Year: | 1985 |
Competition: | SANFL |
Match Type: | Grand Final |
Home: | |
Home Abbr: | GLE |
Away: | |
Away Abbr: | NA |
Home Qtr1: | 2.2 (14) |
Home Qtr2: | 9.7 (61) |
Home Qtr3: | 14.10 (94) |
Home Qtr4: | 21.15 (141) |
Away Qtr1: | 4.4 (28) |
Away Qtr2: | 7.7 (49) |
Away Qtr3: | 9.10 (64) |
Away Qtr4: | 12.12 (84) |
Home Score: | 21.15 (141) |
Away Score: | 12.12 (84) |
Date: | Saturday, 5 October (2:10 pm) |
Stadium: | Football Park |
Attendance: | 50,289 |
Coin Toss: | North Adelaide |
Kick End: | Lake End |
Network: | Seven Network |
Commentators: | Peter Marker Ian Day Robert Oatey |
Last: | 1984 |
Next: | 1986 |
The 1985 SANFL Grand Final was an Australian rules football game contested between the Glenelg Football Club and North Adelaide Football Club at Football Park on 5 October 1985. It was the 87th grand final of the South Australian National Football League, staged to determine the premiers for the 1985 SANFL season. The match, attended by 50,289 spectators, was won by Glenelg by a margin of 57 points, marking the club's third SANFL premiership, having previously won the premiership in 1973. Glenelg's Stephen Kernahan won the Jack Oatey Medal as the player judged best on ground.
NORTH ADELAIDE: 4. David Tiller (c) 1. John Riley 3. Darel Hart 6. Trevor Hill 7. Kim Klomp 9. David Sanders 12. Paul Zoontjens 13. Tony Antrobus 14. Stephen Hay 15. John Brealey 16. Michael Armfield 17. Andrew Jarman 22. Stephen Riley 23. David Wildy 25. Matthew Campbell 27. Brenton Phillips, 28. Michael Parsons 32. Paul Arnold 34. David Robertson 35. Peter Bennett 42. Mick Redden (v/c)
Coach: Michael Nunan
Retiring champion Malcolm Blight was given the honour of tossing the coin. North skipper David Tiller called correctly and elected to kick to the Lake End.
Midway through the second quarter, the Roosters had opened up a 29-point lead after restricting the Tigers to just two goals.
But then, in one moment, the momentum of the match shifted dramatically.
Years later, when reflecting on the sudden change in momentum in the second quarter that swung the result in Glenelg's favour, Graham Cornes remarked: βIt was as if someone flicked the switch and it all turned.β[1]