2009 AFL season















































2009 AFL premiership season
AFL Logo 2009 Premiership season.jpg
Teams 16
Premiers
Geelong
(8th premiership)

Minor premiers
St Kilda
(3rd minor premiership)

Pre-season cup
Geelong
(2nd pre-season cup win)

Matches played 185
Attendance 6,988,638 (37,776 per match)
Highest attendance 99,251 (Grand Final, St Kilda vs. Geelong)
Coleman Medallist
Brendan Fevola
Carlton (86 goals)
Brownlow Medallist
Gary Ablett, Jr.
Geelong (30 votes)

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The 2009 Australian Football League season commenced on 26 March and concluded on 26 September. It was the 113th season of the VFL/AFL competition and the 20th under the name 'Australian Football League', having switched from 'Victorian Football League' after 1989. The season consisted of 22 home and away rounds and four rounds of finals, culminating in the 2009 AFL Grand Final which determined the 2009 AFL premiers. Geelong won the Grand Final against St Kilda.




Contents






  • 1 Pre-season


    • 1.1 AFL pre-season draft


    • 1.2 NAB Cup




  • 2 Premiership season


    • 2.1 Round 1


    • 2.2 Round 2


    • 2.3 Round 3


    • 2.4 Round 4


    • 2.5 Round 5


    • 2.6 Round 6


    • 2.7 Round 7


    • 2.8 Round 8


    • 2.9 Round 9


    • 2.10 Round 10


    • 2.11 Round 11


    • 2.12 Round 12


    • 2.13 Round 13


    • 2.14 Round 14


    • 2.15 Round 15


    • 2.16 Round 16


    • 2.17 Round 17


    • 2.18 Round 18


    • 2.19 Round 19


    • 2.20 Round 20


    • 2.21 Round 21


    • 2.22 Round 22




  • 3 Win/loss table


  • 4 Ladder


    • 4.1 Ladder progression




  • 5 Finals series


    • 5.1 Week one


    • 5.2 Week two


    • 5.3 Week three


    • 5.4 Week four




  • 6 Awards


    • 6.1 Best and fairest


    • 6.2 AFL Rising Star


    • 6.3 Goal of the Year


    • 6.4 Mark of the Year


    • 6.5 AFL Army Award




  • 7 Club leadership


  • 8 Umpiring and rule changes


  • 9 Coach changes


  • 10 See also


  • 11 References


  • 12 External links





Pre-season



AFL pre-season draft



The pre-season draft was held on 16 December 2008 (but is referred to as the 2009 Pre-season draft in continuation from the early years of the AFL draft when it was held in January or February) and most pre-draft interest was on whether or not former West Coast Eagles captain and Brownlow Medal winner Ben Cousins would be selected by the Richmond Football Club. Richmond, the only club to show interest in recruiting Cousins, had one selection in the pre-season draft (because it had only one space left on its senior list). In the week leading up to the pre-season draft, Richmond requested to have Graham Polak (who had been hit by a tram the previous season, with it not clear at this stage whether or not the resulting injuries would end his career) moved to the rookie list, to free up an additional list space and give them a second selection in the pre-season draft. The request was similar to one made by and granted to the Essendon Football Club a few years earlier with respect to Adam Ramanauskas, but there were key differences which led to Richmond's request being rejected by the AFL and a majority of rival clubs on 15 December.[1] Although Richmond had maintained throughout the previous week that it would draft Cousins only if its request to put Polak on the rookie list was granted, they selected Cousins anyway with their only selection in the pre-season draft. Josh Carr's return to Port Adelaide was another major player move.[2]



NAB Cup














































































































































































































Round One
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Final

Western Bulldogs
69

Essendon

70

Essendon

67

Brisbane Lions

65

Brisbane Lions
65

St Kilda
56

Essendon
73

West Coast
54

Collingwood

116

Collingwood

116

Collingwood

97

Fremantle
86

Richmond
51

Richmond

89

Collingwood
51

Geelong

119

Geelong

127

Adelaide
84

Geelong

72

Sydney
78

Port Adelaide
54

Port Adelaide

143

Geelong

84

Carlton

123

Carlton
67

North Melbourne
70

Carlton

112

Hawthorn

69

Hawthorn
88

Melbourne
66


Premiership season



Round 1

























































































Round 1 (season launch)


Thursday, 26 March (7:40 pm)

Richmond 9.13 (67)
def. by

Carlton 23.12 (150)

MCG (crowd: 87,043)

Report
Friday, 27 March (7:40 pm)

Hawthorn 16.7 (103)
def. by

Geelong 15.21 (111)

MCG (crowd: 69,593)

Report
Saturday, 28 March (2:10 pm)

Collingwood 13.8 (86)
def. by

Adelaide 13.12 (90)

MCG (crowd: 41,591)

Report
Saturday, 28 March (6:10 pm)

Brisbane Lions 14.11 (95)
def.

West Coast 13.8 (86)

The Gabba (crowd: 26,800)

Report
Saturday, 28 March (7:10 pm)

St Kilda 12.8 (80)
def.

Sydney 9.11 (65)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 32,442)

Report
Sunday, 29 March (1:10 pm)

Melbourne 10.7 (67)
def. by

North Melbourne 15.11 (101)

MCG (crowd: 28,707)

Report
Sunday, 29 March (2:40 pm)

Port Adelaide 15.17 (107)
def.

Essendon 9.12 (66)

AAMI Stadium (crowd: 28,315)

Report
Sunday, 29 March (4:10 pm)

Fremantle 13.16 (94)
def. by

Western Bulldogs 25.7 (157)

Subiaco Oval (crowd: 34,634)

Report


  • In the season-opener on Thursday night, Carlton easily defeated Richmond, and Richmond's high-profile recruit Ben Cousins injured his hamstring in the final quarter; he had suffered the same injury in his final match with West Coast in 2007.

  • The opening match between Richmond and Carlton was the highest attended home-and-away game of the season, with a crowd of 87,043 at the MCG, and had the third-highest attendance of all games including finals.


  • Michael Voss began his Brisbane Lions coaching career with a win; the Lions beat West Coast by 9 points at the Gabba, after trailing by 38 points during the second quarter.




Round 2

























































































Round 2


Friday, 3 April

Adelaide 10.9 (69)
def. by

St Kilda 15.11 (101)

AAMI Stadium (crowd: 41,189)

Report
Saturday, 4 April

Geelong 15.15 (105)
def.

Richmond 13.7 (85)

Skilled Stadium (crowd: 22,288)

Report
Saturday, 4 April

Collingwood 17.15 (117)
def.

Melbourne 10.4 (64)

MCG (crowd: 43,176)

Report
Saturday, 4 April

Carlton 18.11 (119)
def.

Brisbane Lions 15.10 (100)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 42,496 )

Report
Saturday, 4 April

Sydney 22.11 (143)
def.

Hawthorn 15.15 (105)

ANZ Stadium (crowd: 36,116)

Report
Sunday, 5 April

Essendon 16.13 (109)
def.

Fremantle 10.11 (71)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 27,461)

Report
Sunday, 5 April

Western Bulldogs 11.14 (80)
def.

North Melbourne 9.11 (65)

MCG (crowd: 34,466)

Report
Sunday, 5 April

West Coast 19.11 (125)
def.

Port Adelaide 10.15 (75)

Subiaco Oval (crowd: 37,826)

Report



Round 3

























































































Round 3 (Easter)


Thursday, 9 April

Geelong 18.14 (122)
def.

Collingwood 13.17 (95)

MCG (crowd: 58,527)

Report
Saturday, 11 April

St Kilda 25.11 (161)
def.

West Coast 9.10 (64)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 29,006)

Report
Saturday, 11 April

Brisbane Lions 15.10 (100)
def.

Sydney 9.13 (67)

The Gabba (crowd: 24,984)

Report
Saturday, 11 April

Carlton 16.16 (112)
def. by

Essendon 17.14 (116)

MCG (crowd: 70,411)

Report
Sunday, 12 April

Port Adelaide 22.15 (147)
def.

Melbourne 14.6 (90)

AAMI Stadium (crowd: 21,030)

Report
Sunday, 12 April

North Melbourne 10.9 (69)
def. by

Hawthorn 19.9 (123)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 34,893)

Report
Sunday, 12 April

Fremantle 11.14 (80)
def. by

Adelaide 15.14 (104)

Subiaco Oval (crowd: 30,035)

Report
Monday, 13 April

Western Bulldogs 16.14 (110)
def.

Richmond 8.15 (63)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 46,261)

Report



Round 4

























































































Round 4


Friday, 17 April

Brisbane Lions 10.13 (73)
def. by

Collingwood 13.12 (90)

The Gabba (crowd: 34,912)

Report
Saturday, 18 April

Sydney 12.12 (84)
def.

Carlton 9.13 (67)

SCG (crowd: 30,834)

Report
Saturday, 18 April

Hawthorn 12.13 (85)
def. by

Port Adelaide 17.13 (115)

MCG (crowd: 33,274)

Report
Saturday, 18 April

St Kilda 17.9 (111)
def.

Fremantle 4.4 (28)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 26,326)

Report
Saturday, 18 April

Adelaide 13.8 (86)
def. by

Geelong 21.8 (134)

AAMI Stadium (crowd: 40,418)

Report
Sunday, 19 April

North Melbourne 10.9 (69)
def.

Essendon 7.15 (57)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 33,842)

Report
Sunday, 19 April

Richmond 13.14 (92)
def. by

Melbourne 14.16 (100)

MCG (crowd: 40,763)

Report
Sunday, 19 April

West Coast 17.14 (116)
def.

Western Bulldogs 12.11 (83)

Subiaco Oval (crowd: 37,758)

Report



  • St Kilda set a new record for its greatest win in matches against Fremantle (83 points). Fremantle was restricted to 4.4 (28), the equal-lowest score ever recorded at Etihad Stadium (tied with St Kilda's 3.10 (28) in 2002).


  • Geelong midfielder Gary Ablett, Jr. recorded 46 disposals with 33 handpasses as his side defeated Adelaide by 48 points. It broke West Coast's Matt Priddis' year-old record for most handpasses in a game, and equalled Collingwood's Nathan Buckley's ten-year-old record for the most disposals in a game since the length of the quarters was shortened to twenty minutes in 1994.


  • North Melbourne defender Daniel Pratt became the first player to give away a free kick for deliberately rushing a behind.




Round 5

























































































Round 5 (Anzac Day)


Friday, 24 April

Port Adelaide 5.6 (36)
def. by

St Kilda 15.12 (102)

AAMI Stadium (crowd: 25,426)

Report
Saturday, 25 April

Essendon 13.15 (93)
def.

Collingwood 12.16 (88)

MCG (crowd: 84,829)

Report
Saturday, 25 April

Hawthorn 11.8 (74)
def.

West Coast 7.14 (56)

Aurora Stadium (crowd: 17,880)

Report
Saturday, 25 April

Fremantle 18.13 (121)
def.

Sydney 16.4 (100)

Subiaco Oval (crowd: 32,884)

Report
Saturday, 25 April

North Melbourne 7.16 (58)
def. by

Richmond 13.16 (94)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 29,224)

Report
Sunday, 26 April

Geelong 18.18 (126)
def.

Brisbane Lions 5.3 (33)

Skilled Stadium (crowd: 15,580)

Report
Sunday, 26 April

Western Bulldogs 13.12 (90)
def. by

Carlton 21.7 (133)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 44,268)

Report
Sunday, 26 April

Melbourne 4.10 (34)
def. by

Adelaide 7.9 (51)

MCG (crowd: 14,129)

Report



  • Essendon's David Zaharakis kicked the winning goal in the final seconds, ensuring that Essendon beat Collingwood for the first time on Anzac Day since 2005.


  • Brisbane was restricted to its lowest score in club history, 5.3 (33); although both predecessors of the merged club, the Brisbane Bears and Fitzroy, had scored lower.


  • Geelong amassed 490 disposals against Brisbane, breaking the old record of 469 disposals set by West Coast in 2007 and matched by Geelong in 2008; their 254 handpasses was also a record. The two records would only stand for seven days.




Round 6

























































































Round 6


Friday, 1 May

North Melbourne 11.9 (75)
def. by

Collingwood 19.13 (127)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 40,087)

Report
Saturday, 2 May

Hawthorn 16.10 (106)
def.

Carlton 15.12 (102)

MCG (crowd: 69,014)

Report
Saturday, 2 May

West Coast 9.20 (74)
def. by

Fremantle 13.9 (87)

Subiaco Oval (crowd: 41,654)

Report
Saturday, 2 May

Brisbane Lions 17.9 (111)
def.

Essendon 9.14 (68)

The Gabba (crowd: 29,252)

Report
Saturday, 2 May

Port Adelaide 15.15 (105)
def.

Adelaide 12.7 (79)

AAMI Stadium (crowd: 41,558)

Report
Sunday, 3 May

Sydney 14.10 (94)
def.

Richmond 11.9 (75)

SCG (crowd: 25,410)

Report
Sunday, 3 May

Melbourne 10.8 (68)
def. by

Geelong 15.21 (111)

MCG (crowd: 36,932)

Report
Sunday, 3 May

Western Bulldogs 11.10 (76)
def. by

St Kilda 14.20 (104)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 36,302)

Report


  • In the Hawthorn-Carlton game, Carlton's Brendan Fevola and Hawthorn's Jarryd Roughead both kicked 8 goals for the game. In the final minute of the game, Fevola had a chance to win the game by a point, but his shot hit the post and Hawthorn held on for a 4-point win.


  • Dustin Fletcher played his 300th match for Essendon. In the same game, Matthew Lloyd became the 8th player in the history of the VFL/AFL to kick 900 goals.


  • Geelong amassed 498 disposals, including 259 handpasses, against Melbourne at the MCG, breaking the two records which they had set the previous week.




Round 7

























































































Round 7


Friday, 8 May

Essendon 17.14 (116)
def.

Hawthorn 10.12 (72)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 50,475)

Saturday, 9 May

Geelong 17.14 (116)
def.

Sydney 10.5 (65)

Skilled Stadium (crowd: 22,050)

Saturday, 9 May

Richmond 10.11 (71)
def. by

Brisbane Lions 15.7 (97)

MCG (crowd: 34,646)

Saturday, 9 May

North Melbourne 20.5 (125)
def.

Port Adelaide 18.12 (120)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 14,342)

Saturday, 9 May

Carlton 11.15 (81)
def. by

Fremantle 13.10 (88)

Gold Coast Stadium (crowd: 10,294)

Sunday, 10 May

Adelaide 12.14 (86)
def. by

Western Bulldogs 17.16 (118)

AAMI Stadium (crowd: 31,742)

Sunday, 10 May

West Coast 12.18 (90)
def.

Melbourne 13.4 (82)

Subiaco Oval (crowd: 35,209)

Monday, 11 May

Collingwood 5.10 (40)
def. by

St Kilda 20.8 (128)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 46,880)

Report



  • Sydney's Michael O'Loughlin kicked his 500th career goal in the match against Geelong.


  • St Kilda and Collingwood played a Monday night game, the AFL's first for several seasons. St Kilda won by a new record winning margin against the Magpies of 88 points. Collingwood's score of 5.10 (40) was its lowest with Mick Malthouse as coach.




Round 8

























































































Round 8


Friday, 15 May

Fremantle 9.11 (65)
def. by

Hawthorn 13.9 (87)

Subiaco Oval (crowd: 39,135)

Report
Saturday, 16 May

Melbourne 15.7 (97)
def. by

Western Bulldogs 15.14 (104)

MCG (crowd: 28,279)

Saturday, 16 May

Geelong 18.11 (119)
def.

North Melbourne 7.7 (49)

Skilled Stadium (crowd: 20,273)

Saturday, 16 May

Brisbane Lions 18.11 (119)
def.

Adelaide 12.11 (83)

The Gabba (crowd: 27,767)

Saturday, 16 May

Sydney 16.10 (106)
def.

West Coast 15.11 (101)

ANZ Stadium (crowd: 33,079)

Sunday, 17 May

Port Adelaide 14.18 (102)
def.

Richmond 15.9 (99)

AAMI Stadium (crowd: 22,034)

Sunday, 17 May

Collingwood 7.11 (53)
def. by

Carlton 16.8 (104)

MCG (crowd: 82,834)

Sunday, 17 May

St Kilda 13.12 (90)
def.

Essendon 10.11 (71)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 45,594)


  • Brisbane's Daniel Bradshaw surpassed Alastair Lynch's record of 460 goals for the Brisbane Lions.



Round 9

























































































Round 9 (Indigenous Round)


Friday, 22 May

Geelong 17.14 (116)
def.

Western Bulldogs 17.12 (114)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 44,620)

Saturday, 23 May

North Melbourne 14.14 (98)
def.

Fremantle 12.13 (85)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 15,436)

Saturday, 23 May

Adelaide 15.14 (104)
def.

Carlton 8.12 (60)

AAMI Stadium (crowd: 41,107)

Saturday, 23 May

West Coast 9.12 (66)
def. by

Collingwood 12.16 (88)

Subiaco Oval (crowd: 36,658)

Saturday, 23 May

Richmond 12.13 (85)
def. by

Essendon 19.11 (125)

MCG (crowd: 73,625)

Sunday, 24 May

Sydney 18.15 (123)
def.

Port Adelaide 10.8 (68)

SCG (crowd: 23,229)

Sunday, 24 May

St Kilda 14.13 (97)
def.

Brisbane Lions 13.3 (81)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 30,673)

Sunday, 24 May

Hawthorn 17.12 (114)
def.

Melbourne 13.14 (92)

MCG (crowd: 39,395)



  • Western Bulldogs lost to Geelong by two points after Brad Johnson missed a shot for goal (from near the behind post) after the siren. It was the second time in twelve months, after round 9, 2008, that Johnson had missed a potentially game-winning shot after the siren.



Round 10

























































































Round 10


Friday, 29 May

Carlton 16.15 (111)
def.

West Coast 10.10 (70)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 39,611)

Saturday, 30 May

Western Bulldogs 18.9 (117)
def.

Sydney 12.5 (77)

Manuka Oval (crowd: 12,457)

Saturday, 30 May

North Melbourne 12.9 (81)
def. by

Brisbane Lions 15.9 (99)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 21,583)

Report
Saturday, 30 May

Fremantle 17.10 (112)
def. by

Richmond 17.13 (115)

Subiaco Oval (crowd: 35,391)

Saturday, 30 May

St Kilda 11.17 (83)
def.

Melbourne 6.10 (46)

Gold Coast Stadium (crowd: 9,112)

Sunday, 31 May

Adelaide 16.10 (106)
def.

Hawthorn 12.7 (79)

AAMI Stadium (crowd: 40,035)

Sunday, 31 May

Essendon 11.4 (70)
def. by

Geelong 20.14 (134)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 48,852)

Sunday, 31 May

Collingwood 17.12 (114)
def.

Port Adelaide 11.10 (76)

MCG (crowd: 34,793)




  • Sydney's Barry Hall kicked his 600th career goal.


  • Collingwood's Dane Swan amassed 48 disposals in Sunday's game against Port Adelaide, breaking the previous record of 46 held by Nathan Buckley and Gary Ablett, Jr. for most disposals in a game since the quarters were shortened to 20 minutes in 1994.




Round 11

























































































Round 11 (Women’s Round, Queen's Birthday Holiday Weekend)


Friday, 5 June

Richmond 14.5 (89)
def. by

Western Bulldogs 24.13 (157)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 36,483)

Saturday, 6 June

North Melbourne 9.3 (57)
def. by

St Kilda 15.13 (103)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 30,962)

Saturday, 6 June

Brisbane Lions 16.10 (106)
def. by

Carlton 16.16 (112)

The Gabba (crowd: 33,790)

Saturday, 6 June

Port Adelaide 14.10 (94)
def.

Fremantle 11.4 (70)

AAMI Stadium (crowd: 18,418)

Sunday, 7 June

Essendon 18.6 (114)
def. by

Adelaide 21.4 (130)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 39,451)

Sunday, 7 June

Hawthorn 12.14 (86)
def.

Sydney 11.9 (75)

MCG (crowd: 44,464)

Sunday, 7 June

West Coast 12.5 (77)
def. by

Geelong 15.9 (99)

Subiaco Oval (crowd: 35,355)

Monday, 8 June

Melbourne 8.12 (60)
def. by

Collingwood 19.12 (126)

MCG (crowd: 61,287)




  • Terry Wallace coached his final match for Richmond, after announcing his retirement earlier in the week. Wallace was replaced by Jade Rawlings as caretaker.


  • St Kilda won its 11th consecutive game, breaking the previous club record of 10 set in 2004.


  • St Kilda and Geelong, both at 11–0, set the best start to a premiership season since Essendon in 2000.


  • Adelaide defeated Essendon by 16 points in a game notable for having the highest combined goal-kicking accuracy in VFL/AFL history. The combined score of 39.10 (244) had an overall goalkicking accuracy of 79.6%; the previous best was 76.1%, when Essendon and St Kilda combined for 35.11 (221) in round 20, 1984. Goalkicking accuracy league-wide was 60.78% during the round, also a record.




Round 12

























































































Round 12 (Split round)


Friday, 12 June

Carlton 14.11 (95)
def. by

St Kilda 16.8 (104)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 50,820)

Saturday, 13 June

Western Bulldogs 21.11 (137)
def.

Port Adelaide 7.2 (44)

TIO Stadium (crowd: 11,306)

Saturday, 13 June

Richmond 13.14 (92)
def.

West Coast 11.11 (77)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 30,117)

Sunday, 14 June

Hawthorn 7.9 (51)
def. by

Brisbane Lions 13.15 (93)

Aurora Stadium (crowd: 16,710)

Sunday, 14 June

Adelaide 9.14 (68)
def.

North Melbourne 3.6 (24)

AAMI Stadium (crowd: 30,173)

Friday, 19 June

Essendon 19.17 (131)
def.

Melbourne 13.5 (83)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 45,740)

Saturday, 20 June

Sydney 9.12 (66)
def. by

Collingwood 13.11 (89)

ANZ Stadium (crowd: 41,042)

Sunday, 21 June

Fremantle 11.9 (75)
def. by

Geelong 13.16 (94)

Subiaco Oval (crowd: 33,213)


  • In wet weather in Adelaide, North Melbourne was held to 3.6 (24), the club's lowest score since 1971, the lowest score by any team since round 4, 1999, the lowest score ever conceded by Adelaide, and the lowest score ever at AAMI Stadium (the latter two records would be broken only three weeks later).



Round 13

























































































Round 13


Friday, 26 June

Essendon 21.10 (136)
def.

Carlton 9.13 (67)

MCG (crowd: 83,407)

Report
Saturday, 27 June

Collingwood 26.13 (169)
def.

Fremantle 13.7 (85)

MCG (crowd: 44,114)

Report
Saturday, 27 June

Adelaide 12.13 (85)
def.

Sydney 10.9 (69)

AAMI Stadium (crowd: 38,064)

Report
Saturday, 27 June

West Coast 16.11 (107)
def.

Hawthorn 13.9 (87)

Subiaco Oval (crowd: 31,441)

Report
Saturday, 27 June

Brisbane Lions 16.15 (111)
def.

Melbourne 8.8 (56)

The Gabba (crowd: 23,750)

Report
Sunday, 28 June

Geelong 18.14 (122)
def.

Port Adelaide 13.10 (88)

Skilled Stadium (crowd: 21,142)

Report
Sunday, 28 June

North Melbourne 12.14 (86)
def. by

Western Bulldogs 17.6 (108)

MCG (crowd: 31,470)

Report
Sunday, 28 June

St Kilda 13.14 (92)
def.

Richmond 5.6 (36)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 38,196)

Report



  • St Kilda and Geelong became the sixth and seventh clubs to begin a season with thirteen consecutive wins, the feat having previously been achieved by Collingwood in 1929, Geelong in 1953, Melbourne in 1956, West Coast in 1991 and Essendon in 2000. All seven clubs reached the Grand Finals in their respective seasons.


  • Matthew Lloyd overtook Leigh Matthews with his 916th career goal to become the 7th highest goalkicker in AFL/VFL history.




Round 14

























































































Round 14


Friday, 3 July

Collingwood 15.12 (102)
def.

Essendon 9.13 (67)

MCG (crowd: 77,699)

Report
Saturday, 4 July

Melbourne 17.10 (112)
def.

West Coast 13.14 (92)

MCG (crowd: 23,149)

Report
Saturday, 4 July

Port Adelaide 19.14 (128)
def.

Brisbane Lions 11.14 (80)

AAMI Stadium (crowd: 20,293)

Report
Saturday, 4 July

Richmond 13.7 (85)
def. by

Adelaide 15.12 (102)

Gold Coast Stadium (crowd: 11,174)

Report
Saturday, 4 July

Western Bulldogs 19.19 (133)
def.

Hawthorn 6.9 (45)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 36,827)

Report
Sunday, 5 July

Sydney 15.10 (100)
def.

North Melbourne 13.7 (85)

SCG (crowd: 21,929)

Report
Sunday, 5 July

St Kilda 14.7 (91)
def.

Geelong 13.7 (85)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 54,444)

Report
Sunday, 5 July

Fremantle 15.10 (100)
def. by

Carlton 16.19 (115)

Subiaco Oval (crowd: 34,720)

Report


  • The round 14 match between St Kilda and Geelong, both of whom were unbeaten at this stage, had a change in timeslot, moving from 2:10 pm to 3:10 pm so that the Seven Network could broadcast the game live into Melbourne, and use it as a lead-in to its 6pm news broadcast; in 2012, this change in timeslot became permanent for all Sunday afternoon matches broadcast by Seven. All capital cities (except Sydney and Brisbane, which received a live telecast of the Sydney vs North Melbourne on the same day) received a live telecast of the match. The game broke the record set in round 8, 1991 between West Coast and Essendon as being the latest into a season that two undefeated teams had played against each other. The attendance of 54,444 set a new record for the largest crowd at an AFL game held at Etihad Stadium. Geelong lost at the stadium for the first time since round 1, 2007, ending a 13-match winning streak at the ground.


  • Western Bulldogs held Hawthorn goalless in the first half of their game, and reigning Coleman Medallist Lance Franklin was held goalless for the first time since 2006, breaking a streak of 71 consecutive games scoring at least one goal.


  • Melbourne club president Jim Stynes announced in the week prior to the game that he had been diagnosed with cancer.

  • The Richmond vs Adelaide game was the last event staged at the Gold Coast Stadium before renovation works began at the oval to suit the AFL's new team on the Gold Coast.




Round 15

























































































Round 15


Friday, 10 July

Western Bulldogs 16.14 (110)
def. by

Collingwood 17.9 (111)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 51,382)

Report
Saturday, 11 July

Sydney 10.12 (72)
def. by

Essendon 15.17 (107)

SCG (crowd: 30,924)

Report
Saturday, 11 July

Carlton 16.13 (109)
def.

Richmond 12.17 (89)

MCG (crowd: 50,784)

Report
Saturday, 11 July

Brisbane Lions 16.12 (108)
def.

Geelong 9.11 (65)

The Gabba (crowd: 34,274)

Report
Saturday, 11 July

Adelaide 19.16 (130)
def.

Fremantle 1.7 (13)

AAMI Stadium (crowd: 32,451)

Report
Sunday, 12 July

Hawthorn 10.13 (73)
def.

North Melbourne 9.10 (64)

Aurora Stadium (crowd: 15,080)

Report
Sunday, 12 July

Melbourne 15.11 (101)
def.

Port Adelaide 13.12 (90)

MCG (crowd: 15,888)

Report
Sunday, 12 July

West Coast 11.4 (70)
def. by

St Kilda 13.12 (90)

Subiaco Oval (crowd: 36,259)

Report



  • Carlton's Brendan Fevola kicked a career-best nine goals in his team's win against Richmond.


  • Adelaide's dominant victory against Fremantle saw the latter held to only 1.7 (13). This was the lowest score in Fremantle's history (its previous lowest was 3.7 (25) in 2004), the lowest score by a team at AAMI Stadium and the lowest score ever conceded by Adelaide (the previous record for each was set by North Melbourne three weeks earlier), and the lowest score by any team since 1961, when Richmond scored 0.8 (8). Fremantle was held to 0.1 (1) in the first half, the lowest half-time score since Fitzroy was scoreless in the first half in round 1, 1995. Fremantle's 117-point loss was at the time its equal worst in club history.




Round 16

























































































Round 16


Friday, 17 July

Essendon 11.4 (70)
def. by

Western Bulldogs 15.13 (103)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 47,120)

Report
Saturday, 18 July

Carlton 19.10 (124)
def.

Sydney 9.9 (63)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 42,018)

Report
Saturday, 18 July

Geelong 17.15 (117)
def.

Melbourne 11.5 (71)

Skilled Stadium (crowd: 21,160)

Report
Saturday, 18 July

Fremantle 7.5 (47)
def. by

Brisbane Lions 9.8 (62)

Subiaco Oval (crowd: 22,595)

Report
Saturday, 18 July

Collingwood 11.10 (76)
def. by

Hawthorn 18.13 (121)

MCG (crowd: 66,149)

Report
Sunday, 19 July

Port Adelaide 17.10 (112)
def.

West Coast 11.10 (76)

AAMI Stadium (crowd: 21,106)

Report
Sunday, 19 July

Richmond 12.13 (85)
drew with

North Melbourne 12.13 (85)

MCG (crowd: 30,604)

Report
Sunday, 19 July

St Kilda 15.15 (105)
def.

Adelaide 7.6 (48)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 31,940)

Report



  • Carlton broke a twelve-game losing streak against Sydney with its victory.


  • North Melbourne overcame a 43-point deficit early in the third quarter to record the first draw of the season against Richmond.




Round 17

























































































Round 17 (Rivalry Round)


Friday, 24 July

Carlton 4.16 (40)
def. by

Collingwood 14.10 (94)

MCG (crowd: 84,938)

Report
Saturday, 25 July

Geelong 15.9 (99)
def.

Hawthorn 14.14 (98)

MCG (crowd: 64,803)

Report
Saturday, 25 July

Fremantle 10.11 (71)
def.

West Coast 8.18 (66)

Subiaco Oval (crowd: 39,536)

Report
Saturday, 25 July

Brisbane Lions 17.14 (116)
def.

North Melbourne 11.9 (75)

The Gabba (crowd: 25,509)

Report
Saturday, 25 July

St Kilda 16.10 (106)
def.

Western Bulldogs 9.7 (61)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 45,082)

Report
Sunday, 26 July

Melbourne 6.14 (50)
def. by

Sydney 10.8 (68)

Manuka Oval (crowd: 7,311)

Report
Sunday, 26 July

Essendon 14.12 (96)
def. by

Richmond 15.11 (101)

MCG (crowd: 47,412)

Report
Sunday, 26 July

Adelaide 19.18 (132)
def.

Port Adelaide 9.8 (62)

AAMI Stadium (crowd: 46,859)

Report



  • Geelong won a memorable Grand Final rematch against Hawthorn, winning by a point kicked after the siren by Jimmy Bartel after trailing by as much as 28 in the 4th quarter.

  • The Melbourne vs Sydney game, played in bad weather in Canberra, was the lowest-attended match of the season, with just 7,311 attending.




Round 18

























































































Round 18


Friday, 31 July

North Melbourne 11.18 (84)
def. by

Carlton 14.10 (94)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 38,554)

Report
Saturday, 1 August

Western Bulldogs 17.9 (111)
def.

Fremantle 11.14 (80)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 19,065)

Report
Saturday, 1 August

Geelong 14.9 (93)
def.

Adelaide 13.13 (91)

Skilled Stadium (crowd: 21,686)

Report
Saturday, 1 August

Sydney 13.15 (93)
def. by

St Kilda 13.16 (94)

SCG (crowd: 27,805)

Report
Saturday, 1 August

Collingwood 12.23 (95)
def.

Brisbane Lions 8.7 (55)

MCG (crowd: 47,268)

Report
Sunday, 2 August

Melbourne 12.10 (82)
def. by

Richmond 12.14 (86)

MCG (crowd: 37,438)

Sunday, 2 August

Port Adelaide 18.13 (121)
def.

Hawthorn 14.19 (103)

AAMI Stadium (crowd: 25,154)

Report
Sunday, 2 August

West Coast 14.11 (95)
def.

Essendon 10.8 (68)

Subiaco Oval (crowd: 35,765)

Report



  • Brad Johnson became the games record holder for the Western Bulldogs. His current mark of 342 games surpassed Chris Grant's old record of 341 games for the club.


  • Richmond's Jordan McMahon kicked a goal after the final siren from outside the 50-metre arc to secure a four-point win over Melbourne, after Richmond came back from a few goals behind late in the final quarter. The Herald Sun would later accuse Melbourne of attempting to deliberately lose the match,[3] and the game later became part of an AFL 'tanking' investigation into Melbourne, conducted in 2012 and 2013.[4]




Round 19

























































































Round 19


Friday, 7 August

Carlton 14.13 (97)
def.

Geelong 8.14 (62)

MCG (crowd: 55,057)

Saturday, 8 August

Western Bulldogs 13.19 (97)
def. by

West Coast 16.6 (102)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 22,417)

Report
Saturday, 8 August

Hawthorn 7.7 (49)
def. by

St Kilda 10.14 (74)

Aurora Stadium (crowd: 20,011)

Report
Saturday, 8 August

Essendon 13.9 (87)
drew with

Brisbane Lions 12.15 (87)

MCG (crowd: 41,636)

Report
Saturday, 8 August

Adelaide 9.14 (68)
def. by

Collingwood 13.11 (89)

AAMI Stadium (crowd: 45,128)

Report
Sunday, 9 August

North Melbourne 19.9 (123)
def.

Melbourne 8.13 (61)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 16,594)

Report
Sunday, 9 August

Richmond 10.8 (68)
def. by

Sydney 18.15 (123)

MCG (crowd: 32,216)

Report
Sunday, 9 August

Fremantle 17.14 (116)
def.

Port Adelaide 11.8 (74)

Subiaco Oval (crowd: 30,029)

Report


  • 13th placed West Coast won its first match away from Perth since round 21, 2007 with its five-point win over the 3rd placed Western Bulldogs at Etihad Stadium.


  • Brisbane Lions’s Daniel Bradshaw kicked a goal after the final siren to draw his side's game against Essendon. The draw made the Lions certain of their first finals appearance since the 2004 Grand Final.


  • Sydney's Michael O'Loughlin played his 300th AFL game.




Round 20

























































































Round 20 (Green Round)


Friday, 14 August

Hawthorn 9.13 (67)
def. by

Adelaide 13.16 (94)

MCG (crowd: 32,583)

Report
Saturday, 15 August

Richmond 8.11 (59)
def. by

Collingwood 22.20 (152)

MCG (crowd: 63,366)

Report
Saturday, 15 August

West Coast 17.8 (110)
def.

North Melbourne 10.12 (72)

Subiaco Oval (crowd: 32,472)

Report
Saturday, 15 August

Brisbane Lions 12.12 (84)
def. by

Western Bulldogs 15.12 (102)

The Gabba (crowd: 33,421)

Report
Saturday, 15 August

Sydney 13.9 (87)
def. by

Geelong 13.14 (92)

ANZ Stadium (crowd: 40,261)

Report
Sunday, 16 August

Melbourne 20.7 (127)
def.

Fremantle 9.10 (64)

MCG (crowd: 13,004)

Report
Sunday, 16 August

Port Adelaide 9.13 (67)
def. by

Carlton 18.13 (121)

AAMI Stadium (crowd: 27,221)

Report
Sunday, 16 August

Essendon 16.14 (110)
def.

St Kilda 16.12 (108)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 41,410)

Report



  • Essendon defeated St Kilda by two points to inflict St Kilda's first loss of the season; St Kilda's captain Nick Riewoldt had the chance to win the game with a 45-metre set shot after the final siren, but he missed the goal. St Kilda's nineteen-game winning streak was the longest in club history, the second-longest by any club to start a season (coincidentally, a win would of equaled the all time record, held by their opponents Essendon), and the fifth-longest of all-time.

  • The game between Melbourne and Fremantle, played partially in heavy rain, was the lowest attended match at the MCG since 2004, with an attendance of 13,004.


  • Carlton clinched a position in the finals, ending the club's seven-year finals drought, the longest in club history.




Round 21

























































































Round 21


Friday, 21 August

Western Bulldogs 16.14 (110)
def.

Geelong 14.12 (96)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 46,818)

Report
Saturday, 22 August

Carlton 24.9 (153)
def.

Melbourne 15.6 (96)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 37,433)

Report
Saturday, 22 August

Adelaide 18.14 (122)
def.

West Coast 7.6 (48)

AAMI Stadium (crowd: 39,640)

Report
Saturday, 22 August

Brisbane Lions 16.11 (107)
def.

Port Adelaide 14.8 (92)

The Gabba (crowd: 26,437)

Report
Saturday, 22 August

Richmond 14.9 (93)
def. by

Hawthorn 20.15 (135)

MCG (crowd: 34,779)

Report
Sunday, 23 August

St Kilda 8.11 (59)
def. by

North Melbourne 10.4 (64)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 30,522)

Report
Sunday, 23 August

Collingwood 13.19 (97)
def.

Sydney 8.8 (56)

MCG (crowd: 54,400)

Report
Sunday, 23 August

Fremantle 21.15 (141)
def.

Essendon 13.9 (87)

Subiaco Oval (crowd: 32,413)

Report



  • Geelong's loss secured first position on the ladder for St Kilda, and the 2009 McClelland Trophy, its first since 1997.


  • Carlton scored its highest score since 2001 in its win against Melbourne.


  • Brisbane Lions produced its second biggest comeback against Port Adelaide. After a 10 goal first quarter saw Port Adelaide lead as much as by 47 points, Brisbane Lions kicked 13.9 (87) to 4.8 (32) after the first quarter to eventually win by 15 points.


  • Collingwood's win against Sydney clinched Collingwood's first top four finish since 2003, and eliminated Sydney from the finals for the first time since 2002.


  • Fremantle's win confirmed that Melbourne would finish in last place.




Round 22

























































































Round 22


Friday, 28 August

West Coast 17.23 (125)
def.

Richmond 6.9 (45)

Subiaco Oval (crowd: 39,017)

Report
Saturday, 29 August

Geelong 14.10 (94)
def.

Fremantle 8.6 (54)

Skilled Stadium (crowd: 18,196)

Report
Saturday, 29 August

Hawthorn 14.15 (99)
def. by

Essendon 16.20 (116)

MCG (crowd: 77,278)

Report
Saturday, 29 August

Carlton 16.8 (104)
def. by

Adelaide 27.14 (176)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 42,356)

Report
Saturday, 29 August

Sydney 14.8 (92)
def. by

Brisbane Lions 15.10 (100)

SCG (crowd: 27,933)

Report
Saturday, 29 August

Port Adelaide 9.13 (67)
def. by

North Melbourne 10.11 (71)

AAMI Stadium (crowd: 17,284)

Report
Sunday, 30 August

Melbourne 10.7 (67)
def. by

St Kilda 17.12 (114)

MCG (crowd: 36,748)

Report
Sunday, 30 August

Collingwood 10.16 (76)
def. by

Western Bulldogs 14.16 (100)

Etihad Stadium (crowd: 48,888)

Report



  • Essendon secured eighth spot and their first finals appearance since 2004 with a 17-point win over Hawthorn in a fiery encounter.


  • Hawthorn became the first team since Adelaide in 1999 to miss the finals after winning the flag the previous year.


  • Western Bulldogs defeated Collingwood by 24 points; the win gave the Bulldogs a 0.31% percentage advantage over Collingwood, placing the Bulldogs third and the Magpies fourth. Had Brad Johnson not scored in the final minute, instead of kicking the goal, Collingwood would have finished third.




Win/loss table































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Team
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
F1
F2
F3
GF
Ladder

Adelaide
Coll
4

StK
32
Frem
24

Geel
48
Melb
17
PA
26

WB
32
BL
36

Carl
44

Haw
27
Ess
16

NM
44

Syd
16
Rich
17

Frem
117
StK
57

PA
70
Geel
2

Coll
21
Haw
27

WCE
74
Carl
72

Ess
96
Coll
5
X
X

5

Brisbane Lions

WCE
9
Carl
19

Syd
33

Coll
17
Geel
93

Ess
43
Rich
26

Adel
36
StK
16
NM
18

Carl
6
Haw
42

Melb
55
PA
48

Geel
43
Frem
15

NM
41
Coll
40
Ess
0

WB
18

PA
15
Syd
8

Carl
7
WB
51
X
X

6

Carlton
Rich
83

BL
19

Ess
4
Syd
17
WB
43
Haw
4

Frem
7
Coll
51
Adel
44

WCE
41
BL
6

StK
9
Ess
69
Frem
15

Rich
20

Syd
61

Coll
54
NM
10

Geel
35
PA
54

Melb
57

Adel
72
BL
7
X
X
X

7

Collingwood

Adel
4

Melb
53
Geel
27
BL
17
Ess
5
NM
52

StK
88

Carl
51
WCE
22

PA
38
Melb
66
Syd
23

Frem
84

Ess
35
WB
1

Haw
45
Carl
54

BL
40
Adel
21
Rich
93

Syd
41

WB
24
StK
28

Adel
5
Geel
73
X

4

Essendon
PA
41

Frem
38
Carl
4
NM
12

Coll
5
BL
43

Haw
44
StK
19
Rich
40

Geel
64

Adel
16

Melb
48

Carl
69
Coll
35
Syd
35

WB
33

Rich
5
WCE
27

BL
0

StK
2
Frem
54
Haw
17
Adel
96
X
X
X

8

Fremantle

WB
63
Ess
38

Adel
24
StK
83

Syd
21
WCE
13
Carl
7

Haw
22
NM
13

Rich
3
PA
24

Geel
19
Coll
84

Carl
15
Adel
117

BL
15

WCE
5
WB
31

PA
42
Melb
63

Ess
54
Geel
40
X
X
X
X
14

Geelong
Haw
8

Rich
20

Coll
27
Adel
48

BL
93
Melb
43

Syd
51

NM
70

WB
2
Ess
64
WCE
22
Frem
19

PA
34
StK
6
BL
43

Melb
46

Haw
1

Adel
2
Carl
35
Syd
5
WB
14

Frem
40

WB
14
X

Coll
73
StK
12

2

Hawthorn

Geel
8
Syd
38
NM
54

PA
30

WCE
18

Carl
4
Ess
44
Frem
22

Melb
22
Adel
27

Syd
11

BL
42
WCE
20
WB
88

NM
9
Coll
45
Geel
1
PA
18

StK
25

Adel
27
Rich
42

Ess
17
X
X
X
X
9

Melbourne

NM
34
Coll
53
PA
57
Rich
8

Adel
17

Geel
43
WCE
8

WB
7
Haw
22
StK
37

Coll
66
Ess
48
BL
55

WCE
20

PA
11
Geel
46

Syd
18

Rich
4
NM
62

Frem
63
Carl
57

StK
47
X
X
X
X
16

North Melbourne
Melb
34
WB
15

Haw
54

Ess
12

Rich
36

Coll
52

PA
5
Geel
70

Frem
13

BL
18

StK
46
Adel
44

WB
22
Syd
15
Haw
9
Rich
0
BL
41

Carl
10

Melb
62
WCE
38
StK
5
PA
4
X
X
X
X
13

Port Adelaide

Ess
41
WCE
50

Melb
57
Haw
30

StK
66

Adel
26
NM
5

Rich
3
Syd
55
Coll
38

Frem
24
WB
93
Geel
34

BL
48
Melb
11

WCE
36
Adel
70

Haw
18
Frem
42

Carl
54
BL
15

NM
4
X
X
X
X
10

Richmond

Carl
83
Geel
20
WB
47

Melb
8
NM
36
Syd
19

BL
26
PA
3

Ess
40
Frem
3

WB
68

WCE
15
StK
56

Adel
17
Carl
20

NM
0
Ess
5
Melb
4

Syd
55

Coll
93

Haw
42
WCE
80
X
X
X
X
15

St Kilda

Syd
15
Adel
32

WCE
97

Frem
83
PA
66
WB
28
Coll
88

Ess
19

BL
16

Melb
37
NM
46
Carl
9

Rich
56

Geel
6
WCE
20

Adel
57

WB
45
Syd
1
Haw
25
Ess
2

NM
5
Melb
47

Coll
28
X

WB
7

Geel
12


1

Sydney
StK
15

Haw
38
BL
33

Carl
17
Frem
21

Rich
19
Geel
51

WCE
5

PA
55
WB
40
Haw
11

Coll
23
Adel
16

NM
15

Ess
35
Carl
61
Melb
18

StK
1
Rich
55

Geel
5
Coll
41

BL
8
X
X
X
X
12

West Coast
BL
9

PA
50
StK
97

WB
33
Haw
18

Frem
13

Melb
8
Syd
5

Coll
22
Carl
41

Geel
22
Rich
15

Haw
20
Melb
20

StK
20
PA
36
Frem
5

Ess
27
WB
5

NM
38
Adel
74

Rich
80
X
X
X
X
11

Western Bulldogs
Frem
63

NM
15

Rich
47
WCE
33

Carl
43

StK
28
Adel
32
Melb
7
Geel
2

Syd
40
Rich
68

PA
93
NM
22

Haw
88

Coll
1
Ess
33
StK
45

Frem
31

WCE
5
BL
18

Geel
14
Coll
24
Geel
14

BL
51

StK
7
X

3
Team
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
F1
F2
F3
GF
Ladder


















Colour Result
Green Win
Red Loss
Blue Draw

Bold – Home game



Ladder



























































































































































































































2009 AFL Ladder


Team P W L D PF PA % Pts

1

St Kilda
22
20
2
0
2197
1411

155.71

80

2

Geelong (P)
22
18
4
0
2312
1815

127.38

72

3

Western Bulldogs
22
15
7
0
2378
1940

122.58

60

4

Collingwood
22
15
7
0
2174
1778

122.27

60

5

Adelaide
22
14
8
0
2104
1789

117.61

56

6

Brisbane Lions
22
13
8
1
2017
1890

106.72

54

7

Carlton
22
13
9
0
2270
2055

110.46

52

8

Essendon
22
10
11
1
2080
2127

97.79

42

9

Hawthorn
22
9
13
0
1962
2120

92.55

36

10

Port Adelaide
22
9
13
0
1990
2244

88.68

36

11

West Coast
22
8
14
0
1893
2029

93.30

32

12

Sydney
22
8
14
0
1888
2027

93.14

32

13

North Melbourne
22
7
14
1
1680
2015

83.37

30

14

Fremantle
22
6
16
0
1747
2259

77.34

24

15

Richmond
22
5
16
1
1774
2388

74.29

22

16

Melbourne
22
4
18
0
1706
2285

74.66

16

Key: P = Played, W = Won, L = Lost, D = Drawn, PF = Points for, PA = Points against




Ladder progression



  • Numbers highlighted in green indicate that the team finished the round inside the top 8.

  • Numbers highlighted in blue indicates the team finished first on the ladder in that round.

  • Numbers highlighted in red indicates the team finished in last place on the ladder in that round.






























































































































































































































































































































































































































































Team
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
1
St Kilda
4 8 12 16 20 24 28 32 36 40 44 48 52 56 60 64 68 72 76 76 76 80
2
Geelong
4 8 12 16 20 24 28 32 36 40 44 48 52 52 52 56 60 64 64 68 68 72
3
Western Bulldogs
4 8 12 12 12 12 16 20 20 24 28 32 36 40 40 44 44 48 48 52 56 60
4
Collingwood
0 4 4 8 8 12 12 12 16 20 24 28 32 36 40 40 44 48 52 56 60 60
5
Adelaide
4 4 8 8 12 12 12 12 16 20 24 28 32 36 40 40 44 44 44 48 52 56
6
Brisbane Lions
4 4 8 8 8 12 16 20 20 24 24 28 32 32 36 40 44 44 46 46 50 54
7
Carlton
4 8 8 8 12 12 12 16 16 20 24 24 24 28 32 36 36 40 44 48 52 52
8
Essendon
0 4 8 8 12 12 16 16 20 20 20 24 28 28 32 32 32 32 34 38 38 42
9
Hawthorn
0 0 4 4 8 12 12 16 20 20 24 24 24 24 28 32 32 32 32 32 36 36
10
Port Adelaide
4 4 8 12 12 16 16 20 20 20 24 24 24 28 28 32 32 36 36 36 36 36
11
West Coast
0 4 4 8 8 8 12 12 12 12 12 12 16 16 16 16 16 20 24 28 28 32
12
Sydney
0 4 4 8 8 12 12 16 20 20 20 20 20 24 24 24 28 28 32 32 32 32
13
North Melbourne
4 4 4 8 8 8 12 12 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 18 18 18 22 22 26 30
14
Fremantle
0 0 0 0 4 8 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 16 16 20 20 24 24
15
Richmond
0 0 0 0 4 4 4 4 4 8 8 12 12 12 12 14 18 22 22 22 22 22
16
Melbourne
0 0 0 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 8 12 12 12 12 12 16 16 16


Finals series

























































































































































































 
Qualifying / Elimination finals

Semi-finals

Preliminary finals

Grand final
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
QF1: 6 September, MCG
 

1
 St Kilda

12.8 (80)
 

4
 Collingwood
7.10 (52)
 
 
SF1: 12 September, MCG
 

 
 
 Collingwood

12.11 (83)
 
 

EF1: 4 September, AAMI Stadium
 
 
 Adelaide
11.12 (78)
 
 
 
PF1: 18 September, MCG

5
 Adelaide

26.10 (166)
 
 
 
 St Kilda

9.6 (60)
 

8
 Essendon
10.10 (70)
 
 
 
 
 Western Bulldogs
7.11 (53)
 
 
GF: 26 September, MCG
 
 
 
 
 St Kilda
9.14 (68)
 
EF2: 5 September, The Gabba
 
 
 
PF2: 19 September, MCG
 
 
 Geelong

12.8 (80)

6
 Brisbane Lions

16.15 (111)
 
 
 
 
 Geelong

17.18 (120)
 

7
 Carlton
15.14 (104)
 
 
SF2: 11 September, MCG
 
 
 
 Collingwood
6.11 (47)
 

 
 
 Western Bulldogs

16.11 (107)
 
 

QF2: 5 September, MCG
 
 
 Brisbane Lions
8.8 (56)
 
 

2
 Geelong

14.12 (96)
 

3
 Western Bulldogs
12.10 (82)
 


Week one

























































Qualifying and Elimination Finals


4 September (8:15 pm)

Adelaide 26.10 (166)
def.

Essendon 10.10 (70)

AAMI Stadium (crowd: 50,393)

Report
5 September (2:30 pm)

Geelong 14.12 (96)
def.

Western Bulldogs 12.10 (82)

MCG (crowd: 74,007)

Report
5 September (7:30 pm)

Brisbane Lions 16.15 (111)
def.

Carlton 15.14 (104)

The Gabba (crowd: 32,702)

Report
6 September (2:30 pm)

St Kilda 12.8 (80)
def.

Collingwood 7.10 (52)

MCG (crowd: 84,213)

Report


  • Brisbane came back from 30 points down early in the final quarter to defeat Carlton by 7 points.



Week two









































Semi Finals


11 September (7:45 pm)

Western Bulldogs 16.11 (107)
def.

Brisbane Lions 8.8 (56)

MCG (crowd: 47,030)

Report
12 September (7:30 pm)

Collingwood 12.11 (83)
def.

Adelaide 11.12 (78)

MCG (crowd: 62,184)

Report



Week three









































Preliminary Finals


18 September (7:45 pm)

St Kilda 9.6 (60)
def.

Western Bulldogs 7.11 (53)

MCG (crowd: 78,245)

Report
19 September (7:30 pm)

Geelong 17.18 (120)
def.

Collingwood 6.11 (47)

MCG (crowd: 87,258)

Report



Week four





































































Grand Final


26 September (2:30 pm)

St Kilda
def. by

Geelong

MCG (crowd: 99,251)

Report

3.2 (20)
7.7 (49)
9.11 (65)
 9.14 (68)
Q1
Q2
Q3
 Final
3.0 (18)
7.1 (43)
9.4 (58)
 12.8 (80)

Umpires: McBurney, Rosebury, Ryan
Norm Smith Medal: Paul Chapman (Geelong)





Schneider 2
Goddard, Hayes, Dempster, Jones, Koschitzke, Riewoldt, Montagna 1

Goals
3 Chapman
2 Mooney, Hawkins, Rooke
1 Selwood, Byrnes, Ablett

Gram, Hayes, Ball, Jones, Montagna, Baker, Goddard

Best

Chapman, Rooke, Milburn, Taylor, Selwood, Ablett, Corey, Bartel, Ling, Scarlett

Goddard (broken nose and collarbone), Riewoldt (torn adductor muscle)

Injuries

Chapman (hamstring), Taylor (broken hand)
Nil

Reports
Nil



  • The Grand Final between St Kilda and Geelong was the first time these two teams had played each other in a Grand Final.

  • For the first time since the 1984 Grand Final, a team was behind at three-quarter time and went on to win the premiership.

  • For the first time since the 1989 Grand Final, a team had won three quarters and still lost the premiership.

  • In the whole finals series (until the Grand Final), all the home sides had won.




Awards



  • The Brownlow Medal was awarded to Gary Ablett, Jr. of Geelong, who polled 30 votes during the home and away season.

  • The AFL Rising Star was awarded to Daniel Rich of the Brisbane Lions, who received the maximum 45 votes.

  • The Coleman Medal was awarded to Brendan Fevola of Carlton, who kicked 86 goals during the home and away season.

  • The Wooden Spoon was "awarded" to Melbourne for the second year in a row. Melbourne finished the season in last place on the ladder after 22 rounds, with just 4 wins.

  • The McClelland Trophy was awarded to St Kilda for finishing 1st on the ladder during the premiership season.

  • The AFL Players Association Awards were as follows:

    • The Leigh Matthews Trophy was awarded to Gary Ablett, Jr. from Geelong for being the Most Valuable Player for the third year in a row.

    • The Robert Rose Award went to Joel Selwood from Geelong for being the Most Courageous Player throughout the premiership season.

    • The Best Captain award went to Jonathan Brown of the Brisbane Lions for the second time, after winning the award in 2007.

    • The Best First-Year Player award was won by Daniel Rich from the [[Brisbane Lions|Brisbane Lions]]. Rich blitzed the competition, receiving 463 votes, and the runner-up receiving just 45.





Best and fairest









































































































Club
Award name
Winner
Ref.

Adelaide

Malcolm Blight Medal

Bernie Vince
[5]

Brisbane Lions

Merrett-Murray Medal

Jonathan Brown
[6]

Carlton

John Nicholls Medal

Chris Judd
[7]

Collingwood

Copeland Trophy

Dane Swan
[8]

Essendon

Crichton Medal

Jobe Watson
[9]

Fremantle

Doig Medal

Aaron Sandilands
[10]

Geelong

Carji Greeves Medal

Gary Ablett / Corey Enright
[11]

Hawthorn

Peter Crimmins Medal

Sam Mitchell
[12]

Melbourne

Keith 'Bluey' Truscott Medal

Aaron Davey
[13]

North Melbourne

Syd Barker Medal

Andrew Swallow
[14]

Port Adelaide

John Cahill Medal

Warren Tredrea
[15]

Richmond

Jack Dyer Medal

Brett Deledio
[16]

St Kilda

Trevor Barker Award

Nick Riewoldt
[17]

Sydney

Bob Skilton Medal

Ryan O'Keefe
[18]

West Coast

Club Champion Award

Darren Glass
[19]

Western Bulldogs

Charles Sutton Medal

Matthew Boyd
[20]


AFL Rising Star



The 2009 award was won by Daniel Rich from the Brisbane Lions.[21]



Goal of the Year



The Australian Football League celebrates the best goal of the season through the annual Goal of the Year competition. From 2009 onwards, the commercial name for the award is the AFL Stores Goal of the Year.


Nominations[22]



  • Round 1 – Shannon Hurn (West Coast)

  • Round 2 – Jason Winderlich (Essendon)

  • Round 3 – Taylor Walker (Adelaide)

  • Round 4 – Ryan Houlihan (Carlton)

  • Round 5 – Gary Ablett, Jr. (Geelong)

  • Round 6 – Drew Petrie (North Melbourne)

  • Round 7 – Cyril Rioli (Hawthorn) – Winner[23]

  • Round 8 – Michael Osborne (Hawthorn)

  • Round 9 – Stephen Milne (St. Kilda)

  • Round 10 – Mark LeCras (West Coast)

  • Round 11 – David Rodan (Port Adelaide)

  • Round 12 – David Rodan (Port Adelaide)

  • Round 13 – Nic Naitanui (West Coast)

  • Round 14 – Dale Thomas (Collingwood)

  • Round 15 – Brendan Fevola (Carlton)

  • Round 16 – David Rodan (Port Adelaide)

  • Round 17 – Lance Franklin (Hawthorn)

  • Round 18 – Leon Davis (Collingwood)

  • Round 19 – Adam Schneider (St Kilda)

  • Round 20 – Liam Jurrah (Melbourne)

  • Round 21 – Brad Dick (Collingwood)

  • Round 22 – Shannon Byrnes (Geelong)



Mark of the Year



The Australian Football League celebrates the best mark of the season through the annual Mark of the Year competition. From 2009 onwards, the commercial name for the award is the Hungry Jack's Mark of the Year.


Nominations[24]



  • Round 1 – Simon Wiggins (Carlton)

  • Round 2 – Jay Schulz (Richmond)

  • Round 3 – Matthew Lloyd (Essendon)

  • Round 4 – Tom Logan (Port Adelaide)

  • Round 5 – Tom Hawkins (Geelong)

  • Round 6 – Joel Selwood (Geelong)

  • Round 7 – Patrick Ryder (Essendon)

  • Round 8 – Paul Bevan (Sydney)

  • Round 9 – Heath Grundy (Sydney)

  • Round 10 – David Mundy (Fremantle)

  • Round 11 – Kurt Tippett (Adelaide)

  • Round 12 – Nic Naitanui (West Coast)

  • Round 13 – Josh Hill (Western Bulldogs)

  • Round 14 – Darren Glass (West Coast)

  • Round 15 – Jayden Post (Richmond)

  • Round 16 – Liam Jurrah (Melbourne)

  • Round 17 – Brendan Fevola (Carlton)

  • Round 18 – Jimmy Bartel (Geelong)

  • Round 19 – Quinten Lynch (West Coast)

  • Round 20 – Lewis Roberts-Thomson (Sydney)

  • Round 21 – Max Rooke (Geelong)

  • Round 22 – Brett Burton (Adelaide) – Winner[23]



AFL Army Award



The Australian Football League, with the support of the Australian Army, recognises players who produce an act or acts of bravery or selflessness to promote the cause of his team during a game. Each week three players and what they did are made available on the AFL Army Award website for supporters to vote on. The player with the highest percentage of the vote is the AFL Army Award nominee for that round.


Nominations


For the full list of round-by-round nominees, see 2009 AFL Army Award.



  • Round 1 – James Kelly (Geelong)

  • Round 2 – Campbell Brown (Hawthorn)

  • Round 3 – Luke Ball (St Kilda)

  • Round 4 – Ricky Dyson (Essendon)

  • Round 5 – Lenny Hayes (St Kilda)

  • Round 6 – Martin Mattner (Sydney)

  • Round 7 – Bryce Gibbs (Carlton)

  • Round 8 – Barry Hall (Sydney)

  • Round 9 – Matt White (Richmond)

  • Round 10 – Travis Varcoe (Geelong)

  • Round 11 – Scott McMahon (North Melbourne)

  • Round 12 – Brad Green (Melbourne)

  • Round 13 – Patrick Dangerfield (Adelaide)

  • Round 14 – Ryan Griffen (Western Bulldogs)

  • Round 15 – Nathan Eagleton (Western Bulldogs)

  • Round 16 – Jacob Surjan (PA Adelaide)

  • Round 17 – Cameron Mooney (Geelong)

  • Round 18 – Aaron Davey (Melbourne)

  • Round 19 – Brett Kirk (Sydney)

  • Round 20 – Stephen Milne (St Kilda)

  • Round 21 – Max Rooke (Geelong)

  • Round 22 – Tom Hawkins (Geelong) – Winner



Club leadership









































































































Club
Coach
Captain(s)
Vice Captain(s)/Leadership Group

Adelaide

Neil Craig

Simon Goodwin

Tyson Edwards, Brett Burton, Ben Rutten, Nathan van Berlo, Michael Doughty, Scott Stevens[25]

Brisbane Lions

Michael Voss

Jonathan Brown

Simon Black, Luke Power, Jed Adcock, Daniel Merrett

Carlton

Brett Ratten

Chris Judd

Heath Scotland, Nick Stevens

Collingwood

Mick Malthouse

Nick Maxwell

Josh Fraser (vc), Scott Pendlebury (vc), Shane O’Bree, Dane Swan, Tarkyn Lockyer[26]

Essendon

Matthew Knights

Matthew Lloyd

Scott Lucas (vc), Mark McVeigh, Adam McPhee, Andrew Welsh, David Hille, Jobe Watson

Fremantle

Mark Harvey

Mathew Pavlich

Luke McPharlin, Aaron Sandilands, Antoni Grover, Des Headland

Geelong

Mark Thompson

Tom Harley

Cameron Ling (vc), Joel Corey (dvc), Joel Selwood, Gary Ablett, Jimmy Bartel, Corey Enright

Hawthorn

Alastair Clarkson

Sam Mitchell

Luke Hodge (vc)

Melbourne

Dean Bailey

James McDonald

Cameron Bruce (vc), Brad Green, Brad Miller, Brent Moloney, Brock McLean

North Melbourne

Dean Laidley

Brent Harvey

Drew Petrie (vc)

Port Adelaide

Mark Williams

Domenic Cassisi[27]

Shaun Burgoyne (vc), Kane Cornes (vc)

Richmond

Terry Wallace

Chris Newman

Nathan Foley, Kelvin Moore, Brett Deledio[28]

St Kilda

Ross Lyon

Nick Riewoldt

Lenny Hayes

Sydney

Paul Roos

Brett Kirk[29]

Craig Bolton, Adam Goodes

West Coast

John Worsfold

Darren Glass

Dean Cox (vc), Tyson Stenglein, Matthew Priddis, Adam Selwood, Beau Waters

Western Bulldogs

Rodney Eade

Brad Johnson



Umpiring and rule changes


Two rule changes were introduced into the regular season[30]



  • If a player is not 'under pressure' and deliberately rushes a behind would be penalised by a free kick at the spot that the ball was rushed;

  • If a player tackles an opponent after he disposes of the ball, preventing him from taking further part in the play, then a free kick and 50m penalty is paid.


Umpires were also encouraged to recall a centre bounce if it is offline, throwing it up the second time.


Players contacting umpires continued to be an issue with several players fined for making contact with umpires as they retreated from ball-ups. In related offences, Collingwood's Heath Shaw was suspended for one week after touching an umpire's shoulder, and Hawthorn president Jeff Kennett was fined $5000 after criticising the umpires on radio.[31]



Coach changes
























Coach
Club
Caretaker Coach (for 2009)
Date
New Coach (2010– )

Terry Wallace

Richmond

Jade Rawlings
1 June 2009

Damien Hardwick

Dean Laidley

North Melbourne

Darren Crocker
16 June 2009

Brad Scott


See also


  • 2009 Australian football code crowds


References





  1. ^ Ben Cousins denied AFL return; 15 December 2008


  2. ^ 2009 NAB AFL Pre-Season and Rookie Drafts


  3. ^ Ralph, Jon (3 August 2011), "How Melbourne tanked in 2009", Herald Sun, Melbourne, VIC, retrieved 10 November 2011.mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  4. ^ Wilson, Caroline (20 February 2013), "Demons cleared, guilty, fined", The Age, Melbourne, VIC, retrieved 20 February 2013


  5. ^ Double delight for birthday boy afc.com.au. Retrieved 2 October 2009. Archived 4 October 2009.


  6. ^ Lions Club Champion winners lions.com.au. Retrieved 2 October 2009. Archived 4 October 2009.


  7. ^ "Judd best of the Blues". Fairfax Digital. 29 September 2009. Archived from the original on 1 October 2009. Retrieved 29 September 2009.


  8. ^ "Swan takes back-to-back Copeland Trophies". AFL.com.au. 2 October 2009. Archived from the original on 4 October 2009. Retrieved 2 October 2009.


  9. ^ "Watson wins, and more honours beckon". Fairfax Digital. 1 October 2009. Archived from the original on 3 October 2009. Retrieved 1 October 2009.


  10. ^ O'Donoghue, Craig (9 October 2009). "Honour for Sandilands as Tarrant vows to stay". The West Australian. Retrieved 10 October 2009.


  11. ^ "Ablett, Enright tie for B&F". gfc.com.au. 1 October 2009. Archived from the original on 4 October 2009. Retrieved 4 October 2009.


  12. ^ "Mitchell 2009 Peter Crimmins Medalist". hawthornfc.com.au. 3 October 2009. Archived from the original on 17 October 2009. Retrieved 4 October 2009.


  13. ^ "Davey Wins His First Truscott Trophy". melbournefc.com.au. 21 October 2009. Retrieved 22 October 2009.


  14. ^ "Swallow wins Syd Barker Medal". kangaroos.com.au. 2 October 2009. Archived from the original on 21 October 2009. Retrieved 4 October 2009.


  15. ^ "Tredrea Wins His Fourth John Cahill Medal". portadelaidefc.com.au. 3 October 2009. Archived from the original on 6 October 2009. Retrieved 4 October 2009.


  16. ^ "Deledio goes back to back at B&F". richmondfc.com.au. 16 September 2007. Archived from the original on 27 September 2009. Retrieved 19 September 2009.


  17. ^ "Riewoldt's B&F win sets new record". saints.com.au. 3 October 2009. Archived from the original on 6 October 2009. Retrieved 4 October 2009.


  18. ^ "O'Keefe named Club Champion". sydneyswans.com.au. 11 September 2007. Archived from the original on 27 September 2009. Retrieved 19 September 2009.


  19. ^ "Glass wins club champion award". westcoasteagles.com.au. 12 September 2007. Archived from the original on 27 September 2009. Retrieved 19 September 2009.


  20. ^ "Boyd wins Charles Sutton Medal". westernbulldogs.com.au. 3 October 2009. Archived from the original on 6 October 2009. Retrieved 4 October 2009.


  21. ^ Holmesby, Luke (2 September 2009). "Rich wins rising star". AFL.com.au. Archived from the original on 7 October 2009. Retrieved 4 July 2010.


  22. ^ "2009 AFL Stores Goal of the Year". Archived from the original on 24 July 2009. Retrieved 19 July 2009.


  23. ^ ab Burton, Rioli win mark and goal of the year Archived 29 September 2009 at the Wayback Machine afl.com.au. Retrieved 4 October 2009.


  24. ^ "2009 Hungry Jacks Mark of the Year". Archived from the original on 6 September 2009. Retrieved 3 September 2009.


  25. ^ "Goodwin to lead Crows again". AFL. 5 December 2008. Archived from the original on 5 December 2008. Retrieved 7 December 2008.


  26. ^ Maxwell announced as Magpie captain; 17 December 2008; collingwoodfc.com.au


  27. ^ Cassisi takes over Power leadership; 9 February 2009; ABC


  28. ^ Chris Newman now top Tiger; 19 November 2008; Fox Sports


  29. ^ Co-captaincy for Goodes; 13 February 2009; AFL


  30. ^ All clear for rushed behind rule; (20 March 2009)


  31. ^ Smith, Patrick (20 April 2009) Umpires cop it from all sides




External links



  • AFL official website

  • 2009 AFL Fixture

  • 2009 Season – AFL Tables










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