2002 SANFL season

The 2002 South Australian National Football League season was the 123rd season of the top-level Australian rules football competition in South Australia.

2002 SANFL season
Teams9
PremiersSturt
(13th premiership)
Minor premiersCentral District
(5th minor premiership)
Matches played96
Attendance352,059 (3,667 per match)
Highest attendance35,187 (Grand Final, Sturt vs. Central District)
Ken Farmer MedallistDaniel Hargraves
North Adelaide (68 Goals)
Magarey MedallistTim Weatherald
Sturt (16 votes)
Jade Sheedy
Sturt (16 votes)

Ladder

2002 SANFL Ladder
TEAMPWLDPFPA%PTS
1 Central District 20 18 2 0 2360 1313 64.25 36
2 Norwood 20 17 3 0 2159 1544 58.30 34
3 Sturt (P) 20 16 4 0 1996 1402 58.74 32
4 Woodville-West Torrens 20 10 10 0 1666 1473 53.07 20
5 West Adelaide 20 10 10 0 1887 1913 49.66 20
6 Port Adelaide 20 6 14 0 1488 1739 46.11 12
7 North Adelaide 20 6 14 0 1637 2279 41.80 12
8 South Adelaide 20 4 16 0 1451 2159 40.19 8
9 Glenelg 20 3 17 0 1381 2203 38.53 6
Key: P = Played, W = Won, L = Lost, D = Drawn, PF = Points For, PA = Points Against, (P) = Premiers Click here for source

Grand final

2002 SANFL Grand Final
Sunday 6 October (2:10 pm) Central District def. by Sturt Football Park (crowd: 35,187)
0.1 (1)
2.4 (16)
5.6 (36)
 6.9 (45)
Q1
Q2
Q3
 Final
4.6 (30)
8.7 (55)
11.12 (78)
 13.14 (92)
gollark: It seems like AMD could have done a much better job than they did, though.
gollark: DRAM is what regular RAM sticks use: it uses a lot of capacitors to store data, which is cheap but high-latency to do anything with, and requires refreshing constantly. SRAM is just a bunch of transistors arranged to store data: it is very fast and low-power, but expensive because you need much more room for all the transistors.
gollark: They say they have 200 MB of SRAM on each (16nm) chip. That sounds hilariously expensive.
gollark: It's cool that they have a Vulkan-based version instead of just supporting CUDA only.
gollark: Swap on TPU *when*?

References


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