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Who were all the coaches at the eagles? and what years?

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By what years, i mean, like what years were they as coach for?

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  1. West Coast Eagles Coaches:

    1987: Ron alexander

    1988:  john todd

    1989: john todd

    1990: mick malthouse

    1991:      mick malthouse

    1992:     mick malthouse

    1993:      mick malthouse

    1994:     mick malthouse

    1995:     mick malthouse

    1996:     mick malthouse

    1997:      mick malthouse

    1998:     mick malthouse

    1999:     mick malthouse

    2000:   ken judge

    2001:   ken judge

    2002:  woosha

    2003:  woosha

    2004:  woosha

    2005:  woosha

    2006:   woosha

    2007:   woosha

    2008:   woosha

    GO EAGLES!!!!


  2. West Coast Eagles Coaches:

    1987: Ron Alexander

    1988: John Todd

    1989: John Todd

    1990: Mick Malthouse

    1991: Mick Malthouse

    1992: Mick Malthouse

    1993: Mick Malthouse

    1994: Mick Malthouse

    1995: Mick Malthouse

    1996: Mick Malthouse

    1997: Mick Malthouse

    1998: Mick Malthouse

    1999: Mick Malthouse

    2000: Ken Judge

    2001: Ken Judge

    2002: John Worsfold

    2003: John Worsfold

    2004: John Worsfold

    2005: John Worsfold

    2006: John Worsfold

    2007: John Worsfold

    2008: John Worsfold

    The West Coast Eagles were formed initially when Indian Pacific (a Victorian investor company) applied in 1986 to enter a West Australian based franchise team in the Victorian Football League

    The new club managed to draw a creditable squad together, mostly out of the WAFL, but also with a few players returning from Victoria to play for the new Perth based side. In a lavish function at the then Merlin Hotel (now the Hyatt Perth), in October of 1986, the club released its new colours, its inaugural squad, and announced the club's name would be the "West Coast Eagles".[2]

    The club's reception in West Australian football circles was mixed, with many diehard supporters of the WAFL opposed to the entry of the VFL into Perth. But with a good array of local talent on board, including the return from Melbourne of 1983 Brownlow Medallist Ross Glendinning as the club's inaugural captain, the Eagles caught the attention of a majority of the football supporters of Western Australia. West Coast's first official match of any sort was a pre-season game against Footscray (now Western Bulldogs) on March 3, 1987, which the Eagles won.

    The club's first official home and away match at Subiaco Oval against Richmond on March 29, 1987 was played before a respectable crowd of 23,897. The fledgeling Eagles, down by 33 points at the final change, somehow managed to outscore the visiting and tiring Tigers nine goals to one in the final term to run out 14 point winners - a club record last quarter comeback that lasted until round 10 of 2006.[3] By season's end, the club had split its games with eleven wins and eleven losses for a seventh place finish, but despite this quite respectable effort, inaugural coach Ron Alexander was sacked from the position and replaced with WA coaching legend John Todd.

    The 1988 season saw the Eagles improve to become one of the strongest teams of the competition, finishing the home and away season in fourth, before narrowly losing the Elimination Final to Melbourne by two points. Despite this loss, the mood was upbeat at the club for the future, although it was the last game for inaugural captain Glendinning.[4]

    However, the 1989 season put the club under a lot of pressure. Injuries and poor form led to the club only winning two matches in the first fifteen rounds of the season, culminating in the "Windy Hill Massacre", where the Eagles lost by a club record 142 points to Essendon. In the nadir of this season, with major financial problems besetting the club and a bleak outlook, there was even talk of disbanding the club and reverting back to the WAFL as the senior competition in Western Australia. However, the Eagles rallied with five wins in the last seven weeks of the season. While it was enough to stave off the wolves, it was not enough to keep John Todd in the role of senior coach, nor allow first year captain Murray Rance to retain the role.

    [edit] 1990s: The Malthouse Years

    As the VFL made way for the new AFL the Eagles entered the 1990s with a new coach, Mick Malthouse, a Victorian recruited from Footscray, and a new captain in Steve Malaxos who had won the club's first club champion award in 1987. The change in leadership, and the rise of a few younger players, led to a resurgence at the club winning sixteen games on the way to a third place finish at the end of the home and away season. This led to a berth in the Qualifying Final against Collingwood, which resulted in a famous draw,[5] but the Eagles could not win the replay, and despite beating Melbourne in the First Semi Final, bowed out a fortnight later to Essendon in the Preliminary Final.

    As 1991 started, out of favour captain Malaxos was replaced with youngster John Worsfold. That didn't seem to affect the club as the season saw what was probably the most dominant Eagles side, winning the first twelve games of the season, a club-record nineteen games in the home and away series, and the Eagles' first minor premiership.[6] However, the young team struggled with the finals pressure exerted by such a dominant season, and while they made the Grand Final, it was lost to Hawthorn by 53 points in front of a crowd of 75,230. It was the only Grand Final ever to be played at Waverley Park, and the first in the AFL to feature a non-Victorian side.

    1991 AFL Grand Final G B Total

    Hawthorn 20 19 139

    West Coast 13 8 86

    Venue: Waverley Park Crowd: 75,230 [5]

    The Eagles weren't as strong through the 1992 season, but managed to get a reasonable spot in the finals, winning a classic final against Hawthorn[7] on the way to a Grand Final appearance, this time against Geelong at the MCG. The Eagles struggled early in the match, trailing by as much as four goals, but ended up over-running the Cats to win by 28 points and claim the club's first ever premiership, with Peter Matera winning the Norm Smith Medal for best on ground. The 1992 premiership was the first senior AFL premiership won by a team from outside Victoria.

    1992 AFL Grand Final G B Total

    West Coast 16 17 113

    Geelong 12 13 85

    Venue: Melbourne Cricket Ground Crowd: 95,007 [6]

    After a 1993 season that was a washout when the Eagles just never really got going (although still making the finals), in 1994 the Eagles again won the minor premiership at the end of the home and away season, and this time managed to carry the form through the finals series, despite a scare in the opening week of the finals when Collingwood nearly sneaked over the line in a close game at the WACA Ground. In the end the Eagles did not lose a match in the series, culminating in an 80 point thrashing of Geelong in the Grand Final for the club's second premiership. Dean Kemp was awarded the Norm Smith Medal for best on ground on this occasion.

    1994 AFL Grand Final G B Total

    West Coast 20 23 143

    Geelong 8 15 63

    Venue: Melbourne Cricket Ground Crowd: 93,860 [7]

    In 1995, a local AFL rival the Fremantle Football Club was introduced to the WA football market, heightening competition for the West Australian audience and forming a fierce rivalry to become the Western Derby, a twice yearly encounter between the two clubs. The derby was for much of the 90s a West Coast affair, with the Eagles winning the first nine encounters before the Dockers finally won the later derby of 1999.

    Meanwhile the club's performances on the field slipped a little from the heights of the early 90s, but never so far as to not make the finals. After bowing out quietly in 1995, the Eagles won their opening final in 1996, resulting in what would normally have been a home semi final against Essendon. However, due to what Eagles fans saw as a poorly constructed contract between the league and the MCG, the game was scheduled to be played at the MCG instead of Subiaco.[8] In all the furore the Eagles were comprehensively thrashed. On a brighter note, young Eagle Ben Cousins won the club's first AFL Rising Star award for the best rookie in the competition for 1996.[9]

    The 1997 and 1998 seasons saw the Eagles mostly making up numbers in the finals, bowing out early both years, with the most notable incident being when captain John Worsfold was dropped for what would have been his final appearance in the 1998 Semi Final; [10] oddly mirroring what happened to his predecessor in the role, Steve Malaxos, who was dropped for the 1990 Preliminary Final and never played for the club again.[11] Worsfold was replaced in the captaincy by his vice captain, Guy McKenna.

    In the second week of the 1999 season the Eagles again found themselves in the situation where they earned a home final (after beating the Western Bulldogs at the MCG in the first week), but once again the MCG contract denied the club the right to host the final, and the Eagles faced Carlton and lost on the road.[12] This rule later cost the Adelaide Crows the right to host a Semi Final in 2002, and the Brisbane Lions a Preliminary Final in 2004 before it was finally abolished.

    The 1999 season is probably more remembered for the continual rumours that linked coach Mick Malthouse to the senior coaching role at Collingwood; the rumours ended up being proven correct when Malthouse was released from his contract to the club for the 2000 season, to be replaced with Ken Judge. Also notable in 1999 was the first (and currently only) Eagle to top the AFL goalkicking, when Scott Cummings won the Coleman Medal with 95 goals.[13]

    [edit] 2000-2001: The Ken Judge Years

    The Eagles might have started Judge's reign as coach impressively, thrashing reigning premiers North Melbourne in the opening game of 2000, and winning two games by over 100 points in three weeks against Adelaide and Fremantle, but it was to turn sour quite quickly in the latter part of the 2000 season. Sitting at six wins and five losses at the half way point of the season, injury struck, and West Coast slumped to win only one more match for the season, and missing the finals for the first time since 1989, and another change of captaincy, as McKenna retired to be replaced with Dean Kemp and Ben Cousins as co-captains. The Eagles also introduced a much maligned ochre colour to their home and away uniforms in these years, which have since been abandoned for the more traditional uniforms worn in previous years.

    However bad 2000 might have been, the 2001 season was the club's all time nadir. In a shocking season, cr

  3. West Coast Eagles Coaches:

    1987: Ron Alexander

    1988: John Todd

    1989: John Todd

    1990: Mick Malthouse

    1991: Mick Malthouse

    1992: Mick Malthouse

    1993: Mick Malthouse

    1994: Mick Malthouse

    1995: Mick Malthouse

    1996: Mick Malthouse

    1997: Mick Malthouse

    1998: Mick Malthouse

    1999: Mick Malthouse

    2000: Ken Judge

    2001: Ken Judge

    2002: John Worsfold

    2003: John Worsfold

    2004: John Worsfold

    2005: John Worsfold

    2006: John Worsfold

    2007: John Worsfold

    2008: John Worsfold

  4. Better visit this link http://vitzy.net/forum/Philadelphia-Eagl... for a complete list of Philadelphia Eagles head coaches with their corresponding terms in service.

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