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・ 1979 US Open – Women's Singles
・ 1979 USAC Championship Car season
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・ 1979 USC Trojans football team
・ 1979 Venezuelan motorcycle Grand Prix
・ 1979 Venezuelan Primera División season
・ 1979 VFA season
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・ 1979 VFL season
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1979 WANFL season
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・ 1979 West Virginia Mountaineers football team
・ 1979 Whitbread Awards
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・ 1979 Wimbledon Championships
・ 1979 Wimbledon Championships – Men's Singles
・ 1979 Wimbledon Championships – Women's Singles
・ 1979 Winnipeg Blue Bombers season
・ 1979 Winston Western 500


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1979 WANFL season : ウィキペディア英語版
1979 WANFL season

The 1979 WANFL season was the ninety-fifth season of the West Australian National Football League in its various incarnations, and the last of forty-nine (including three under-age wartime seasons) under that moniker.
The season set many records for high scoring due to the still-ongoing drying of Perth’s climate〔See (Indian Ocean Climate Initiative: Stage 3: Summary for Policymakers )〕〔(Monthly Rainfall for Perth Regional Office ); (Monthly Rainfall for Perth Metro (Mount Lawley) )〕 and the new “interchange’ rule. The all-time record aggregate score of 60.18 (378) was set in the third last round between and 〔(WAFL Footy Facts: Highest Combined Scores )〕 and has never been approached since. 〔(WAFL Footy Facts: East Fremantle Highest Scores )〕 and 〔(WAFL Footy Facts: Claremont Highest scores )〕 also set records for highest senior score during the season, the former of which still stands. However, the overall average score of 112.52 points per team per game was not nearly so high as in the following few years under the ‘WAFL’ moniker.
A major highlight of the 1979 season was the all-time record attendance for local West Australian football of 52,781 in the Grand Final,〔Devaney, John; ''Full Points Footy’s WA Football Companion''; p. 12. ISBN 978-0-9556897-1-0〕 beating narrowly the previous record of 52,322 set in the 1975 decider.〔Devaney; ''Full Points Footy’s WA Football Companion''; pp. 126-129〕
The 1979 season was a critical turning point in the fortunes of many WANFL clubs. Perth, who had been a powerhouse ever since the end of World War II, winning six premierships and playing in the finals during twenty-four of the preceding thirty-two seasons, underwent a long-term decline that has seen the play in the finals since only in 1986, 1991 and 1997, and take the wooden spoon on seven occasions as opposed to none between 1936 and 1980. With the loss of a number of veterans and major coaching problems which culminated in the resignation of newcomer Percy Johnson for former premiership mentor Graham Campbell, West Perth, also a power club of the WANFL during the third-of-a-century before 1979, declined to their worst record since 1939 with only four wins. The Cardinals (latterly the Falcons) were to remain battlers until the middle 1990s when they moved to Arena Joondalup. On the other hand, the 1979 season saw and begin revivals after years near the bottom of the ladder that would see them dominate the competition during the 1980s.
==Home-and-away Season==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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