West Coast Eagles Wiki
Phil Matera
Photo: aflphotos.com.au
DOB
27/11/75
Height
171cm
Weight
76 kg
Junior club
South Fremantle/Wagin JFC
Arrived
Traded from Fremantle at the end of the 1995 season with pick 3 (Brendon Fewster) for David Hynes
Number
Debut
Round 4 1996 vs Geelong
(101st Eagles player)
Games
179
Goals
389
Honours
All-Australian (2003)
Leading goalscorer (2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005)
Team 20 (2006)
B&F Top 10
4 (1999, 2000, 2003, 2004)
Best Finish
6th (1999, 2004)
Last app.
Departed
Retired ahead of the 2006 season
Other clubs
South Fremantle (WAFL) 1994-2005

The younger brother of Wally Matera and Peter Matera made a name for himself as a prolific goalscorer. While Peter made his name with electrifying runs on a wing, Phil spent the majority of his career closer to the goals, having an impact through immense tackling pressure as well as his obvious scoring ability.

West Coast career[]

Phil joined Peter at West Coast at the end of the 1995 season after Fremantle traded the rights to him, along with a top-three pick, for the serviceable David Hynes.

The diminutive goalsneak made his debut against Geelong at Subiaco early in 1996, alongside another fresh-faced young debutant in Ben Cousins. Just two weeks later he announced himself to the AFL world with a haul of 5 goals against Melbourne at Princes Park. However, after 1 goal in the next two weeks he was sent back to South Freo, where he stayed for the rest of the year.

That was the last time the Bulldogs saw a lot of the younger Matera. He kicked 30 goals in 19 games in his second season, with his performances including consecutives bags of 4 goals early in the year, and 3 goals against North Melbourne in a semi-final. 1998 was less successful, kicking just 13 goals from 12 games and getting sent back to South Fremantle on several occasions.

In 1999 Matera formed an extremely successful partnership with newly-arrived spearhead Scott Cummings. Feeding at the feet of the burly Cummings, “Fido” kicked 3 or more goals on no less than 11 occasions during the season, including a best-afield 5 goal effort against the Bulldogs, and finished with 51 goals for the year.

The partnership continued in 2000, with the duo bursting out of the blocks in the season-opener against North at the MCG. Matera kicked a then-career-high 6 goals and Cummings added 5. Cummings ultimately missed a fair chunk of the season due to injury and as a result Matera became more of a focal-point, and ended up pipping the full-forward for the goalkicking award with 49 goals to Cummings’ 47.

When Cummings fell out of favour in 2001 Matera gained a new offsider, the human wrecking-ball Troy Wilson. Injury problems limited Fido to just 31 goals from 16 games for the season, but he returned with a bang in 2002, kicking 46 goals for the season to win his second club goalkicking award. In the final home-and-away round he equalled his career-high with 6 goals as West Coast upset North Melbourne to scrape into the finals. Unfortunately he was held goal-less the following week for just the second time in the year as Essendon knocked the Eagles out of the finals.

With Wilson out of the side for most of 2003 the pint-sized Matera became an unlikely spearhead, a role he would hold for the remainder of his career. The tactic paid immediate dividends, with Fido setting a new career-high with 7 goals against the Saints early in the year, and following it up with another 5 against Adelaide the following week. He kicked another 6 against Carlton and a few more hauls of 5 and ended up with a massive 62 goals for the season. Matera was rewarded for the best year of his career with selection in a forward pocket in the All-Australian side.

He backed up in 2004 with another 61 goals, including another half-dozen total against Richmond. However, he was controversially left out of the All-Australian squad as selectors opted to name Brisbane midfielder Luke Power in a forward pocket.

Matera struggled with injury throughout 2005. Although his 38 goals were good enough to win him a fifth club goalscoring title, it was down on past years. Fido limped into the finals, suffered a groin injury the first-up win over Sydney and missed the preliminary final win against Adelaide.

Named to return for the grand final, Matera was ruled out by the club’s medical staff and replaced in the final side by Kasey Green. The history books will show that West Coast, without their two leading scorers for the season (Quinten Lynch also missed the game after being dropped earlier in the finals series), lost by less than a goal.

During the following offseason, Matera announced his retirement due to a chronic hip injury. He finished his career behind only Peter Sumich on the club’s all-time goalkicking table. He also held the somewhat unfortunate record of having played the most games for West Coast without obtaining a premiership medal, before being overtaken by Matt Priddis.

Stats[]

AFL Gm G B K M H D T Cl WAFL Gm G
1996 5 8 6 30 11 16 46 6 SF 16 25
1997 19 30 23 182 74 66 248 30 2 7
1998 14 13 13 93 32 49 142 25 10 7 17
1999 24 51 20 188 66 91 279 37 27 0
2000 19 49 30 164 57 55 219 26 15 0
2001 16 31 22 111 48 43 154 20 7 0
2002 21 46 16 136 63 66 202 36 17 0
2003 19 62 27 136 53 35 171 15 6 0
2004 23 61 42 155 65 48 203 32 11 0
2005 19 38 38 121 47 40 161 22 12 0
Tot 179 389 227 1316 516 509 1825 249 105
Avg 2.2 7.4 2.9 2.8 10.2 1.4 0.7

References[]

http://afltables.com/afl/stats/players/P/Phillip_Matera.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phillip_Matera

http://www.wafl.com.au/player/phillip-matera