Jarrad Schofield Explained

Jarrad Schofield
Birth Date:30 January 1975
Originalteam:Subiaco (WAFL)
Debutdate:Round 11, 13 June 1993
Debutteam:West Coast Eagles
Debutopponent:Sydney Swans
Debutstadium:Sydney Cricket Ground
Height:180 cm
Weight:76 kg
Statsend:2006
Years1:1993–1998
Club1:West Coast
Games Goals1:63 (34)
Years2:1999–2004
Club2:Port Adelaide
Games Goals2:131 (91)
Years3:2005–2006
Club3:Fremantle
Coachyears1:2024–
Coachgames Wins1:5 (2–3–0)
Coachstatsend:round 22, 2024
Games Goals3:12 (2)
Games Goalstotal:206 (127)
Careerhighlights:AFL

WAFL

  • Subiaco premiership player (2006, 2007, 2008)
  • Subiaco premiership coach (2014, 2015, 2018)

Jarrad Schofield (born 30 January 1975) is an Australian rules footballer who played for the West Coast Eagles, Port Adelaide and Fremantle in the Australian Football League (AFL) and Subiaco in the West Australian Football League (WAFL).

He attended school at Wesley College in South Perth.

AFL career

West Coast career

Schofield was drafted with the 49th selection in the 1992 AFL draft by the West Coast Eagles. He made his debut in 1993, but only played seven games in three seasons, until 1996, when he played 22 games and won an AFL Rising Star nomination, that he became an important player at the club. He was traded to Port Adelaide at the end of the 1998 season for Scott Cummings.

Port Adelaide career

He was traded to Port Adelaide in the 1998 trade period in return for Scott Cummings. He was noted for being a useful running outside midfielder, used as a "link man" in the midfield. In Round 5, 2002, he won the Showdown Medal.[1] In 2004, Schofield enjoyed an outstanding season where he amassed a high amount of disposals for Port, and topped it off by being a part of Port's premiership side.

Fremantle career

In 2005 Schofield went back home to Perth, this time playing with the Fremantle Football Club. In 2005 he struggled to get on the field with numerous injuries and had what was considered a disappointing season which was much different from the heights he reached in 2004.

Schofield struggled to break into the Fremantle side in 2006, playing only two games for the season. He announced prior to Round 22 that he would retire from AFL football at the end of the 2006 season.[2]

WAFL career

Subiaco career

Schofield made his debut for Subiaco in the West Australian Football League (WAFL) in 1993 and played over 100 games for them until his retirement in 2008.[3] He was a member of their three WAFL Grand Final winning sides, in 2006, 2007 and 2008.

Coaching career

At the end of the 2008 season he retired from the WAFL and was appointed coach of the Subiaco colts side. In 2012 he joined Claremont as an assistant coach, before being named as the senior coach of Subiaco for the 2013 season.[4]

After a tough 2013 season where Subiaco could only manage an 8th-placed finish in the competition, Schofield led the Lions to a dramatic turnaround with a second-placed finish on the ladder in 2014, and despite a loss to East Perth in the first final, would turn the tables on them in the grand final where they won by 16 points, their first Premiership since 2008. Schofield would then lead Subiaco to the Minor Premiership in 2015 and would win that seasons Grand Final convincingly over West Perth. Two further Minor Premierships were ensured in seasons 2016 and 2017, however would end up losing to Peel Thunder in both Grand Finals-with Peel boasting a significant number of Fremantle Dockers players.

The year 2018 would see Schofield and Subiaco end up making huge amends for the 2016 and 2017 disappointments, which drove them to an undefeated 2018 season and a huge premiership victory over West Perth. As a result, Schofield would end up resigning from the senior coaching position,

Port Adelaide assistant coach (2019-2021)

Schofield joinied his former club Port Adelaide as an assistant coach for the 2019 season under senior coach Ken Hinkley reuniting with former premiership teammates in Brett Montgomery and Dean Brogan.

West Coast Eagles

At the conclusion of the 2021 AFL season, he ended up joining the West Coast Eagles as an assistant coach under senior coach Adam Simpson in the role of Strategy and Stoppage Coach.

During the 2024 AFL season, he was appointed caretaker senior coach of the West Coast Eagles for the remainder of the season, after the club sacked Simpson in the middle of the season after Round 17, 2024.[5] [6]

Playing statistics

Statistics are correct to the end of the 2006 season[7]

|- style="background-color: #EAEAEA"!scope="row" style="text-align:center"|1993|style="text-align:center;"||46||1||0||3||4||1||5||1||1||0.0||3.0||4.0||1.0||5.0||1.0||1.0|-!scope="row" style="text-align:center"|1994|style="text-align:center;"||21||4||1||2||13||12||25||7||3||0.3||0.5||3.3||3.0||6.3||1.8||0.8|- style="background:#eaeaea;"!scope="row" style="text-align:center"|1995|style="text-align:center;"||21||2||1||0||5||10||15||1||4||0.5||0.0||2.5||5.0||7.5||0.5||2.0|-!scope="row" style="text-align:center"|1996|style="text-align:center;"||21||22||22||12||216||141||357||54||25||1.0||0.5||9.8||6.4||16.2||2.5||1.1|- style="background:#eaeaea;"!scope="row" style="text-align:center"|1997|style="text-align:center;"||21||20||5||9||202||111||313||53||28||0.3||0.5||10.1||5.6||15.7||2.7||1.4|-!scope="row" style="text-align:center"|1998|style="text-align:center;"||21||14||5||5||103||52||155||33||7|| 0.4||0.4||7.4||3.7||11.1||2.4||0.5|- style="background:#eaeaea;"!scope="row" style="text-align:center"|1999|style="text-align:center;"||6||21||19||12||208||96||304||68||22||0.9||0.6||9.9||4.6||14.5||3.2||1.0|-! scope="row" style="text-align:center"|2000|style="text-align:center;"||6||18||17||13||153||76||229||40||21||0.9||0.7||8.5||4.2||12.7||2.2||1.2|- style="background:#eaeaea;"!scope="row" style="text-align:center"|2001|style="text-align:center;"||6||24||16||15||312||145||457||92||32||0.7||0.6||13.0||6.0||19.0||3.8||1.3|-!scope="row" style="text-align:center"|2002|style="text-align:center;"||6||20||16||12||247||140||387||100||28||0.8||0.6||12.4||7.0||19.4||5.0||1.4|- style="background:#eaeaea;"!scope="row" style="text-align:center"|2003|style="text-align:center;"||6||23||10||10||321||123||444||107||44||0.4||0.4||14.0||5.3||19.3||4.7||1.9|-!scope="row" style="text-align:center"|2004|style="text-align:center;"||6||25||13||9||280||166||446||95||54||0.5||0.4||11.2||6.6||17.8||3.8||2.2|- style="background:#eaeaea;"!scope="row" style="text-align:center"|2005|style="text-align:center;"||17||10||2||1||88||43||131||33||13||0.2||0.1||8.8||4.3||13.1||3.3||1.3|-!scope="row" style="text-align:center"|2006|style="text-align:center;"||17||2||0||1||17||12||29||8||5||0.0||0.5||8.5||6.0||14.5||4.0||2.5|- class="sortbottom"!colspan=3|Career!206!127!104!2169!1128!3297!692!287!0.6!0.5!10.5!5.5!16.0!3.4!1.4|}

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Port storms home to win Showdown XI. Phelan. Jason. 27 April 2002. 5 May 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20121002161547/http://www.afl.com.au/news/newsarticle/tabid/208/newsid/2926/default.aspx. 2 October 2012. dead.
  2. News: Schofield calls it quits. ABC. 29 August 2006. 22 March 2018.
  3. Web site: WAFL playing statistics. 22 March 2018.
  4. News: Jarrad Schofield set to coach Subiaco next season. Chris. Robinson. 25 September 2012. 22 March 2018.
  5. Web site: ‘It was time’: Adam Simpson and Eagles part, Schofield to take over. 10 July 2024. 10 July 2024.
  6. Web site: Schofield to stand in. 10 July 2024. 10 July 2024.
  7. Web site: Jarrad Schofield's player profile at AFL Tables. 22 March 2018.