It has been captained by Matthew Pavlich since the beginning of the 2007 season. High profile players include former captain Peter Bell, vice captain Josh Carr, Jeff Farmer, and Paul Hasleby. The club is coached by Mark Harvey following the resignation of Chris Connolly on July 18, 2007.
The AFL announced on December 14 1993 that a new team would enter the league in 1995 and be based in Fremantle. The names "Fremantle Football Club", "Fremantle Dockers" and club colours were announced on July 12 1994. Their first training session was held on October 31 1994 at Fremantle Oval.
The decision to base the new club in Fremantle was primarily due to the long association of Australian rules football in Fremantle. The first match to be played in Fremantle occurred in the 1880s and the city quickly became a stronghold of the code, with Fremantle based teams winning 24 of the first 34 WAFL premierships . For over 100 years it has been represented by two strong clubs in the West Australian Football League: East Fremantle and South Fremantle. However it was not represented in a national club competition until 1995, eight years after the initial expansion of the then Victorian Football League in 1987 with the creation of rival Western Australian football team, the West Coast Eagles.
In February 1996, Levi Strauss & Co., which produces the Dockers brand of clothing, challenged the club's right to use the name "Fremantle Dockers", specifically on clothing. As a result, the club and AFL discontinued the official use of the "Dockers" nickname in 1997. However, the team is still known unofficially as "The Dockers", both inside and outside the club, including in their official team song Freo Way to Go and the official club magazine "Docker".
The team endured some tough years near the bottom of the premiership ladder, until they finished fifth after the home-and-away rounds in 2003 and made the finals for the first time. The elimination final against eighth placed Essendon at Subiaco Oval was then the club's biggest ever game, but ended in disappointment for the home team, with the finals experience of Essendon proving too strong for the young team. They then missed making the finals in the following two seasons, finishing both years with 11 wins, 11 loses and only 1 game outside the top 8.
After an average first half to the 2006 season, Fremantle finished the year with a club record 9 straight wins to earn themselves 3rd position at the end of the Home & Away season, a club record 15 wins in a year and a double chance for their September finals campaign. In the qualifying final against Adelaide at AAMI Stadium, the Dockers led for the first three quarters before being overrun by the Crows. The following week (September 15) saw the club win its first ever finals game in the semi-final against Melbourne at Subiaco Oval. The club subsequently earned a trip to Sydney to play in its first ever preliminary-final the following Friday night (September 22) at Telstra Stadium against the Sydney Swans, where they lost by 35 points.
Fremantle is the only currently active club the AFL that has not won a premiership (or played in a Grand Final), following Port Adelaide's win in 2004.
The club is also the only team never to have played in a drawn match, despite a controversial Round 5 match against St Kilda at Aurora Stadium in Launceston, Tasmania in 2006. The Saints trailed by a point when the final siren sounded, but the field umpires failed to hear the siren which many commentators had noted as being "dangerously quiet" during the game. St Kilda's Steven Baker then scored a behind, levelling the scores, before the siren was sounded a second time. Baker was awarded a free-kick for an infringement after he kicked the point and was allowed to take the kick again - which he also scored a behind from. Immediate protests from Fremantle players and officials failed to have any effect, causing controversy throughout Australian rules circles. However, the AFL overturned the result the following Wednesday — the first time this had occurred since 1900 — and awarded the win and four premiership points to Fremantle.
The team's home games are played at Subiaco Oval. Between 1995 and 2000 they also played home games at the WACA Ground.
| Seasons | Captain | Coach |
|---|---|---|
| 1995-1996 | Ben Allan | Gerard Neesham |
| 1997-1998 | Peter Mann | Gerard Neesham |
| 1999 | Chris Bond | Damian Drum |
| 2000-2001 | Shaun McManus & Adrian Fletcher (co-captains) | Damian Drum, Ben Allan from Rd 10, 2001 |
| 2002-2006 | Peter Bell | Chris Connolly |
| 2007-2008 | Matthew Pavlich | Chris Connolly, Mark Harvey from Rd 16, 2007 |
The Beacon Award is presented to the club’s best new talent. To be eligible, a player must be under the age of 21 years on or before 31 December of the previous year and have played less than 10 games at the start of the season (matching the AFL Rising Star criteria).
| Season | Doig Medal Winners | Beacon Award Winners | Best Clubman | Leading Goalkicker |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1995 | Peter Mann | Scott Chisholm | Peter Mann (33) | |
| 1996 | Stephen O'Reilly | Gavin Mitchell | Kingsley Hunter (33) | |
| 1997 | Dale Kickett | Mark Gale | Kingsley Hunter (32) | |
| 1998 | Jason Norrish | Brad Dodd | Chris Bond & Jason Norrish | Clive Waterhouse (30) |
| 1999 | Adrian Fletcher | Clem Michael | Ashley Prescott | Tony Modra (71) |
| 2000 | Troy Cook | Paul Hasleby | Dale Kickett & John Rankin | Clive Waterhouse (53) |
| 2001 | Peter Bell | Dion Woods | Leigh Brown | Justin Longmuir & Matthew Pavlich (28) |
| 2002 | Matthew Pavlich | Paul Medhurst | Shaun McManus | Trent Croad (42) |
| 2003 | Peter Bell | Graham Polak | Troy Longmuir | Paul Medhurst (50) |
| 2004 | Peter Bell | Andrew Browne | Matthew Carr | Paul Medhurst (41) |
| 2005 | Matthew Pavlich | David Mundy | Troy Cook | Matthew Pavlich (61) |
| 2006 | Matthew Pavlich | Marcus Drum | Luke Webster | Matthew Pavlich (71) |
| 2007 | Matthew Pavlich | Robert Warnock | Heath Black | Matthew Pavlich (72) |
| 2008 | Matthew Pavlich | Rhys Palmer | Luke Webster | Matthew Pavlich (67) |
The Fremantle Football Club uses the anchor symbol as the basis for all of their guernseys or jumpers (unlike other sporting codes it is rarely called a jersey, shirt or kit). The home jumper is purple, with a white anchor on the front separating the chest area into two panels, which are coloured red and green to represent the traditional maritime port and starboard colours. The current alternative or clash guernsey is all white with a purple anchor.
One game each year is designated as the Purple Haze game, where an all-purple jumper with a white anchor is worn. This game is used to raise money for the Starlight Foundation.
Since 2003, the AFL has marketed one round each year as the Heritage Round. Until 2006 Fremantle wore a white guernsey with 3 red chevrons, to emulate the jumper worn by the original Fremantle Football Club in 1885. However in 2007, the selected round had Fremantle playing Sydney, who also wear red and white. An alternative blue and white striped design was used, based on the jumper worn by the East Fremantle Football Club in their 1979 WAFL Grand Final win over the South Fremantle Football Club. This Fremantle Derby still holds the record for the highest attendance at a football game of any code in Western Australia, with 52,781 attending at Subiaco Oval
The song is regarded with a great deal of both derision from many opposition supporters and equally fierce loyalty from many fans.
Despite a relative lack of on-field success, Fremantle has surprised many with record membership figures. The club in 2005 had the fastest growing membership in the AFL competition with home crowds growing at a similar rate. The club's recent membership slogans have emphasised the passion of Fremantle fans for their team.
| Year | Members | Finishing position² | Average home crowd |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1995 | 18,456 | 13th | 23,286 |
| 1996 | 19,622 | 13th | 22,113 |
| 1997 | 19,949 | 12th | 22,025 |
| 1998 | 22,186 | 15th | 22,780 |
| 1999 | 24,896 | 15th | 23,869 |
| 2000 | 24,925 | 12th | 22,405 |
| 2001 | 23,898 | 16th | 21,258 |
| 2002 | 23,775 | 13th | 26,358 |
| 2003 | 25,347 | 5th | 30,680 |
| 2004 | 32,259 | 9th | 36,261 |
| 2005 | 34,124 | 10th | 35,224 |
| 2006 | 35,666 | 3rd | 36,569 |
| 2007 | 43,343 | 11th | 37,474 |
| 2008 | 43,366 | 14th | |
Famous fans include television personalities Rove McManus and Simon Reeve.
Vice-Patrons