Jump to content

Sport in Victoria

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 121.214.165.3 (talk) at 14:55, 17 May 2010 (Melbourne: Melbourne Storm now only officially has 1 premiership). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Sport in Victoria is of high cultural importance. The Victorian capital, Melbourne is often referred to as the sporting capital of the world.[1]

The most popular sports to play in the state are Australian rules football and cricket whilst horse racing joins that list as the most popular spectator sports.

Team Sports

Association football (soccer)

Association Football (soccer) in Victoria is governed by the Football Federation Victoria. It is particularly popular among migrant communities and has growing popularity both as a spectator and participation sport. Melbourne Victory FC and Melbourne Heart[2] are the state's A-League teams.

Australian rules football

Australian rules football has a long history in Victoria, shown in this nineteenth century junior football team from Geelong

In terms of attendance, Australian rules football is the most popular sport in the state. The participation rate of 4% is the third highest in the country with 223,999 players counted in 2004. Australian rules football is claimed by many to have originated in Melbourne in 1858. Ten of the sixteen Australian Football League clubs are based in Victoria, and the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG) is held by many to be the spiritual home of the game. Victoria hosted the 2002, 2005 and 2008 Australian Football International Cup competitions.

Basketball

The Melbourne Tigers are Victoria's sole representative in the National Basketball League (Australia), following the withdrawal of the South Dragons. They have won the championship 4 times, in 1993, 1997, 2005-2006 and 2007-2008. They currently play at State Netball and Hockey Centre affectionally know as "the cage".

Cricket

Cricket at the MCG

Cricket is very popular in Victoria. The governing body for the sport is Cricket Victoria which administers the 1,182 cricket clubs and 112,000 registered cricketers in Victoria, and 62,774 children involved in school-based competition. The Victorian Bushrangers are the men's state team which competes in the KFC T20 Big Bash, the Sheffield Shield and the Ford Ranger Cup. Following an extended period of low attendances at Bushrangers home games, the 2009/10 season saw a string of record crowds for T20 Big Bash games at the MCG. Whilst attendances for international cricket games in Victoria have dropped in the past season, crowds for Sheffield Shield and Ford Ranger Cup matches are steadily growing. The Victorian Spirit are the women's state team which competes in the Women's National Cricket League.

Motorsport

Motor racing has its Australian roots in Melbourne. One of the earlier motor races was held on a horse racing venue in Melbourne, but organised motor racing as we know it today began with the first running of the Australian Grand Prix, held on a rectanglular dirt road course on the streets of Phillip Island in 1928. The Grand Prix wondered across the country in subsequent decades but today is held for the Formula One World Drivers Championship on the streets of inner Melbourne around the Albert Park Lake. A modern Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit hosts the Australian motorcycle Grand Prix. The state has more motor racing circuits than any other as well as providing home base for more than half of the teams contesting the premier domestic motor racing series, V8 Supercar. Even New South Wales' signature motor race, the Bathurst 1000 has its roots in Victoria, having been first held as a 500 mile race at Phillip Island.

Rugby league

The predominantly Australian rules football-dominated state of Victoria didn't play host to much rugby league football traditionally a New South Wales and Queensland-based game, during most of the the 20th century. Some representative games were played in Melbourne to gauge public interest in the sport in the early 1990s and the crowds were encouraging.

Travel back a few years and you find that, in rugby league circles, Melbourne was viewed as a great, succulent peach ready for picking. Almost 90,000 people had turned up to the MCG in 1994 to watch NSW play Queensland in a State of Origin match. In a period where the robust sport was focused on expansion, Melbourne loomed as the obvious next frontier. Then the code imploded.

— The Sunday Age, 1999[3]

The Super League war may have delayed Victorian representation in rugby league's national competition, but when the newly-formed National Rugby League re-emerged in 1998, the Melbourne Storm were part of the lineup of clubs. They have since become one of the most successful teams in the League and gained a significant following in their home state.[4]

Rugby league participation (0% in 2005 according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics) has grown significantly since 2006. Melbourne's television audience for the 2006 NRL Grand Final was higher than Sydney's.[5] There are 13 amateur clubs in the entire state according to the Victorian Rugby League[6] and there are development officers and professional teams have visited schools.

Rugby union

Official Australian Bureau of Statistics report of 2007 on sports participation, Victoria has a very low participation in rugby (less than 1%).[7] The game is played by a small number of amateur senior clubs and in some private schools in Melbourne.

However international rugby matches are popular with spectators in Victoria. This is evidenced by the large crowds which attended matches at the 2003 Rugby World Cup, 2006 Commonwealth Games and overall television ratings for blockbuster internationals.

Netball

Netball is recognised as the largest female participation sport in Australia. In Victoria there are in excess of 105,000 registered participants, which does not include the tens of thousands of school children that participate in school netball programs annually.

Approximately 240 associations/groups affiliate with Netball Victoria on an annual basis. Affiliation provides access to netball events, programs and services as well as a pathway to State, National and International representation. Associations are geographically grouped into one of the 20 Regions, and then Regions are grouped into one of six Zones. 96% of the Netball Victoria membership is female. 55% of the membership resides in regional Victoria with the remaining 45% in the metropolitan suburbs in and around Melbourne. 62% of the Netball Victoria membership is aged seventeen (17) and under, with the majority of the remaining participants aged between eighteen and fifty. Victoria has a team in the ANZ Championship, the Melbourne Vixens.

Open Water Swimming

Open water swimming is a popular sport throughout Victoria. There is an ever growing number of races right around Port Phillip Bay, Western Port Bay and Victoria's Ocean Coast. There are even a small number of races held in Rivers and Lakes.

The open water swim season in Victoria runs from early December to Mid-March of the following year. Several swims occur on Australia Day which also marks the "middle" of the season. The largest open water swim in Victoria (and As of 2009, the largest in the world) is the Lorne Pier to Pub. It attracts up to 4000 participants each year.

Some other well know swims include;

The standard distance of the majority of the swims on the open water swim calendar is between 1 km and 2 km with the most common distance used been 1.2 km. Other swims however, cover much further distances including the Bloody Big Swim which covers 11.2 km.

Many famous swimmers are known to have participated in these swims including Olympic Gold medalists Kieren Perkins and Michael Klim. It is also a popular hobby of many other famous people including many AFL footballers, Australian cricketers including Simon O'Donnell and politicians including former Premier of Victoria Steve Bracks and current opposition leader Ted Ballieu.

Special events

The 2006 Australian Open at Melbourne Park
Phar Lap winning the 1930 Melbourne Cup

Annually, Melbourne hosts the Australian Open tennis tournament, one of the four Grand Slam tournaments; the famous Melbourne Cup horse race; the 'Boxing Day' cricket test match held each year from 26–30 December at the Melbourne Cricket Ground; and the Australian Formula One Grand Prix. The Wallabies, Australia's national rugby union team, usually also play at least one Test annually in Melbourne.

Rivalling the Open early in the year, the Formula One World Drivers' Championship visits the Albert Park street circuit to contest the Australian Grand Prix (which was stolen from Adelaide, South Australia). Also Phillip Island hosts the Australian motorcycle Grand Prix for MotoGP bikes as well as a round of the World Superbike Championship, and Stawell is the home of Australia's most prestigious foot race, the Stawell Gift.

The MCG was the site of the first ever cricket test match between Australia and England in 1877, and has been the main stadium for the 1956 Summer Olympics and 2006 Commonwealth Games.

As well as Olympic and Commonwealth Games, Melbourne has hosted numerous sporting events which rotate host cities. Melbourne co-hosted the 2003 Rugby World Cup, including many pool matches as well as a quarter final – all of which were played at the Telstra Dome; hosted the 2002 World Masters Games; the first city outside the United States to host the World Police and Fire Games in 1995, and the Presidents Cup golf tournament in 1999; and was the first city in the Southern Hemisphere to host the World Cup Polo Championship in 2001. The city has hosted FIFA World Cup qualifiers in both 1997 2001 and 2009

Major Sports Venues

Melbourne

Venue Capacity Main Sports
Flemington Racecourse 130,000 horse racing
Albert Park 100,000+ Formula One
Melbourne Cricket Ground 100,000 Australian rules football, cricket
Etihad Stadium 56,347 Australian rules football, rugby league, cricket, Association football (soccer)
Caulfield Racecourse 50,000 horse racing
Princes Park 35,000 Australian rules football
Melbourne Rectangular Stadium 31,500 Rugby League, Rugby Union, Association football (soccer)
Victoria Park 27,000 Australian rules football
Moorabbin Oval 27,000 Australian rules football
Western Oval 25,000 Australian rules football
Olympic Park 18,500 rugby league
Rod Laver Arena 14,820 tennis
Bob Jane Stadium (within Albert Park area) 14,000 Association football (soccer)
Hisense Arena 10,500 tennis, netball, cycling, gymnastics, and basketball
Melbourne Sports and Aquatic Centre 4,000 (9,000 for the Commonwealth Games) swimming
Sandown Raceway motorsport, horse racing
Calder Park Raceway motorsport
State Netball and Hockey Centre 3,500 (1,000 for Hockey) netball, hockey, basketball

Outside Melbourne

Venue Capacity Main Sports
Kardinia Park 28,300 Australian rules football
Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit 90,000 motorcycle racing, touring car racing
Winton Motor Raceway 30,000 Motorsport

Current professional franchises in national competitions

Melbourne

Club League Venue Established Premierships
Carlton Football Club Australian Football League Etihad Stadium 1864 16
Collingwood Football Club Australian Football League Melbourne Cricket Ground 1892 14
Essendon Football Club Australian Football League Etihad Stadium 1871 16
Ford Performance Racing V8Supercar Championship Series Winton Motor Raceway 1989 2
Garry Rogers Motorsport V8Supercar Championship Series Winton Motor Raceway 1989 Nil
Hawthorn Football Club Australian Football League Melbourne Cricket Ground 1874 10
Holden Racing Team V8Supercar Championship Series Winton Motor Raceway 1988 6
Kelly Racing V8Supercar Championship Series Winton Motor Raceway 2009 Nil
Lucas Dumbrell Motorsport V8Supercar Championship Series Winton Motor Raceway 2010 Nil
Melbourne Football Club Australian Football League Melbourne Cricket Ground 1858 12
Melbourne Heart A-League Melbourne Rectangular Stadium 2009 0
Melbourne Ice Australian Ice Hockey League Olympic Ice Arena 2002 Nil
Melbourne Kestrels Commonwealth Bank Trophy State Netball and Hockey Centre 1997 Nil
Melbourne Phoenix Commonwealth Bank Trophy State Netball and Hockey Centre 1997 5
Melbourne Storm National Rugby League Olympic Park 1998 1 (2 stripped)[9]
Melbourne Tigers National Basketball League State Netball and Hockey Centre 1984 4
Melbourne Victory FC A-League Etihad Stadium 2004 2
Melbourne Vixens ANZ Championship State Netball and Hockey Centre, Hisense Arena 2008 1
North Melbourne Football Club Australian Football League Etihad Stadium 1869 4
Richmond Football Club Australian Football League Melbourne Cricket Ground 1885 10
Rod Nash Racing V8Supercar Championship Series Winton Motor Raceway 1998 Nil
Saint Kilda Football Club Australian Football League Etihad Stadium 1873 1
Tony D'Alberto Racing V8Supercar Championship Series Winton Motor Raceway 2008 Nil
Victorian Bushrangers Pura Cup/Ford Ranger Cup Junction Oval/MCG 1851 27
Walkinshaw Racing V8Supercar Championship Series Winton Motor Raceway 2009 Nil
Western Bulldogs Australian Football League Etihad Stadium 1883 1

Outside Melbourne

Club League Venue Established Premierships
Brad Jones Racing V8Supercar Championship Series Winton Motor Raceway 1986 Nil
Britek Motorsport V8Supercar Championship Series Winton Motor Raceway 2005 Nil
Geelong Football Club Australian Football League Kardinia Park 1859 7

See also

References

  1. ^ "Melbourne victorious again". Herald Sun. www.news.com.au. 1 April 2008. Retrieved 2008-07-18.
  2. ^ http://www.melbourneheartsyn.com
  3. ^ Cockerill, Ian (1999-10-03). "Eye of the Storm". The Sunday Age. p. 4. Retrieved 2009-10-06. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  4. ^ Heming, Wayne (2009-10-30). "Brisbane Broncos voted Australia's most popular football team". foxsports.com.au. AAP. Retrieved 2009-10-31. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  5. ^ Stevenson, Andrew (2006-10-03). "Rugby league - the game they play in Melbourne". The Sydney Morning Herald. Fairfax Digital. Retrieved 2009-12-16. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  6. ^ http://www.sportingpulse.com/assoc_page.cgi?c=1-2121-0-0-0
  7. ^ http://www.abs.gov.au/AUSSTATS/abs@.nsf/2f762f95845417aeca25706c00834efa/4b9b9f663704b5d9ca2573280013c2f0!OpenDocument
  8. ^ http://www.caseyseals.com.au/open_water_swim_calendar.html
  9. ^ The 2007 and 2009 premierships stripped due to salary cap breaches.