Yarraville Oval Explained

Stadium Name:Yarraville Oval
Location:Williamstown Rd & Anderson St, Yarraville, Victoria
Coordinates:-37.815°N 144.8842°W
Owner:City of Maribyrnong
Surface:Grass
Tenants:Yarraville Cricket Club
Yarraville/Seddon Football Club (WRFL)
Yarraville Football Club (VFJA/VFA 1903–1984)
Seating Capacity:6,000[1]

The Yarraville Oval is an Australian rules football and cricket ground located on the corner of Williamstown Road and Anderson Street in Yarraville, Victoria.[2] It is currently the home ground of the Yarraville/Seddon Eagles Football Club[3] and the Yarraville Cricket Club.

The ground was most notable as the home of the Yarraville Football Club throughout almost its entire existence in both the Victorian Junior Football Association from 1903 until 1927, and then in the Victorian Football Association from 1928 until 1982; the club played its games at the Western Oval in its final season in 1983.[4] The ground was originally managed by a group of trustees, but management of the ground was transferred to the Footscray Council in 1928 to enable the ground to be upgraded to Association standards.[5] The City of Maribyrnong, which incorporates the former City of Footscray, remains the ground manager.[6]

In 1942, Yarraville Oval was the home of the Footscray Football Club in the Victorian Football League because its normal home ground, the Western Oval, was being used as an army base, whilst the VFA was in recess until 1945. The Western Region Football League had its head office at the Oval until 2010.

A ground record crowd estimated to be between 16,000 and 18,000 attended Ron Todd's first VFA match for Williamstown, played against Yarraville on 20 April 1940.[7] [8] The record crowd for a VFL game was set on 25 July 1942 when 15,000 fans turned out to see Footscray defeat eventual grand finalist Richmond by seven points in a high-scoring game.[9]

One of the most noticeable features of the Yarraville Oval is the historic W. Pedley Stand. The grandstand was built in two sections and has a unique V shape: the southern half of the stand was built in 1929, and the northern half was built in 1940. The viewing area of the grandstand was damaged by fire in 2017.[10]

Tenants

ClubYearsSport
Yarraville F.C1903–1983, 1996–2006Football
Yarraville C.C.1903–presentCricket
Yarraville Boys Club1968–2006Football
Footscray F.C.1942Football
Kingsville F.C.1990–1995Football
Yarraville/Seddon Eagles2007–presentFootball
W.R.F.L. (Offices and League Finals)1990–2010Football

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Yarraville Oval . Austadiums . 16 July 2023.
  2. Web site: Maribyrnong City Council - Yarraville Parks and Reserves . www.maribyrnong.vic.gov.au . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20101225062508/http://www.maribyrnong.vic.gov.au/Page/page.asp?page_Id=532 . 2010-12-25.
  3. Web site: Yarraville Seddon Eagles Football Club Page 5 . 18 July 2011 . 12 January 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110112015452/http://www.yseagles.com/about%20yse.htm . dead .
  4. News: The Age. Melbourne. Marc Fiddian. 27. 26 March 1983. Dullard, Towns join Seagulls.
  5. News: The Argus. Yarraville Oval. 28 November 1928. 20. Melbourne.
  6. Web site: Yarraville Oval. 17 April 2014. Maribyrnong City Council.
  7. News: The Argus. Melbourne. 62,000 at V.F.A opening. 22 April 1940. 13. Rover.
  8. News: The Canberra Times. National Football – Club practice games. 3. 22 April 1940. Canberra, ACT.
  9. Web site: AFL Tables - Footscray v Richmond - Sat, 25-Jul-1942 2:30 PM - Match Stats.
  10. News: Herald Sun. Melbourne. Brianna Travers. Yarraville Football Oval grandstand destroyed in suspicious blaze. 18 June 2017. 29 July 2017.