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Whitten Oval

Whitten Oval (also known as Mission Whitten Oval under a naming rights agreement[2]) is a stadium in the inner-western suburbs of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, located in Barkly Street, West Footscray.[3] It is the training and administrative headquarters of the Western Bulldogs (formerly the Footscray Football Club), which competes in the Australian Football League (AFL). The ground is also the home of the club's women's and reserves teams which compete in the AFL Women's (AFLW), Victorian Football League (VFL), and VFL Women's (VFLW).[4]

Mission Whitten Oval
Whitten Oval, Western Oval
Whitten Oval with a view of the Whitten Stand in 2017
Former namesWestern Oval (1883–1995)
Whitten Oval (1995–2013)
VU Whitten Oval (2013–2024)
Location417 Barkly Street, West Footscray, Victoria
Coordinates37°47′57″S 144°53′12″E / 37.799166°S 144.886748°E / -37.799166; 144.886748
Capacity10,000[1]
Record attendance42,354 (1955 VFL season)
SurfaceGrass
Tenants
Western Bulldogs/Footscray Football Club

Administration & Training (1883–present)
VFA (1886–1924)
VFL/AFL (1925–1997)[a]
VFL (2014–present)
VFLW (2016–present)
AFLW (2017–present)

Other Teams
Footscray Cricket Club (VPC) (1883–1996)
Footscray JUST (National Soccer League) (1980)
Yarraville Football Club (VFA) (1983)
Brunswick United (National Soccer League) (1993-1994)
Fitzroy Football Club (AFL) (1994–1996)
Western United FC (A-League Men) (2020)

Formerly known as the Western Oval, the venue was renamed in honour of Ted Whitten in 1995, a former player, captain and coach for the club. A statue of Whitten is located at the entrance of the oval.

History edit

The Whitten Oval is the centrepiece of a reserve that, from 1860, was a stone quarry used by the railways. In 1866, the quarry was turned into a reserve that included botanical gardens. Other former quarries within the City of Footscray that were turned into public gardens in this era include the Yarraville Reserve, which is the site of the current Yarraville Oval, off Williamstown Road; the Yarraville Gardens, off Hyde Street; and Footscray Park, which fronts the Maribyrnong River.[5]

In 1886, after moving from ground to ground, the local council granted the local football club permission to use the Western Reserve as its home ground.[6] In 1883, the Prince Imperial Football Club reverted to its original name from its formation in the mid-1870s and Footscray Football Club was reformed. The club had to turn the gardens into a football field, building a railing system to surround the playing and dragging the pavilion from the Barkly Street end to the other.[7]

While the gardens became known as the David Spurling Reserve, the oval within the gardens became the Western Oval.

Footscray used Western Oval as its home ground almost continuously until 1997. It was absent from the ground only in 1942, when it was commandeered by military personnel during World War II; during that season, Footscray played its home games at the nearby Yarraville Oval, which was vacant because the VFA, in which the regular tenant Yarraville Football Club competed, was in recess. In 1943, the club returned to Western Oval.[6]

In 1955, the ground record attendance was set for the oval when 42,354 turned out on 9 July to see then-defending premiers Footscray defeat Collingwood by six points in Round 12, 1955.[8] In 1965, Footscray considered leaving Western Oval, and made an application to the City of Sunshine for a lease at the new football ground it was developing at Skinner Reserve, approximately 3 km west in Braybrook; the Sunshine Council ultimately rejected the application, as it would have required the breaking of an agreement it already had with the VFA's Sunshine Football Club.[9]

National Soccer League, Fitzroy, renaming, and the end of AFL matches edit

 
The E.J. Whitten Stand

In 1983, struggling VFA Division 2 club Yarraville played its home games at Western Oval on Sundays.[10] This was the only season of the arrangement, as the club folded before the 1984 season.

In addition to its use as a VFL/AFL ground, the Western Oval also hosted 9 National Soccer League matches during the 1980s and 1990s:[11] Footscray JUST played 5 matches at the ground during the 1980 National Soccer League,[12] with an average attendance of 3,398, while Brunswick United played 4 matches at the ground during the 1993–94 National Soccer League season, with an average attendance of 1,306.[13][14][15][16] The highest attended National Soccer League match played at Western Oval was Footscray JUST's match against Heidelberg United on Sunday 17 August 1980, which drew a crowd of 6,734, while the lowest attended National Soccer League match played at Western Oval was Brunswick United's match against Brisbane Strikers on Sunday 7 March 1994, which drew a crowd of 773.

In 1994, the struggling Fitzroy Football Club began playing its home matches at the Western Oval, sharing the venue with Footscray, as it sought a better financial arrangement than it had received at its previous home Princes Park.[17] During this time Whitten Oval had a crowd capacity of 25,000.

In 1995, the oval was renamed the Whitten Oval, after the death of the football club's most prominent player, Ted Whitten. The driveway leading from Barkly Street to the car park behind the oval was named Whitten Avenue.

In 1996, the Footscray Football Club attempted to get an injunction against the Fitzroy Football Club merging with any other club in the AFL, claiming such a move would break Fitzroy's 20 year lease to play their home games at Whitten Oval. The court dismissed the claim, saying damages rather than an injunction should have been sought. Following Fitzroy's merger with Brisbane after the 1996 AFL season, the Western Bulldogs moved their primary home ground for matches from Whitten Oval to Princes Park in Carlton, with the club still scheduled to play two home matches at Whitten Oval.[18] However, prior to their Round 1 encounter with Fremantle, the ground was condemned and the Fremantle match was moved to Optus Oval.[19] Eventually the Bulldogs announced their intention to no longer play AFL matches at Whitten Oval, instead playing home games at Princes Park, until moving to Docklands Stadium in the 2000 season. A farewell premiership match was staged at the venue in Round 21, 1997 before a crowd of 26,704; the Bulldogs 12.14 (86) defeated West Coast 10.8 (68). After moving home matches away from the venue, the Bulldogs retain a training and administrative base at the venue.

Current use and growth of VFL/AFLW football edit

 
E.J Whitten statue which stands outside of the Whitten Oval

After the appointment of Campbell Rose as Chief Executive of the football club in 2002, discussions commenced on a redevelopment of Whitten Oval. In September 2004, the club secured a deal for a $19.5 million redevelopment, with contributions from the Federal Government ($8.0m),[20][21] Western Bulldogs Forever Foundation ($5.5m), Victorian Government ($3.0m),[22][23] Australian Football League ($1.5m) and the City of Maribyrnong ($1.0m).[24] Construction commenced in 2005,[25] and was completed in 2009. The renovated facility included a 120 place childcare centre, a conference and convention centre and a professional sports, medical, and health care centre for the Western Bulldogs.[26]

In 2014, the ground started hosting home matches for the Western Bulldogs men's reserves team, known as Footscray, which competes in the Victorian Football League.[27] Since the Bulldogs received a license to field a team in the inaugural season of the AFL Women's (AFLW) competition in 2017, the club has played home matches for its women's teams at Whitten Oval.

A-League club Western United held a home match at the venue against Adelaide United on 26 January 2020, with Adelaide winning the match 4–3 in front of a crowd of 5,988. This was the first association football match to be played at the ground since 1994, with the crowd of 5,988 being the largest association football crowd at the ground since 1980.

2022/23 redevelopments edit

 
The Whitten Oval in August 2022 after the demolition of the EJ Whitten stand

In May 2019 the Western Bulldogs unveiled a $150 million redevelopment plan to upgrade spectator facilities at Whitten Oval. The proposal would boost the capacity to 18,000 and result in the reconstruction of the EJ Whitten Stand, add seating around the ground, install permanent broadcast-quality lighting, and construct an indoor training field and convention centre.[28] The following year the club confirmed that $58 million would be spent to proceed with the EJ Whitten Stand reconstruction and permanent lighting, as well as the re-size the oval, install terracing on the eastern and southern side of the ground and make other alterations.[29] This is referred to as the "Stage 2 redevelopment".[29] As of January 2021 $36.8 million has been secured (from the Victorian Government), with the sources for the remaining amount unspecified.[29] Council approval was granted in late 2020.[30][31] In mid-2022 the club confirmed that construction would soon proceed over an 18-month period and include the rebuilding of the Whitten Grandstand, construction of a high-performance centre and indoor sports field, realignment of the oval surface, improvement in spectator amenities, and facilities for the club's foundation and women's health programs.[32] The demolition and replacement of the EJ Whitten Stand commenced in July 2022.[33]

In February 2024, Mission Foods, a long-term partner of the Bulldogs, was announced as the new naming rights sponsor of Whitten Oval.[2]

Past characteristics edit

 
View of the oval in 2007

During its VFL/AFL playing days, Whitten Oval was known for being particularly long and narrow with deep squarish pockets, and for the wild wind which often bellowed over the ground, particularly at the Geelong Road end. These reasons, most specifically the wind, meant that the oval was the site of many abnormally low scoring games, inaccurate scoring tallies and games in which more than 80% of all scoring was kicked to one end. The ground developed a demographic of the "ground visiting sides hated to play at", with passionate Bulldog supporters and its distinctive playing conditions making it an arduous task to leave with a win.

In a game illustrating the worst that the Western Oval wind could offer, Footscray defeated Fitzroy in a close game, 14.9 (93) to 13.7 (85), in Round 10, 1964 – of the total of 178 points scored in the game, only 7 were scored against the wind. When Footscray played Fitzroy in Round 17, 1927, only 6 of 173 points were kicked against the wind. In 1948's Footscray versus Geelong game, only 2 of the 58 scoring shots were made into the wind. The wind was so fierce that when the Geelong full-back, Bruce Morrison, kicked the ball off after Footscray had scored a behind, the ball floated back over his head and went through the goals. The goal umpire signalled a "forced behind". While these are extreme examples, it was common to see no more than two or three goals kicked into the wind, while 14 or 15 would be scored at the other end.

Community use edit

Post-use as a VFL/AFL stadium, the Whitten Oval is now primarily used as the training ground for the Western Bulldogs.

A number of local community groups, schools and sporting organisations utilise the ground; particularly because of its close proximity to the Melbourne CBD and local transport. The ground also plays host to a variety of commercially-oriented tenancies, including retail (The Western Bulldogs merchandise shop, Bulldogs Central) and health (Physioplus Footscray). It also headquarters the WMR (Western Metropolitan Region) division of DEECD, which oversees all government schools in Melbourne's West.

The Victorian Women's Football League (VWFL) utilised the ground for games and finals until its demise as a competition in 2015. Other local groups have utilised the facility on numerous occasions, including the Rec Footy competition and the Bulldogs Family Day.

Footscray Cricket Club edit

The ground ceased to be a used as a regular cricket venue at the end of 1996. From 1893 until December 1996, it was the home of the Footscray Cricket Club, which played in the Victorian district/premier cricket competition. From 1997, the club moved to the Mervyn G. Hughes Oval in northern Footscray.[34]

Transport edit

Whitten Oval is serviced by West Footscray railway station and local bus lines.

Trivia edit

  • Fifteen Canary Island date palm trees line the footpath north of the oval, facing Barkly Street.
  • Of the 15 palms that line the reserve's northern border, 10 are south of the entrance to Whitten Avenue and five are north of the entrance.
  • Behind the palms, to the north of the entrance, is the Lions Club of Footscray Memorial Playground.
  • In 1937 the oval was used to host the first interclub Trugo match with Yarraville coming out victors over Footscray by 7 goals.[35][36]
  • The Western Oval was the home ground of the Footscray Trugo Club from 1937 until 1940 when the club moved to purpose built facilities in Buckly Street.[37]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Not including 1942 when the oval was being utilised by military personnel and the club played home matches at Yarraville Oval.

References edit

  1. ^ "Whitten Oval". austadiums.com. Austadiums. Retrieved 25 September 2015.
  2. ^ a b "Mission Whitten Oval: Home of the Western Bulldogs". Western Bulldogs. Telstra. 23 February 2024.
  3. ^ "VU Whitten Oval". Retrieved 22 April 2022.
  4. ^ "VU Whitten Oval | Western Bulldogs". westernbulldogs.com.au. Retrieved 22 April 2022.
  5. ^ Ruban, L. (2013, May 11). Club History Page - West Footscray Football Club. WRFL Footy Record, 5, 47.
  6. ^ a b Potted History - Official AFL Website
  7. ^ Lack, John (1996). A History of the Footscray Football Club Unleashed. Australia: Aus-Sport Enterprises. pp. P16-18. ISBN 0646262157.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  8. ^ "Western Oval – Attendances (1925–1997)". AFL Tables. Retrieved 27 December 2013.
  9. ^ "Oval for Sunshine". The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne, VIC. 28 September 1965.
  10. ^ Marc Fiddian (26 March 1983). "Dullard, Towns join Seagulls". The Age. Melbourne, VIC. p. 27.
  11. ^ Lynch, Joey. "WESTERN UNITED ON THE MOVE AGAIN". FTBL. Retrieved 15 January 2024.
  12. ^ "1980 National Soccer League Results". OzFootball. Retrieved 15 January 2024.
  13. ^ "1993/94 season - round 2 results". OzFootball. Retrieved 15 January 2024.
  14. ^ "1993/94 season - round 4 results". OzFootball. Retrieved 15 January 2024.
  15. ^ "1993/94 season - round 5 results". OzFootball. Retrieved 15 January 2024.
  16. ^ "1993/94 season - round 25 results". OzFootball. Retrieved 15 January 2024.
  17. ^ "1993 review". Footystats. Retrieved 27 December 2013.
  18. ^ "Fairfax Syndication Photo Print Sales and Content Licensing".
  19. ^ "Fairfax Syndication Photo Print Sales and Content Licensing".
  20. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 September 2007.
  21. ^ (PDF). p. 15. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 September 2007.
  22. ^ Media Release: Whitten Oval Rebuild On Track To Deliver The Goods
  23. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 July 2012. Retrieved 23 August 2012.
  24. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 March 2012.
  25. ^ Johnson, Lyall (19 November 2005). "Hawk's wing clipped". The Age. p. 4.
  26. ^ Whitten Oval - Official AFL Website of the Western Bulldogs Football Club
  27. ^ Jon Pierik (10 December 2013). "Footscray Bulldogs return to Whitten Oval". The Age. Retrieved 27 December 2013.
  28. ^ "Bulldogs bold plan to return AFL to Whitten Oval". Austadiums. 2 May 2019.
  29. ^ a b c "$58 million revamp for Whitten Oval". Austadiums. 15 November 2020.
  30. ^ "Whitten Oval redevelopment". Maribyrnong City Council. 17 December 2020.
  31. ^ "VICTORIAN GOVERNMENT FUNDING SECURES REDEVELOPMENT OF BULLDOGS' WHITTEN OVAL". Australasian Leisure Management. 15 November 2020.
  32. ^ "AFLW Bulldogs to play home games away from VU Whitten Oval". Western Bulldogs. 30 June 2022.
  33. ^ "State Government continues its support as demolition begins". Western Bulldogs. 16 July 2022.
  34. ^ Vin Maskell (21 January 2013). "The Mervyn G Hughes Oval, Footscray, Victoria". Scoreboard Pressure. Retrieved 9 April 2014.
  35. ^ "True-go Clubs Meet". The Age. 16 June 1937.
  36. ^ "Essendon Debutantes, Skin of Sheep Marauder, Show Arena to be Floodlit". The Age. 11 June 1937.
  37. ^ "Williamstown Chronicle". Tru-go Club. 17 February 1940.

External links edit

  • Whitten Oval at Austadiums
  • "Around the Grounds" - Web Documentary - Western Oval
  • Whitten Oval "From Vision to Reality" - documentation of the redevelopment by the Western Bulldogs
  • Bulldogs Central - the Western Bulldogs Merchandise Outlet
  • Physioplus Footscray - a physiotherapy and massage therapist practice operating at the Whitten Oval

whitten, oval, also, known, mission, under, naming, rights, agreement, stadium, inner, western, suburbs, melbourne, victoria, australia, located, barkly, street, west, footscray, training, administrative, headquarters, western, bulldogs, formerly, footscray, f. Whitten Oval also known as Mission Whitten Oval under a naming rights agreement 2 is a stadium in the inner western suburbs of Melbourne Victoria Australia located in Barkly Street West Footscray 3 It is the training and administrative headquarters of the Western Bulldogs formerly the Footscray Football Club which competes in the Australian Football League AFL The ground is also the home of the club s women s and reserves teams which compete in the AFL Women s AFLW Victorian Football League VFL and VFL Women s VFLW 4 Mission Whitten OvalWhitten Oval Western OvalWhitten Oval with a view of the Whitten Stand in 2017Former namesWestern Oval 1883 1995 Whitten Oval 1995 2013 VU Whitten Oval 2013 2024 Location417 Barkly Street West Footscray VictoriaCoordinates37 47 57 S 144 53 12 E 37 799166 S 144 886748 E 37 799166 144 886748Capacity10 000 1 Record attendance42 354 1955 VFL season SurfaceGrassTenantsWestern Bulldogs Footscray Football Club Administration amp Training 1883 present VFA 1886 1924 VFL AFL 1925 1997 a VFL 2014 present VFLW 2016 present AFLW 2017 present Other Teams Footscray Cricket Club VPC 1883 1996 Footscray JUST National Soccer League 1980 Yarraville Football Club VFA 1983 Brunswick United National Soccer League 1993 1994 Fitzroy Football Club AFL 1994 1996 Western United FC A League Men 2020 Formerly known as the Western Oval the venue was renamed in honour of Ted Whitten in 1995 a former player captain and coach for the club A statue of Whitten is located at the entrance of the oval Contents 1 History 2 National Soccer League Fitzroy renaming and the end of AFL matches 3 Current use and growth of VFL AFLW football 3 1 2022 23 redevelopments 4 Past characteristics 5 Community use 6 Footscray Cricket Club 7 Transport 8 Trivia 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksHistory editThe Whitten Oval is the centrepiece of a reserve that from 1860 was a stone quarry used by the railways In 1866 the quarry was turned into a reserve that included botanical gardens Other former quarries within the City of Footscray that were turned into public gardens in this era include the Yarraville Reserve which is the site of the current Yarraville Oval off Williamstown Road the Yarraville Gardens off Hyde Street and Footscray Park which fronts the Maribyrnong River 5 In 1886 after moving from ground to ground the local council granted the local football club permission to use the Western Reserve as its home ground 6 In 1883 the Prince Imperial Football Club reverted to its original name from its formation in the mid 1870s and Footscray Football Club was reformed The club had to turn the gardens into a football field building a railing system to surround the playing and dragging the pavilion from the Barkly Street end to the other 7 While the gardens became known as the David Spurling Reserve the oval within the gardens became the Western Oval Footscray used Western Oval as its home ground almost continuously until 1997 It was absent from the ground only in 1942 when it was commandeered by military personnel during World War II during that season Footscray played its home games at the nearby Yarraville Oval which was vacant because the VFA in which the regular tenant Yarraville Football Club competed was in recess In 1943 the club returned to Western Oval 6 In 1955 the ground record attendance was set for the oval when 42 354 turned out on 9 July to see then defending premiers Footscray defeat Collingwood by six points in Round 12 1955 8 In 1965 Footscray considered leaving Western Oval and made an application to the City of Sunshine for a lease at the new football ground it was developing at Skinner Reserve approximately 3 km west in Braybrook the Sunshine Council ultimately rejected the application as it would have required the breaking of an agreement it already had with the VFA s Sunshine Football Club 9 National Soccer League Fitzroy renaming and the end of AFL matches edit nbsp The E J Whitten Stand In 1983 struggling VFA Division 2 club Yarraville played its home games at Western Oval on Sundays 10 This was the only season of the arrangement as the club folded before the 1984 season In addition to its use as a VFL AFL ground the Western Oval also hosted 9 National Soccer League matches during the 1980s and 1990s 11 Footscray JUST played 5 matches at the ground during the 1980 National Soccer League 12 with an average attendance of 3 398 while Brunswick United played 4 matches at the ground during the 1993 94 National Soccer League season with an average attendance of 1 306 13 14 15 16 The highest attended National Soccer League match played at Western Oval was Footscray JUST s match against Heidelberg United on Sunday 17 August 1980 which drew a crowd of 6 734 while the lowest attended National Soccer League match played at Western Oval was Brunswick United s match against Brisbane Strikers on Sunday 7 March 1994 which drew a crowd of 773 In 1994 the struggling Fitzroy Football Club began playing its home matches at the Western Oval sharing the venue with Footscray as it sought a better financial arrangement than it had received at its previous home Princes Park 17 During this time Whitten Oval had a crowd capacity of 25 000 In 1995 the oval was renamed the Whitten Oval after the death of the football club s most prominent player Ted Whitten The driveway leading from Barkly Street to the car park behind the oval was named Whitten Avenue In 1996 the Footscray Football Club attempted to get an injunction against the Fitzroy Football Club merging with any other club in the AFL claiming such a move would break Fitzroy s 20 year lease to play their home games at Whitten Oval The court dismissed the claim saying damages rather than an injunction should have been sought Following Fitzroy s merger with Brisbane after the 1996 AFL season the Western Bulldogs moved their primary home ground for matches from Whitten Oval to Princes Park in Carlton with the club still scheduled to play two home matches at Whitten Oval 18 However prior to their Round 1 encounter with Fremantle the ground was condemned and the Fremantle match was moved to Optus Oval 19 Eventually the Bulldogs announced their intention to no longer play AFL matches at Whitten Oval instead playing home games at Princes Park until moving to Docklands Stadium in the 2000 season A farewell premiership match was staged at the venue in Round 21 1997 before a crowd of 26 704 the Bulldogs 12 14 86 defeated West Coast 10 8 68 After moving home matches away from the venue the Bulldogs retain a training and administrative base at the venue Current use and growth of VFL AFLW football edit nbsp E J Whitten statue which stands outside of the Whitten Oval After the appointment of Campbell Rose as Chief Executive of the football club in 2002 discussions commenced on a redevelopment of Whitten Oval In September 2004 the club secured a deal for a 19 5 million redevelopment with contributions from the Federal Government 8 0m 20 21 Western Bulldogs Forever Foundation 5 5m Victorian Government 3 0m 22 23 Australian Football League 1 5m and the City of Maribyrnong 1 0m 24 Construction commenced in 2005 25 and was completed in 2009 The renovated facility included a 120 place childcare centre a conference and convention centre and a professional sports medical and health care centre for the Western Bulldogs 26 In 2014 the ground started hosting home matches for the Western Bulldogs men s reserves team known as Footscray which competes in the Victorian Football League 27 Since the Bulldogs received a license to field a team in the inaugural season of the AFL Women s AFLW competition in 2017 the club has played home matches for its women s teams at Whitten Oval A League club Western United held a home match at the venue against Adelaide United on 26 January 2020 with Adelaide winning the match 4 3 in front of a crowd of 5 988 This was the first association football match to be played at the ground since 1994 with the crowd of 5 988 being the largest association football crowd at the ground since 1980 2022 23 redevelopments edit nbsp The Whitten Oval in August 2022 after the demolition of the EJ Whitten stand In May 2019 the Western Bulldogs unveiled a 150 million redevelopment plan to upgrade spectator facilities at Whitten Oval The proposal would boost the capacity to 18 000 and result in the reconstruction of the EJ Whitten Stand add seating around the ground install permanent broadcast quality lighting and construct an indoor training field and convention centre 28 The following year the club confirmed that 58 million would be spent to proceed with the EJ Whitten Stand reconstruction and permanent lighting as well as the re size the oval install terracing on the eastern and southern side of the ground and make other alterations 29 This is referred to as the Stage 2 redevelopment 29 As of January 2021 36 8 million has been secured from the Victorian Government with the sources for the remaining amount unspecified 29 Council approval was granted in late 2020 30 31 In mid 2022 the club confirmed that construction would soon proceed over an 18 month period and include the rebuilding of the Whitten Grandstand construction of a high performance centre and indoor sports field realignment of the oval surface improvement in spectator amenities and facilities for the club s foundation and women s health programs 32 The demolition and replacement of the EJ Whitten Stand commenced in July 2022 33 In February 2024 Mission Foods a long term partner of the Bulldogs was announced as the new naming rights sponsor of Whitten Oval 2 Past characteristics edit nbsp View of the oval in 2007 During its VFL AFL playing days Whitten Oval was known for being particularly long and narrow with deep squarish pockets and for the wild wind which often bellowed over the ground particularly at the Geelong Road end These reasons most specifically the wind meant that the oval was the site of many abnormally low scoring games inaccurate scoring tallies and games in which more than 80 of all scoring was kicked to one end The ground developed a demographic of the ground visiting sides hated to play at with passionate Bulldog supporters and its distinctive playing conditions making it an arduous task to leave with a win In a game illustrating the worst that the Western Oval wind could offer Footscray defeated Fitzroy in a close game 14 9 93 to 13 7 85 in Round 10 1964 of the total of 178 points scored in the game only 7 were scored against the wind When Footscray played Fitzroy in Round 17 1927 only 6 of 173 points were kicked against the wind In 1948 s Footscray versus Geelong game only 2 of the 58 scoring shots were made into the wind The wind was so fierce that when the Geelong full back Bruce Morrison kicked the ball off after Footscray had scored a behind the ball floated back over his head and went through the goals The goal umpire signalled a forced behind While these are extreme examples it was common to see no more than two or three goals kicked into the wind while 14 or 15 would be scored at the other end Community use editPost use as a VFL AFL stadium the Whitten Oval is now primarily used as the training ground for the Western Bulldogs A number of local community groups schools and sporting organisations utilise the ground particularly because of its close proximity to the Melbourne CBD and local transport The ground also plays host to a variety of commercially oriented tenancies including retail The Western Bulldogs merchandise shop Bulldogs Central and health Physioplus Footscray It also headquarters the WMR Western Metropolitan Region division of DEECD which oversees all government schools in Melbourne s West The Victorian Women s Football League VWFL utilised the ground for games and finals until its demise as a competition in 2015 Other local groups have utilised the facility on numerous occasions including the Rec Footy competition and the Bulldogs Family Day Footscray Cricket Club editThe ground ceased to be a used as a regular cricket venue at the end of 1996 From 1893 until December 1996 it was the home of the Footscray Cricket Club which played in the Victorian district premier cricket competition From 1997 the club moved to the Mervyn G Hughes Oval in northern Footscray 34 Transport editWhitten Oval is serviced by West Footscray railway station and local bus lines Trivia editFifteen Canary Island date palm trees line the footpath north of the oval facing Barkly Street Of the 15 palms that line the reserve s northern border 10 are south of the entrance to Whitten Avenue and five are north of the entrance Behind the palms to the north of the entrance is the Lions Club of Footscray Memorial Playground In 1937 the oval was used to host the first interclub Trugo match with Yarraville coming out victors over Footscray by 7 goals 35 36 The Western Oval was the home ground of the Footscray Trugo Club from 1937 until 1940 when the club moved to purpose built facilities in Buckly Street 37 See also editAFL Women s venues List of Australian rules football statuesNotes edit Not including 1942 when the oval was being utilised by military personnel and the club played home matches at Yarraville Oval References edit Whitten Oval austadiums com Austadiums Retrieved 25 September 2015 a b Mission Whitten Oval Home of the Western Bulldogs Western Bulldogs Telstra 23 February 2024 VU Whitten Oval Retrieved 22 April 2022 VU Whitten Oval Western Bulldogs westernbulldogs com au Retrieved 22 April 2022 Ruban L 2013 May 11 Club History Page West Footscray Football Club WRFL Footy Record 5 47 a b Potted History Official AFL Website Lack John 1996 A History of the Footscray Football Club Unleashed Australia Aus Sport Enterprises pp P16 18 ISBN 0646262157 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Western Oval Attendances 1925 1997 AFL Tables Retrieved 27 December 2013 Oval for Sunshine The Sun News Pictorial Melbourne VIC 28 September 1965 Marc Fiddian 26 March 1983 Dullard Towns join Seagulls The Age Melbourne VIC p 27 Lynch Joey WESTERN UNITED ON THE MOVE AGAIN FTBL Retrieved 15 January 2024 1980 National Soccer League Results OzFootball Retrieved 15 January 2024 1993 94 season round 2 results OzFootball Retrieved 15 January 2024 1993 94 season round 4 results OzFootball Retrieved 15 January 2024 1993 94 season round 5 results OzFootball Retrieved 15 January 2024 1993 94 season round 25 results OzFootball Retrieved 15 January 2024 1993 review Footystats Retrieved 27 December 2013 Fairfax Syndication Photo Print Sales and Content Licensing Fairfax Syndication Photo Print Sales and Content Licensing Re Development Of Whitten Oval A Community Partnership PDF Archived from the original PDF on 28 September 2007 Re Development Of Whitten Oval A Community Partnership PDF p 15 Archived from the original PDF on 27 September 2007 Media Release Whitten Oval Rebuild On Track To Deliver The Goods FORMER AFL VENUES PDF Archived from the original PDF on 10 July 2012 Retrieved 23 August 2012 SPECIAL COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES PDF Archived from the original PDF on 26 March 2012 Johnson Lyall 19 November 2005 Hawk s wing clipped The Age p 4 Whitten Oval Official AFL Website of the Western Bulldogs Football Club Jon Pierik 10 December 2013 Footscray Bulldogs return to Whitten Oval The Age Retrieved 27 December 2013 Bulldogs bold plan to return AFL to Whitten Oval Austadiums 2 May 2019 a b c 58 million revamp for Whitten Oval Austadiums 15 November 2020 Whitten Oval redevelopment Maribyrnong City Council 17 December 2020 VICTORIAN GOVERNMENT FUNDING SECURES REDEVELOPMENT OF BULLDOGS WHITTEN OVAL Australasian Leisure Management 15 November 2020 AFLW Bulldogs to play home games away from VU Whitten Oval Western Bulldogs 30 June 2022 State Government continues its support as demolition begins Western Bulldogs 16 July 2022 Vin Maskell 21 January 2013 The Mervyn G Hughes Oval Footscray Victoria Scoreboard Pressure Retrieved 9 April 2014 True go Clubs Meet The Age 16 June 1937 Essendon Debutantes Skin of Sheep Marauder Show Arena to be Floodlit The Age 11 June 1937 Williamstown Chronicle Tru go Club 17 February 1940 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Whitten Oval Whitten Oval at Austadiums Around the Grounds Web Documentary Western Oval Whitten Oval From Vision to Reality documentation of the redevelopment by the Western Bulldogs Bulldogs Central the Western Bulldogs Merchandise Outlet Physioplus Footscray a physiotherapy and massage therapist practice operating at the Whitten Oval Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Whitten Oval amp oldid 1216507102, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

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