Showing posts with label BASSENDEAN OVAL. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BASSENDEAN OVAL. Show all posts

Thursday, 5 October 2017

ARTICLE: "Bassendean Oval: Home of hard men, on and off the field", by John Townsend, 18/9/2017

ARTICLE: As a boy growing up in Perth’s western suburbs in the 1970s, there were few prospects more terrifying than catching the train to Bassendean Oval to watch Claremont take on Swan Districts.

The train ride from Swanbourne was straightforward enough, even though the last couple of stops before Success Hill started to bring contact with characters best avoided once the game started.

A three-minute trot down Thompson Road, a right and then left to the main gates on Old Perth Road and you were in the ground.

Then the fun started.

The railway has played a major part in Swan Districts’ history, with Bassendean Oval’s position on the Midland line providing easy access to the city and eastern suburbs, which supplied many of its players over the decades.

Sports were played at the then Bassendean Reserve from the early part of the century, but it was the foresight of former South Fremantle player RA (Dick) McDonald in the mid-1920s, then a member of the Bassendean Road Board, that saw funds raised to convert Bassendean Oval into a facility suitable for senior football.

McDonald’s vision was to create a league club based in the district, a dream that would come true in 1934 when Swan Districts were admitted to the WA National Football League with their founding father the inaugural president.

Swans’ Haydn Bunton Jr vs. Perth, April 1964.
McDonald was also recognised with the naming of the 800-seat grandstand in his honour, an historic achievement lost on a small boy whose only ambition was to survive unscathed amid the most threatening football environment of his limited experience.

The RA McDonald Stand was the source of that terror; a wooden stand packed with the most ferocious and vocal supporters whose synchronised foot-stamping played tune to the fortunes of their team.

They had seen dark days — Swans failed to make finals for 15 consecutive seasons after World War II, a record that stood until Peel’s entry to the league nearly half a century later — followed by the most glorious reign as Haydn Bunton’s men won three straight flags from 1961.

Silky Bill Walker, a four-time Sandover medallist, roved alongside Bunton while Test cricketer Keith Slater dominated the ruck and a host of equally hard men, such as Ken Bagley, Tony Nesbit and Fred Castledine, played for keeps.

Bassendean Oval crowd, 1961
Swans struggled for success in the 1970s, as did Claremont, but their one or two battles a year at Bassendean were epic contests between two different worlds.

Crowds flocked to witness these encounters, with the crush in the outer only matched by that on the late train, with 10,000 and more fans often squeezed into the ground.

There were nearly that many on the devastating day in June 1976 when Claremont’s Norm Uncle kicked 10 goals, only for Swans’ Mark Olsen to answer with nine as the home team got the better of a 45-goal shootout.

It remains the closest any WAFL match has come to having opponents kick 10 goals.

[By John Townsend for The West Australian. This article was first published online on 18 September 2017 at the following link: https://thewest.com.au/sport/wafl/bassendean-oval-home-of-hard-men-on-and-off-the-field-ng-b88600154z]
Swan Districts versus West Perth at Bassendean Oval in 1964.
A game between Swan Districts and South Fremantle in 1962.

Monday, 23 September 2013

OPINION: "Why not hold WAFL Grand Finals at the Suburban Grounds?", by Jack Frost

Fremantle Oval: my first preference for an alternative WAFL Grand Final venue
Bassendean Oval: My second preference
I would like to suggest that the WAFL considers shifting the WAFL Grand Final to suburban traditional grounds in the future and away from the AFL corporate megastadium of Subaco Oval. (I refuse to use any sponsor's names in naming grounds unless the sponsor pays me personally.) Nothing is sacred in the WAFL these days and the move should be considered. Playing the Grand Final at Subiaco Oval made sense when the three minor finals were played there and it was the home ground of Subiaco Football Club. Now the ground is firmly within the AFL corporate sphere and has no logical or necessary connection with second-tier football. Whatever Subiaco Oval may have meant to the WAFL and to WAFL supporters in the past I believe is now forever lost.

Last week West Perth played East Perth in front of 20,000 people in the 2013 WAFL Grand Final. Perhaps the crowd was reduced somewhat by bad weather. Not living in Western Australia anymore I have no first-hand knowledge of this. However, WP v EP is a major traditional clash and I doubt that any other match is as important in WAFL football other than the Fremantle derby. If WP v EP can only attract 20,000 people then it is unlikely a WAFL Grand Final crowd in the future will reasonably exceed (say) 23,000 or 25,000 people even in fine weather. The largest of the traditional suburban grounds, such as Bassendean Oval, Fremantle Oval, East Fremantle Oval, and Lathlain Park have accommodated crowds of 20,000 people at home-and-away games before and could do so again. I accept that Claremont Oval and Leederville Oval are much smaller grounds now than they were 20 years ago and perhaps they could not accommodate 20,000 mostly standing-room patrons. I would appreciate if anyone could give me full capacity figures for those two grounds at the moment. I was at Claremont Oval for the 4 May 2013 clash with Perth Demons and much of the old north-east corner of the ground (the bank to the left of the scoreboard if viewed from the members' stand) seemed to have been removed or was in the process of being removed.

Lathlain Park: My fourth preference
The atmosphere at Fremantle Oval or Bassendean Oval with 20,000 mostly standing patrons would be amazing and give younger people an insight into what big home-and-away games were like in the WAFL in the 1960s, 1970s, and early-1980s. We would need a rule like the ground used for the Grand Final could not be the home ground for either of the two competing clubs. My preferred grounds (in order of preference) would be: 1 Fremantle, 2 Bassendean, 3 East Fremantle, 4 Lathlain, 5 Claremont, 6 Rushton Park, 7 Leederville, 8 Joondalup (Joondalup is last because part of my aim here is re-creating the old WAFL big-match atmosphere at a traditional WAFL ground). Please leave me your comments below.

[By Jack Frost, 24 September 2013.]

OPINION: On the Prison Bars: From Destiny by Dr Norman Ashton (2018), p. 153.

From Destiny by Dr Norman Ashton (2018), p. 153: Given who the opponent was to be in 1997, a letter of 1 September 1995 from Collingwood Pre...