North Hobart Oval
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Location | Argyle Street, North Hobart, Tasmania |
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Coordinates | 42°52′4″S 147°18′57″E / 42.86778°S 147.31583°E |
Owner | City of Hobart |
Operator | City of Hobart |
Capacity | 10,000[1] |
Field size | 150 m × 105 m (492 ft × 344 ft)[2] |
Surface | Grass |
Construction | |
Broke ground | 1921 |
Opened | 1922 |
Tenants | |
|
North Hobart Oval is a sports venue in North Hobart, Tasmania. Formerly used primarily for Australian rules football widely regarded as the traditional home of Australian football in Tasmania. However since the 1950s it has also become one of the main soccer, rugby league and rugby union venues in Tasmania.
The ground holds the record crowd for Australian rules football in Tasmania, also the highest for any football code in the state: 24,968 for the 1979 TANFL grand final.
History
[edit]North Hobart Oval started its existence as Hobart Town's brickfields in 1844 before becoming a convict women's housing site, an immigration depot and an invalid persons' depot before closing in 1882 whereby the land became a rubbish dump until it was acquired for construction of a football stadium in 1921. The first official match to take place on North Hobart Oval was a Tasmanian Football League (TFL) match between Lefroy and New Town on 6 May 1922, the match was won by Lefroy (9.8.62 to 7.13.55) before 1,000 people.
Football
[edit]North Hobart Oval became League Headquarters for the TFL/TANFL/TFL Statewide League in 1922 and remained so until the League was disbanded in 2000. The ground hosted a total of 74 TFL grand finals between 1922–1999 and also hosted the Tasmanian State Grand Final on 20 occasions between 1923 and 1975, also hosting the Winfield Statewide Cup Grand Final in 1980. The final TFL match to be held at the ground was the 2000 SWL Preliminary Final between North Hobart and North Launceston (trading as the Hobart Demons and Northern Bombers at the time) which resulted in a narrow win to the Northern Bombers. After pressure from Northern TFL clubs, notably the Northern Bombers, the TFL scheduled the 2000 Grand Final to be played at Launceston's York Park, marking the first (and ultimately last) TFL Grand Final to be held away from North Hobart Oval since 1921.
The first official radio broadcast of a Tasmanian Football League match took place at North Hobart on 9 May 1931 when former Cananore player "Dinah" Green commentated on the match between North Hobart and Lefroy for radio station 7ZL. After the disbandment of the TFL, the Southern Football League made the ground its Grand Final venue in both the Premier and Regional competitions and has done since 2000, it also hosts the Old Scholars Football Association Grand Final each year. The Tasmanian Devils VFL side also played its Southern home fixtures at North Hobart from its inception in 2001 until AFL Tasmania moved the team to Bellerive Oval in 2005 where its Centre Of Excellence was established and it could more adequately host corporate functions.
Australian football carnivals
[edit]North Hobart Oval has hosted three Australian National Football Carnivals. The first was in August 1924, which was won by Victoria before an official attendance of 60,705 for the entire carnival. In 1947 a total of 67,271 attended the carnival which was played in deplorable conditions - including one match where a dog ran onto the ground and buried a saveloy in the mud in the centre of the ground. Victorian once again triumphed, this time on percentage. The 1966 Carnival was the last to be played in Tasmania. A total attendance of 91,347 were present to view the matches played and once again, Victoria took the title defeating Western Australia in the final.
Interstate and state of origen matches
[edit]The ground hosted numerous intrastate, interstate and state of origen clashes in its history. Some of the most memorable are Tasmania's triumph over Western Australia by two points in 1970 and the three State Of Origin matches held there in 1989 where 12,342 saw Tasmania hold Victoria to halftime before Victoria raced away to win. 24 June 1990 saw Tasmania finally get its revenge on Victoria, with a crowd of 18,653 packing North Hobart Oval, Tasmania raced away in the last quarter before a roaring crowd to record a 33-point win, its first over Victoria since 1960.
And in 1991 a peculiar draw from the Australian Football League (AFL) scheduled the match to be played at 11am on a Tuesday morning (a working day in Hobart) - despite this, 14,086-people turned out to watch Tasmania fall agonisingly short after leading Victoria B for much of the game, with the Victoria B rushing home with a late flurry to win by 12 points. Subsequently, through the rest of the 1990s Tasmania went on to defeat the South Australia, the Western Australia and Victoria (VFA), all at North Hobart Oval.
VFL/AFL and TFL matches
[edit]North Hobart's first VFL/AFL match took place (as part of a National Round) on 14 June 1952, where 18,387 crammed in to witness Fitzroy beat Melbourne by 20 points, 13-12 (90) to 10.10 (70). Fitzroy would host two AFL Premiership Season matches in each of 1991 and 1992 but, due to the uncompetitive nature of Fitzroy at the time (including a 157-point belting by Hawthorn, the club's worst ever defeat) crowds were lower than expected and the cash-strapped Lions pulled out of the experiment at the end of 1992. There were numerous other Foster's Cup and Ansett Cup pre-season matches held there during the 1990s.
The largest crowd for any of these matches was over 19,300 in 1996 for a Hydro Challenge pre-season practice match between the previous season's Grand Finalists, Carlton and Geelong which was won by Carlton.
Other notable events
[edit]North Hobart Oval has hosted numerous other events throughout its long history. Cricket, Association football (soccer), Rugby League, Rugby Union, Anzac Day sports events and athletics have all been staged there at various times. An Australian XI played an association football friendly against Hungarian club Ferencvárosi TC in 1957,[3] and two world records were established at North Hobart in athletics when Betty Cuthbert set a new world record for the 220-yard sprint on 7 March 1960 and Ron Clarke beat Vladimir Kuts 5000 metres record on 16 January 1965.
In 1959 a Billy Graham crusade set an all-time attendance record for the ground with a crowd in excess of 25,000 attending, and in 1987, thousands attended a Military Tattoo at the ground. A NRL match between the Melbourne Storm and the Brisbane Broncos was played at the ground in 2012.[4] A Super Rugby Pacific match between the New South Wales Waratahs and the Melbourne Rebels was played at the ground in 2013.
Development
[edit]The first of the grandstands to be built at North Hobart was the Ryde Street (George Miller) Stand in late-1921 which was badly damaged by fire in June 2012 and has since been rebuilt.
The Argyle Street Stand (known today as the Horrie Gorringe Stand) was an 840-seat stand that began construction in 1923 and was opened in time for the 1924 Australian National Football Carnival. It remained unaltered until the rear-half of the structure was gutted-out in June 1991 to build the North Hobart Football Clubrooms which in years to come would become the headquarters for AFL Tasmania and the Southern Football League.
The Letitia Street Stand was also erected in 1924. This was built of wood and was in a poor state of disrepair by the time it was burned down in an arson attack in May 1987, it was later replaced by the $1.25 million Doug Plaister Stand that was completed in 1988. The concrete Roy Cazaly Stand, located in the forward pocket in front of the main entrance gate was constructed during 1960/1961.
Other works carried out were the building of players' tunnels at the foot of the Horrie Gorringe Stand and building the terraces (still in place today) during 1964/1965.
The main, electronic scoreboard, opened as the Gorringe Electronic Scoreboard, sponsored by the Donald Gorringe company in North Hobart, was constructed in 1972 and opened in time for the 1972 TANFL Finals Series. After being in a rundown and precarious condition for several years, its 538 light globes were removed and replaced by the Hobart City Council in May 2011, with a flat screen installed in place and new time clock installed. The upgraded scoreboard was opened for use on 21 May 2011 for a TSL match between North Hobart and Clarence. This has since been replaced by a jumbo screen scoreboard affixed to the front of the structure.
A new media centre named the Devine-Leedham Media Centre was constructed on centre-wing on the terraced side of the ground to replace the old television tower that had stood at the ground since the 1970s.
Future
[edit]Despite North Hobart Oval's long-standing tradition as the 'Home Of Football' in the South of the State, the future of the venue is looking increasingly shaky as other stadiums gradually have surpassed the now tired looking stadium. In the 2009 TSL season, the ground was only scheduled to hold North Hobart's home matches and one finals match, but due to the poor standard of the playing surface the match was transferred to the now-preferred Bellerive Oval which marked the first TFL/TSL Season since 1921 that the ground went without hosting a finals match. The ground continued to host the Grand Final for the SFL and for the Old Scholars Football Association in 2009, but on 23 December 2009, it was announced by the SFL that they would be moving their operations and their Grand Final fixture to KGV Oval from 2010 and beyond.[5]
North Hobart Oval has repeatedly been the subject of discussions over potential future redevelopment into a rectangular stadium in similar fashion to Perth Oval. However, the SFL has since backflipped and returned the Grand Final to NHO for the 2016 season.[6] However, in recent times, the future of the ground has been assured somewhat with a 1.1 million combined state and federal government investment into the ground that will see improvements including a new kiosk and cool room, terraced and roofed standing area on the Rydges Hotel wing, an AFL compliant coaches and media box and a lift into the Plaister Stand to allow disabled access to the function room.[7] In 2019, the ground will also host its first elite-level AFL event since the early 2000s when it hosts an AFL Women's match between North Melbourne Football Club vs Carlton Football Club on 3 February.
Football attendance records
[edit]North Hobart Oval holds the top five ground attendance records in Tasmanian football history, including the highest roster match attendance ever recorded of 8,840 in 1967:
- 24,968 - Clarence v Glenorchy - 1979 TANFL Grand Final.
- 24,413 - New Norfolk v Clarence - 1970 TANFL Grand Final
- 23,764 - Tasmania v VFL - 1966 Australian National Football Carnival.
- 23,368 - Western Australia v VFL - 1966 Australian National Football Carnival.
- 20,775 - Sandy Bay v New Norfolk - 1964 TANFL Grand Final
References
[edit]- ^ "North Hobart Oval". Austadiums. Retrieved 16 November 2019.
- ^ Atkinson, Cody; Lawson, Sean (15 June 2022). "From the SCG to Kardinia Park — do ground sizes contribute to the end result in AFL games?". ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 19 February 2024.
- ^ "Socceroo B internationals, 1957". ozfootball.net. Retrieved 29 December 2007.
- ^ "NRL pre-season trial results". Fox Sports Australia. 19 February 2012. Retrieved 14 July 2024.
- ^ North Hobart's lights fade
- ^ "Claremont claims premiership glory". The Mercury. 24 September 2016.
- ^ "federal government grant to kick beloved North Hobart Oval-into the 21st century". The Mercury.