词条 | Ormond Amateur Football Club |
释义 |
| name = Ormond Amateur Football Club | logo = | fullname = Ormond Amateur Football Club | nickname = 'Monders' | colours = Brown and blue guernsey, white numbering | founded = 1931 | founder = Mr. L.E. Smith | sport = Australian Rules Football | league = VAFA | ground = E.E. Gunn Reserve, Ormond, Victoria | captain = Mr. Boyd Upstill | song = "It's A Grand Old Flag" | president = Mr. Richard Simon | coach = Mr. Ashleigh Lever | season = 2015 | position = Division 1 }} Ormond Amateur Football Club is the second-oldest suburban club in the Victorian Amateur Football Association. The club was founded in 1931 by Mr. Leslie Edward Smith, and is located 14 km south east of Melbourne in the suburb of Ormond.[1] In 2008 Ormond welcomed back recently retired AFL player Matthew Robbins as player and assistant coach. After competing in B grade in season 2009, Ormond were narrowly relegated and subsequently moved down to C grade for 2010. In 2008 the Club won the C Grade premiership, defeating Hampton Rovers 15.12 (102 points) to 9.10 (64 points). Club foundationThe club was founded in the early years of the Great Depression. A local businessman named Les Smith, believed that the local young people needed a constructive way to channel their energies in difficult times, and that he was able to help them do that through sport. Smith had himself been nurtured as a young player of Australian Rules Football in the Albert Park State School team, which included himself, Roy Cazaly and Frank Beaurepaire. All three had been presented with their uniforms by Henry Harrison, a founding member of the Australian Rules game in the early 1860s.[2] At the beginning of the 1930s, Smith approached a friend, Councillor Ernie Gunn, to prevail on the local council for a grant of land. Gunn arranged this, and in 1931 the Ormond Amateur Football Club was born. Smith served as president for most of the years between the first playing season, 1932, and 1959. Les Smith's daughter, Betty Macgregor, recalls the club's foundation: Dad was a champion footballer in the bush in his youth. He was dubbed the "Gippsland Flyer". He was training with South Melbourne when World War One broke out. Our family moved back to the city from Maffra at the start of the Depression, and we opened a newsagency on the corner of North Road and Newham Grove in Ormond. It was here that a lot of the planning was done to establish the club. At Les Smith's funeral in 1968, so many of the "Ormond family" arrived to pay respects that there was standing room only. In an article in the club's newsletter, "The Brown & Blue Review" (reprinted in "The Amateur Footballer"), Ormond's long-standing club doctor, JR "Doc" Porter, wrote: On behalf of the Ormond Amateur Football Club - members, executives and supporters - I present to you a memoir of the grand old man of Ormond, Les Smith... Les Smith was one of nature's ten-footers in the moral and spiritual measure of earthly existence.... His action in starting the ball rolling for the formation of the OAFC was partly coloured by his concern for the youngsters of the district... He was a stickler for the right method or approach and set standards so many of us were pleased to try and maintain...[4] AFL/VFL playersIn all over forty Ormond footballers have played VFL/AFL football and include the following;
References1. ^Clubs display 2. ^Commander Stan Veale, Letter to "The Southern Cross", Oct 10, 1979. 3. ^Interview with Mrs Betty Macgregor, April 21, 2013. 4. ^"Brown & Blue Review", May 4, 1968. Vol 5, No.2; reprinted in "The Amateur Footballer" on May 11, 1968. External links{{Commons category}}
4 : Victorian Amateur Football Association clubs|Australian rules football clubs in Melbourne|1931 establishments in Australia|Sports clubs established in 1931 |
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