The rise and fall of Waverley Park
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Re: The rise and fall of Waverley Park
I have a lot of memories of VFL Park.
My 1st visit to the ground was to play against South Melbourne for Footscray little league in 1978 We lost 1.1.7 to 0. I played half a game and froze as the ball never came near me in the forward line. The highlight was getting a pie and strawberry Big M after the game, and getting to explore the massive members grand stand and change rooms that the public never get to see.
My family went to many games between 1978 and 1995, including all of the finals (heartbreak in 1985, and took hours to get out of the carpark), and joy in 1992. I remember Beazer kicking 8 against Geelong, and Dunstall kicking 14 against us. Most of all though what I remember was how far the action was from the stands and the long rides home that were made bearable because Dad always got us hot donuts to eat on the way home.
In 1996 I joined as an AFL Member and my memories of Waverley were much better. I went to heaps of non-Bulldog games once I found out where to park to make a quick getaway after the game - I could be home in Williamstown within 30 minutes if I timed it right. Sitting in the AFL Members was great for mixing with who's who of the AFL, and it was the best spot to view the games.
Finally I also went to a World Series cricket game there between Australia and the West Indies, and many Australian Baseball League games when the Waverley Reds used VFL Park as their home field. The games between the Reds and the Melbourne Monarchs were particularly memorable, especially if you like a good old fashioned all in brawl. There was one almost every game.
Also a U2 concert, but that car park getting out after a big crowd was shocking, and cold, very cold and windy with no protection from the stands.Comment
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Re: The rise and fall of Waverley Park
I also bought my first home in Donncaster East. However in the early 2000s.Comment
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Re: The rise and fall of Waverley Park
It was a shit hole, an absolute shit hole. It was miles away from the western suburbs, it was always cold and wet there was no proper public transport to the ground and if you drove the car park was knee deep in mud and took 3 hours to get out of after the game.
Apart from that the only problems were the overall depressing feeling the ground exuded, you couldn't see the play from one side to the other and the masses of concrete was probably carcinogenic.
It's also where Kelvin Templeton did his knee in the fading moments of one of those pointless Escort night matches against Melbourne in the preseason after he'd won the Brownlow.They say Burt Lancaster has one, but I don't believe them.Comment
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