Contents
Ovens & King Football League
The ** Ovens & King Football Netball League** is a minor country Australian rules football and netball league based in North-Eastern Victoria in the vicinity of Wangaratta and more recently Benalla.
History
The Ovens & King Football League was formed on the 13th of June 1903, after a handful of men met at The Bulls Head Hotel in Wangaratta to consider forming a football competition. One week later, the first matches of the Ovens & King Football Association were played. The competition changed its name to the Ovens and King Football League after the 1928 season. Today, more than 100 years later, teams from Benalla, Bright, Greta, King Valley, Milawa, Moyhu, North Wangaratta, Tarrawingee and Whorouly participate in seniors, reserves and five netball grades. Located in the rich Ovens Valley and King Valley of northeast Victoria, the league has produced a number of elite football who have gone on to play in the AFL, including the cousins Nigel (Brisbane Lions) and Matthew Lappin (St Kilda/Carlton), ruckman Mark Porter (Kangaroos/Carlton) and most recently Michael Newton (Melbourne), Ben Reid (Collingwood) and Sam Reid (Sydney Swans). Community support is strong in the Ovens and King districts with crowds attending games usually greater than most neighbouring competitions. The local football is an important social outlet for many local communities and finals matches draw especially strong crowd numbers. In 2010, the league added Tatong, Swanpool, Goorambat and Bonnie Doon, who had previously played in the now-defunct Benalla & District Football League. After four years of heavy losses, Swanpool and Tatong were thrown out of the competition by AFL County Victoria, ending nearly 100 years of tradition. A two-way merge proposed by the clubs was rejected, as was a transfer to the Picola District FL. In 2019 Glenrowan were forced into recess following a player, coach and volunteer shortage.
Names history
Clubs
Current
Former
Premiership History
Senior Football Grand Finals
A Grade Netball Grand Finals
League Hall Of Fame
This pretigious honour for O&KFNL players & officials was first awarded in 2006.
League Life Members
Charlie H. Butler (Sec)
G. Ray Barker (Pres)
Ron Marks (Tribunal)
John Keogh (Auditor)
Cyril C. Johnson (Tribunal)
Harold H. Wellington (Tribunal)
Bert H.G. Harman (Reporter)
J R Mummery (Delegate)
William Smith (Sponsor etc.)
Clyde Baker (Sec)
Albert (Bert) A. Clarke (Pres)
Jack M. Wood (Tribunal)
D.P. Jones (Auditor)
H. Peter Nolan (Pres)
Ken Stewart (Delegate)
Angry J.A. Ferguson (Auditor)
Fred Jensen (Delegate)
E.J (Ted) Lester (Delegate)
Fred Baker (Sec)
Vin Shelley (Pres)
D.R. (Toby) Schultz (Tribunal)
Les OKeefe (Tribunal) Bill Lowen (300 games) Bright William. O
Brien (300 games) Greta
Rob Forrest (300 games) Beechworth
Rowdy Lappin (300 games) Chiltern
Rex Walter (300 games) North Wangaratta
Ross Nightingale (300 games) Bright
Gary Bussell (300 games) King Valley
Trevor Blair (300 games) Tarrawingee
Mark Allan (300 games) Milawa
Brendan Allan (300 games) Milawa
Lionel Schutt (300 games) Milawa, North Wang, Tarrawingee, Moyhu
Allan Dickson (League President)
Andrew Smith (300 games) Greta, Glenrowan
Mal Dinsdale (400 games) Tarrawingee
Geoff Robinson (400 games) Milawa
Russell Ferguson (400 games) Milawa
Steve Masin (300 games) Whorouly
Peter Hawkins (400 games) Moyhu
Bruce Nightingale (300 games)
Ab (Alan) Gillett (300 games) Bright
John Munari Moyhu
Patrick O'Shea (Bright)
Peter Jones (Bright)
Scott Douglas (Moyhu)
Robert Burrowes (Moyhu, King Valley)
Paul Hogan (Greta)
Senior Football Best and Fairest / Clyde Baker Medal Winners
Senior Leading Goal Kicking Winners
Football Seasons
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2022
2023
This article is derived from Wikipedia and licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. View the original article.
Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the
Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.
Bliptext is not
affiliated with or endorsed by Wikipedia or the
Wikimedia Foundation.