Shepley Oval
LocationPultney St, Dandenong, Victoria
Coordinates37°59′45″S 145°13′19″E / 37.99583°S 145.22194°E / -37.99583; 145.22194
OwnerCity of Greater Dandenong
Field size166m × 120m
SurfaceGrass
Tenants
Dandenong Stingrays (TAC Cup)
Dandenong Cricket Club (VPC)
Dandenong Football Club (VFA, 1962–1994)

Shepley Oval is a football and cricket field located in Dandenong in south-eastern Melbourne. It presently serves as the home ground of the Dandenong Cricket Club in the Victorian Premier Cricket competition, and of the Dandenong Stingrays in the TAC Cup football competition.

Shepley Oval is located at the eastern end of Dandenong Park, immediately north of the Dandenong Creek. The parkland was used for sports in the late 19th century, but throughout the early half of the 20th century until the 1960s, the premier venue for sports in Dandenong was the Dandenong Showgrounds (which at that time was located in Clow Street, the site presently occupied by the Dandenong Municipal Offices). Shepley Oval was developed to a top standard oval in the late 1950s, with a grandstand being opened in 1959, and it has been the region's premier sports venue since the 1960s.[1]

The venue's most historically notable football tenant is the Dandenong Football Club. Dandenong, which was then playing in the Victorian Football Association, moved its home ground from the Showgrounds to Shepley Oval in 1962,[2] and played its games there until it folded at the end of the 1994 season. In 1995, the Southern Stingrays in Victoria's premier under-18s football competition, the TAC Cup, moved its home ground from Kavanagh Reserve, Mordialloc to Shepley Oval; the club has been since known as the Dandenong Stingrays, remains based at the ground in 2014 and is now the main football tenant of the oval.[3] Another notable football tenant of the ground was the Victorian Football League's Springvale Football Club, which played many of its games at the ground between 2000 and 2005, after it had left the Newcomen Rd Oval but before it moved to Casey Fields.[4]

In the early 1960s, around the same time as the Dandenong Football Club moved to Shepley Oval, the Dandenong Sub-District Cricket Club was formed, and began playing its games at Shepley Oval during the summer. Top level district cricket first came to the venue in 1989, when the Waverley Cricket Club merged with Dandenong; the merged club, originally known as Waverley-Dandenong but now known as the Dandenong Cricket Club, has played its first XI and second XI cricket at Shepley Oval since; Wilson Oval, which is adjacent to Shepley Oval in Dandenong Park, serves as the third and fourth XI home ground.[1]

The venue is named after former Dandenong Cricket Association secretary and president Harry Shepley. The oval has two main buildings: the Frank Storan Grandstand, named after the Dandenong cricket personality whose fundraising efforts facilitated its construction; and the Keith Miller Pavilion, named after the former Dandenong mayor, footballer and cricketer Keith Esmond Miller – not after former Australian Test cricketer and VFL footballer Keith Ross Miller, who was a much better known sportsman from Melbourne, but had no association with sport in Dandenong.[5] The Keith Miller Pavilion underwent a $1.25 million re-development in 2014 to improve its training facilities.[6] The ornate western gates were originally built at the Springvale Crematorium and were moved to Shepley Oval later.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Club history". Retrieved 3 November 2014.
  2. Marc Fiddian (16 July 1983). "Panthers head for record & relegation". The Age. Melbourne, VIC. p. 29.
  3. "Club Sponsors". Fox Sports Pulse. Retrieved 4 January 2015.
  4. Fiddian 2003, p. 140–143.
  5. Santo Caruso; Marc Fiddian; Jim Main (2002), Football Grounds of Melbourne, Essendon North, VIC: Pennon Publishing, pp. 52–54
  6. Jarrod Potter (23 October 2014). "Shepley Oval up there with the best". Star Community. Cranbourne, VIC. Retrieved 3 November 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.