Alberton Oval

Alberton Oval
Alberton
Location cnr Brougham Place and Queen St, Alberton, South Australia
Opened 1880
Operator Port Adelaide Football Club
Surface Grass
Capacity 17,000
Tenants
1880-1996
Port Adelaide Football Club (SANFL / AFL)
1997-2010
Port Adelaide Football Club (admin & training)
Port Adelaide Magpies (SANFL)
2010-present
Port Adelaide Football Club (SANFL / AFL)

Alberton Oval is located in Alberton, a north-western suburb of Adelaide, South Australia. The ground is primarily used for Australian rules football and has a capacity of 17,000 people with seated grandstands holding 2,000, (the RB Quinn and the Fos Williams Stands). The record crowd for Alberton is 22,738 which was set in 1977 for an SANFL match between Port Adelaide and their traditional SANFL rivals Norwood.

Alberton Oval is the training and administration base for the Port Adelaide Football Club although they play their Australian Football League home games just 3km away at the 51,515 seat AAMI Stadium. Alberton is often referred to as the 'spiritual home' of Port Adelaide,[1] due to the club (in the SANFL) playing almost all of their homes games there since it opened in 1880. The Power (as the club is known in the AFL) usually plays 1-2 trial games at the ground during the pre-season.

The oval also hosts matches for the Port Adelaide Magpies Football Club in the local SANFL competition.

The Allan Scott Power Headquarters stands adjacent to the oval. So too does the Port Club, a social venue for Port Adelaide Magpies and Port Adelaide Power supporters and players.

Alberton Oval has a long history. On 15 May 1880, the Port Adelaide Football Club played its first match on the ground. Many notable players from the Port Adelaide Football Club and the Port Adelaide Magpies have played matches on Alberton Oval, including four time SANFL Magarey Medal winner and club games record holder (392) Russell Ebert, nine time premiership coach Fos Williams, local junior and future Carlton star Craig Bradley and the Power's first ever AFL coach, John Cahill who also coached the Magpies to 10 premierships.[2]

References and notes

  1. ^ History, Port Adelaide Football Club.
  2. ^ Alberton Oval, Port Adelaide Football Club.

External links