Duke Trophy

The Duke Trophy is an annual inter-state speed skating competition in Australia.

Duke Trophy
Sport Speedskating
Founded 1952
No. of teams 4
Continent Australia
Most recent champion(s) New South Wales
New South Wales

History

The Duke Trophy was made in 1952 and donated to the Australian Amateur Ice Racing Council by Len Duke, the first Secretary/Treasurer of the AAIRC, with the help of an old school friend Dave Morgan. They started skating at St Moritz Ice Palais in St Kilda in June 1946 and both eventually represented Victoria in interstate competition.[1]

There had been Interstate Racing between NSW and Victoria for many years, initially managed by the Ice Hockey Association as an additional attraction to the Interstate Hockey matches at the time however; there was nothing tangible to record the winning teams in these competitions. The inscription on the plate of the original part of the trophy reads "The Australian Amateur Ice Racing Council Trophy for Interstate Racing".

By 1951 the AAIRC was formed and had separate associations for Speed Skating in Victoria and New South Wales and even for a short time in Tasmania, which was the venue for the 1952 Australian Championships. Len felt there should be a separate trophy for Interstate Racing; especially after the Victorian team was very successful in Hobart in 1952. The idea of the skater on the top was born after he won the three distances in the 1951 Australian Championships, and brought back to Melbourne three beautiful trophies donated by Graeme Smith's father in the form of a globe of the world on which was mounted a speed skater. One of these original trophies was donated back to the VSSU (which later became VIRA) after Len's death, and has since been made into the Best and Fairest Trophy for the Duke Trophy competition. In 2002, The Spirit of the Duke Trophy Perpetual Trophy was donated by Australian Olympian, Colin Coates and is awarded to a skater has the "spirit" of the Duke Trophy.

After a bike accident in 1952 in which Len damaged discs in his spine and was encased in a plaster cast for several months.[2] Len could not skate and defend his titles that year. For various reasons he finally dropped out of participation in Speed Skating. In either 1956 or 1957 and it was suggested that the trophy become "Duke Trophy" to keep his name in the sport. This was not widely accepted in Melbourne for a few years, but by 1963 when the competition moved away from the Australian Championships to its own time slot of Queen's Birthday weekend, the name settled in as the Duke Trophy.

Format of the competition

The original format was a competition between 6 senior men and 2 junior men with races ranging from quarter mile, through half mile to 1 mile. Two skaters per State competed in each race, except for the 1 mile in which there were three skaters per state. The Juniors skated quarter and half mile only, then there was also a 2 mile Relay for the seniors. By 1955 a 2 mile race for Seniors was included. The whole program was held over a half hour period on the last night of the Australian Championships.

Ladies came later in the early 1960s–initially there were only three –with a special trophy for the Ladies Relay donated by Teddi Jenkins of Victoria, a previous Victorian and National titleholder.

Results

Duke Trophy
Year Host Champions Runners-up 3rd place
2014
New South Wales
New South Wales
New South Wales
New South Wales
[3]
Victoria (Australia)
Victoria
Western Australia
Western Australia
2012
Queensland
Queensland
New South Wales
New South Wales
[4]
Queensland
Queensland
Victoria (Australia)
Victoria
2011
New South Wales
New South Wales
New South Wales
New South Wales
[5]
Queensland
Queensland
Victoria (Australia)
Victoria
2010
Queensland
Queensland
New South Wales
New South Wales
[6]
Queensland
Queensland
Victoria (Australia)
Victoria
2009
New South Wales
New South Wales
New South Wales
New South Wales
[7]
Queensland
Queensland
Victoria (Australia)
Victoria
2008
Queensland
Queensland
New South Wales
New South Wales
[8]
Queensland
Queensland
Victoria (Australia)
Victoria
2007
New South Wales
New South Wales
Queensland
Queensland
[9]
New South Wales
New South Wales
Victoria (Australia)
Victoria
2006
Queensland
Queensland
Queensland
Queensland
[10]
New South Wales
New South Wales
Victoria (Australia)
Victoria
2005
New South Wales
New South Wales
Queensland
Queensland
[11]
New South Wales
New South Wales
Victoria (Australia)
Victoria
2004
Queensland
Queensland
Queensland
Queensland
[12]
New South Wales
New South Wales
Victoria (Australia)
Victoria
2003
Queensland
Queensland
Queensland
Queensland
[13]
Victoria (Australia)
Victoria
New South Wales
New South Wales
2002
Queensland
Queensland
Queensland
Queensland
[14]
Victoria (Australia)
Victoria
New South Wales
New South Wales

Note that the competition was not held in 2013.

See also

Sports in Australia

References

External links