Winter sport in Australia

Juniors playing polocrosse in NSW, Australia
Kiandra Snow Shoe Carnival, 1900.

Winter Sports in Australia encompasses a great variety of activities across the continent of Australia, including winter sports played in snow and ice. Climate varies considerably from the tropical North to temperate South in Australia, and sporting practices vary accordingly. Ice and snow sports like Skiing in Australia are conducted in the high country of the Australian Alps and Tasmanian Wilderness. Australia has relatively low mountain ranges, but a long history of participation in recreational skiing (since the 1860s) and the Winter Olympic Games (since 1936). Australians have won olympic gold in ice skating, skiing and snow-boarding events. Australia's generally flat geography and usually mild winter climate otherwise provide ideal conditions for international non-snow/ice winter sports and team games like Rugby Union Football, Rugby League Football and Association Football (Soccer), which are all popular sports during the Australian winter and in which Australia has enjoyed considerable international success. Australian rules football is a home-grown winter football code with a wide following throughout Australia. Many other sports are also played or watched in Australia through the winter season.

Snow and ice sports

Ladies' Toboggan Race, Kiandra, c. 1884–1917
Mount Hotham ski resort, Victoria
Perisher is Australia's largest ski resort

Snow sports

Alpine Skiing

Main article: Skiing in Australia

During the Southern Hemisphere winter, snow skiing and snow boarding takes place in the high country of the states of New South Wales, Victoria and Tasmania, and cross-country skiing is also possible in the Australian Capital Territory.

New South Wales is home to Australia's highest snow country, oldest skifields and largest resorts. The highest peak in New South Wales is Mount Kosciuszko, at 2200m. Victoria is the State with the greatest number of ski resorts in Australia. The highest peak in Victoria is Mount Bogong at 1986m.[1] The most northerly ski fields in Australia are located in the A.C.T. - in the Brindabella Ranges which rise to the west of Canberra, the capital city of Australia, and include the Namadgi National Park in the A.C.T. and Bimberi Nature Reserve and Brindabella National Park in New South Wales. The highest mountain in the ACT is Bimberi Peak, which lies above the treeline at 1912 metres, at the northern edge of the Snowy Mountains.[1] The most southerly ski fields in Australia are located in Tasmania, a mountainous island off the southern coast of Eastern Australia. Much of the State is subject to at least occasional winter snows. Mount Ossa is the highest point on the island at 1614m but Tasmania has eight mountains exceeding 1500m and 28 above 1,220m. Also notable is the Central Plateau, at an elevation of around 900m. The capital city of Hobart is built at the base of Mount Wellington, which at 1270m is snow-capped in winter.[2]

Skiing began in Australia at the goldrush town of Kiandra, New South Wales around 1861. The Kiandra snow shoe club founded around that time (now called the Kiandra Pioneer Ski Club (1861)) remains the world's first identifiable and ceaseless Ski Club.[3] The Club held separate ski races for both ladies and children as early as 1885. In 1908 the club held the first ever documented International and Intercontinental Downhill Skiing Carnival. Results- America 1st, Australia 2nd, England 3rd.[4] The first Kosciuszko Chalet was built at Charlotte Pass in 1930, giving relatively comfortable access to Australia's highest terrain.[5] The first Australian ski tow was constructed near Mount Buffalo, Victoria in 1936. It was the construction of the vast Snowy Mountains Hydro-Electric Scheme from 1949 that really opened up the Snowy Mountains of New South Wales for large scale development of a ski industry and led to the establishment of Thredbo, Perisher and Guthega as leading Australian resorts.[6][7]

Australian skiers competed in the Winter Olympics for the first time in Oslo 1952 and have competed in all subsequent Games, winning medals at every Games since 1998.[8] Malcolm Milne became the first non-European to win a ski race world cup in 1969 and Olympic medalists include Zali Steggall, Alisa Camplin and Dale Begg-Smith.[9][10]

Australia has extensive skiable terrain during the southern hemisphere winter in the south eastern states and Australian Capital Territory, between elevations of around 1250m to 2200m. Elevation of the snowfields in Australia varies with latitude, however viable winter snows are generally found above 1500m: Thredbo, near mount Kosciuszko, has Australia's highest lifted point at 2037m and its base elevation is 1365m. Kiandra, in the Northern Skifields, has an elevation of 1400m, while Mount Mawson near Hobart, Tasmania is at 1250m.[11][12][13][14]

A number of well serviced resorts have been developed, including: Thredbo, Perisher, Charlotte Pass and Selwyn Snowfields in New South Wales; Mount Buller, Falls Creek, Mount Hotham, Mount Baw Baw and Mount Buffalo in Victoria; as well as the small resorts of Ben Lomond and Mount Mawson in Tasmania. Cross country skiing is popular in such national parks as Kosciuszko National Park and Alpine National Park and is also possible within Namadgi National Park and in the Tasmanian Wilderness.

The Australian Alps are within driving range for weekend trips for residents of Sydney, Melbourne and Canberra, while Tasmanian ski slopes are within day trip range for residents of the state.

In 2004, a mogul course called "Toppa's Dream" was constructed on Blue Cow.[15] The Mount Buller World Aerials is an annual event, the first on the World Cup calendar. Aerial skiers practice extensively on water before trying jumps on snow, and Camplin practised jumps in a pond in Wandin (one hour's drive from Melbourne).[16] The Kangaroo Hoppet, a member of the Worldloppet Ski Federation series of cross-country skiing races, is an annual citizen race that attracts competitors from several countries. Ski jumping is currently non-existent in Australia.[17]

The only Australian Biathlon training course is located at Dinner Plain, Victoria near Mount Hotham.

Cross country and back country skiing

Cradle Mountain in Tasmania's UNESCO World Heritage Wilderness Area

The Kosciuszko Main Range in the Snowy Mountains of New South Wales offer some of the most challenging cross-country and back-country skiing in Australia, notably Watsons Crags and Mount Twynam on the steep Western Face of the Range.[18][19] The Mount Jagungal wilderness area provides some of the most isolated back-country ski terrain. High country huts, often a legacy of the era of cattle grazing in the mountains, provide emergency shelter in these regions.[20]

Dedicated Cross Country ski resorts are located at Lake Mountain, Mount Stirling and Mount St Gwinear in Victoria and popular areas for back country skiing and ski touring in the Alpine National Park, Yarra Ranges National Park and the Baw Baw National Park include: Mount Bogong, Mount Feathertop, Bogong High Plains, Mount Howitt, Mount Reynard and Snowy Plains. The Kangaroo Hoppet is a leg of the Worldloppet cross-country race series which is conducted on the last Saturday of August each year, hosted by Falls Creek in Victoria. The showpiece 42-kilometre race attracts thousands of spectators and competitors.[21]

Cross country skiing can be possible in the Brindabella Ranges which rise to the west of Canberra, in the A.C.T, and include the Namadgi National Park and Bimberi Nature Reserve. Mount Franklin Chalet, built in 1938, in the A.C.T. played a pioneering role in providing lifted ski runs in Australia, however the chalet was converted to a museum and subsequently destroyed by fire in 2003, so today only cross country skiing can be practised in the area (when conditions allow).[22] Cross Country skiing is also practised at Mount Gingera, elevation 1855m, a prominent snow covered peak above the city of Canberra.[23][24]

When conditions allow, Australia's rugged island State of Tasmania also offers cross country skiers some scenic terrain - notably in the UNESCO World Heritage area around Cradle Mountain.[25] Tasmania has 28 mountains above 1,220m and much of the island is subject to at least occasional winter snow.[2]

The Australian High Country is populated by unique flora and fauna including wombats, wallabies, echidnas, and the Snow Gum. The Alpine regions are subject to environmental protection, which has limited the scope of commercial development of skiiable terrain,[26] however Australia has extensive cross country skiing terrain.[27][28]

Snowboarding

Torah Bright of Cooma, NSW, the winner of the women's halfpipe snowboarding at the 2010 Winter Olympics

The sport of snowboarding is also popular in the Australian skifields and Australia has been represented at the Olympics in this sport ever since it debuted at Nagano in 1998.[29] Torah Bright, of the Snowy Mountains town of Cooma, New South Wales, won gold for Australia at the Vancouver Olympics in 2010 in the women's snowboard halfpipe event. Australia finished on top of the medal tally at the snowboarding world championships in 2012.[30] Bright's gold medal - combined with the gold and silver skiing event medals – made 2010 Australia's most successful winter Olympic Games.[31]

Ice sports

Many major Australian cities have indoor ice rinks, enabling participation in some winter sports regardless of the city's climate - for example, subtropical Brisbane is a major short track speed skating hub for Australia. Sydney hosted the 1991 short track speed skating World Championships (in which Australia won the men's relay event), and the 2001 Goodwill Games, hosted in Brisbane, included figure skating. The Duke Trophy hosted annually by the Australian Amateur Ice Racing Council encourages interstate competition in short track speed skating.

Short-track speedskater Steven Bradbury won the 1,000 m event at the 2002 Winter Olympics. He was the first Australian to win a Winter Olympic gold medal and was also part of the short track relay team that won Australia's first Winter Olympic medal (a bronze in 1994).[32]

Curling facilities are limited in Australia. There is curling at Sydney Ice Arena in New South Wales, while curling also occurs in Melbourne [33] and is also played in Brisbane.[34]

Ice Hockey is played in many major cities in Australia, with the NHL affiliated Australian Ice Hockey League.

Sliding sports

Australia lacks any bobsleigh tracks (used for bobsleigh, luge and skeleton), but there is a bobsleigh push track in the Docklands area in Melbourne.[35]

Australia at the Winter Olympics

Australia first competed in the Winter Olympic Games in 1936 and has taken part in every Winter Olympics since 1952. It won its first Winter Olympic medal, a bronze, in 1994, and became the only southern hemisphere country to win Winter Olympic gold in 2002. Australia has competed in every Winter Paralympic Games, and has won medals at every Winter Paralympics since 1992.

Australian medals at the Winter Olympic Games
Year Athletes Sports  Gold   Silver Bronze Total 
199427 90011
199824 80011
200227 52002
200640 101-12
Australian medals at the Winter Paralympic Games
Year  Gold   Silver Bronze Total 
19921124
19943249
19981012
20026107
20060112

Sports played in winter

A sold out Melbourne Cricket Ground crowd during the Australian Rules Football (AFL) Grand Final Day of 2007.

Australia's mild winters mean that in most parts of Australia, regular outdoor sports can be played all year, and indeed more vigorous sports are more comfortably played in winter. Australian rules football and rugby league, the two most popular spectator sports in Australia, are played primarily in winter. See Sport in Australia.

Australia's National Rugby League Team, Brisbane 2009.
Harry Kewell playing for the Australian National Soccer Team (Socceroos).
The Wallabies (Australian national rugby union team) compete for the ball in a lineout in a match against the South African Springboks.

Reports of rugby union being played in Australia date back to the 1820s, with local clubs established by the 1860s.[36] The game has been especially popular as a winter sport in Queensland, New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory. The Australian national rugby union team is called the Wallabies. Since the 1920s the Wallabies have worn green and gold jerseys.[36] Despite having a relatively small player base, mainly in NSW and Queensland, the national side has twice won the Rugby World Cup in 1991 and 1999. Australia hosted the 2003 Rugby World Cup, which saw the Wallabies defeated by England in the final at Telstra Stadium. Other notable competitions include the annual Bledisloe Cup played against Australia's traditional rivals, the New Zealand All Blacks since 1931, and the Tri-Nations competition involving South Africa and New Zealand. Australia has produced a number of notable rugby players of national stature, including Sir Edward Dunlop, Mark Ella (one of the first indigenous Australians to captain a national side) and the prolific try scorer David Campese.

In 1908, rugby league was established in Australia by former rugby union players and supporters as a breakaway professional code. The new code gained and has maintained a wider following in Australia than rugby union, which remained amateur until the 1990s.[36] It has traditionally been seen as a "working man's sport" with its roots in the working class communities of the northern English counties of Lancashire and Yorkshire translating to similar areas of Western Sydney and Brisbane. Rugby league is the most popular winter sport in New South Wales, Queensland and the Australian Capital Territory. The elite club competition is the National Rugby League (NRL), which features ten teams from New South Wales, three teams from Queensland, and one team each from Victoria, Australian Capital Territory and New Zealand. The season culminates in the premiership deciding game, the NRL Grand Final, traditionally one of Australia's most popular sporting events and one of the largest club championship matches in the world.[37] Rugby League is played in all Australian states and territories, but has a much reduced participation in the southern and western states. The New South Wales Blues and Queensland Maroons play a representative series against each other every year, called the State of Origin series, which is one of Australia's major sporting events. In addition, the Australian Kangaroos represent the country in international matches. Since its inception in 1954, the Australian team has dominated the Rugby League World Cup, having won the competition nine times.[38]

Australian rules football (usually called " Football, Aussie rules" or "AFL") is a popular spectator sport and a participation sport in all Australian states and territories, though its core support lies in four of the six states; Victoria, South Australia, Western Australia and Tasmania. The national competition, the Australian Football League, evolved from a Victorian state competition. The AFL Grand Final is traditionally played each year at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. Australian rules football culture has a strong set of rituals and traditions, many of which have crossed sporting boundaries in Australia.

Soccer is a high participation football code, with both boys and girls at junior level as well with men and women at senior level. A number of major international stars have played for the national team in recent years including Tim Cahill, Mark Viduka, Mark Schwarzer and Harry Kewell. Australia's national team, the Socceroos, as of 2010 has competed at three FIFA World Cups. The Australian Government sought to host the event, the world's most watched sporting event, in either 2018 or 2022 but the bid failed.

Polocrosse is an equine team sport that was developed in New South Wales before the Second World War. This sport is now played by men, women and juniors in many parts of the world.

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 http://www.ga.gov.au/education/geoscience-basics/landforms/highest-mountains.jsp
  2. 2.0 2.1 http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/bb8db737e2af84b8ca2571780015701e/876720A0621CD8E5CA25710E00756155?opendocument#
  3. http://members.ozemail.com.au/~sealark/skiing_history.html
  4. The Melbourne Argus, 6 July 1908.
  5. http://www.charlottepass.com.au/chalet.html
  6. http://www.thredbo.com.au/about-thredbo/history/
  7. http://www.perisherblue.com.au/winter/info/history.html
  8. http://www.olympics.com.au/australian-team/aus-at-the-winter-olympics
  9. Oakes-Ash, Rachael (30 July 2007), "Snow Divide - Australia vs New Zealand", The Age Newspaper Travel Blog (Melbourne), retrieved 2010-05-04
  10. Australian Olympic Committee, "Winter Olympic Games", Official Website of the AOC, retrieved 2010-05-04
  11. Sydney Morning Herald (2008-11-21), "Kiandra - Culture and History", The Sydney Morning Herald, retrieved 2010-05-04
  12. "Australia Resorts", ski.com.au, retrieved 2010-05-04
  13. Selwyn Snowfields, "History", Selwyn Snowfields Website, retrieved 2010-05-04
  14. Kiandra Historical Society, "Ski Clubs of Kiandra", Kiandra Historical Society Website, retrieved 2010-05-04
  15. Alpha Magazine: "The Short and Bumpy Road" February 2006.
  16. Sports Illustrated: She comes from the land Down Under: Aussie aerialist Camplin captures gold in dramatic fashion 18 February 2002.
  17. 2005 International Masters Ski Jumping Championships report. Retrieved 2 February 2006.
  18. http://www.ozbc.net/nsw_crags.htm
  19. http://www.ozbc.net/nsw_twynamwest.htm
  20. http://www.kosciuszkohuts.org.au/thehuts.html
  21. Upe, Robert; Darby, Jim; Holt, Russell; Bredow, Susan (6 June 2009). "50 reasons to love Australian snow". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  22. http://www.abc.net.au/stateline/act/content/2003/s826091.htm
  23. http://www.australia.com/destinations/icons/namadgi.aspx
  24. INSTRUMENT NO. 111 OF 1999 ACT Legislation
  25. http://www.parks.tas.gov.au/index.aspx?base=391
  26. See "Kosciuszko National Park: Contemporary Management". New South Wales Department of Education and Training, Riverina Environmental Education Centre.
  27. http://www.hoppet.com.au/xc/
  28. http://www.australia.com/destinations/icons/alps.aspx
  29. http://www.olympics.com.au/sports/snowboard
  30. http://www.olympics.com.au/news/bright-lands-golden-run
  31. http://www.olympics.com.au/news/australia-records-best-ever-winter-games
  32. "Australia salutes Bradbury". BBC News. 18 February 2002.
  33. Forever skating on thin ice
  34. Queensland Curling
  35. The Sports Factor - interview with Will Alstergren
  36. 36.0 36.1 36.2 "History of the ARU". rugby.com.au. 25 November 1949. Retrieved 2011-01-29.
  37. Schwarz, David; Spike TV (2 September 2009). "Spike TV To Telecast National Rugby League Playoffs and Championship Game". reuters.com (Thomson Reuters). Retrieved 2009-09-19.
  38. "BBC SPORT | RUGBY LEAGUE WORLD CUP 2000 | WORLD CUP 2000 | World Cup history: 1954–92". BBC News. 17 October 2000. Retrieved 2011-01-29.
Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Winter sports in Australia.