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Australia Games

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Australia Games was held in Melbourne, Victoria, from 26 January to 5 February 1985.[1]

Background

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The concept of the national festival of sport was first raised in John Bloomfiel's report Role and Scope and Development of Recreation in Australia published in 1973.[2] In 1981, a report titled Report on the Feasibility of Australia Games resulted in the Fraser government approving the staging of a national sports festival in 1983.[3] The Australia Games Foundation was established and registered in Victoria as a trustee company in 1982.[2] The Games were part of Victoria's 150th anniversary.[3] The Games had several objectives: improve access to international competition for Australian athletes in their own environment, increase media exposure to non high-profile sports and to encourage the construction of new multi-purpose facilities of international standard.[4]

Victoria was due to host the 1987 Games after Sydney and Brisbane decided not to host them due to the cost overruns on the inaugural Games.[5] The 1987 Games did not occur due to cost issues. In 1986, it was estimated that the 1987 Games would cost $3.2 million. But the Games did not proceed after the Hawke government decided not to provide $500,000 in funding due to budgetary pressures and the Victorian Government decided not to fund the 1987 Games after uncertainty in its overall funding.[6]

Funding

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The cost of staging the Games was estimated at $2 million. The Australian Government allocated $800,000 in the 1984-1985 budget and the Victorian Government provided $375,000.The balance came from the business sector. The major expenditure items were $700,000 international air travel, $200,000 for Domestic air travel and $300,000 for University of Melbourne accommodation charges.[3]

Victorian auditor-general in a 1986 report detailed massive cost overruns in the management of the Games. The Victorian Government provided the Australia Games Foundation $920,000 more than the initial grant of $375,000.[5]

Victorian Government estimated that the economic impact of the 1985 Games to the Victorian economy was $18.1 million.[1]

Summary

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  • 1,848 athletes (including 804 from overseas) from 31 countries.[1][2][7]
  • 928 officials and 1,396 volunteers[2]
  • Spectator attendance - 92,767[2]
  • Gate receipts - $364,966[2]
  • Integration of disabled athletes in to athletics, swimming, basketball, lawn bowls, netball and weightlifting competitions.[1]
  • Capacity crowds at the opening ceremony, basketball, gymnastics, aquatics, netball and surf life saving.[1]
  • Seven Network provided 70 hours of television coverage.

Sports and venues

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Sport Venue
Athletics Olympic Park Stadium
Badminton Monash University
Melbourne Sports and Entertainment Centre
Basketball Melbourne Sports and Entertainment Centre
Boxing Festival Hall
Cycling Northcote Cycling Velodrome
Diving State Swimming Centre
Field hockey Royal Park
Gymnastics Melbourne Sports and Entertainment Centre
Judo Albert Park
Lawn bowls Doncaster Bowling Club
Netball Festival Hall
Shooting sports Geelong Small Bore Range
Melbourne Gun Club
Springvale Moving Target Range
Softball Gilbert Park, Knox
Squash Albert Park Squash Courts
Surf lifesaving Ocean Grove
Swimming State Swimming Centre
Synchronized swimming State Swimming Centre
Trampolining Croydon Leisure Centre
Volleyball Morwell Sports Stadium
Corio Leisure Centre
Water polo State Swimming Centre
Weightlifting Hawthorn Recreation Centre
Wrestling Footscray Institute of Technology

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e Australian Bureau of Statistics (1986). Year Book of Australia 1986. Canberra: AGPS. pp. 678–679.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Inaugural Australia Games Melbourne 1985: Operations Report. Melbourne: Australia Games Organising Committee. 1985.
  3. ^ a b c Australia Games: Melbourne January 26 - February 3, 1985: Official Souvenir Program. Melbourne: Time Inc. 1985.
  4. ^ Report on the feasibility of Australia Games. Mt Waverley, Vic.: J.F. Brown. 1981.
  5. ^ a b "Funding cloud over Australia games' future". Launceston Examiner. 27 March 1986.
  6. ^ "Australia Games may be called off, says Trezise". The Age. 10 June 1986.
  7. ^ "Australian Sports Commission" (PDF). Annual Report: 7. 1984–1985. Archived from the original (PDF) on 31 March 2012. Retrieved 20 February 2015.