HISTORY OF THE ELTHAM LACROSSE CLUB
In 1963, Dr Graham Webb, a teacher (and avid lacrosse enthusiast) at
Eltham High School, introduced the game of lacrosse to his students
in a very casual and informal way. The seed of an idea had been sown
and it quickly germinated into an occasional interschool game against
other high schools. As is often the case with novel ideas, interest in
the game by those directly involved was high and the appetite now having
been whetted, further competition was eagerly sought by both teacher
and students.
Dr Webb not only organised further inter-school games, but he also
discussed the student's interest in the game with other lacrosse
identities who lived in the area. As a result of these discussions it
was decided to form a new club and use the nucleus of the school team
along with a few older experienced lacrosse players to enter a team in
the Victorian Amateur Lacrosse Association competition in 1964. Two men
stood out as the club's key administrators in these formative years
Bob Russell and Fred Durham. [It is interesting to reflect that both of
them are still active supporters of the club today and together with
Graham Webb they are recognised as the "founders" of the Eltham Lacrosse Club.
It is also worth noting that three players from the clubs early teams -
Peter Jarvis, Hugh Russell and Alan Montague can still be seen around the club today.]
For the next ten years the Eltham Club fielded senior and/or junior age teams
with moderate success at the lower end of the grading structure. Then in the
early 1970's, just when the club was looking its most fragile, a new group of
administrators and players emerged to revive the club. Some of these people
were from other clubs but now lived in the area (such as Neil and Rob Traeger,
John Good, Keith James, Alan Black, Hugh and Alan Roche and Bo Trainor) and
some were homegrown products (like Peter Jarvis, Hugh Russell and Alan Montague).
Although up to this point the club had produced some very fine individual players
over the years it had not won a premiership and could hardly have been called a
force in lacrosse. This period in the club's history (i.e. during the early to mid
1970's) changed its fortunes, at least for a short while. The club was runnerup and
then premiers in consecutive years; was promoted up a grade to A-Reserve; fielded
two senior teams for a while; started regular junior recruitment drives and fielded
extra junior teams; helped get a women's lacrosse team started in the area.
Unfortunately the enthusiasm waned almost as quickly as it developed and by the late
1970's the club was once again near extinction. However one good aspect remained from
this buoyant period and that was the number of keen, dedicated and industrious lacrossiers
and ex-lacrossiers that were still loosely associated with the club, but nonetheless keen
to help it out of its difficulties. People like the Roches, John Good, Alan Black,
John Easton, Kendrea Kendall, Marty Mottau, Ken Hickey and Keith James to name but a few who,
along with the old stalwarts named previously, were to provide the backbone for the next
wave of interest in reviving the club.
Despite a lot of recruitment effort by Peter Jarvis and Chris Morris during the mid 1970's,
by 1978 the club consisted of only one Cgrade men's team and an Under 16 boy's team. If not
for the success of Alan Montague and Alan Roche in recruiting enough boys to field an Under
14 team in 1979, the club would have shrunk to one solitary senior team. This new batch of
young recruits from Montmorency High was to be the turning point in the club's history. The
parental involvement and interest in the club and the game which these parents showed (and
which was skilfully nurtured and promoted by the willy club administrators) was in fact to
be the start of a permanent turn around in the clubs fortunes. The following two years saw
more juniors and more parents involve themselves in the club. These new lacrosse devotees
both inspired and reinvigorated many of the old club stalwarts and this new found confidence
and energy was soon translated into fresh ideas and a fast expanding club. People like Roy
and Alma Jellie, Bill Buchanan, Lee Thornbury and Judy Emery formed the basis of an early
parents support group. Unlike previous efforts at building the club from the top down, this
period saw a very different approach. This time it was a bottomup plan. A deliberate and
sustained attempt to develop a large base of talented youngsters was organised by Ray Shannon
through a massive junior recruitment program. Thanks to the work of a very large number of
helpers, most of whom are still connected with the club today, the size of the club has
increased tenfold and so has the quality of the teams fielded. Much credit for this revival
goes to those tireless helpers named above and the many newcomers such as Margaret Cobern,
Syd and Wendy Myers, John and Helen Wearne, Neil Dennis, Chris Aldridge, Bill Jellie, Jeff
and Mary Montague, Steve Mavric, Jeff Fry, Marino Colautti, Brian Hayton, Rod Barrkemp, Paul
Clough, Peter and Helen Stiglich to name but a few of the key personnel of that era.
Since then Eltham Lacrosse Club has continued the consolidation of its strong position within
the lacrosse fraternity and is now one of the largest, if not the largest, lacrosse club in
the world. It fields on average 15 teams each season, spanning mens, womens and juniors. Its
under age teams frequently dominate in most grades with many State team representatives in its
ranks. The club now fields mens teams in the state's three highest grades and is working
towards achieving a similar strength in womens lacrosse. Much of the thanks for the clubs
current strength is due to a new group of administrators and supporters who in the 1990's have
carried on the good work of their predecessors and have added initiatives like regular touring
teams of juniors (both boys and girls) to the USA and Canada and the fabulous social atmosphere
created in the clubrooms after games ........... but that is another chapter in the clubs history
which I shall leave to a later time for our historians to develop.
Although we would all agree that there are still many things to do before Eltham can claim it
is the best club in the State, it has certainly come a long way since the shaky times of the past
and it can, with some certainty, now claim it has secured a permanent spot in the lacrosse fixture.
This was not always the case, so feel proud of the club's achievements and honour those who put
us there.
