A history of basketball in Geraldton, Western Australia
Easter Carnivals & Aboriginal Carnivals
Geraldton Easter Carnivals commenced soon after the shift from St. Pat’s Primary School to Sanford St in 1964. Most Perth division 1 teams travelled to Geraldton as a prelude to their Winter season commencing.
A highlight one year was Trevor Monger reaching Ric Longley’s nose with his elbow, accidentally of course. Ric is Luc’s uncle.
Another
feature of the early days was the tussles between Geraldton & Highgate
(East Perth). Around 50 teams attended during this period.
The move to
Eighth St and the attraction of an indoor stadium in 1974 was the catalyst to
growth with 140 teams coming one year. The fixtures were a nightmare because
many teams registered but didn’t always turn up and some teams turned up
without registering. This caused fixtures to be finalised on the Wednesday and
faxed out to teams, and then changed again on Good Friday. University (UWA)
sent 12 teams one year and one particular player attended over 15 carnivals. He
was a studious type.
The
Geraldton Carnival was the go to carnival for many years until the Perth club
decided to run a similar carnival in Vic Park. The following year Bunbury
decided to run a carnival also and with the option of three carnivals on the
weekend, teams were spread over the whole state. The result was that within 2
years, all carnivals cancelled through lack of players. A very successful
carnival, run over more than 25 years, was defeated by greed and jealousy.
University continued to come to Geraldton until the very end but lack of other
teams made the carnival unviable. A regular attendee was the HEH Naval Base
team from Exmouth, and the most watched team was the athletic Meekatharra
(George Flanagan) team which was always a highlight. Broome was also a regular
attendee at Easter. Fergie, the driving instructor, organised this team.
For many
years, Geraldton hosted an Aboriginal Carnival which attracted teams from as
far as Broome and all districts in between. This started in the nineties and
continued for around 5 years.