This remote Australian football oval is uniting a desert community

When the Aboriginal Australian rules footballers of South Australia’s remote APY Lands run out for the first game of the season next year it will be on a brand new green grass oval, with the red dirt field and the match-day violence that has plagued the league firmly behind them.

The new grass community oval at Amata is uniting the desert town.

The new grass community oval at Amata is uniting the desert town. Source: SBS

The existence of a green grass football oval in the desert town of Amata in the remote APY lands is something of a miracle.

Locals say it hasn’t rained here in more than two years.

Surrounded by endless miles of red dirt, the newly completed grass oval is an oasis for the community in the harsh, dry central desert.

The oval will be used by the whole community, with school kids of all ages, as well as the local community football league playing games on the field.
The APY Lands, which stands for Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara, is a remote Aboriginal local government area in the north-west corner of South Australia.

The vast arid lands of the Central Desert is home to about 3,000 people spread across around a dozen small communities. With a land-mass of more than 100,000 kilometers squared, the region is larger than the size of South Korea. 

Wirangu man Paul Vandenberg from Port Adelaide Football Club visiting from 1,300 kilometers away, says Australian rules football is everything to the community up here.

“It is absolutely a bit of a religion...football is the key, (it) seems to be the one thing that brings all communities together,” he told SBS News.

Mr Vandenberg, who has been working with Port Adelaide’s Aboriginal outreach programs for nine years says the new grass oval is still a bit of a novelty to the kids, some of whom have never seen grass before in their lives.
“We are used to seeing red dirt and dust, and kids running around with no shoes on. This might be a good opportunity for them to try some boots on and run around,” he said.

Growing the grass oval is no easy feat in this dry part of Australia, where water is both precious and scarce.

The South Australia Water Corporation invested around $2.5 million dollars on the overall project which involved laying the infrastructure that would convert the town’s excess wastewater into suitable irrigation water for the oval.

Prior to that, there was no use for the wastewater from town.

“It means you have a sustainable green oval well into the future because you have that environmentally sound supply of water. You are not dependent on it falling from the sky, you can take is straight out of the wastewater treatment plant,” SA Water’s Anna Jackson told SBS News.

“Obviously it is going to be money extremely well spent from the point of the community who are going to get great use out of it for years to come,” she added.
Some young kids of the APY Lands say they have never seen a grass oval before.
Some young kids of the APY Lands say they have never seen a grass oval before. Source: SBS
But football here has not been without its challenges.

The community league, which involves players of all ages, was founded in 2006 as part of the Petrol Sniffing Strategy to combat petrol sniffing in the area and is run by the South Australian National Football League (SANFL).

But in 2018 the SANFL shut the league down due to match day violence between players and supporters of the various communities. 

In 2019, the league came back. Coach of the Amata’s Central Swans team, Stanley Windy, said his men can’t wait to get out on the new grass oval. 

“We used to play on the dirt little oval there,” the local Anangu elder told SBS News. 

“I think grass will be good, really good for them,” he said. 

Mr Vandenberg said he believes football can play a unifying role for the community.

"They can be competitive between communities, but it is the one thing that unites everyone,” he said.

He added that the game’s unifying role stretched far behind the deserts of the APY Lands.

“Often you can see that there is a black and white issue in Australia, but when you bring football into it removes all colours and we are all there together on the field together,” Mr Vandenberg said.

Jarni Blakkarly’s trip to the APY Lands was made with the assistance of SA Water.


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4 min read
Published 24 November 2019 2:01pm
Updated 24 November 2019 2:48pm
By Jarni Blakkarly


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