MARIBYRNONG & HOBSONS BAY
Home » News » Queen’s Birthday medal honour for footy pioneer Peta Searle

Queen’s Birthday medal honour for footy pioneer Peta Searle

Australian rules football trailblazer Peta Searle has been awarded a Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) in the 2019 Queen’s Birthday Honours List.

Searle, who lives in Yarraville, was recognised in Monday’s list for her extensive service to Australian rules football.

As player and coach she has spent more than two decades spearheading the involvement of women in Australian Rules football at both community and professional levels.

Searle was head coach at the VFL Women’s Academy and coached the Western Bulldogs women’s team to the AFL’s first exhibition match in 2013.

She made history in 2014 when appointed by St Kilda as the first full-time female assistant coach in the men’s AFL competition.

Searle told Star Weekly she was “honoured and a little bit overwhelmed” by her Honours List medal.

“I just feel privileged that I may be helping shape things for girls and boys towards fairness and creating positive attitudes,” she said.

Working her way up in such a male-dominated sport has not been easy, but Searle’s passion and determination never wavered.

“I probably had my blinkers on in terms of it being unprecedented and how I was the first,” she said.

“I’ve fought my fair share of battles, I think there’s resistance right through your career in any field … girls are always being told they can’t do this or that, so it’s just always something you are working through.

“Hopefully I have helped inspire others and they think it will be possible for them to follow a dream.”

St Kilda has rewarded Searle’s hard work with the men’s team by appointing her as their inaugural AFLW coach as they enter the expanded league next season, alongside new teams from Richmond, Gold Coast and West Coast.

She is proud to be playing a key role in helping to develop the AFLW competition, seeing the support for women in AFL as a sign of a healthy shift not just in the game but more broadly in society.

“I think sport is a really good medium for changing attitudes, breaking down barriers and also getting people thinking in terms of respect and responsibility,” she said.

Searle said she was heartened to see people embrace the AFLW, particularly younger fans.

“I have gone to a lot of games with my own family and I always walk away with a really warm feeling,” she said. “The atmosphere it’s created is really positive, you’ve got these nine-year-old boys and girls running around idolising the women as much as the men.

“The real power of the AFLW will come through in 10 to 15 years when those young boys and girls grow up.”

Digital Editions


More News

  • Changing young lives

    Changing young lives

    Anglicare Victoria, the state’s largest provider of out-of-home care, has put out an urgent call to locals in the west to become foster carers. For Braybrook resident and foster carer…

  • Men’s shed car show comes back

    Men’s shed car show comes back

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 532180 For the 18th time, the Hobsons Bay Men’s Shed Car and Bike Show will take place on Sunday 22 February at Apex Park…

  • Busy summer results in park repairs

    Busy summer results in park repairs

    After a heavy schedule of summer events combined with a heatwave and a lack of rain, Footscray Park is getting some much needed maintenance and rehabilitation works. Events such as…

  • Calls for new specialist development schools

    Calls for new specialist development schools

    Families, educators and disability advocates across Melbourne’s west are calling on the state government to commit to building a new special development school (SDS), warning the region is facing a…

  • Congs on the improve

    Congs on the improve

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 518156 Williamstown Congs were after improvement this season and have shown exactly that in the Victorian Turf Cricket Association Russell Pollock Shield. After struggling…

  • From the archives

    From the archives

    Star Weekly looks back on the pages of our predecessors. 40 years ago 19 February, 1986 Williamstown Council will meet the Planning and Environmental Minister Evan Walker on Friday to…

  • More than four walls

    More than four walls

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 530350 For people who are socially isolated, culturally diverse or part of the LGBTQIA+ community, finding a space where you feel safe and welcomed…

  • Community Calendar

    Community Calendar

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 533209 Join Hobsons Bay Community Fund as a committee member The Hobsons Bay Community Fund is seeking new volunteer committee members to help support…

  • Thousands venerate sacred relics

    Thousands venerate sacred relics

    More than 17,000 people attended Quang Minh Temple in Braybrook last month to pay their respects to sacred relics of the Buddha dating back over 2500 years. The relics travelled…

  • Altona North’s crucial win

    Altona North’s crucial win

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 518147 Altona North took a step to securing its future in the Victorian Turf Cricket Association senior division. The side, in its first season…