RMIT Redbacks

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RMIT Redbacks
Founded1968
Based inMelbourne, Australia
Colours   
OwnerRMIT Sport
MascotRupert and Ruby the Redback spiders
WebsiteRMIT Sport

The RMIT Redbacks are the sport collective of the Australian research University the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT), based at all campuses in Victoria and Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. The program is managed by the RMIT Sport team, part of RMIT Student Life.

Organised sport was first established at the Melbourne City Campus when the University re-branded from the Working Men's College, Melbourne to Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology in 1960.

RMIT has participated in the Australian University Games[1] since 1992, initially competing as the Coburg Kangaroos due to the university's partnership with the Coburg-based Philip Institute of Technology (PIT). Following PIT's amalgamation into RMIT in 1992, RMIT re-branded as the Rhinos before changing the mascot to the Redbacks in 1997.

The RMIT Redbacks currently administers 40 clubs in competitive sport ranging from local grassroots level to semi-professional, available to student and non-student members.

History[edit]

Working Men's College (1887-1960)[edit]

The Working Men's College (WMC) was an all-male tertiary institution opened in 1887 at the college's campus on La Trobe Street, Melbourne City following the initial financial support and founding by prominent Victorian parliamentarian and philanthropist Francis Ormond in 1881. Coordinated by the WMC, organised sport was played at the college as early as 1900 with students competing in athletics events and registering Australian Rules football and cricket teams to compete against fellow Universities in the area.[2]

Following the end of World War I, the WMC formed clubs for tennis, swimming, rowing, lacrosse, baseball and boxing and entered annual multi-sport events, firstly the Inter-Technical School Carnival held in Brunswick and subsequently the Preparatory School Sports held in Queenscliffe. The increased player registrations for Australian Rules increased to allow the WMC to enter an Under 21 years team in the Senior Technical School Association and an Under 16 years team in the Junior Technical Schools’ Association. In 1927, the WMC coordinated its first interstate student sporting trip in an exchange of visits with Adelaide Technical High School .

In 1954, the WMC became the first Australian tertiary education provider to be awarded royal patronage for its service to the Commonwealth in the area of education and for its contribution to the World War II effort and was officially renamed the “Royal Melbourne Technical College”. Its name was officially changed to the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology in 1960.

Emily McPherson College of Domestic Economy (1927-79)[edit]

The Emily McPherson College of Domestic Economy (EMCDE) was an Australian domestic science college for women situated on the corner of Russell Street and Victoria Street in Melbourne City adjacent to the current-day RMIT campus. On 30 June 1979, EMCDE was amalgamated with the RMIT campus.

Creation of Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (1960 - present)[edit]

Following its re-branding, RMIT became a co-educational institution allowing enrolment for female as well as male students. Students formed and operated sporting clubs that were run dependent on resources and funding from the RMIT sport and student life departments. Accordingly, the new administrative body the Sports Regulation Committee opened registration for mixed gender sides as well as all-male and all-female sports. Table tennis, softball, hockey, basketball, squash, badminton, netball, fencing, golf and volleyball were introduced to the campus between 1960 and 1969.

Amalgamation of Phillip Institute of Technology (1992)[edit]

The Phillip Institute of Technology (PIT) was a northern Melbourne tertiary college from 6 January 1982 to 30 June 1992. It was established in Preston and amalgamated into RMIT University on July 1, 1992.

Campus Club Sport[edit]

RMIT Sport clubs are available to student and non-student members.

The RMIT Women's Football Academy Redbacks celebrate a goal at Bundoora Oval.
AFL Women's Aikido Badminton Basketball Brazilian Jiu Jitsu
Cheerleading Cricket Cue Sports Cycling Dodgeball
eSports Fencing Futsal Hockey Karate
Kendo Kung Fu Lacrosse Netball Outdoors
Pom-Pom (ceased) Snow Sports Soccer Softball Squash
Surf Table Tennis Taekwondo (ITF) Taekwondo (WT) Tennis
Tenpin Bowling Touch Football Ultimate Frisbee Underwater Volleyball
Water-ski and Wakeboard

Melbourne City Campus[edit]

A'Beckett Square[edit]

The A’Beckett Urban Square is an outdoor sports facility located on A’Beckett Street adjacent to the RMIT Melbourne City campus opened in 2014. The facility is used by the University for its Social Sports program.

Melbourne City Baths[edit]

The Melbourne City Baths is a multi-purpose indoor sports centre featuring a gym, group fitness classes, cycle studio and squash courts located next to RMIT's Melbourne City Campus on Swanston Street. RMIT student membership has been available to active   students since 2018.

Bundoora Campus Sports Centre[edit]

The Sports Centre at RMIT's Bundoora campus was opened in 2000. The facility features an indoor complex with four basketball courts, a gymnasium and a spin cycle class. The external sports centre features four tennis courts, a hockey field, a soccer pitch, two futsal courts and an Australian Rules oval. Open to both RMIT students and staff and the non-RMIT public.

National and Regional Uni Games[edit]

The RMIT Redbacks compete in the following annual sport competitions.

Australian University Games (1992-2017)[edit]

The Australian University Games (AUG), since reformatted and renamed as the UniSport Nationals Division 1 and UniSport Nationals Division 2, was an annual national multi-sport event held between the 43 Australian universities and tertiary institutions. First held in Melbourne in 1992, the AUG were hosted in Queensland for eight years, Victoria for five years, Western Australia and New South Wales for four years, South Australia for three years and the Northern Territory and the ACT for one year.

RMIT won the John White Spirit of the Games Shield as the University that best displayed exemplary behaviour, excellent team spirit and fair competition in the 2009 and 2011 AUG at the Gold Coast.

Southern University Games (2011-17)[edit]

The Southern University Games (SUG), since reformatted and renamed as the UniSport Nationals Division 1/Division 2, was an annual regional multi-sport event held between the Australian universities and tertiary institutions from Victoria, South Australia and Tasmania. First held in Ballarat in 2002, the SUG reformatted in 2017.

RMIT finished first in the SUG in 2008 and 2015–2017, finished second in 2009-11 and 2013–14 and was awarded the Spirit of the Games Award in 2009-12 and 2014.

Nationals Division 1 & 2 (2018-2019)[edit]

Following the 2017 Australian University Games, UniSport reformatted the nationals and regionals events into a two-tiered competition Nationals Division 1 and Nationals Division 2. Universities could enter one team per sport across the two divisions with student athletes able to compete in multiple events. The competition was merged into a single week-long festival ahead of the 2020 games.

Nationals Snow (2011-2019)[edit]

Nationals Snow is an annual multi-discipline snow sport event held between Australian universities and tertiary institutions. Student athletes compete in a variety of disciplines including slalom, boarder cross, slopestyle and rails.

Eastern University Games (2013)[edit]

The Eastern University Games was an annual multi-sport event held between Australian universities and tertiary institutions from New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory. RMIT entered a team for the surfing (men's) and surfing (women's) events in the 2013 Wollongong Games.

Events[edit]

RMIT Soccer Tour of China (2002-04)[edit]

The RMIT Redbacks Soccer Team celebrates victory during its 2004 China Tour.

The RMIT Redbacks’ Soccer club conducted annual tours of China between 2002 and 2004. The tours were supported by the University, the Australian Football Federation, the Victorian Soccer Federation, Australian University Sport, then-SBS Head of Sport Les Murray and the Honourable Lord Mayor of the City of Melbourne John So.

In 2002, the Redbacks played a five-match tour against teams from Chinese universities. The following year, RMIT planned an expanded 16-day tour that saw the Redbacks compete against teams from seven Chinese universities with one of the matches being broadcast on Chinese national television.

NBL Big Hustle 3x3 Nationals (2018)[edit]

RMIT hosted the inaugural NBL Big Hustle 3x3 Nationals at its Melbourne City Campus in 2018. The two-day tournament was held at the A’Beckett Urban Square and featured 24 teams from 17 Australian universities and tertiary institutions playing in Open Men and Open Women categories between July 31 and August 1.

Macquarie University finished first in the Open Men category with Monash University winning the Open Women category. The RMIT Redbacks’ Open Men side finished second and the Open Women side finished fifth.

Malaysian Tenpin Bowling Tournament (2019)[edit]

The RMIT Redbacks’ Tenpin Bowling Team competed in the 2019 UiTM International Sports Fiesta in Malaysia at Universiti Teknologi Mara in the city of Shah Alam between July 31-August 4.

RMIT as the first team from Australia to compete at the international multi-sport event. The four-player team was made up of student athletes Jordan Wallace, Josh Robinson, Daniel Perrella and Richard Tran with Terry Lu acting as team manager.

Perrella won gold in the Men's Singles and Wallace claimed the bronze medal in the same event. In the Men's Doubles event, Tran and Robinson won silver. The Redbacks finished fourth in the team events format.

Elite Athletes[edit]

International Athletes[edit]

The following international athletes are alumni or current students of RMIT University.

Athlete Sport
Ian Browne Cycling
Christine Envall Bodybuilding
Jessica Gallagher Alpine Skiing

Track and field

Tandem cycling

Elizabeth Gardner Freestyle skiing
Steve Hooker Pole Vaulting
Laura Hingston Diving
Lydia Lassila Freestyle Skiing
Bill Lawry Cricket
James Marburg Rower
David Morris Freestyle Skiing
Nick Morris Wheelchair basketball
Monique Murphy Swimming
Christine Nunn Squash
Elizabeth Patrick Coxswain
Colin Ridgway NFL
Catherine Skinner Shooting
Jared Tallent Racewalking
James Tomkins Rowing
Peter Thomson Golf
Paul Van Der Ploeg Cross-country mountain cycling
Max Walker Cricket/AFL
Julian Wiener Cricket

National Athletes[edit]

The following national athletes are alumni or current students of RMIT University.

Athlete Sport
Lauren Arnell Australian Rules (Carlton/Brisbane)
Laura Attard Australian Rules (Carlton)
Shae Audley Australian Rules (Carlton)
Ron Barassi Australian Rules (Melbourne/Carlton)
Lauren Brazzale Australian Rules (Carlton)
Hayley Bullas Australian Rules (West Coast)
Stephanie Chiocci Australian Rules (Collingwood)
Darcy Daniher Australian Rules (Essendon)
Roger Dean Australian Rules (Richmond)
John Dugdale Australian Rules (North Melbourne)
Jack Edwards Australian Rules (North Melbourne)
Carrie Graf Basketball (Nunawading Spectres)
Keith Grieg Australian Rules (North Melbourne)
David Hille Australian Rules (Essendon)
Tony Jewell Australian Rules (Richmond)
Gus Johnston Hockey (New South Wales)
Lauren Morecroft Australian Rules (Western Bulldogs)
Karen Paxman Australian Rules (Melbourne)
Bob Skilton Australian Rules (South Melbourne)
Jim Stynes Australian Rules (Melbourne)
Brian Taylor Australian Rules (Richmond/Collingwood)

Captains[edit]

In 2010, RMIT Sport began the annual practice of appointing a male and female student as co-captains for the duration of the year. The students represented the University in sport events and in public appearances.

Year Captains
2020 Zeb Jarvis and Dana Tieman
2019 Tyson Lingham and Rebecca McInerney
2018 Marcus Vaiano and Emily Buckland
2017 Alexander Bonacci and Sarah Collins
2016 Jack Plowman and Lilly Walsh
2015 Ben Marris and Tessa Bruno
2014 Patrick Hutton and Hannah Wyatt
2013 Aaron Bettio-Sandlant and Teagan Nugent
2012 Kieran Wallis and Louise Grant
2011 Jake Mutimer and Samantha Coates
2010 Stefan Olszewski and Samantha Coates

National and Regional Uni Games Results[edit]

Australian UniGames Nationals Results Summary (1992-2019)[edit]

Year Host City Sports Medals
1992 Melbourne Hockey (Men's) Hockey (Men's): Gold
1993 Brisbane
1994 Wollongong
1995 Darwin
1996 Canberra
1997 Melbourne Netball (Women's) Netball (Women's): Gold
1998 Melbourne Rowing 8s (Women's) Rowing 8s (Women's): Gold
1999 Perth
2000 Ballarat Rowing 8s (Women's) Rowing 8s (Women's): Bronze
2001 Sydney Hockey (Men's), Rowing 8s (Women's) Hockey Men's): Gold

Rowing 8s (Women's): Bronze

2002 Adelaide
2003 Newcastle Hockey (Men's) Hockey (Men's): Gold
2004 Perth
2005 Brisbane Beach Volleyball (Men's), Water Polo Beach Volleyball (Men's): Bronze

Water Polo: Bronze

2006 Adelaide Basketball (Men's), Volleyball (Women's) Basketball (Men's): Silver

Volleyball (Women's): Silver

2007 Gold Coast Beach Volleyball (Men's) Beach Volleyball (Men's): Silver
2008 Melbourne
2009 Gold Coast AFL (Women's), Athletics, Badminton (Men's),Badminton (Women's),

Beach Volleyball, Cycling,Fencing, Golf, Handball, Hockey (Men's),

Hockey (Women's),Judo, Lawn Bowls, Netball (Mixed), Netball (Women's),

Rugby 7s, Soccer (Men's), Soccer (Women's), Squash, Swimming, Table

Tennis,Taekwondo, Tennis, Tenpin Bowling, Touch Football, Ultimate

Frisbee, Volleyball (Men's), Volleyball (Women's), Water Polo (Men's),

Water Polo (Women's)

Volleyball (Mixed): Silver
2010 Perth AFL (Men's), AFL (Women's), Athletics, Badminton (Men's),

Badminton (Women's), Baseball (Men's), Basketball (Men's),

Basketball (Women's). Beach Volleyball, Cycling, Fencing, Golf,

Handball (Men's), handball (Women's), Hockey (Men's), Hockey (Women's),

Judo, Lawn Bowls, Netball (Mixed), Netball (Women's), Rowing, Rugby 7s,

Soccer (Men's), Soccer (Women's), Squash, Swimming, Table Tennis,

Taekwondo, Tennis, Tenpin Bowling, Touch Football, Ultimate Frisbee,

Volleyball (Men's). Volleyball (Women's), Water Polo (Men's),

Water Polo (Women's)

*SPIRIT OF THE GAMES*

Volleyball (Mixed): Gold

Beach Volleyball (Men's): Silver

2011 Gold Coast AFL (Men's), AFL (Women's), Athletics (Men's), Badminton (Men's),

Badminton (Women's), Basketball (Men's), Basketball (Women's),

Beach Volleyball (Men's), Football (Men's), Netball (Women's),

Netball (Mixed), Swimming (Men's), Swimming (Women's),

Table Tennis (Men's). Taekwondo, Tennis (Men's), Tennis (Women's),

Tenpin Bowling, Ultimate Frisbee, Volleyball (Mixed), Water Polo (Women's)

AFL (Women's): Gold

Tenpin Bowling: Gold

Netball (Women's): Gold

Netball (Mixed): Gold

Tenpin Bowling: Gold

Badminton (Men's): Silver

Beach Volleyball (Men's): Silver

Beach Volleyball (Mixed): Silver

Basketball (Women's): Bronze

Beach Volleyball (Women's): Bronze

Football (Men's): Bronze

Tennis (Women's): Bronze

2012 Adelaide AFL (Women's), Athletics, Badminton (Men's), Baseball (Men's),

Basketball (Men's), Beach Volleyball (Mixed), Cycling (Men's),

Football (Men's), Golf (Men's), Hockey (Men's), Hockey (Women's),

Netball (Mixed), Netball (Women's), Rowing (Men's), Sailing,

Swimming (Women's), Table Tennis, Taekwondo (Men's), Tennis (Men's),

Tenpin Bowling, Volleyball (Men's), Volleyball (Women's),

Water Polo (Men's), Water Polo (Women's),

*SPIRIT OF THE GAMES*

Volleyball (Mixed): Gold

AFL (Women's): Gold

Tenpin Bowling: Gold

Netball (Mixed): Gold

Cycling: Gold

Golf (Men's): Silver

Netball (Women's): Silver

2013 Gold Coast AFL (Men's), AFL (Women's), Athletics (Men's), Athletics (Women's),

Badminton (Men's), Badminton (Women's), Basketball (Men's).

Basketball (Women's), Beach Volleyball (Mixed), Cycling (Men's),

Cycling (Women's), Soccer (Men's), Golf (Men's), Handball, Hockey (Men's),

Hockey (Women's), Lawn Bowls, Netball (Mixed), Netball (Women's),

Sailing, Squash, Table Tennis, Tenpin Bowling, Ultimate Frisbee,

Volleyball (Men's)

AFL (Women's): Gold

Tenpin Bowling: Gold

Athletics (Women's): Silver

Beach Volleyball: Silver

Golf (Men's): Silver

2014 Sydney Athletics (Men's), Athletics (Women's), AFL (Men's), AFL (Women's),

Baseball, Badminton (Men's), Badminton (Women's), Basketball (Women's)

Tenpin Bowling: Gold

Golf: Gold

AFL (Women's): Silver

Beach Volleyball: Silver

Athletics (Women's): Bronze

AFL (Women's): Bronze

2015 Gold Coast AFL (Women's): Gold

Lawn Bowls: Gold

Tennis (Women's): Gold

Tenpin Bowling: Silver

Beach Volleyball (Mixed): Silver

Golf: Silver

AFL (Men's): Bronze

Cycling (Women's): Bronze

Kendo (Men's): Bronze

2016 Perth AFL (Women's): Gold

Golf: Gold

Futsal (Men's): Gold

Basketball (Men's): Silver

Beach Volleyball (Men's): Silver

Fencing (Women's): Silver

Tenpin Bowling: Silver

Netball: Bronze

2017 Gold Coast Tenpin Bowling: Gold

Cycling: Gold

Basketball (Men's): Silver

AFL (Women's): Bronze

Netball (Women's): Bronze

2018 - Nationals Div 1 Gold Coast *SPIRIT OF THE GAMES*

Cycling (Men): Gold

Tenpin Bowling: Gold

AFL (Women's): Silver

Basketball (Men's): Silver

Cycling (Women): Silver

Futsal (Men): Silver

Lawn Bowls: Silver

Tennis (Men): Silver

3x3 Basketball (Men): Silver (Melbourne)

Golf (Men): Bronze

Netball (Mixed): Bronze

Softball: Bronze

2019 - Nationals Div 1 Gold Coast *SPIRIT OF THE GAMES*

Futsal (Men): Gold

Tennis (Men): Gold

Tennis (Women): Gold

Tenpin Bowling: Gold

Marathon (Women): Gold (Melbourne)

Cycling (Men): Silver

Surfing (Women): Silver (Manly)

Basketball (Men's): Bronze

2019 - Nationals Snow Thredbo Alpine Skiing (Women): Gold

Snowboard (Men): Gold

Freestyle Ski (Women): Silver

Southern UniGames Results Summary (2011-17)[edit]

Mascots[edit]

Following the amalgamation of the Phillip Institute of Technology, the mascot of the RMIT sport collective was the Kangaroo (the University continued to play under the name Coburg until 1995). In 1995, RMIT Sport re-branded the sport collective under the University's banner and anointed the mascot as the Rhinos ahead of the Australian University Games held in Darwin. Following a proposal from the Sport Regulation Committee (SRC), RMIT changed the mascot to the Redbacks in 1997. The RMIT Redbacks logo features a redback spider silhouette with the University's pixel logo as a red background.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Past events Archived 2011-05-18 at the Wayback Machine - RMIT Link, retrieved 2 October 2012
  2. ^ "Book: The Tech: a centenary history of the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology 1987 - The Tech: a centenary history of the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology 1987 - Victorian Collections". victoriancollections.net.au. Retrieved 6 February 2020.