Gordon Ogden


Gordon Ogden was a professional athlete and an Australian rules footballer who played for Melbourne in the Victorian Football League.

Family

The son of dual Essendon premiership player and coach Percival Gordon Ogden, and Mary Kathleen Ogden, née Gaynor, Gordon Francis Ogden was born in Northcote, Victoria on 14 February 1909. His brother, Terence William John Ogden played VFL football for both Melbourne and Carlton.
He married Patricia deVere Kelly on 4 June 1934 at Clifton Hill. They had four daughters.

Athlete

A talented professional sprinter, Ogden won the 1936 Nyah Gift.

Footballer

Ogde was recruited from Northcote CYMS. He played at Melbourne as a back pocket specialist and represented the VFL five times during his career.
After appearing in losing Preliminary Finals at the end of the 1936 and 1937 seasons, Ogden left Melbourne. He initially signed a deal to be playing coach of Victorian Football Association club Brighton in 1938, but instead went to country club Warracknabeal after receiving a better offer. The following year, he signed as captain-coach of VFA club Williamstown, at the time a financially troubled club that had been very weak on-field. Although 'Town had won only twice in 1938, Ogden steered them to a flag in 1939 and captain-coached Williamstown for 56 games from 1939 to 1941.
In 1947 Ogden joined the VFL senior list of umpires, umpired 14 VCFL matches and was emergency field umpire for a single VFL match. He returned as a non-playing coach of Williamstown in 1948, serving two seasons and leading the club to another premiership in 1949.
The former Melbourne defender then joined lowly Yarraville as coach in 1951. The Eagles had been last in the previous three seasons, but under Ogden they developed so well as to reach a Grand Final in 1953, only to be thrashed by ten goals against a powerful Port Melbourne combination. For the following season it was generally thought Yarraville's prospects were extremely good, but apart from a five-game winning streak mid-season the Eagles were extremely disappointing in 1954, and 1955 was no different. Ogden planned to retire from coaching the Eagles at the end of that season, and did not change his mind although the Yarraville committee attempted to re-appoint him for 1956.
Ogden returned to Melbourne, and served as assistant coach to Norm Smith from 1962 until the end of the 1965 VFL season; and, also, served as coach of the Melbourne Reserves from 1963 to 1965.

Recognition

In 2014 he was one of the 51 former players, officials, and volunteers that were announced as the inaugural inductees into the Williamstown Football Club's Hall of Fame.

Footnotes