


Rowing
World University Championships - Belgrade
Women's Double Sculls: Heat 1: Romania 1, Germany 2, Austria 3, Australia (Emma Costello SU, Chloe O'Regan SU) 4.
Repechage 2: Chekoslovakia 1, Austria 2, Australia (Costello, O'Regan) 3
B Final: Sweden 1, France 2, Croatia 3, New Zealand 4, Australia (Costello. O'Regan) 5.
Women's Senior Coxless Four: Heat 2: Romania 1, France 2, Australia (Natasha Bolsin SU, Georgina Harvey, Emy Hunstsman, Ailsa Tremayne SU) 3.
Repechage 1: Great Britain 1, Germany 2, Australia (Bolsin, Harvey, Hunstsman, Tremayne) 3.
B Final: Australia (Bolsin, Harvey, Hunstsman, Tremayne) 1, New Zealand 2, Croatia 3.
Men's Coxless Four: Repechage 2: Germany 1, Poland 2, Australia 3 (James Adams, Dominic Grimm SU, Ry Kehett SU, James Harding SU).
B Final: Poland 1, Netherlands 2, Belgium 2, Ukraine 4, Australia (Adams, Grimm. Kehett, Harding) 5.
Australian Football
Sydney Premier Division - Preliminary final
Reserve Grade: Sydney University 14.13: 97 d UNSW-Eastern Suburbs 8.8: 56 at Henson Park.
Rugby Union
Shute Shield - Elimination semi-final
Third Grade: Eastern Suburbs 23 d Sydney University 11 at Weekender Stadium.
Netball
State Netball League - major semi-final
Division 1: NSWIS 52 d Fairfield City-Sydney University 34 at Anne Clark Netball Centre.
Division 7: Sydney University 48 d Manly Warringah 37.
Basketball
Women's National Basketball League
Fiesta Pre-season Tournament - Shoalhaven
Sydney University Flames 87 d Logan Thunder 49
Sydney University Flames 78 d AIS 65
Canberra Capitals 83 d Sydney University Flames 81
When you become part of Sydney Uni Sport & Fitness you take your place within Australia’s oldest and richest sporting tradition.
But we are not focused on the past. Our goal is ahead.
Our mission is to facilitate the optimal participation opportunities for our members and implement unique strategies for the development of our clubs and athletes.
That means we are focused on you.
The University of Sydney has a long and prestigious history of sport, witnessing many changes in the athletic world. Sydney Uni Sport & Fitness has produced more Australian representatives and won more major competitions than any other club. Consequently it continues to be an influential body in the sporting domain.
Just take the 2004 Athens Olympic and Paralympic Games where we were represented by two coaches and 17 athletes, five of whom returned with medals! That same year the Football Club won the Club Championship, the Sydney Uni Flames reached the grand final, the American Football Club won their second consecutive premiership and the Sydney University team won the 2004-2005 Cricket Club Championship.
On January 1, 2003 the Sydney University Sports Union (1890) and the Sydney University Women's Sports Association (1910) amalgamated and created this country's premier tertiary sporting body. Sydney Uni Sport & Fitness manages and administers 49 sport and recreation clubs, organises sporting and recreation events and offers a comprehensive range of sporting facilities to students and the wider Sydney community.
A strategic partnership between the NSW Institute of Sport (NSWIS) and the University has succeeded in attracting, encouraging and assisting elite athletes with their academic pursuits.
Over 100 years at a glance - Sydney Uni Sport & Fitness established 1890.
By Lisa Jane Kinny
sanaens in sano corpore - let everybody go in for sports and thereby he will be doing general good. (Hermes, 18 May 1894)
Four decades after the establishment of the University of Sydney, Australia's first university, a meeting took place in the Stenhouse Library of all the University's athletes. The result was the formation of the Sydney University Sports Union, an amalgamation of the Cricket (1854), Football (1865), Boat (1860), Tennis (1885) and Athletic (1885) clubs already competing as University clubs.
The aim of the Union was to give students the opportunity to participate in as many sports as possible at an affordable rate. Before the Sports Union was formed students were required to subscribe to each individual club, making participating in more than one sport a costly exercise. The Fourth Annual Report of the Sports Union presented in 1894 noted its early success. 'Your Committee cannot but consider that the Sports Union is working well, when they notice the increase in the number of those who not only take part in but represent the University in more than one of these branches.
In its inaugural year the Sports Union had 166 members, by 1915 twenty five percent of the University's 1500 students were representing University teams and today Sydney University Sport involves more than 40 000 members.
Admission of women to the University began in 1881 and it was not long before these pioneering women had made their mark felt in both the academic and sporting arenas. The Ladies' Tennis Club was formed in 1887, the Women's Boat Club in 1896 and the Hockey Club in 1908 which culminated in the formation of the Sydney University Women's Sports Association in 1910.As Universities grew especially after WWII more demands were placed on the sporting facilities provided by the Sports Union. Despite these unsteady times several of the University's Clubs continued to exercise influence both within the University and in external sporting organisations. During this time the two Sport unions continued to expand facilities and encourage the student body to participate in sport and recreational activities.
The residential colleges have featured in the Sports Union's history, as from their earliest days the colleges had both the facilities and a competitive nature. Football, cricket and athletics were always popular as was rowing with the first Intercollegiate Boat Race being held in 1892. For members of the Sports Union not residing in an on campus college interfaculty sport was and continues to be an excellent opportunity to participate in intra-varsity competition. By the mid-1890's interfaculty competitions were annual events with Medicine taking on Arts in football and cricket. Such was the support for interfaculty sport that the Sports Union successfully lobbied the University Senate to have classes cancelled on the afternoon of interfaculty competition so that the competitors would not be disadvantaged. The Interfaculty Competition in 2004 included more than 10 faculties and over 500 competitors in the men's and women's competitions. Both interfaculty and intercollegiate sport has always been high on the Sports Unions agenda, showing its belief in the importance and benefits of participation in sport. The Sport and Recreation department of Sydney Uni Sport now oversees social and Interfaculty sport. School holiday sports camps are run in conjunction with CampAustralia and a school sport program in which a number of local schools participate.
The role of Universities continues to change, however sport is an ever present element. The Blues tradition is an example of sports' continual importance within the University. Starting in 1892 and continuing robustly into the 21st century, the honor of being awarded a Blue has never been diminished as athletes proudly take their place next to past Blues which include some of the countries most notable athletes.
A second visible example of the importance of sport with in varsity institutions can be seen at annual Intervarsity competitions. Sydney University first took on Melbourne University in cricket during the early 1870's. As Australia developed and more universities were established the competition expanded both in terms of competitors and sports. The Australian Universities Sports Association was formed in 1907 to oversee and organise these important annual contests. Since its inception in 1993 Sydney University has claimed the Australian University Games title seven times including five of the last six, thus continuing Sydney University's prestige in the sporting community.
January 1st 2003 was a crucial turning point for the organisation which became known as Sydney University Sport when the Sydney University Sports Union and the Sydney University Women's Sports Association amalgamated creating this country's premier tertiary sporting body. Five years later, February 15th 2008 marked another major milestone with the launch of the organisation's new brand now referred to as Sydney Uni Sport & Fitness. In addition to its first class facilities there are over 40 different sports and recreation clubs under the supervision of Sydney Uni Sport & Fitness providing a variety of opportunities for its members. These opportunities range in level from social to national competition, for example the Scholarship program which began in 1990 and now supports over 250 athletes across numerous sports. Sydney Uni Sport & Fitness provides support for its athletes in a number of ways including academically and financially as well as through its partnership with external sporting bodies such as the New South Wales Institute of Sport.