Peta Searle is a 39-year-old mother of two. She’s an assistant school principal at a high school in Melbourne. And she’s also a woman who is kicking some ridiculous goals (no pun intended) in the world of Australian football.
After a long career in women’s football, and an even longer string of coaching roles over the last few decades, she was the first-ever woman to get a coaching role in the VFL (Victorian Football League). She has been with Port Melbourne for the last two years, training up the boys along with Gary Ayers.
She was also the first female coach in the TAC (another AFL league) with the Western Jets, and the first head coach of the AFL Victoria VWFL (Victorian Women’s Football League) Academy Coach/Mentor.
She’s also the head coach for the Western Bulldog women’s team, runs the AFL Women’s High Performance Academy, and the Victorian Women’s stateside.
Busy. Busy. Busy.
I had a chat to her about how she’s managed to get to where she is. Have a read:
Natalia: How did you even get started in football?
Peta: Yes. I was brought up into a football family. My mum and my sister were very passionate supporters. In those days there was no Auskick or anything so, I played one year with the boys in the under 9’s when I was about 8, and then when I was about 20 I started the women’s league. So I played for about eleven years and then went from playing to coaching.
Top Comments
I was inspired by the gutsy women who took on coaching senior men, before Peta Searle there was Michelle Cowan at the WAFL, an a couple of others, but my big inspiration was a lady called Kirsten Tona who coached at a high level in Sydney and in Melbourne. She was the first woman in Australia anywhere to coach men. I saw a program about her and read about her in the paper, and she was really feminine and attractive, but the men took her really seriously.
Seeing her made me think I could do it too, and I applied to assistant coach in my country town team and got it.
These ground-breaking ladies, we owe them a lot.
Is this her, Kirsten Tona? I've been looking at women coaches too on Google. Peta Searle is amazing. I'd love to do that. I've been following footy all my life, but I don't know if I could do it. They must be thich skiined to work in a man world. But I'd like to.
http://www.guernseys.com.au...
I remember this article Micahela. My son played for East Sydney at the time. This was written beofe the season started so I should tell you that Kirsten Tona went on to coach the most successful season the team ever had. I'll never forget the first game of the year, when they beat our biggest rival balmain by a goal kicked after the siren! We hadn't won a game in that many seasons, I can't remember how many, that was the first win but not the last.
Tell you what, after that all the old fellows who'd been saying she couldn't do it changed there minds pretty quick!! Haha. My son and the other boys on the team had huge respect for kirsten. we all did at Easts and we were very sorry when she moved to Melbourne because she'd been asked to come on as assistant coach of the seniors for the next year. But I know she coached down there too in the Amateurs A-Grade. I heard she went overseas, lets hope she comes back and comes back into coaching. Without women like Kirsten I don't think we would have seen women like Peta Searle get taken as seriously. Women have proved they can do a lot more in footy than just run the canteen now. If I was young enough I'd have a go myself! haha
Well anywhoo, thanks Nat for writing an article featuring women in sport. Lord knows it's going to be hard to find features like this in other mainstream media.