05/05/2026
Tuggeranong United Football Club blasts ACT Government after home ground deemed 'completely unsafe'
According to an article in the Canberra Times on 5 May 2026 a National Premier League referee report on Saturday 2 May 2026 found the state of the surface at Kambah Field 201 for men's and women's first grade and under-23 matches was "completely unsafe" and presented an injury risk.
The danger with the surface is around injuries to ankles and knees. A Tuggeranong United player suffered a knee injury on the Kambah 201 field earlier.
The referee report on Kambah 201 said it was "inappropriate to schedule further fixtures until remediation is done" which impacted the men's matches and the NPLW fixtures the next day.
Stan Mitchell, the Tuggeranong United President, lodged a formal complaint with ACT Chief Minister Andrew Barr and Sport Minister Yvette Berry. In the letter of complaint, he said that following a long list of issues with their home ground these incidents were "the last straw".
That this should happen is not surprising. Fund Football Fairly has been highlighting the need for significant Government investment in football infrastructure for some time but there seems to be a distinct lack of interest on the part of the ACT Government to listen to the concerns of the football community.
In August 2024 Fund Football Fairly engaged in a consultative process with Capital Football and the local football clubs. Out of this process we identified three key and unanimously agreed upon funding requests.
These proposals are simple, and the grass roots football community is united around these aims. The three funding requests are as follows:
1. A significant capital works program to upgrade football facilities at local clubs
- Improved lighting.
- Improved playing surfaces.
- An immediate moratorium on ground hire fees until the grounds and change rooms are up to an acceptable standard.
- Construction of all-weather synthetic pitches at all major playing hubs.
- Construction of modern clubhouses with administrative, meeting, function, and female friendly change rooms co-located at suburban playing fields.
2. Development of two dedicated football complexes, one northside and one southside
The complexes are to be on a level with the new Regional Sports Complex at Jerrabomberra built by the Queanbeyan-Palerang Regional Council and are to include function, office, café, and meeting facilities.
The facilities are to have playing arenas with a ground capacity of around 6,000 people fit for the purpose of hosting major games including local finals and the Australia Cup and Canberra United games.
3. Implement a Sports Voucher scheme
Create a sports voucher program and give each school age child $300 per year to go towards sports participation costs.
None of the things requested are exceptional. Other sports in Canberra with lower participation rates than football have facilities to the standard requested by Fund Football Fairly. Voucher systems exist in other states.
Queanbeyan has better football facilities than Canberra funded by the NSW Government.
In the context of the discussion about a new billion-dollar stadium, the bankruptcy of Gungahlin United Football Club, and the pending collapse of Canberra United for want of reasonable support, being support equivalent to that provided to the other codes, it is time for the ACT and Federal Governments to respond to the needs of the football community and start to fund football fairly.
As Yvette Berry vows to address 'frustrating' issue across Canberra sports.