Oakley attended Wesley College, Melbourne[6] and began his senior VFL footballing career with the St Kilda Football Club in 1962. He went on to score 38 goals in 62 games.[7][8] His career was marred by unfortunate knee injuries; the first came in 1965 in St Kilda's semi-final victory, which meant Oakley missed the Grand Final. He suffered déjà vu in 1966, missing not only the Grand Final, but St Kilda's first VFL premiership.[9] Following a further injury before the start of the 1967 season, Oakley retired at the age of 24.
Executive career
Oakley was appointed Chairman and CEO of the then troubled Victorian Football League in 1986, taking over the role from Jack Hamilton, remaining as Chairman until the role was separated in 1993, and remaining as CEO until the end of the 1996 season.[7]
In 1993, he oversaw the transfer of administrative control of the league from the clubs (via the AFL Board of Directors) to the AFL Commission,[11] and the formal transfer of control of the code from the ANFC to the AFL Commission.
During his time with the VFL/AFL, he was deeply involved in mergers; his administration believed that eleven Victorian clubs, many of which were in a poor financial state, was unsustainable in a national competition. Victorian clubs were offered incentive packages of up to $6 million to merge during his tenure, but the only merger completed during his tenure was between Fitzroy and Brisbane Bears, with proposed mergers between Fitzroy and Footscray in 1989 and Melbourne and Hawthorn in 1996 coming very close to fruition.
However, these merger attempts caused great off-field discord among clubs and fans, and the strategy was abandoned after Oakley was succeeded by Wayne Jackson as CEO at the end of 1996.[12]
Oakley's appointment as Melbourne Rebels' CEO was announced 9 September 2010, when the Rebels also said the franchise was to join forces with the Victorian Rugby Union to build rugby union in Victoria, at both professional and amateur levels.[2][3] Oakley became CEO to fill the gap left by the resignation of Rebels' founding CEO Brian Waldron who resigned in early 2010 in the wake of the Melbourne Storm salary cap scandal.[4]
Ross Oakley is a former Chairman of Royal Australian Holdings Ltd, Royal Life Insurance Australia Ltd, and the State Training Board of Victoria. He is listed as Chairman of the Get Going Sport Foundation, and he has served as director on the boards of AAMI Ltd and Tisdall Wines.[16][17] Between 1997 and 2001 Oakley was a director of Harris Scarfe.[citation needed]
^ abWitham, Jennifer (21 May 2009). "Ross Oakley profile". AFL News. Melbourne, Australia: AFL BigPond Network. Archived from the original on 27 May 2009. Retrieved 10 September 2010.
^"About Get Going". Get Going. North Balwyn, Vic, Australia: Get Going Sport Foundation. Archived from the original on 23 February 2011. Retrieved 11 September 2010.