Ross Ditchburn was born on 18 March 1957 and is a former Australian rules footballer in the Western Australian National Football League and the Victorian Football League.
12 Facts About Ross Ditchburn
From a prominent farming family in the small Western Australian wheatbelt community of Kukerin, Ditchburn moved to Perth in the mid-1970s, where he played WANFL football for Claremont.
Between 1975 and 1980, Ross Ditchburn played a total of 110 senior games for Claremont as a forward.
Ross Ditchburn left the league at the end of 1980, and returned to work at the family farm in Kukerin.
Ross Ditchburn had been signed by the VFL's Carlton Football Club during the 1970s, tying him to the club if he ever chose to move to Victoria.
Ross Ditchburn initially struggled; by Round 14, he had played only one senior game for one goal, and was considered too slow to play his preferred position of centre half forward in the VFL.
Ross Ditchburn was nearly cleared back to Western Australia at mid-season, but was instead moved to full-forward where he had much greater success.
Ross Ditchburn kicked a total of 61 goals in only thirteen senior games for the year to be Carlton's leading goalkicker, and he was a member of the club's 1982 VFL Grand Final winning side having been knocked unconscious during the game.
Ross Ditchburn played one further season for the Blues, kicking 30 goals in 15 games, to finish his brief VFL career with 28 games and 91 goals.
Ross Ditchburn returned to Kukerin after the 1983 season, in large part because his father was becoming ill, and he resumed his place on the family farm where he has continued to work since.
Ross Ditchburn continued to play football for Kukerin and post-merger club Kukerin-Dumbleyung for many years.
Ross Ditchburn became heavily involved in the local community later in his life as a Shire of Dumbleyung councillor and deputy president.