Australian rules football Tenants of the ground for VFL/AFL home matches have been: • : the ground was Carlton's primary home ground continuously from 1897 until 2004, except in 2002 when it played only four games at the ground. A single farewell match was also played at the venue in 2005. The ground has been Carlton's training, social and administrative base continuously since 1897, remaining as such after the club stopped playing games there, and the club presently holds a 40-year lease on the venue which runs until 2035. • : used the ground as its home during 1942 and 1943, owing to its usual home ground at
Lake Oval being used for military purposes during World War II. • : shared the ground with Carlton from 1967 until 1969 following its departure from the
Brunswick Street Oval. • : following its departure from
Glenferrie Oval, Hawthorn used the ground as its primary home ground for sixteen years from 1974 until 1989. Then from 1990 until 1991, the club split its home games approximately evenly between Princes Park and
Waverley Park, before moving permanently to Waverley Park in 1992. • : after leaving Junction Oval and Victoria Park, Fitzroy spent a second stint at Princes Park and shared the ground with Carlton, using it as its primary home ground from 1987 until 1993, before moving to
Western Oval seeking better rental terms. • : after leaving
Western Oval, used the ground as its primary home ground for three seasons from 1997 until 1999. • Neutral venue: following Fitzroy's departure at the conclusion of 1993, an existing arrangement between Carlton and the AFL still required eighteen matches to be played there during the year; consequently, Fitzroy and the MCG's four co-tenants (, , and ) were each forced to play one or two home games at Optus Oval to make up the balance, including Fitzroy's last home game in the AFL. The practice ended in 1997 when the Western Bulldogs moved their home games to the venue. A similar arrangement occurred in 2002, when Carlton played only four games at the ground, forcing six neutral games to be staged at the ground to meet the new contractual minimum of nine. The unpopular venture was dropped at the end of the year, as all of the home teams in these neutral games lost money due to poor crowds and, in many cases, conflicting sponsorship deals. The ground has hosted
VFA/VFL grand finals on and off from 1990 to 2007 and again from 2019. Carlton's
reserves team plays its VFL matches at the ground; and from 2012 until the dissolution of their affiliation in 2020, the
Northern Blues, Carlton's , split their home games between Princes Park and
Preston City Oval. From 2007 until 2010, the ground was the home ground of the
Collingwood reserves, which was ironic considering that Collingwood and Carlton are bitter rivals in the AFL. Carlton's senior team has continued to play some pre-season and practice matches at the ground since it stopped playing premiership matches there. Carlton's
AFL Women's (AFLW) team plays its matches at the venue, as have some other clubs for specific matches.
Other sports The venue's most notable alternative use was as a cricket ground. The ground has hosted seven
first-class cricket matches, including three
Sheffield Shield games, and two
List A matches. Until 2000, the ground was the home of the
Carlton Cricket Club in the
Victorian Premier/District Cricket competition; in 2000, the club moved to the No. 1 Oval in the wider
Princes Park area to enable the football club unlimited access to the venue for year-round training. The
Balmain Tigers took two games away from their traditional home
Leichhardt Oval to Princes Park in the
1994 Winfield Cup. The largest attendance Balmain got for a match was 14,762, when the
Brisbane Broncos beat Balmain 36–14 in round 7 with
Steve Renouf scoring four tries. From 2006 to 2010, the venue became the administrative headquarters and training venue for the
Melbourne Storm rugby league club during the construction of a
purpose-built rectangular stadium next to the then-current Melbourne Storm home ground,
Olympic Park Stadium. The Storm hosted one preseason fixture at the venue in 2007. The stadium was the home ground for now defunct
association football club
Carlton SC. In December 2023,
A-League club
Melbourne City hosted
Chinese Super League club
Zhejiang in the
AFC Champions League due to scheduling conflicts at its usual home ground. Other sports,
boxing and
rugby, have also been played there. The ground was also host to a production of the
opera Aida. ==References==