Newcastle International Sports Centre

Newcastle International Sports Centre
Hunter Stadium

Logo from January 2012

Main (western) grandstand
Newcastle International Sports Centre
Full name Hunter International Sports Centre
Former names International Sports Centre (1970–91)
Marathon Stadium (1992–2001)
EnergyAustralia Stadium (2001–10)
Ausgrid Stadium (2011)
Location New Lambton, Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia
Coordinates 32°55′08″S 151°43′36″E / 32.91889°S 151.72667°E / -32.91889; 151.72667Coordinates: 32°55′08″S 151°43′36″E / 32.91889°S 151.72667°E / -32.91889; 151.72667
Public transit Turton Road
Owner NSW Government
Operator Venues NSW (Hunter Venues)
Type Stadium
Genre(s) Sporting events
Capacity 33,000 (23,000 seated)[1]
Record attendance 32,890 - Australia vs New Zealand, 2011
Surface Grass
Construction
Broke ground 1967
Opened 10 April 1970 (1970-04-10)
Renovated 2003–05, 2008–11
Tenants
Newcastle Knights (NRL) (1988–present)
Hunter Eagles (ABL) (1994–1998)
Newcastle Jets FC (A-League) (2000–present)
Website
hunterstadium.com.au

Hunter Stadium is a multi-purpose sports stadium located in Newcastle, Australia. The ground is home to the Newcastle Knights (National Rugby League) and Newcastle Jets FC (A-League). It is owned by the New South Wales government and administered by the Hunter Region Sporting Venues Authority. Due to past sponsorship deals, the ground has been previously known as Marathon Stadium, EnergyAustralia Stadium and Ausgrid Stadium. Newcastle International Sports Centre is also known as Newcastle Stadium when in use during AFC competitions due to conflicting sponsorship reasons.

History

Work began on the stadium on 1 December 1967, and was officially opened by Queen Elizabeth II on 10 April 1970. It was originally known as the International Sports Centre, and is still part of the ISC complex to this day. The playing surface back then was originally oval shaped to allow both codes of rugby, soccer and cricket to be able to make use of it.

The Knights secured a lease on the stadium in 1986, and converted it from an oval to a rectangle layout. During the 1988 Great Britain Lions tour, the Newcastle Knights, in their first season, hosted a match at the ground. On that occasion the Lions, captained by Ellery Hanley, defeated the Knights 28–12.

In 1992, local tyre outlet Marathon Tyres became the naming rights sponsor for the stadium, and it was renamed Marathon Stadium. That year the Knights played Great Britain for a second time as part of the Lions Tour of Australasia. The Ellery Hanley captained Lions took the Knights apart winning 22–0. Later in the 1992 NSWRL season, the Knights qualified for their first ever Finals series.

Towards the end of 2001, energy supplier EnergyAustralia took over naming rights, and thus the stadium became EnergyAustralia Stadium. In February 2011 it was announced that the stadium would be renamed to "Ausgrid Stadium" after EnergyAustralia was renamed "Ausgrid".[2]

Before redevelopment, the stadium had a capacity of 28,000, including 5,000 in the main grandstand. The ground attendance record for a sporting event is 32,642, which was set when the Knights took on the Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles in July 1995.[3] Despite a lack of incidents, police subsequently asked for the allowed capacity to be lowered for reasons of safety.

Following the retirement of former Knights captain Andrew Johns, the new eastern grandstand was renamed The Andrew Johns Stand in honour of Johns in front of a packed crowd before the Knights vs Brisbane Broncos NRL match on Sunday 22 April 2007.

The name (Newcastle International Sports Centre) is used primarily by those who wish to mention stadiums by original names, such as non-commercial organisations like the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, and those with other corporate interests such as FIFA or the Asian Football Confederation.

Redevelopments

2003–05

The stadium underwent redevelopment during the years 2003–05, funded mostly by local and state government grants.

Factors that brought on the redevelopment included:

The first stage of the redevelopment was completed in early 2004. This consisted of;

The second stage of construction began in 2004 and was completed in 2005. This consisted of:

2008–11

During the 2007 NSW Election campaign, the Premier Morris Iemma promised $30 million towards an upgrade of the stadium, conditional on the Federal Government matching the funds.[6]

On 1 April 2008 the federal government confirmed $10m towards the development of the Western Grandstand. This is in addition to the $30m commitment from the state government. This is a critical step for the stadium's development for the upgrade to be in by 2011.[7] The A$40 million will contribute to an expansion of the stadium's capacity to eventually hold over 40,000 as well as general improvements in the stadiums facilities.[8][9]

From 2008–10 the stadium is being upgraded again[10] to around 33 000 seats, with a hope for the stadium to be involved in the 2015 Asian Cup and 2018 World Cup should Australia be the host of those tournaments. As part of the announcement, Morris Iemma stated that the capacity of 33,000 can be increased to the 40,000 necessary for World Cup Hosting, through temporary seating.[11] The total cost of the upgrade is $60 million, with $50 million from the state government and $10 million from the Federal Government. Although construction will take place during both the Newcastle Knights and Newcastle Jets seasons, developers have stated that there will be minimal effect on attendances due to the staged approach.[10]

The stadium development is being carried out over four stages.

Uses

Hunter Stadium during the 2015 AFC Asian Cup semi-final between Australia and the UAE.

Rugby League

The Newcastle Knights team have been tenants of the ground since 1988, when they were entered into the NRL Competition.

In October 2011 it hosted a rugby league one-off test match between Australia and New Zealand. This event set a new ground attendance record for a sporting event of 32,890.

Soccer

During the National Soccer League competition, three clubs have played their home ground games at this stadium. They are Newcastle KB United (1978–84); Newcastle Rosebud United (1984–86) and Newcastle United (2000–04). The NSL competition folded in 2004.

In 2005, the newly formed national competition (A-League) began to operate. Newcastle United was part of the newly formed competition, and have played at this ground ever since.

The stadium also hosted two 2015 AFC Asian Cup group stage matches, and also a semi final between Australia and the United Arab Emirates and third place match between United Arab Emirates and Iraq.

Baseball

The Hunter Eagles were formed for the 1994–95 Australian Baseball League season after purchasing the Sydney Wave's license. The Eagles played in the Australian Baseball League until the end of the 1997–98 season.[13]

Rugby Union

In 2012, it was used for the first match of the 2012 Scotland rugby union tour of Oceania. Scotland won the match, beating Australia 9–6.[14]

Notable games

Rugby League test matches

The venue has hosted three Australia internationals and one Rugby League World Cup game. The results were as follows;[15] Hunter Stadium has also been chosen as the host venue for the 2016 ANZAC Test between Australia and New Zealand on 6 May.[16]

Date Opponents Result Attendance Part of
12 June 1996  Fiji (NRL) 84 – 14 19,234
23 April 2004  New Zealand 37 – 10 21,537 2004 Anzac Test
16 October 2011 42 – 6 32,890
6 May 2016 TBD TBD 2016 ANZAC Test

Rugby League World Cup

Game# Date Result Attendance Part of
1 6 November 2008  New Zealand def.  England 36–24 15,145 2008 World Cup

2015 AFC Asian Cup matches

No. Date Stage "Home" team Score "Away" team Attendance
1 12 January 2015 Group Japan Japan 4–0 State of Palestine Palestine 17,147
2 17 January 2015 Group Oman Oman 1–0 Kuwait Kuwait 7,499
3 27 January 2015 Semi-Final Australia Australia 2–0 United Arab Emirates United Arab Emirates 21,079
4 30 January 2015 3rd Place United Arab Emirates United Arab Emirates 3–2 Iraq Iraq 12,829

References

  1. Bossi, Dominic (19 January 2015). "Socceroos Asian Cup semi-final won't be moved to Sydney despite Hunter Stadium limitations". The Sydney Morning Herald (Fairfax). Retrieved 19 January 2015.
  2. Goffet, Neil (18 February 2011). "EnergyAustralia stadium to change name". The Newcastle Herald. Retrieved 4 March 2011.
  3. 1995 ARL - Newcastle vs Manly at Rugby League Project
  4. "Newcastle Stadium, NSW Legislative Assembly Hansard extract". New South Wales Government Publisher. 27 June 2002. Retrieved 23 May 2007.
  5. "Newcastle Stadium, NSW Legislative Assembly Hansard extract". New South Wales Government Publisher. 28 May 2002. Archived from the original on 29 September 2007. Retrieved 23 May 2007.
  6. "Protester crash-tackled by Iemma minder". The Sydney Morning Herald. 20 March 2007.
  7. 'Funding powers development of stadium' – Department of Health and Ageing
  8. Group's goal for growing stadium – Local News – News – General – The Herald
  9. Davutovic, David (5 April 2008). "Sydney fights Melbourne for the right to host World Cup". The Daily Telegraph.
  10. 1 2 State's $20m grand stand – Local News – News – General – The Herald
  11. $20m to create a field of dreams – Local News – News – General – The Herald
  12. "Images of Stage 1 of 2008 Energy Australia Stadium redevelopment".
  13. "The Clubs". pflintoff.com. Retrieved 9 October 2012.
  14. Hunter Stadium results @ Rugby League Project
  15. "Representative Round: Newcastle to host Test". NRL.com. 25 January 2016.

External links

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