Adelaide Oval

Adelaide Oval
Ground information
Location Adelaide, South Australia
Establishment 1871
Capacity 38,791
Owner South Australia Cricket Association
Tenants Australian cricket team
South Australia cricket team
Adelaide Strikers (BBL) 2011+
Port Adelaide (AFL) 2014+
End names
River End
Cathedral End
International information
First Test 12 December 1884: Australia v England
Last Test 3–7 December 2010: Australia v England
First ODI 20 December 1975: Australia v West Indies
Last ODI 26th January 2011: Australia v England
Domestic team information
South Australia (1877 - present)

The Adelaide Oval is a sports ground in Adelaide, South Australia, located in the parklands between the Central Business District and North Adelaide. It's home to the South Australian Redbacks, the Adelaide Strikers and the South Australian Cricket Association.

The oval has a rich history which dates back to 1871, shortly after the formation of the SACA and is considered to be one of the most picturesque Test cricket grounds in Australia, if not the world.[1]

The ground is mostly used for cricket and Australian rules football, but plays host to other sports such as Rugby League and Soccer.

The oval is managed by the South Australian Cricket Association (SACA). The oval currently has a seating capacity of 36,000 spectators.[2] The maximum crowd at a cricket game was 50,962 during the Bodyline test in 1932 and the maximum crowd was 62,543, set at the 1965 SANFL Grand Final between the Port Adelaide and Sturt Football Clubs.

From March 2012, the oval will undergo a $550 million redevelopment which will bring football into the city, increase the stadiums capacity to 54,600 and become the home venue for the Adelaide and Port Adelaide Football Clubs in the Australian Football League.

Contents

History

Major sporting events

Adelaide Oval hosts the following major sporting events:

16 sports have been played at one time or another at the oval: archery, athletics, baseball, cycling, gridion, highland games, hockey, lacrosse, lawn tennis, rugby league, rugby union, quoits and soccer.

Concerts

Adelaide Oval has hosted major concerts during its time, with some of the most famous acts including Fleetwood Mac (1977 & 2004), David Bowie (1978 & 1983), KISS (1980), Madonna & Paul McCartney (1993), Michael Jackson (1996), Billy Joel & Elton John (1998),[4] P!nk (2002), Pearl Jam (2009), AC/DC and Wolfmother (2010) and Foo Fighters (2011).[5]

Oval layout

The oval dimensions are 190m x 125m,[6] which is both unusually long and unusually narrow for an Australian cricket ground. The arrangement is highly favourable for batsmen who play square of the wicket, and heavily penalises bowlers who deliver the ball wide so that the batsman can exploit the short boundaries square of the wicket. Before the far ends in front of and behind the wicket were roped off, making the playing area shorter, it was not uncommon for batsmen to hit an all-run five. The pitch itself is generally very good for batting, and offers little assistance to bowlers until the last day of a match.

The new western stand - December 2010

During the second Ashes test

During the England vs SA match

Ground redevelopment

Western stand redevelopment

In August 2008 the South Australian Cricket Association announced that it had approved plans to redevelop the ground, involving expanding its capacity to 40,000. Development plans showed a reconfiguration of the playing surface and a remodelled western stand. The redevelopment would make the ground a viable option for hosting Australian Football League games as well as international soccer and rugby. The state and federal Governments each pledged $25m to the project, leaving the SACA to raise at least $45m. The SACA planned for the new stand to be ready in time for the 2010–11 Ashes series.[7]

It was announced on 27 February 2009 that the A$95 million re-development would commence on 10 March 2010. In March, the western stands were torn down.

2010 state election proposals

In the lead up to the 2010 South Australian state election, the opposition Liberal Party announced that, if elected, it would provide Adelaide with a new stadium with a roof capable of closing. The incumbent Labor party subsequently announced it would fund an upgrade and redevelopment of the whole of the Adelaide Oval, rather than just the Western Grand Stand. The redeveloped stadium, (which will not have a closing roof), is intended to seat 50,000 people, with 77% of them under cover. The redevelopment is proposed to be completed some time in 2014 or 2015. In an arrangement negotiated between the incumbent Labor Party and the SACA on 2 December 2009, it was originally planned to cost $450 million.

Joint redevelopment by SACA and SANFL

The Adelaide Oval Stadium Management Authority (AOSMA), a joint venture of SACA and SANFL, was registered as a company on 23 Dec 2009 following the re-announcement of the plan.[8] The AOSMA has eight directors, four associated with SACA (Ian McLachlan-Chair, John Harnden, Creagh O’Connor & John Bannon) and four with SANFL (Leigh Whicker-CEO, Rod Payze, Philip Gallagher & Jamie Coppins)[9]

However, in early-mid 2010, prior to the election, it became clear that $450m would be inadequate. After the election (on 7 April 2010), SA Premier Mike Rann capped the State Government's commitment, saying: "It's $450 million - and not a penny more", and set a deadline for the parties to agree.[10] In May, Treasurer Kevin Foley announced that "the Government's final offer to the SANFL and SACA for the redevelopment" was $535 million, and the deadline was extended to August 2010.[11] Simultaneously, the SACA and the SANFL were in the process of negotiating an agreement that would enable Australian Rules Football (AFL) to use the Adelaide Oval during the AFL season as their home ground.[12][13][14][15] In September 2010, an agreement between Port Adelaide, SACA, the SANFL and the AFL had still not been achieved.

The redevelopment is also planned to include a $20 million pedestrian bridge across the River Torrens to link the Adelaide railway station precinct with the Adelaide Oval precinct. there was debate on whether the Adelaide Crows will move from Football Park (AAMI Stadium) to Adelaide Oval, or continue to use AAMI Stadium as their home ground. If they do move to Adelaide Oval, it is expected that AAMI will withdraw their sponsorship, and the land around Football Park will be rezoned to allow the SANFL (the owners of Football Park) to profit from the rezoning. Fans of the Adelaide Crows have rallied in support of the club to stay at Football Park. It was announced 2 months prior to the SACA vote that the Adelaide Crows will move to Adelaide Oval and use it as their home ground, as does Port Adelaide. Once the upgrade on the oval has been completed, The Port Adelaide and Adelaide Football clubs will move immediately to Adelaide oval. Once the move has been completed from Football Park to Adelaide Oval, AAMI will withdraw their sponsorship of Football Park, The stands at Football Park will be demolished, but the Adelaide Football Club Administrative offices, CrowsMania (Adelaide Football Clubs merchandise store), the Oval itself and the surrounding area will stay..In Early 2011, the AFL, SANFL, SACA, the SA Government and the Australian Government reached an agreement to upgrade Adelaide Oval. The SACA and the SANFL proposed, if SACA members vote yes on the upgrade in early May, that the whole Stadium will undergo redevelopment, except for the Northern Mound, the Moreton Bay Fig trees and the scoreboard, which will stay as it is because of it being under heritage listing. The stadium's capacity is meant to exceed 50,000, and it will have 2 T.V. screens, which will both be bigger than the ones at the MCG, which, at the moment, are the biggest in the country. If SACA members do vote yes, (75% of SACA need to vote yes for the deal to go ahead) then the SANFL and AFL will have control over the stadium for 7 months of the year, and SACA will have control for 5 months of the year.

SACA members could choose to vote online on the 28th of April, 2011, of whether they want the upgrade to go ahead, or they could go to the Adelaide Showgrounds on the 2nd of May, 2011, to vote. At 6pm, 28th of April, 2011, It was announced that 60% of SACA members that voted online voted yes, 15% short of the Majority vote needed for the upgrade to go ahead. At 10.15pm, on the 2nd May, 2011, at the Adelaide Showgrounds, it was announced that the votes had been counted and finalized. The results were, 80.37% of total votes cast were in favour of Adelaide Oval being redeveloped, meaning that the upgrade will go ahead. Other small complications are still ahead, but should be easily passed. The upgrade will recommence in April, 2012, and is expected to be finished by late-March, 2014, if there isn't any more delays. The whole Oval will be upgraded except for the already rebuilt Western grandstand (SACA and SANFL members only stand), the Northern Mound, the Historic Scoreboard and the Morton Bay Fig Trees. The Northern Mound, the Morton bay Fig Trees and the Scoreboard are all listed under the Heritage act and will never be demolished unless they are damaged beyond repair.

See also

References

  1. ^ Adelaide Oval at Austadiums
  2. ^ SACA - Adelaide Oval - Overview 28 December 2006
  3. ^ p69, Mark Peel, England Expects, A biography of Ken Barrington, The Kingswood Press, 1992
  4. ^ U2 to lead the charge, The Advertiser, 10 November 2006
  5. ^ http://www.cricketsa.com.au/Article/EventDetail.aspx?p=285&id=110
  6. ^ http://www.saca.com.au/library/seating_plan.pdf
  7. ^ New-look Adelaide Oval to chase AFL, The Australian, 2 August 2008
  8. ^ "Re: Adelaide Oval Redevelopment inc. $450 million 'extension". Sensational Adelaide. http://www.sensational-adelaide.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=3335#p77481. Retrieved 27 May 2011. "The "Adelaide Oval Stadium Management Authority" was registered as a company on Dec 23rd 2009 following the re-announcement of the plan (now $450 million) by Mike Rann, in time for the March 2010 election." 
  9. ^ Adelaide Oval SMA Limited ABN 46 141 259 538. "Adelaide Oval Stadium Management Authority Organisation Chart" (PDF). http://www.sanfl.com.au/sma/org%20chart2010-06-17%20-%20revision%20A.pdf. Retrieved 27 May 2011. 
  10. ^ Rann caps State Government's commitment, Advertiser, 7 April 2010: SA Premier Mike Rann has capped the State Government's commitment to any redevelopment of Adelaide Oval for AFL football at $450 million. "It's $450 million - and not a penny more", said Mr Rann today ruling out the government underwriting any cost over-runs at Adelaide Oval.
  11. ^ Adelaide Oval plan still short by $50m, 27 May 2010, Adelaidenow.com.au
  12. ^ AFL at Adelaide Oval, SACA website
  13. ^ Stadium Management Authority promotional brochure, 13 August 2010, SACA website
  14. ^ Stadium Management Authority official website, www.adelaideovalredevelopment.com.au
  15. ^ SMA Design Briefing, 18 June 2010, SANFL website

External links