Yuen Long Stadium

Yuen Long Stadium
大披頭
Tai Pei Tou
元朗大球場
Address 6 Tai Yuk Road, Yuen Long, Hong Kong
Coordinates 22°26′34″N 114°01′16″E / 22.442807°N 114.021090°E / 22.442807; 114.021090Coordinates: 22°26′34″N 114°01′16″E / 22.442807°N 114.021090°E / 22.442807; 114.021090
Public transit      Fung Nin Road
Owner Hong Kong Government
Operator Leisure and Cultural Services Department
Capacity 4,932
Surface Grass
Construction
Broke ground 1965
Opened 1969
Renovated 1989, 2008
Construction cost HK$198,000
Architect Yuen Long Cheong Kee Construction
Tenants
Yuen Long (2013–present)
HK Pegasus (2009-2013)

Yuen Long Stadium is a multi-purpose stadium in Yuen Long, New Territories, Hong Kong and the home ground of Hong Kong Premier League club Yuen Long.

History

East Stand entrance

Originally a piece of vacant land next to Shui Bin Village, the stadium was built by the Yuen Long District Sports Association with local support. It was constructed by Yuen Long Cheong Kee Construction for HK$198,000 in 1965.

The stadium opened in December 1969 with a First Division match between Yuen Long and Fire Services. On the same day, it hosted the start and the finish of the first marathon in Hong Kong held by Hong Kong Amateur Athletic Association, sponsored by Tin Tin Daily.

In 1983, the stadium received a HK$3 million endowment from Royal Hong Kong Jockey Club for expansion. The work, which cost HK$12 million in total, added a new 2,000-capacity covered grandstand and an eight-lane all-weather running track. The playing surface was also re-laid during the construction.

In recent years, the stadium has been transferred to and operated by the Leisure and Cultural Services Department of Hong Kong.

Tenants

Yuen Long District S.A.

From the 1970s to 1980, the stadium had been the home ground for Yuen Long, who were playing at the First Division before withdrawing from the top tier after the 1979-80 season. Nowadays, it occasionally hosts home matches for their amateur and youth teams in lower divisions.

Pegasus

200809 season

On 22 July 2008, newly formed Tin Shui Wai Pegasus applied for permission to play home fixtures in their inaugural season at Yuen Long Stadium, which was rejected by the HKFA due to the quality of playing surface.

In September 2008, after reaching an agreement with the away side, TSW Pegasus requested to play their home game against South China on 5 October at Yuen Long Stadium, which was approved by the HKFA. It was arranged that the league tie between Mutual and Citizen on the same match day would also be moved to this stadium,[1] which was later scheduled to host two more TSW Pegasus home games in the second half of the season.[2]

TSW Pegasus chairman Wilson Wong and the HKFA officials visited the ground on 17 September 2008 to explore the possibility for hosting more league matches at Yuen Long Stadium during the season. It was concluded that the ground was not equipped with up to four changing rooms to accommodate multiple matches on the same match day; while there were no scoreboards, ticket booths and substitute benches on the sideline to meet FIFA standards, the exits for supporters were not clearly indicated. HKFA Head of Competitions Lam Shing Kui reaffirmed the stadium was only suitable for one game per match day. The conditions of the existing playing surface, floodlights, executive box, first-aid room, referee's room and changing rooms were adequate to host First Division matches, with an option of setting up additional VIP areas and media facilities including internet access temporarily. Substitute benches would be borrowed from Tai Po Sports Ground.[3]

The ground was scheduled to host two First Division fixtures on 5 October, with Mutual against Citizen kick-off at 12:30 and TSW Pegasus against South China at 16:00. However, both matches were postponed due to waterlogged pitch.[4] Three days later, the hosts defeated South China 3-2 in front of an attendance of 2,537 in the rescheduled fixture, which was the ground's first First Division match in 22 years.[5]

200913 seasons

Pegasus used the stadium as their home ground for domestic games for four seasons from 200913.

They were forced to play their home games in the 2011 AFC Cup at Tseung Kwan O Sports Ground as their home ground failed to fulfil the requirements from the Asian Football Confederation.[6]

Yuen Long FC

The stadium has been the home ground of Yuen Long since their promotion to the top flight in 2013-14.

Facilities

The stadium features a world standard natural turf pitch with flood light system and two stands constructed on either side of the pitch. The athletics track is a world standard all-weather 400m eight-lane oval.

It is open to public six days a week from 08:00 to 22:30, except for one hour from 12:30 to 13:30. It is closed for maintenance every Wednesday.[7]

Future Developments

In October 2013, the Leisure and Cultural Services Department announced plans to redevelop the stadium to fulfil requirements for hosting international matches. Capacity will rise to no less than 5,000, with both East and West Stands covered. Other improvements include executive boxes, trophy presentation area, electronic turnstiles and television gantry. Yuen Long chairman Wilson Wong revealed that the club will play their home games on other grounds during the revamp.[8]

Yuen Long Stadium Panorama.

Transport

There are a couple Light Rail stops near Yuen Long Stadium, the closest being Fung Nin Road, about five minutes walk away from the ground, and Shui Pin Wai, a further two minutes walk away. Both stops are served by routes 610, 614, 615 and 761P.

The nearest MTR station is Long Ping on the West Rail Line, which is about ten to fifteen minutes walk from the stadium.

A number of KMB routes run near the stadium, such as 68X, 268B, 268C, 268X, 269D, 276, 276P and B1, each of which run down Castle Peak Road.

References

  1. http://hk.myblog.yahoo.com/chairman-blog/article?mid=1939
  2. "足總派員視察大埔運動場". Takungpao. Hong Kong. 6 September 2008. Archived from the original on 24 February 2009. Retrieved 9 May 2017.
  3. "元朗球場難當飛馬主場". Wenweipo. Hong Kong. 18 September 2008. Archived from the original on 21 September 2008. Retrieved 9 May 2017.
  4. "Coolpoint Ventilation First Division postponed". HKFA. 5 October 2008. Retrieved 9 May 2017.
  5. "反勝南華卻換外援超額 天水圍贏變輸!". Apply Daily. Hong Kong. 9 October 2008. Retrieved 9 May 2017.
  6. "大陂頭球場溫故知新". Oriental Daily. Hong Kong. 27 March 2011. Retrieved 9 May 2017.
  7. http://www.lcsd.gov.hk/en/facilities/facilitieslist/facilities.php?ftid=4&did=18&fcid=6
  8. "元朗大球場重建變身國際級". Sing Tao Daily. Yahoo! Hong Kong. 25 October 2013. Retrieved 9 May 2017.
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