Brisbane Cricket Ground
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| Brisbane Cricket Ground | ||||
| The 'Gabba | ||||
| Ground information | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | Woolloongabba, Brisbane, Queensland | |||
| Establishment | 1895 | |||
| Seating capacity | 42,000 | |||
| Owner | Queensland Government | |||
| Operator | Major Sports Facilities Authority | |||
| Tenants | Queensland Bulls (cricket) Brisbane Lions (AFL) |
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| End names | Stanley Street End Vulture Street End |
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| International information | ||||
| First Test | 27 November 1931: Australia v South Africa | |||
| Last Test | 8 November 2007: Australia v Sri Lanka | |||
| First ODI | 23 December 1979: England v West Indies | |||
| Last ODI | 6 February 2007: England v New Zealand | |||
| Domestic team information | ||||
| Years | Team | |||
| 1896 – present | Queensland Bulls | |||
| 1997 – present | Brisbane Lions | |||
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As of 16 December 2007 |
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The Brisbane Cricket Ground is a major sports stadium in the Queensland capital of Brisbane. It is located in the suburb of Woolloongabba, and is hence known colloquially as The 'Gabba.
The land on which the ground sits was first set aside for use as a cricket ground in 1895. The first cricket match was held on the site on 19 December 1896 between Parliament and The Press. The 'Gabba was not used for interstate or international cricket until 1931. The first Sheffield Shield match scheduled for The Gabba was to be played between 31 January 1931 and 4 February 1931, however it was washed out without the captains even bothering to toss a coin. The first cricket Test match at The 'Gabba was played Australia and South Africa between 27 November and 3 December 1931.
Over the years the 'Gabba has hosted athletics, Australian rules football, baseball, concerts, cricket, cycling, rugby league, rugby union, soccer and pony and greyhound races.
Between 1993 and 2005 The Gabba was redeveloped in six stages at a cost of $128,000,000 AUD. The dimensions of the playing field are now 170.6 metres (east-west) by 149.9 metres (north-south). The seating capacity of the ground is now 42,000. In its appearance the Gabba now almost resembles a mini Melbourne Cricket Ground complete with light towers and a gigantic modern grandstand ringing the ground providing an intimidating atmosphere for visiting teams.
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From October to March the Gabba is used for cricket and is home to the Queensland Cricket Association, Queensland Cricketers' Club and the Queensland Bulls cricket team. The venue usually hosts the first Test match of the season each November, in addition to a number of international one-day matches usually held in January.
Test cricket was first played at the ground in November 1931, the first Test of the series between Australia and South Africa. In December 1960, Test cricket's first-ever Tied Test took place at the ground when Richie Benaud's Australian team tied with Frank Worrell's West Indian side. Queensland clinched its first-ever Sheffield Shield title with victory over South Australia in the final at the ground in March 1995.
A record crowd for any cricket match of 39,874 flocked to the Gabba on January 15, 2006 to see Australia play South Africa in the second game of the triangular VB Series.
The Gabba was the first Australian venue to host an International Twenty20 cricket match.
Since 1993 the Gabba has been the home ground for the Brisbane Bears (to 1996) and (from 1997) Brisbane Lions AFL teams. The record crowd for an Australian rules football match is 37,224 between the Brisbane Lions and Collingwood.
Australian football has a long association with the ground. The Queensland Football League (a precursor to AFL Queensland) played matches at the Gabba from 1905 to 1914, 1959 to 1971, and in the late 1970s and early 1980s. AFLQ matches resumed in 1993 as curtain-raiser events to AFL games, along with occasional AFLQ Grand Finals.
Interstate games, including the 1961 national carnival have also been played there, as was a demonstration game during the 1982 Commonwealth Games. In 1991 the Gabba was host to Queensland's only victory over a Victorian side.
During the 1950s and 1960s The Gabba hosted soccer matches for English first division clubs including Blackpool FC, Everton FC and Manchester United. The Chinese and South African national teams also played at the ground. During the 2000 Olympic Games The Gabba hosted soccer pool games.
From 1932 to 1959 The Gabba was used to host rugby league games, including interstate and international matches. Rugby league still holds the ground attendance records for this venue, after 47,096 people attended the Great Britain versus Australia Test on 3 July 1954. Rugby League and association football are now regularly played at Suncorp Stadium, which has a rectangular pitch and over 50,000 seating capacity.
The Gabba has hosted six rugby union Test matches.
| Year | Result | Crowd |
|---|---|---|
| 1907 | Australia lost to New Zealand 14-5 | TBA |
| 1914 | Australia lost to New Zealand 17-0 | TBA |
| 1950 | Australia lost to the British and Irish Lions 19-6 | TBA |
| 1951 | Australia lost to New Zealand 16-6 | TBA |
| 2001 | Australia lost to the British and Irish Lions 29-13 | 37,460 |
| 2002 | Australia beat South Africa 38-27 | 37,258 |
Brisbane Cricket Ground ("The Gabba")
- Sir Donald Bradman holds the record for the highest individual test innings at the ground of 226 against South Africa in 1931.
- The ground where Australia and the West Indies fought out the first ever tied test match.
- Brett Lee is the only cricketer to hit a 6 out of the (redeveloped) ground, achieving the feat in a match on November 15, 2005.
- The ground attendance record is 47,096 for a rugby league Test match between Australia and Great Britain in 1954.
- Australia has not lost a cricket test match at the Gabba since the 1988/89 season - a streak of 17 matches and counting.
References used in this article include:
- Brisbane Cricket Ground - Queensland Government Legislation Act, 1993 (.pdf file)
- Brisbane Cricket Ground - Statistical Overview (Test Cricket) - HowSTAT! Grounds Statistics
- Brisbane Cricket Ground Redevelopment, Brisbane, QLD
- Pura Cup - 2005-2006 season) - Cricket online website - (venues include the Brisbane Cricket Ground)
- Brisbane Cricket Ground at Austadiums
- Satellite photo of The Gabba
- The Brisbane Lions - an Overview
- Brisbane Lions information
- World Stadiums
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| Adelaide Oval · The Gabba · Melbourne Cricket Ground · Sydney Cricket Ground · WACA Ground · Bellerive Oval · Bundaberg Rum Stadium · Marrara Oval |
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| Major grounds: | AAMI Stadium · Gabba · Melbourne Cricket Ground · Skilled Stadium · Subiaco Oval · Sydney Cricket Ground · Telstra Dome · Telstra Stadium |
| Minor grounds: | Aurora Stadium · Carrara Stadium · Manuka Oval · TIO Stadium |
| Former AFL/VFL major grounds: |
Arden Street Oval · Brunswick Street Oval · Corio Oval · East Melbourne Cricket Ground · Glenferrie Oval · Junction Oval · Lake Oval · Moorabbin Oval · Princes Park · Punt Road Oval · Victoria Park · WACA Ground · Waverley Park · Whitten Oval · Windy Hill |