Wellington Regional Stadium

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Wellington Regional Stadium
Westpac Stadium
'The Cake Tin'
'The Ring of Fire'
Westpac Stadium viewed from Wadestown
Former names WestpacTrust Stadium
Location Wellington, New Zealand
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Owner Wellington Regional Stadium Trust
Operator Wellington Regional Stadium Trust
Capacity 34,500 (Seating capacity)[1]
33,000 (Cricket)[2]
Field size Length (north–south) 235 metres
Width (west–east) 185 metres (stadium dimensions, not the playing surface)
Surface Grass
Construction
Broke ground 12 March 1998
Opened 3 January 2000
Construction cost NZ$130 million
Architect Warren and Mahoney
Populous (then Bligh Lobb Sports Architecture)
Project manager Beca Carter Hollings & Ferner Ltd
Main contractors Fletcher Construction Ltd
Tenants
Hurricanes (Super Rugby) (2000–present)
Wellington Lions (ITM Cup) (2000–present)
Wellington Firebirds (NZC) (2000–present)
Wellington Phoenix (A-League) (2008–present)
New Zealand Institute of Sport
Website
http://www.westpacstadium.co.nz/
Ground information
End names
Scoreboard End
City End
International information
First ODI 8–9 January 2000: New Zealand v West Indies
Last ODI 21 March 2015: New Zealand v West Indies
First T20I 22 December 2006: New Zealand v Sri Lanka
Last T20I 15 January 2014: New Zealand v West Indies
As of 8 January 2016
Source: ESPNcricinfo
Westpac Stadium and CentrePort Wellington, 2015

Wellington Regional Stadium (known as Westpac Stadium through naming rights) is a major sporting venue in Wellington, New Zealand. The stadium's bowl site size is 48,000 sq m.

The stadium was built in 1999 by Fletcher Construction[3] and is situated close to major transport facilities (such as Wellington Railway Station) one kilometre north of the CBD. It was built on reclaimed railway land, which was surplus to requirements.

It was built to replace Athletic Park, which was no longer considered adequate for international events due to its location and state of disrepair. The stadium was also built to provide a larger-capacity venue for One Day International cricket matches, due to the Basin Reserve ground losing such matches to larger stadia in other parts of the country.

The stadium also serves as a large-capacity venue for concerts.

Tenants

The stadium is a multi-purpose facility, though used mainly for sporting events. It is the home of the Wellington Lions ITM Cup rugby team and the Hurricanes Super Rugby team. The stadium also hosts the Wellington Sevens, one of the events in the annual IRB Sevens World Series for national rugby sevens teams. Westpac Stadium regularly serves as a home venue for All Blacks rugby matches.

Westpac Stadium is also the home venue for A-League football (soccer) team Wellington Phoenix FC, the stadium often referred to as "The Ring of Fire" by Phoenix supporters. It also serves as a major home venue for the New Zealand national football team (the All Whites), notably hosting the home leg of their 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification match against Bahrain.

During the summer the stadium generally hosts international and occasionally domestic limited overs cricket, with the home team being the New Zealand Black Caps for the international contests and Wellington Firebirds for the domestic competition.

The stadium has also been used for rugby league matches, including national team fixtures and New Zealand Warriors away fixtures.

Off-field facilities built into the stadium also included the New Zealand Institute of Sport, and a campus for the Wellington School of Cricket, run by the Wellington Cricket Association.

Events

In 2000, The Westpac Stadium hosted the Edinburgh Military Tattoo. This was the first time the event was hosted outside Edinburgh, Scotland.

In 2002 during an England versus Black Caps cricket match, director Peter Jackson recorded 30,000 fans chanting in Black Speech for the sound of 10,000 chanting Uruk-hai during the Battle of Helm's Deep in the film The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers.

On 4 March 2006 WWE's first ever New Zealand show, WWE Smackdown Road to Wrestlemania 22 Tour was held at the stadium. 23,875 people were in attendance to witness 9 matches including a triple threat match between Kurt Angle, Undertaker and Mark Henry for the World Heavyweight Championship.

Also in 2006 a concert was held by The Rolling Stones which ended the Australasian leg of its A Bigger Bang World Tour,

On 14 October 2007, Australia defeated New Zealand in the Centenary Test rugby league game. The 58–0 defeat set a new record for the largest loss by the New Zealand national rugby league team.

On 1 December 2007, the stadium hosted an exhibition match between Wellington Phoenix FC and Los Angeles Galaxy. LA Galaxy won 4–1 in front of 31,853 spectators, the largest crowd for non-national football (soccer) match in New Zealand history.[4]

On 17 January 2008 the stadium hosted the first leg of The Police Reunion Tour [5] and over Easter the inaugural two-day "Rock2Wgtn" music festival, headlined by Kiss and Ozzy Osbourne. Attendance over the two days was around 50,000.[6]

New Zealand hosted the 2008 FIFA Under-17 Women's World Cup. Six pool matches and two playoff matches were played at the Westpac Stadium. Due to FIFA rules disallowing host stadia to be named after non-FIFA sponsors, the stadium was officially known as "Wellington Stadium" during the event.

The stadium hosted the national team's 2010 FIFA World Cup qualifying match on 14 November 2009 against Bahrain. New Zealand won the match 1–0, with a record crowd of 35,194 for a football match in New Zealand.

On 28 January 2010 AC/DC kicked off the Australasian leg of its Black Ice World Tour at the stadium. The concert quickly sold out so a second was scheduled for 30 January.[7] The stadium was also a venue for Bon Jovi's The Circle Tour in 2010.

The stadium hosted eight games during the 2011 Rugby World Cup including two quarter-final matches.

On 11 May 2013 the stadium and Wellington hosted its first National Rugby League fixture since 2004 with the Auckland-based New Zealand Warriors hosting the Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs at the stadium for 'The Capital Clash'.[8] The Warriors wore their 'Capital Clash' jerseys which incorporated the black and gold colours of Wellington and a design based off a strip worn by Wellington Rugby League teams in the 1970s. The Warriors lost the game late in the match in front of 28,096 fans.[9]

On 20 November 2013, the stadium hosted the second leg of the World Cup qualification inter-confederation play-off against Mexico, which resulted in New Zealand failing to qualify for the 2014 FIFA World Cup.[10]

On 15 November 2014, the stadium hosted the 2014 Rugby League Four Nations Final. It was the first Four Nations Final held in New Zealand, though the Mount Smart Stadium in Auckland hosted the inaugural final of the tournament, then known as the Tri-Nations, in 1999.[11]

The stadium was one of the venues for 2015 Cricket World Cup which was co-hosted by New Zealand and Australia. It hosted a total of four matches during the World Cup which included a quarter-final clash between the hosts New Zealand and West Indies.[12]

On 12 December 2015 AC/DC played a concert at the stadium in front of 30,000 people

Major Tournaments

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2011 Rugby World Cup
11 September 2011 South Africa  17–16  Wales Regional Stadium, Wellington
Attendance: 33,331
17 September 2011 South Africa  49–3  Fiji Regional Stadium, Wellington
Attendance: 33,262
23 September 2011 Australia  67–5  United States Regional Stadium, Wellington
Attendance: 33,824
25 September 2011 Argentina  13–12  Scotland Regional Stadium, Wellington
Attendance: 26,937
1 October 2011 France  14–19  Tonga Regional Stadium, Wellington
Attendance: 32,763
2 October 2011 New Zealand  79–15  Canada Regional Stadium, Wellington
Attendance: 37,665
8 October 2011 Ireland  10–22  Wales Regional Stadium, Wellington
Attendance: 35,787
9 October 2011 South Africa  9–11  Australia Regional Stadium, Wellington
Attendance: 34,914

Reference:[13]

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2015 Cricket World Cup
20 February (D/N)
Scorecard
England 
123 (33.2 overs)
v
 New Zealand
125/2 (12.2 overs)
New Zealand won by 8 wickets
Wellington Regional Stadium, Wellington
Attendance: 30,148
1 March
Scorecard
England 
309/6 (50 overs)
v
 Sri Lanka
312/1 (47.2 overs)
Sri Lanka won by 9 wickets
Wellington Regional Stadium, Wellington
Attendance: 18,183
12 March (D/N)
Scorecard
South Africa 
341/6 (50 overs)
v
 United Arab Emirates
195 (47.3 overs)
South Africa won by 146 runs
Wellington Regional Stadium, Wellington
Attendance: 4,901
21 March (D/N)
Scorecard
New Zealand 
393/6 (50 overs)
v
 West Indies
250 (30.3 overs)
New Zealand won by 143 runs
Wellington Regional Stadium, Wellington
Attendance: 30,268

Reference:[14]

Rugby League Test Matches

Since its opening in 2000, Wellington Regional Stadium has hosted six New Zealand rugby league internationals. The results were as follows;.[15]

Date Opponent Result Attendance Part of
13 July 2001  Australia 10 – 28 26,580
12 October 2002 24 – 32 25,015
11 November 2006  Great Britain 34 – 4 16,401 2006 Tri-Nations
11 October 2007 Australia Australia 0 – 58 16,681
23 October 2010  England 24–10 20,324 2010 Four Nations
12 November 2014 Australia Australia 22–18 25,093 2014 Four Nations Final

Gallery

Panorama of Westpac Stadium

See also

  • Basin Reserve – Wellington's other international cricket ground

References

  1. http://westpacstadium.co.nz/key-facts/
  2. Westpac Stadium, Wellington, New Zealand ESPNcricinfo.com. Retrieved on 29 Nov, 2015
  3. Fletcher Construction website
  4. Topless Beckham delights female fans at Phoenix party | infonews.co.nz New Zealand's local news community
  5. Stadiums events 2008
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  11. http://www.triplem.com.au/sydney/sport/nrl/news/2014/4/four-nations-schedule-2014/
  12. Venues of Cricket World Cup cricketworldcup.com. Retrieved on 29 Nov, 2015
  13. RUGBY WORLD CUP, 2011 / Highest attendance ESPNscrum.com. Retrieved on 29 Nov, 2015
  14. Cricket World Cup Results & Attendances austadiums.com. Retrieved on 29 Nov, 2015
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External links