Home Grounds
Westpac Stadium Waikato Stadium Eden Park Forsyth Barr Stadium AMI Stadium Home grounds in New ZealandLike the other two countries in the Tri Nations, New Zealand does not have an official stadium for its national team. Instead, New Zealand play their Test matches at a variety of venues throughout New Zealand.
Prior to the construction of Westpac Stadium in 1999, Wellington's Test venue was Athletic Park. Athletic Park was the venue for the first All Blacks Test match in New Zealand against Great Britain in 1904. The first home Test match played outside the main centres of Auckland, Christchurch, Dunedin or Wellington was in 1996 at McLean Park in Napier. Both the 1987 and 2011 Rugby World Cup finals were played at Eden Park.
Eden Park and AMI Stadium were upgraded in preparation for the 2011 Rugby World Cup. In 2006, the Government of New Zealand proposed the construction of a waterfront National Stadium in Auckland as an alternative to Eden Park's upgrade; this proposal was rejected by the Auckland Regional Council. By that time, the NZRU no longer considered Carisbrook a suitable Test venue (it did however get Tests against South Africa in 2008, Wales in 2010 and Fiji in 2011); a covered sports stadium was proposed as a replacement. Dunedin City Council approved the new stadium in March 2008, land acquisition proceeded from August to October of that year, and the new venue opened in August 2011, in time for the World Cup.
AMI Stadium was significantly damaged during the February 2011 Christchurch earthquake, with cracks in some stands and the playing surface badly damaged by liquefaction as well as damage to infrastructure and streets surrounding the venue. As a result of the damage all scheduled 2011 World Cup games to be held in Christchurch were moved to other regions. Test rugby returned to Christchurch in 2012 at Rugby League Park. Although the stands at that venue were damaged severely enough that they had to be torn down, infrastructure damage was much less severe than at AMI Stadium, and the playing surface survived relatively intact. The stadium was rebuilt with a permanent capacity of 17,000, with temporary seating allowing for 9,000 more spectators.
Ground | Record | Recent Win | Recent Draw | Recent Loss |
---|---|---|---|---|
AMI Stadium, Christchurch (formerly Lancaster Park and Jade Stadium) | 80% | 2010 (AUS) | N/A | 1998 (AUS) |
AMI Stadium, Christchurch (formerly Rugby League Park) | 100% | 2012 (IRE) | N/A | N/A |
Athletic Park, Wellington | 69% | 1999 (FRA) | 1962 (AUS) | 1998 (RSA) |
Eden Park, Auckland | 81% | 2012 (IRE) | 1994 (RSA) | 1994 (FRA) |
Forsyth Barr Stadium, Dunedin | 100% | 2012 (RSA) | N/A | N/A |
Waikato Stadium, Hamilton | 88% | 2011 (JPN) | N/A | 2009 (RSA) |
Westpac Stadium, Wellington | 88% | 2011 (CAN) | N/A | 2003 (ENG) |
Read more about this topic: New Zealand National Rugby Union Team
Famous quotes containing the words home and/or grounds:
“Parents offer an open womb. More than anyone else in your life, mothers, and sometimes fathers, can kiss it, and make it well when their grown children need to regress and repair. More than anyone else in your life, mothers, and sometimes fathers, can catch you when you start to fall. When you are in disgrace, defeat, and despair, home may be the safest place to hide.”
—Frank Pittman (20th century)
“Were built, as a nation, on the grounds of a concentration camp. Its like saying OK, heres Auschwitz. Heres where well start our country.”
—Peter Carey (b. 1943)