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Lavington Sports Ground

Coordinates: 36°2′6″S 146°54′47″E / 36.03500°S 146.91306°E / -36.03500; 146.91306
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(Redirected from Lavington Sports Oval)

Lavington Sports Ground
L.S.G.
View of the pitch before the A-League match. (9 February 2014)
Map
Former namesLavington Panthers Oval (2001–2009)
LocationHamilton Valley, Albury, New South Wales, Australia
Coordinates36°2′6″S 146°54′47″E / 36.03500°S 146.91306°E / -36.03500; 146.91306
OwnerCity of Albury
Capacity12,000 approx.[1]
Seating: 1,500 (13% capacity)
Record attendance20,169 (20 March 1995: AFL Pre-Season: Essendon vs. Carlton)
SurfaceGrass (Oval)
Construction
Opened1970s
Renovated2016 (2019 plan completion)
Tenants
Lavington Panthers F.N.C. (OMFNL)
Lavington Panthers C.C. (CAW)
Murray Kangaroos (VFL) (2000-2002)
Sydney Thunder (BBL) (2022–present)
Ground information
End names
"North End"
"South End" / "Hill End"
International information
Only ODI18 March 1992:
 Zimbabwe v  England
Source: Cricinfo

Lavington Sports Ground (known as "Lavington Panthers Oval" between 2001 and 2009) is a sports ground located in the suburb of Hamilton Valley near Lavington on the north-west fringe of the city of Albury, Australia. The oval is nestled in the side of a hill, with concrete terraces cut into the southern side of the oval below a grass embankment and the grandstand and changing rooms located on the north-west flank. The venue also incorporates a 4 table cricket wicket, a velodrome for track cycling and two netball courts. The Lavington Panthers Sports Club licensed club was formerly located next to the ground, across Hanna Street.

The venue is the home ground for the Lavington Panthers Football Club in the Ovens & Murray Football League, and usually hosts the Ovens & Murray grand finals, which typically attract crowds of 10 thousand to 15 thousand. During the summer months, the venue is used for cricket, with a turf wicket, and in this capacity serves as the home ground of the Lavington Panthers side in the Cricket Albury-Wodonga Provincial competition.

History

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  • In December 1972, construction started on the current grandstand.[2]
  • 1981 saw the ground host the Grand Final of the Ovens & Murray Football League for the first time. Wodonga triumphed over Albury, 19.11 (125) to 14.14 (98), in front of 10,150.
  • Ever since 1995, every Grand Final of the Ovens & Murray Football League has been hosted at Lavington Sports Ground. Normally the Preliminary Final is hosted by one of the O&M's other big venues, either the Albury Sports Ground or Norm Minns Oval in Wangaratta.
  • In 2001 the facility became under control of the Penrith Panthers through the Penrith Entertainment Group.
  • In July 2009 the facility was sold to the Albury City Council for $1.2M.
  • In 2010, Albury City Council completed a lighting upgrade costing in the order of $500K to bring the lux level to television broadcast standards.
  • In September 2010, Lavington Sports Ground hosted the Group Nine Rugby League Grand Final for the first time.
  • In 2016 Albury City Council announced plans for extensive refurbishments.

2016–17 Redevelopment

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Albury City purchased the Lavington Sports Ground from the Panthers Group in 2009. Since then, a number of improvements have been made to the facility and the council has also purchased an additional 4.6 hectares of land to the east for the development of additional multipurpose playing fields.

In December 2015, the council was successful in securing $4.025M under the Federal Government's National Stronger Region Fund for the redevelopment project to add to funding of $3.5M from Albury City Council and $250,000 from the AFL, and commitments from the Lavington Panthers Football/Netball and Cricket clubs, design of the project is near completion and works will commence in late 2017.[3]

International & national usage

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Australian rules football

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From the early 1990s until 2006, Lavington often hosted AFL practice matches during the pre-season, however due to the inadequacy of the ground lighting, from 2006 the AFL began prioritise pre-season fixtures elsewhere in the Riverina area at Narrandera and Wagga Wagga, and the North East Victoria area at Wangaratta and Shepparton. After the lighting upgrade, AFL once again began scheduling pre-season matches at the Lavington Sports Ground, with the first being between Richmond and Port Adelaide in 2015.[4]

From 2000 until 2002, the Murray Kangaroos played in the VFL as a joint venture between the AFL's North Melbourne Football Club and the Ovens and Murray Football League and served as North Melbourne's reserve side. The club's home games were split between Lavington and Coburg City Oval in Melbourne.[8] The side was composed of players from the Kangaroos, topped up with players from the Ovens and Murray League which offered a second chance to local footballers who had missed out on the AFL Draft.

In 1990, the venue also hosted a warm-up match for the 1990 International Rules Series between Australia and Ireland, in which Australia 2.9.17 (56) defeated Ireland 2.6.11 (41) [9]

Cricket

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Kerry Packer brought his World Series Cricket to Lavington for the Country Cup during the 1977/78 & 1978/79 seasons.

The venue hosted a Sheffield Shield fixture between New South Wales and Victoria during the 1989/90 domestic season.

In 1990 New South Wales hosted England in a tour match at the venue.

During the 1992 Cricket World Cup, the ground hosted the match between England and Zimbabwe.[10] Zimbabwe won in a shock result, due in part to their fast bowler Eddo Brandes demolishing the English top order, enabling Zimbabwe to defend their own low innings total.

On 13 December 2016, the venue hosted 3 exhibition cricket matches between Big Bash League teams. This included one match from the 2016–17 Women's Big Bash League followed by two practice matches for men [11] ahead of their Big Bash competition that began later in the month.

On 31 December 2022, the Big Bash League returned to the ground for a full competition men's match between Sydney Thunder and Hobart Hurricanes which saw the Thunder post a considerable innings total of 6/228 then successfully defending their total, dismissing the Hurricanes all out for 166. The attendance for the game was 10,171.[12]

Rugby league

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Lavington hosted the grand final of the then-NSWRL/ARL's pre-season competition, the Tooheys Challenge Cup 1994 and 1995. The South Sydney Rabbitohs won their first major trophy since their 1971 premiership win when they shocked two-time reigning premiers the Brisbane Broncos 27–26 in the Tooheys Challenge Cup final. In 1995 the Broncos went one better and won the Cup with a 30–14 win over Cronulla-Sutherland.

The New South Wales Rugby League had scheduled the City vs Country representative game for Lavington in 2007 but the fixture was shifted to Coffs Harbour,[13] as the existing lighting was deemed unsuitable for television. The venue did however host the City vs Country game in 2011 with Country defeating City 18–12 in front of 8,056 fans.

In February 2015, the NRL announced that the Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles would play at Lavington against the Canberra Raiders in round 5.[14] The match, which took place during Round 5 of the 2015 NRL season saw the Raiders defeat an out-of-form Manly 29–16 in front of 6,436 fans.

Soccer

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In September 2013, The A-League soccer club Melbourne Heart confirmed that they would play their Round 18 fixture of the 2013–14 season against Perth Glory at the stadium.[15]

On 9 February 2014, Heart triumphed 2–1 in scorching conditions. Due to the high temperature of 41 °C, the start of the match was postponed by two hours from 3pm to 5pm, however there remained no significant drop in temperature in that time. Players were ordered off the field on three occasions (15', 30', 66') for drinks breaks. 7218 were in attendance.[16]

In May 2016, the local NPL Victoria side Murray United was drawn to host fellow Victorian side Bentleigh Greens in the Sixth Round Preliminary of the 2016 FFA Cup. (Murray United's usual home ground is at La Trobe University in Wodonga.) On 25 May 2016, at Lavington Sports Ground, Murray United lost 0–3 in a gutsy effort to the NPL Vic Powerhouse club.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Lavington Sports Ground – AuStadiums
  2. ^ "EXCLUSIVE | Lavington Sports Club shut down: Photos". 4 August 2014.
  3. ^ "Albury City Council - Lavington Sports Ground Redevelopment". www.alburycity.nsw.gov.au. Archived from the original on 15 June 2016.
  4. ^ "NARRANDERA GETS SECOND AFL GAME - Local News - Sport - Football - Australian Rules - the Daily Advertiser". Archived from the original on 11 July 2012. Retrieved 9 April 2008.
  5. ^ http://footystats.freeservers.com/Archive/Wizard05.html#SEMI-FINALS 2005 Wizard Regional Challenge - Melbourne vs. St. Kilda
  6. ^ http://footystats.freeservers.com/Archive/NAB06.html#GRAND-FINAL Archived 7 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine 2006 Wizard Regional Challenge - Carlton vs. Western Bulldogs
  7. ^ afl.com.au 2015 NAB Challenge – Richmond vs. Port Adelaide
  8. ^ /www.footballvic.com.au/vfl/vfl_clubs.htm
  9. ^ "Aust-Ireland.html". footystats.freeservers.com. Archived from the original on 7 November 2017. Retrieved 25 August 2017.
  10. ^ "Zimbabwe vs England Scorecard 1991/92 | Cricket Scorecard".
  11. ^ http://www.cricket.com.au/series/bbl-exhibition-matches/S5AbnHVKsUeto1WJn3gXSg
  12. ^ "Davies and Hales power resurgent Sydney Thunder to big win".
  13. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 10 February 2010. Retrieved 9 April 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  14. ^ "Sea Eagles fly to Albury for Raiders Easter clash". Manly Warringah Sea Eagles. 20 February 2015. Retrieved 26 June 2018.
  15. ^ "Heart to play A-League fixture in Albury - Melbourne Heart - Football Australia 2013". Archived from the original on 27 September 2013. Retrieved 24 September 2013.
  16. ^ "Heart take down Glory in Albury - Iain Strachan, Omnisport - Football Australia 2013". Archived from the original on 26 March 2014. Retrieved 9 February 2014.
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