Everything about Canberra Stadium totally explained
Canberra Stadium (originally known as
Bruce Stadium) is a facility primarily used for
rugby league and
rugby union games, located adjacent to the
Australian Institute of Sport in
Canberra, the capital of
Australia.
Bruce is the Canberra suburb where the stadium is located, and in turn Bruce was named after
Stanley Bruce, Australian
Prime Minister 1923-1929.
Capacity is a nominal all-seated 25,000, the largest crowd being 28,753 for the 2004 Super 12 Final. The main grandstand is named after Canberra Raiders and
Australian rugby league player
Mal Meninga, and a statue of another Raiders and Australian league representative
Laurie Daley adorns the main grandstand entrance. The eastern grandstand was named the Gregan/Larkham Grandstand on
28 April 2007, after
Brumbies and
Australia rugby union greats
George Gregan and
Stephen Larkham. Both ended their international careers after the
2007 Rugby World Cup as the two most-capped players in Wallabies history, with Gregan at
a world-record 139 and Larkham at 102.
The stadium is currently owned by the
Australian Government through the
Australian Sports Commission and leased to the
Australian Capital Territory Government. While the current lease is due to expire in 2010, the ACT Government is seeking ownership of the stadium through a land transfer with the Australian Government.
History
Constructed in 1977 for the
Pacific Conference Games, it also was the venue for the 4th
IAAF World Cup in Athletics. At the latter meet, the fastest 400m for women was recorded by East German
Marita Koch - a time that still stands today.
The stadium has played host to several local sporting teams such as the
Canberra City Arrows and
Canberra Cosmos (
football (soccer)) and the shortlived
Canberra Bushrangers (
baseball). In 1990 the athletics track was removed, and the ground then became the home of the
Canberra Raiders (
rugby league) and, in 1996, the
ACT Brumbies (
rugby union).
Further renovations occurred in 1997 in preparation for staging
football (soccer) matches as part of the
2000 Summer Olympics in
Sydney, which also in turn shrank the size of the playing field preventing any future
Australian rules football games being played on the field. The final cost of the renovations was more than seven times what was originally anticipated by the territory government of the time, and the subsequent controversy ended the career of then Chief Minister
Kate Carnell. During the lead-up, on
29 May 2000, unseasonal snow fell during a match between the Raiders and the Wests Tigers, the only such event in
National Rugby League history, with the snow causing frost damage to the turf intended for the
Olympic football tournament.
Other events
Further Information
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