Central Park (Wigan)
Central Park was a rugby league stadium in Wigan, England, which was the home of Wigan RLFC before the club moved to the JJB Stadium in 1999. Its final capacity was 18,000. The site is now a Tesco supermarket car park.
Home of Rugby League | |
Full name | Central Park |
---|---|
Location | Wigan, England |
Coordinates | 53°33′1.5″N 2°37′33″W |
Capacity | 18,000 |
Record attendance | 47,747 vs St Helens 27 March 1959 |
Surface | Grass |
Construction | |
Built | 1902 |
Opened | 1902 |
Closed | 1999 |
Demolished | 1999 |
Tenants | |
Wigan RLFC (1902–1999) |
History
On 6 September 1902, Wigan played at Central Park for the first time in the opening match of the newly formed First Division. An estimated crowd of 9,000 spectators saw Wigan beat Batley 14–8.
The first rugby league international was played between England and Other Nationalities at Central Park on 5 April 1904, Other Nationalities won 9-3 in the experimental Loose forward-less 12-a-side game, with Wigan players David "Dai" Harris, and Eli Davies in the Other Nationalities team.
The visit of St. Helens on 27 March 1959 produced Central Park's record attendance of 47,747, and set a record for a rugby league regular season league game in Britain. Wigan won the game 19–14, holding off a Saints' comeback after having led 14–0.
Floodlights were installed on 120 ft high pylons in summer 1967 so that the club could play in the BBC2 Floodlit Trophy.
On 7 October 1987, Central Park was the first English venue used for the World Club Challenge (WCC) between the English champions and the Winfield Cup premiers from Australia. The 1987 World Club Challenge between Wigan and Manly-Warringah saw the home side run out 8-2 winners in a try-less game in front of 36,895, though many who were there believe the attendance was closer to 50,000 on the night, far exceeding the 36,000 capacity of the ground at the time. The game was marred by several all-in brawls, while Manly captain Paul Vautin was almost pushed over the fence and into the crowd by a group of Wigan players who had tackled him into touch, the incident sparking another all-in. Manly fullback Dale Shearer and second-rower Ron Gibbs were the main villains of the parochial Wigan crowd. Gibbs became the first player to be sent off in a WCC after hitting Wigan centre Joe Lydon with an elbow to the head after Lydon attempted a field goal, while later in the game Shearer appeared to step on the head of Lydon while getting up from a tackle.
Despite the ugly on-field play, the success of the match and its high attendance saw the World Club Challenge made into an annual event between the English and Australian champions starting in 1989.
A week after the 1992 Rugby League World Cup Final (WCF) at Wembley Stadium which saw Australia defeat Great Britain 10-6, Central Park hosted the 1992 World Club Challenge between Wigan and the Brisbane Broncos. With twelve players who played in the WCF playing the challenge (5 from Wigan, 7 from Brisbane), the Broncos became the first Australian side to win the challenge in England with a 22-8 victory in front of 17,764 fans. Wigan would get their revenge just two years later when they defeated the Broncos 20-14 in the 1994 World Club Challenge played in front of a WCC record attendance of 54,220 at the ANZ Stadium in Brisbane. Showing the loyalty of the club's fans, several thousand travelled to Brisbane to support the team, the win seeing Wigan become the first English team to win the Challenge on Australian soil.
In January 1997 the club's shareholders approved a deal in which the stadium would be sold to Wigan Athletic's owner Dave Whelan and be redeveloped to provide a new home for both the football and rugby teams. Two months later however, the Warriors' chairman Jack Robinson accepted a rival bid from Tesco, pointing out that the supermarket's offer was three times bigger than Whelan's.[1]
The final game at Central Park was on Sunday 5 September 1999. Wigan beat St Helens by 28 points to 20, 96 years and 364 days after the first game against Batley was played. The Central Park site later became a car park for a Tesco supermarket.
Rugby League Test Matches
List of rugby league test matches played at Central Park.[2]
Test# | Date | Result | Attendance | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 5 April 1904 | Other Nationalities def. | 6,000 | |
2 | 1 January 1906 | 8,000 | ||
3 | 7 February 1923 | 12,000 | ||
4 | 30 September 1925 | 12,000 | ||
5 | 2 October 1926 | 14,500 | 1926–27 England vs New Zealand series | |
6 | 11 January 1928 | 12,000 | ||
7 | 27 February 1943 | 17,000 | ||
8 | 26 February 1944 | 16,028 | ||
9 | 10 March 1945 | 23,500 | ||
10 | 20 September 1947 | 27,000 | 1947–48 European Rugby League Championship | |
11 | 22 September 1948 | 12,638 | 1948–49 European Rugby League Championship | |
12 | 1 March 1950 | 27,500 | 1949–50 European Rugby League Championship | |
13 | 11 April 1951 | Other Nationalities def. | 17,000 | 1950–51 European Rugby League Championship |
14 | 23 April 1952 | 20,000 | 1951–52 European Rugby League Championship | |
15 | 17 September 1952 | 13,503 | 1952–53 European Rugby League Championship | |
16 | 28 November 1953 | 19,000 | 1953–54 European Rugby League Championship | |
17 | 12 September 1955 | 18,234 | 1955–56 European Rugby League Championship | |
18 | 17 November 1956 | 22,473 | 1956 Ashes series | |
19 | 23 November 1957 | 19,152 | ||
20 | 12 December 1959 | 26,089 | 1959 Ashes series | |
21 | 24 September 1960 | 20,278 | 1960 Rugby League World Cup | |
22 | 8 October 1960 | 2,876 | ||
23 | 17 February 1962 | 17,277 | ||
24 | 3 April 1963 | 19,487 | ||
25 | 6 November 1965 | 7,919 | 1965 Great Britain vs New Zealand series | |
26 | 5 March 1966 | 14,004 | ||
27 | 4 March 1967 | 7,448 | ||
28 | 25 October 1969 | 4,568 | 1969–70 European Rugby League Championship | |
29 | 21 October 1970 | 9,805 | 1970 Rugby League World Cup group stage | |
30 | 17 February 1974 | 9,108 | ||
31 | 1 November 1975 | 9,393 | 1975 Rugby League World Cup | |
32 | 21 October 1978 | 17,644 | 1978 Ashes series | |
33 | 18 October 1980 | 7,031 | 1980 Great Britain vs New Zealand series | |
34 | 20 November 1982 | 23,126 | 1982 Ashes series | |
35 | 2 November 1985 | 15,506 | 1985 Great Britain vs New Zealand series | |
36 | 1 March 1986 | 8,112 | ||
37 | 22 November 1986 | 20,169 | 1986 Ashes series 1985–1988 Rugby League World Cup | |
38 | 24 October 1987 | 9,121 | 1985–1988 Rugby League World Cup | |
39 | 21 January 1989 | 8,266 | ||
40 | 11 November 1989 | 20,346 | 1989 Great Britain vs New Zealand series 1989–1992 Rugby League World Cup | |
41 | 9 November 1991 | 4,193 | 1989–1992 Rugby League World Cup | |
42 | 30 October 1993 | 16,502 | 1993 Great Britain vs New Zealand series | |
43 | 11 October 1995 | 26,263 | 1995 Rugby League World Cup Group A |
Rugby League Tour Matches
Other than Wigan club games and test matches, Central Park was also a regular host to various international touring teams from 1907–1994.
game | Date | Result | Attendance | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 9 November 1907 | 30,000 | 1907–08 All Golds tour | |
2 | 11 January 1908 | 12,000 | ||
3 | 25 November 1908 | 4,000 | 1908–09 Kangaroo Tour | |
4 | 9 January 1909 | 4,000 | ||
5 | 20 January 1909 | 9,100 | ||
6 | 28 October 1911 | 25,000 | 1911–12 Kangaroo Tour | |
7 | 31 January 1912 | 2,000 | ||
8 | 15 October 1921 | 24,308 | 1921–22 Kangaroo Tour | |
9 | 3 December 1929 | 9,987 | 1929–30 Kangaroo Tour | |
10 | 28 December 1929 | 8,000 | ||
11 | 23 September 1933 | 15,712 | 1933–34 Kangaroo Tour | |
12 | 6 March 1934 | 8,000 | 1934 French rugby league tour | |
13 | 3 November 1937 | 9,800 | 1937–38 Kangaroo Tour | |
14 | 20 October 1948 | 28,554 | 1948–49 Kangaroo Tour | |
15 | 8 December 1948 | 11,788 | ||
16 | 26 August 1950 | |||
17 | 24 September 1952 | 16,223 | 1952–53 Kangaroo Tour | |
18 | 8 December 1956 | 15,854 | 1956–57 Kangaroo Tour | |
19 | 14 November 1959 | 24,466 | 1959–60 Kangaroo Tour | |
20 | 25 September 1963 | 15,068 | 1963–64 Kangaroo Tour | |
21 | 18 November 1963 | 11,746 | ||
22 | 13 October 1967 | 22,770 | 1967–68 Kangaroo Tour | |
23 | 17 November 1972 | 6,000 | 1972 Australian Rugby League World Cup tour | |
24 | 18 November 1978 | 10,645 | 1978 Kangaroo Tour | |
25 | 13 October 1982 | 12,158 | 1982 Kangaroo Tour | |
26 | 23 October 1983 | 9,749 | 1983 Queensland Maroons tour | |
27 | 6 October 1985 | 1985 New Zealand Kiwis tour | ||
28 | 12 October 1986 | 30,622 | 1986 Kangaroo Tour | |
29 | 14 October 1990 | 24,814 | 1990 Kangaroo Tour | |
30 | 10 October 1993 | 1993 New Zealand Kiwis tour | ||
31 | 8 October 1994 | 20,057 | 1994 Kangaroo Tour |
World Club Challenge/Championship
Central Park hosted 5 World Club Challenge games between 1987–1997.
Game | Date | Result | Attendance | Year |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 7 October 1987 | 36,895 | 1987 World Club Challenge | |
2 | 30 October 1992 | 17,764 | 1992 World Club Challenge | |
3 | 20 July 1997 | 12,816 | 1997 World Club Championship | |
4 | 28 July 1997 | 10,280 | ||
5 | 3 August 1997 | 12,504 |
See also
- English rugby league stadia by capacity
References
- Dave Hadfield (6 March 1997). "Rugby League: Wigan exiled by pounds 12m Central Park sale". The Independent.
- Shawn Dollin and Andrew Ferguson. "Central Park - Rugby League Project".
External links
Preceded by Springfield Park |
Home of Wigan RLFC 1902 – 1999 |
Succeeded by DW Stadium |
Preceded by |
Host of the World Club Challenge 1987 |
Succeeded by |
Preceded by |
Host of the World Club Challenge 1992 |
Succeeded by |