Coogee Oval

Coogee Oval is a sporting ground, located in Coogee, in Sydney's Eastern Suburbs. It is home of the Randwick Rugby Union Club in winter, and Randwick Petersham Cricket Club in summer.

Coogee Oval
LocationCoogee, New South Wales
Coordinates33°55′10″S 151°15′21″E
Capacity5,000
SurfaceGrass
Tenants
Randwick Rugby Union Club (Shute Shield)
Randwick Petersham Cricket Club (Sydney Grade Cricket)
New South Wales Country Eagles (NRC) (2014-present)

Facilities

One side of the ground is fully seated with terracing and a television tower behind it, with a grandstand/dressing rooms in the corner. In winter, temporary stands and temporary corporate facilities boost the capacity to around 5,000.[1] It is usually standing room only come game day, with some of the better seats on the balconies of the blocks of flats overlooking the ground. The oval is situated directly across the road from both Coogee Beach and Randwick Rugby Club.

The ground record crowd of 9246 was set on 22 June 1988 when Randwick lost 25-9 to the touring All Blacks.[2]

The soil within the oval itself has been found to more nutrient- and mineral-dense than any other oval tested globally. This is reputed to offer performance benefits to under-performing New South Wales Rugby League representative footballers.[3]

gollark: Remotely debugging potatOS computers, yes.
gollark: Well, SPUDNET effectively emulates lazily some sort of complex asymmetric crypto scheme where admin messages are cryptographically signed.
gollark: You could probably have some sort of thing where heavdrones *initially* connect as unprivileged, and only get a comms mode key after they are remotely inspected somehow, but like all DRM-y schemes it is flawed against anyone actually paying attention.
gollark: They heavdrone.
gollark: Yes, heavdrones are autonomous systems.

References

  1. "Coogee Oval". Austadiums. 22 March 2005. Archived from the original on 29 March 2014. Retrieved 15 July 2014.
  2. "New Zealand vs Randwick RFC at Coogee Oval". New Zealand Rugby Museum. 22 June 1988. Archived from the original on 26 April 2012. Retrieved 15 July 2014.
  3. "Barefoot Blues impossible to miss in Coogee Oval 'nutrient' stroll". Sydney Morning Herald. 19 June 2018. Retrieved 19 June 2018.
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