Ngwana Mohube Sports Ground

Ngwana Mohube Sports Ground, also commonly referred to as Ngwana Mohube Sports Complex, is a low level football stadium in the village Ga-Mphahlele; situated around 8 km East of Lebowakgomo and 60 km South of Polokwane, in the Limpopo province of South Africa.

Ngwana Mohube Sports Ground is situated  at the very same address of the Secondary School.
Ngwana Mohube Sports Ground
Ngwana Mohube Sports Complex
LocationSeleteng village,
Ga-Mphahlele, Lebowakgomo,
Limpopo, South Africa
Coordinates24.3049°S 29.6234°E / -24.3049; 29.6234
(NB: Might also be situated at 2km more to the East)
OwnerLepelle Nkumpi Municipality
CapacityN/A
Tenants
Baroka F.C.

Since June 2010, the main tenant of Ngwana Mohube Sports Ground is Baroka FC. This club is based in the same village, and currently compete at the third level of South African football, known as Vodacom League. As Baroka in 2008-10 had opted to play their home games at the somewhat greater Lebowakgomo Stadium, one might speculate, that at least the playing field of Ngwana Mohube Sports Ground, perhaps got improved in 2010.[1]

Facilities

The capacity of the Sports Ground is currently unknown. In regards of facilities, they were in April 2011 described as being second to none. Currently the Sports Ground lack some proper dressing rooms, and is even without toilets and running water. [2]

gollark: And because the UK has similar things and "intelligence" sharing.
gollark: Because it's international surveillance, obviously.
gollark: Let me just find a constitution online, I'm not in America where these things must be everywhere.
gollark: I don't consider "constitutional" to be "ethical" and I think that it probably isn't constitutional under reasonable interpretations anyway.
gollark: You mean like it ALREADY HAS?
  • No official website, or pictures of Ngwana Mohube Sports Ground, currently exist.

References

  1. SAFA. "Official database for Vodacom League (with info about venues, results and logs)". Retrieved 2011-06-15.
  2. Times Live (2011-04-30). "The nobodies who shamed Chiefs". Archived from the original on 2011-05-04.CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link)
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