SportingSights Archive for April, 2008

New Stadium in Tanzania nears completion

28.Apr.08
A new stadium which is expected to host an African Nations qualifier match is set to open in Tanzania next month.

Mkuchika made the announcement in Parliament Thursday but cautioned that work on the stadium was yet to be fully completed. The stadium would host the African Nations Cup qualifier match between Tanzania and Mauritius on May 31 in preparation for the 2010 finals in South Africa.

However, the stadium can only host matches during daylight as logistics for electricity supply are still being worked out by engineers.

Construction of the stadium began in 2005 by Beijing Construction and Engineering Group Company Limited.

Source & Full Article: Africa News

Beijing’s Olympic stadium ready for test event

17.Apr.08
Beijing’s eye-catching main Olympic stadium, better known as the Bird’s Nest, will open for business for the first time on Friday when it hosts a world-class athletics event.

The 3.5-billion-yuan (500-million-dollar) arena will be the centrepiece of the Beijing Games, staging the opening and closing ceremonies as well as the athletic competition.

beijing national stadium bird's nest

Though it remains unfinished, the iconic stadium which gained its nickname thanks to its interlocking structure of steel beams, will throw open its doors to an estimated 20,000 paying customers for an IAAF men’s race-walking competition.

It is one of 42 test events that Beijing Olympic organisers are staging to fine-tune preparations ahead of the August 8-24 Games.

The nearby National Aquatics Centre, also known as the Water Cube and the second of Beijing’s two iconic Olympic venues, was completed in December and staged its first test event in February, the China Open swimming competition.

Work still remains to be done on the Bird’s Nest although the overall structure is finished and athletes competing on Friday and those in more races scheduled for Saturday are not expected to be inconvenienced.

Yang Shu’an, executive vice-president of the Beijing Olympic organising committee, said test events would ensure that “everything is in working order as far as the hosting parties are concerned.”

All 31 of Beijing’s Olympic venues were supposed to be finished by the end of 2007 but officials said the main stadium would be finished later, probably in May, because of the extra work needed to prepare it for the opening and closing ceremonies.

Fixtures and fittings still need to be installed, including some of the 91,000 seats that will be in place for the Games.

While China struggles against a wave of bad publicity over Tibet and human rights issues in the run-up to the Olympics, the “hardware” side to the Games has encountered few major problems.

International Olympic Committee officials have repeatedly praised Beijing’s venue construction and President Jacques Rogge, in Beijing last week, once again spoke highly of Games preparations.

Work started on the stadium in December 2003 after a consortium led by Swiss architects Herzog and de Meuron won an international competition to build it.

Progress was interrupted in August 2004 when the stadium’s expensive retractable roof fell victim to cost-cutting measures, as did 9,000 seats.

Work resumed later that year and an army of migrant workers was recruited from the countryside to complete the landmark project.

A British newspaper said last year that at least 10 workers had died in the race to complete the stadium on time.

After repeated denials, the government admitted that two migrants had died on the project, one in 2006 and one in 2007.

On Sunday, the stadium will host the finish to the Beijing marathon, another test event. Its first full dress rehearsal comes when it hosts the China Open athletics competition on May 22-25.

Source & Full Article: AFP

Editor’s Blog Archive

See also:
Beijing National Stadium on sportingsights.com
2008 Summer Olympics websiteA

San Jose Quakes 18,000 stadium to go ahead

17.Apr.08
The future is bright for Major League Soccer’s San Jose Earthquakes, who have managed to land a new stadium. The Earthquakes reached an agreement with city officials on construction of a $132-million, 18,000 seat soccer stadium near the San Jose airport. The city council will vote on the deal next month and approval is believed to be a formality.

Pending formal approval from the San Jose city council next month, Lew Wolff, the owner of Major League Soccer’s Earthquakes franchise, has reached a financial agreement with city officials on a $132 million deal that sets the stage for a stadium as early as 2010, according to a report in the San Jose Mercury News.

“If and when we pull it off, it is going to make me feel - well, at my age, that would be a great accomplishment,” the 72-year-old Wolff told the Mercury News. “It would cap off a long time of development in San Jose.”

According to terms of the deal, Wolff and his partners would pay $132 million for 66 acres with about 18 of those being set aside for the 18,000-seat soccer stadium and parking. The city bought the land in 2005 for $81 million.

Source & Full Article: Seattle Post Intelligencer

Editor’s Blog Archive

See also:
San Jose Quakes

Redevelopment of the Racecourse Ground

17.Apr.08
Two news articles published today suggest that Wrexham’s ambitions to develop the Racecourse Ground are heading in the right direction. This follows successful meetings of Council and Welsh Assembly members with Welsh Minister for Sport Rhodri Glyn Thomas. Public approval is essential for Wrexham as they need public funding towards plans to make The Racecourse the “Millennium Stadium of the North.”

racecourse ground wrexham fc

From BBC Wales:

The Welsh sports minister recognises Wrexham’s need for a stadium capable of hosting international sporting events, the town’s assembly member has said.

Lesley Griffiths AM and Wrexham council officials attended a meeting with Rhodri Glyn Thomas in Cardiff.

It is hoped the bid will not be affected if Wrexham are relegated from the Football League this week.

The Dragons are nine points from safety with four games left, and if their result against Notts County on Saturday is bettered by Dagenham, the club will be relegated.

It is not known whether relegation would damage their chances of attracting public funding towards a new all-seated stand.

Ms Griffiths described the meeting with Mr Thomas as “constructive”.

She said: “It’s vital that we retain the Racecourse Ground. It’s very important not just for Wrexham but for north Wales. We now have a clear new vision for the Racecourse.

“We need to broaden the horizion and get other events there. It needs to be more dynamic and there needs to be more community facilities there if that can be achieved.”

She added that Mr Thomas also “recognised fully the need for a stadium in Wrexham to host international sporting events”.

She said: “He wants to see young people have the opportunity, in the future, to see their sporting heroes playing at the Racecourse. That is an aspiration we all share.”

Source & Full Article: BBC Wales

THE door to public sector funding for Wrexham’s Racecourse ground could be opened if a “new vision” for the stadium is developed, says the town’s Assembly Member.
Council officers, Assembly heritage minister Rhodri Glyn Thomas and Lesley Griffiths AM met in Cardiff yesterday to discuss the ground’s future.

The meeting had been arranged to help secure the future of the ground in light of Wrexham FC’s potential relegation from the Football League.

Miss Griffiths said: “We had a very constructive meeting and I was pleased the minister listened to our concerns about the future of the ground.

“The council officers and I had the opportunity to put to him our belief that The Racecourse should continue as an important strategic venue, for the North Wales region as a whole.

“As the Welsh Assembly Government has indicated before, there needs to be a more dynamic and publicly focused dimension to The Racecourse ground of the future.

“For this to happen, there needs to be a more robust link between the stadium and the wider community through regeneration, social inclusion and economic development projects – both in Wrexham and within the rest of the North Wales region.

“If this kind of new vision can be incorporated into future plans for the venue, then I believ
e the door for public sector funding, could well be opened and investment could come to The Racecourse.

“The minister recognised fully the need for a stadium in Wrexham to host international sporting events. He wants to see young people have the opportunity, in the future, to see their sporting heroes playing at The Racecourse. That is an aspiration we all share.”

Earlier this week council leader Aled Roberts said he wanted to see the council working alongside the club and taking a bigger role in the redevelopment of the ground to provide a 15,000 seater stadium.

He claimed everything ought to be done to ensure The Racecourse continued to be developed as the “Millennium Stadium of the North” – even if the club is relegated from the Football League, and co-owner Nev Dickens said plans to redevelop the stadium would remain on track regardless as to whether the club was relegated.

Source & Full Article: Flintshire Standard

Editor’s Blog Archive

See also:
Racecourse Ground on sportingsights.com
Wrexham Football Club

Press Release: The Largest Stadia in the World

17.Apr.08
Sportingsights.com today published a definitive list of both the world’s largest stadia and the world’s largest sporting venues.

The former lists the largest enclosed stadia of the traditional variety, with the whilst the latter includes venues for all sports, including the huge capacity motor racing circuits of the United States and the horse racing tracks of Japan.

Currently the awards in each category go to the Rungnado May Day Stadium (North Korea, capacity 150,000) and the Indianapolis Speedway (USA, capacity 257,325).

Capacities can be contentious, so Sportingsights.com researched each stadium in detail and the results make this the most comprehensive compilation on the internet today.

Each venue is linked to its detailed sportingsights profile, allowing readers to view the stunning aerial photography that Sportingsights.com is known for.

The list will be updated regularly and if readers disagree, find updated capacity sources or can suggest any new additions, they are encouraged to contribute to the discussion on the Sportingsights.com message board.

View the world’s largest sporting venues

Editor’s Blog Archive

Swangard replacement remains a pipedream

17.Apr.08
In most cities, a local multimillionaire willing to pay for a new stadium might be received with a counter inquiry such as: Where would you like your statue, sir?

But in Vancouver, it has now been five years and two Olympiads since reclusive businessman Greg Kerfoot presented his vision for a multipurpose stadium on the city’s downtown waterfront.

Swangard Stadium

Five years of red tape and dawdling. Five years of plans, revised plans, sites, site changes, assessments, appraisals, offers and counteroffers.

On Saturday, the Vancouver Whitecaps FC began its 22nd consecutive professional season with a 1-0 victory over the Montreal Impact at crumbling Swangard Stadium (capacity 5,288).

The clubs play in the United Soccer Leagues’ First Division alongside the Carolina RailHawks, Charleston Battery and Puerto Rico Islanders - hardly big-league markets or history-rich franchises.

The Impact, owned by Montreal’s Saputo family, are moving into a new 13,500-seat stadium this month with an eye to graduating to the more prestigious Major League Soccer circuit.

A partnership with Montreal Canadiens owner George Gillette is in the works as the Impact seizes on a closing window to join MLS, which is expected to cap its membership at 18 clubs by 2011. MLS, which will have 16 teams next year after Seattle joins its ranks, is considered the premier professional soccer league in North America.

Meanwhile, Toronto FC, owned by Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment, instantly became a model MLS franchise with capacity crowds and passionate fans during an inaugural 2007 season. Its stadium, BMO Field, was conceived, designed, constructed (with three levels of government funding) and unveiled since the Whitecaps first went knocking on doors.

And so, Whitecaps president Bob Lenarduzzi, who fronts the stadium project for publicity-shy Kerfoot, is left to count the ironies. Among them:

Well-heeled MLSE getting public funding and building a stadium while his benefactor, palms closed, waits;

The changing face of Vancouver-Whistler, where sports infrastructure projects for the Winter Olympics of 2010 will cost taxpayers hundreds of millions;

That in five years, no politician has championed this cause and seen a personal legacy alongside big-dreaming Kerfoot. (Especially curious since this initiative does not include requests for a public subsidy, a.k.a. political dynamite;

That Kerfoot, rich and used to getting his way, hasn’t just walked away.

The Whitecaps want to construct a 15,000-seat complex that could be expanded to 30,000. It would be horseshoe-shaped, with the open end providing a brilliant view of the Burrard Inlet, North Vancouver and the mountains.

Lenarduzzi believes such a stadium would lead to an MLS franchise, and the team could recapture crowds of more than 20,000, as it had in the early 1980s. MLS commissioner Don Garber has indicated a stadium is the only obstacle holding Vancouver back.

The project is on its third site near the Landing in Vancouver’s Gastown neighbourhood, where the waterfront could use some aesthetic improvement. The current negotiation involves Kerfoot’s swapping his seven-hectare plot of downtown rail-yard land for five hectares of waterfront property owned by the Vancouver Fraser Port Authority.

The port is conducting an appraisal of the land values, which, if comparable, could lead to a deal.

The Whitecaps have found interested parties in having an outdoor stadium of that size, namely Rugby Canada, which is without a national stadium, and the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra, whom Lenarduzzi said would step up with a summer concert series. The team’s message is the stadium would be available to others.

But because Kerfoot is so unwilling to expose himself and his family to life in the spotlight, Lenarduzzi does the grunt work, and perhaps that is why this smells like a developer’s project as opposed to a philanthropist’s baby.

Solid as his reputation might be, Lenarduzzi stands before public officials as Kerfoot’s agent. Kerfoot would stand before them as someone who could, for example, build a hospital wing or invest in revitalizing the city’s downtown east side - financial clout that would grab the politicians’ attention, to say the least.

In short, Kerfoot is easy to ignore because he doesn’t kick up a fuss, even when there is a fuss worth kicking up.

“Maybe I underplay it, but I don’t think it would make a difference,” Lenarduzzi said. “What we’re saying is, ‘We can build it anywhere, just tell us where.’ ”

Five years later, that question awaits an answer.

Source & Full Article: globeandmail.com

See also:
Swangard Stadium on sportingsights.com
Vancouver Whitecaps
United Soccer Leagues

Editor’s Blog Archive

Great Gifts For Sports Fans

Franklin Covey Field to get a new name?

17.Apr.08
Long-term sponsors Franklin Covey are believed to be reconsidering their options concerning the naming rights to the Salt Lake City stadium. It is believed that the Bees are waiting to hear from Franklin Covey before listening to potential new sponsors.

Franklin Covey Field

If the Utah based company decline to renew their 15 year naming rights agreement, Franklin Covey Field will get a new name.

“We don’t know what we’re going to do,” said Franklin Covey spokeswoman Debra Lund. She would not elaborate on the company’s internal discussions.

Bees representatives have met with Salt Lake Mayor Ralph Becker in the past couple of weeks and anticipate meeting with Franklin Covey “in the very near future,” said Randy Rigby, president of Miller Sports & Entertainment.

“We’re anxious to address that sooner than later,” he said, adding the city intends to turn negotiations over to the Bees.

Rigby said the team has fielded inquiries from companies interested in putting their names on the stadium. It’s waiting on talks with Franklin Covey before pursuing them.

Franklin Quest contributed $1.4 million — $600,000 from the company and $200,000 each from four of its principals, including Sen. Bob Bennett — toward construction of the mostly taxpayer-funded $18 million park in 1993. The name changed after Franklin Quest and Covey Leadership merged in 1997.

Source & Full Article: Deseret News

See also:
Franklin Covey Field on sportingsights.com
Salt Lake Bees

Editor’s Blog Archive

Great Gifts For Sports Fans

New Frontier League Ballpark in Avon for 2009

17.Apr.08

The sun is shining, the grass is green and the Tribe is playing again. It’s baseball season in Northeast Ohio.

But if you want to root, root, root for the minor league home team, it’s going to be another year.

Avon Mayor Jim Smith said he wants to break ground sometime next month on a 5,000-seat baseball stadium at the corner of Interstate 90 and state Route 611. The ballpark will open the first week of June 2009 and will be home to a brand-new Frontier League expansion team.

Smith said he expects about 2 million people a year to visit the stadium, driving up local tourism and bringing a host of new businesses to the Interstate 90 corridor, including a hotel, restaurants and offices.

There will be plenty for adults to do, too — including a party patio with beer and concessions, loges and tie-ins with local company fitness plans.

Smith said the stadium will be a lot easier to build than an office building or Avon’s police department, so it won’t take nearly as long to finish.

Terri Manns, vice president of fund development for the Cleveland YMCA, said her organization needs about $5.2 million to build the new athletic facility, which will include a traditional gym, hockey rink and swimming pool.

A big part of that will come from a 0.25-percent income tax increase passed by Avon voters in November. The tax will raise $1.2 million a year over the next 30 years to build the $6 million to $9 million stadium and the $14.2 million YMCA.

Source & Full Article: The Chronicle Telegram

See also:
Frontier League Professional Baseball
The City of Avon, Ohio Official Website

Great Gifts For Sports Fans

Royals Fans give seal of approval to work at Kauffman Stadium

14.Apr.08
Kansas City Royals fans gave a big thumbs up to the work done on the Kauffman Stadium at their 5-2 home opening victory over the New York Yankees on Tuesday 8th April.

The most noticeable addition is a state of the art scoreboard, which features a 101-by-85-foot high definition screen and a digital-image left-field wall that keeps fans up to date with pitcher stats and scores from other games in the league.

Kauffman Stadium

More from The Examiner:

“During the game, one of my friends said, ‘I’m seeing the game better on the scoreboard than I am in person.’ And he was right. It’s the most amazing thing I’ve ever seen - and we saw it during the day. I can’t imagine what it’s going to look like at night. It just might be the most amazing thing on the planet.”

“It’s worth coming out in the cold and the rain just to see all the cool new stuff at the stadium,” Huskey said. “When we walked up (to the gate) and saw that scoreboard it was like, ‘Wow!’ It’s just unbelievable.”

It wasn’t just the fans who were impressed by the new scoreboard that stands in center field:

“It was pretty cool,” Royals third baseman Alex Gordon said. “I’d catch myself watching it a couple of times during the game, just wondering what was going to come on next.”

Source & Full Article: The Examiner

See also:
Kaufman Stadium on sportingsights.com
Kauffman Stadium renovations could cause some distractions
Royals’ HD scoreboard to one-up ‘Godzillatron’
A taste of the future Kauffman Stadium
Big Renovations for Royals’ Kauffman Stadium
Media gets tour of stadium progress

Great Gifts For Sports Fans

AAMI replacement in Adelaide?

14.Apr.08
AAMI Stadium

SAM Newman believes Adelaide needs a new football stadium, but the SANFL would rather not hear him say so.

Speaking at the SANFL President’s Lunch at AAMI Stadium today, Newman said Adelaide needed to “get with the 21st century” and build a modern stadium like Melbourne’s Telstra Dome.

But he also told the 600-strong audience that the SANFL had given him “strict instruction” not to discuss the stadium debate.

Weighing into the controversial debate, Newman said AAMI was not inferior to other football grounds throughout the nation, but thought Adelaide could capitalise further through a new stadium.

Source & Full Article: Adelaide Now

See also:
AAMI Stadium on sportingsights.com

Approval for new Islamabad cricket ground granted

13.Apr.08
Pakistan’s Capital Development Authority approved to allot 40 acres of land for constructing the first cricket stadium in the federal capital.

…”the authority has approved to allot 40 acres of land to Pakistan Cricket Board near Shakkar-pariyan for constructing the first state-of-the-art cricket stadium in the capital. Officials said that according to the contract with the PCB, 25 percent of built-up property would be given back to CDA and the civic agency would enjoy the profit of 25 percent property that would include commercial buildings attached with the stadium.”

Source & Full Article: thepost.com.pk/

See also:
Pakistan’s Test Cricket Grounds on sportingsights.com

Editor’s Blog Archive

Red Bull Park progressing smoothly

13.Apr.08
Red Bull New York announced that the construction of Red Bull Park, built by Makita, in Harrison, New Jersey, is entering its next phase. After breaking ground in December 2007, over 2,600 of the 3,200 timber piles that support the stadium foundation have been driven into the ground. The construction is now set to enter the next phase - construction of the concrete foundations that will serve as the base of the structure.

The forming of the concrete foundations was recently started and the placement of concrete in the foundations to begin in the very near future. This construction of the concrete pile caps and grade beams for the foundations will continue through June. After the concrete foundations are completed, the next phase will be the erection of the structural steel frame, which is set to commence this summer.

Red Bull Park

The stadium was designed by Rossetti Architects of Los Angeles, CA, and New Jersey-based Hunter Roberts Construction Group, LLC, is the project’s construction manager and general contractor.

Red Bull Park features a dynamic form roof - a curving structure that wraps the entire stadium in an elegant shell. The unique stadium roof design, which will create a distinguished identity and unique welcome to Red Bull fans, will extend from its leading edge over the entire seating bowl and then curve down to the concourse, creating the dominant architectural statement of power and elegance.

Also included in the design is the location of the patron seating in relationship to the field. The main concourse will be 26-feet high, eliminating the majority of field-level entryways which will give Red Bull Park’s seating bowl a very compact, close-to-the-action feeling. The field level seats are just 21 feet from the fields touch lines.

Red Bull Park is situated on 22-acre site bounded by 6th Street to the west and Cape May Street to the South and East. The facility is owned by Red Bull Park, Inc., on a site owned by the Town of Harrison.

Source & Full Article: New York Red Bulls Press Release

See also:
Red Bull Park official site

Editor’s Blog Archive

New stadium for Winnipeg Blue Bombers is key to security

13.Apr.08
The President and CEO of the Bombers, Lyle Bauer, has outlined the importance of a new stadium to the long-term financial stability of the team. Despite several sellouts and the highest revenue achieved in their history, the club recorded a loss of $263,877 in the financial year.

Lyle Bauer is in no doubt as to the importance of a new stadium in remedying this problem;

“It’s clear to us that the club needs to change its business model,” Bauer said. “And at the root of that change is a new stadium. The stadium we’re in now is more than 50 years old and as we see it, the only way to secure the franchise’s financial well-being … is a new stadium.”

A proposal to build a new 40,000-seat, $120-million stadium has been on the table since January 2007. But despite general approval for the plans by both federal and provincial government, neither has yet to commit financially to the required level.

If the new stadium does not come to fruition, the future looks bleak for the Winnipeg Blue Bombers says Bauer;

“with five sellouts and a great product on the field,” what will happen in the lean years?

Source & Full Article: National Post

See also:
Canad Inns Stadium on sportingsights.com
Winnipeg Blue Bombers website

Editor’s Blog Archive

Great Gifts For Sports Fans

New Rays’ Stadium gains support

13.Apr.08
The Tampa Bay Rays have plans for a retractable-roof, 34,000-seat, open-air waterfront ballpark that could open as early as 2012.

Today, the hopes for the new stadium seems more likely than ever as the plans gained approval from key figures.

A couple of heavyweights offered their views prior to Tuesday’s home opener regarding the Rays’ proposed $450 million waterfront stadium.

Florida Gov. Charlie Crist and Bob DuPuy, Major League Baseball’s president and chief operating officer, were on hand for the pregame festivities and spoke about the waterfront stadium.

“I’d love to see them be able to do it,” Crist said. “I think it’s a great idea. A stadium on the waterfront in a state like Florida makes great sense. It’s beautiful in San Francisco the way their setup is. If the team is willing to contribute so much toward it, I think it’s wonderful.”

The Rays are planning to build the stadium on the team’s former Spring Training site, Al Lang Field, on the downtown St. Petersburg waterfront. Al Lang Field has been the site of Rays Spring Training since the team’s inception, but they are scheduled to move to Port Charlotte for Spring Training in 2009. Because Al Lang Field is housed on public property, St. Petersburg voters would need to approve the new stadium.

While the stadium in mind is open-air, the plan calls for the stadium to have the option to be covered with a sail-like material on a cabling system in the event of bad weather.

Source & Full Article: MLB.com

See also:
Tropicana Field on sportingsights.com
Tampa Bay Devil Rays website

Editor’s Blog Archive

Great Gifts For Sports Fans