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Albert Cricket Ground

Cricket ground in St Kilda, Victoria


Summary

Cricket ground in St Kilda, Victoria

FieldValue
nameAlbert Cricket Ground
image[[File:Albert Cricket Ground.jpgalt=Albert Cricket Ground in 2014300px]]
locationSt Kilda, Victoria
coordinates
operatorMelbourne Cricket Club
surfaceGrass
dimensions145m × 130m
former_namesWarehouseman's Cricket Ground
tenantsMelbourne Cricket ClubLawn Tennis Association of Victoria (until the 1920s)
Melbourne Stars (WBBL)
capacity2,000
embedded{{Infobox cricket ground
embedyes
internationaltrue
onlywtestdate26 January
onlywtestyear1979
onlywtesthomeAustralia
onlywtestawayNew Zealand
firstwodidate10 December
firstwodiyear1988
firstwodihomeAustralia
firstwodiawayNew Zealand
lastwodidate25 February
lastwodiyear2004
lastwodihomeAustralia
lastwodiawayNew Zealand
date8 September
year2020
sourcehttps://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Grounds/2/106.html CricketArchive

Melbourne Stars (WBBL) |}}}}

Albert Cricket Ground, also known as the Albert Reserve and previously as the Warehouseman's Cricket Ground, is a cricket ground in St Kilda, Victoria. It is operated by the Melbourne Cricket Club (MCC), and used as its primary home ground in the Victorian Premier Cricket competition.

Cricket

The Melbourne Cricket Club has held the lease for the venue, originally known as the Warehouseman's Ground, since 1890. It has been the primary home venue for its cricket team in the Victorian District/Premier Cricket competition since that time. The venue is one of the primary finals venue in the premier cricket competition, and hosted the first XI district/premier cricket final almost every year from 1953/54 until the early 21st century.

The venue has never hosted a first-class cricket match; in 2003, it was to have hosted its first List A match, a tour match between Australia A and South Africa A, but the match was abandoned without a ball being bowled due to rain.

Top level women's cricket has been played on the ground. One women's Test match was played at the ground between Australia and New Zealand in January 1979, and the Rose Bowl series of Women's One Day International matches in 1988–89, 1990–91, and on three occasions in 1999–2000.

The venue has one pavilion, the Clive Fairbairn Pavilion, named after MCC player, administrator and life member Clive Fairbairn.

Tennis

In 1905, the tennis courts at the Warehouseman's Cricket Ground were the venue of the first Australasian Tennis Championship, the tournament which later became the Australian Open. Lawn tennis at that time was administered in Victoria by the Melbourne Cricket Club. Rodney Heath defeated fellow Australian Arthur Curtis in four sets to claim the inaugural title. The venue hosted the Australasian Championships under the auspices of the MCC, and later the Lawn Tennis Association of Victoria, a total of four times: in 1905, 1911, 1914 and 1924, as well as the 1908 and 1912 Davis Cup finals, after which Kooyong became the primary venue for lawn tennis in Melbourne.

A set of public tennis courts remains available at Albert Reserve to the north of the cricket ground.

Other sports

The Melbourne Cricket Club lacrosse team has its training and playing base at the Albert Cricket Ground; the club's baseball team also used the venue until 1976.

Football has been played on the ground in the past. The original Prahran Football Club, which played senior football in the Victorian Football Association in 1886 and 1887 before amalgamating with , played its home matches at the ground in 1886; and the Melbourne Football Club (which was a part of the MCC) played some games there after 1890. The Leopold Football Club also played home games at the ground while competing in the Metropolitan Junior Football Association (MJFA). The ground is not used for football today.

In the early years of cycling in Victoria the ground was used to host races. On 24 May 1880 it was the scene of the first 25 Miles race of the Melbourne Bicycle Club on the occasion of Queen Victoria's birthday celebrations.

Notes

References

  1. (2002). "Football Grounds of Melbourne". Pennon Publishing.
  2. (6 February 2003). "South Africa A to travel to Australia for April series". ESPNcricinfo.
  3. "Australia A v South Africa A". Cricket Archive.
  4. "Other matches played on Albert Ground, Melbourne". Cricket Archive.
  5. "Women's Test Matches played on Albert Ground, Melbourne". Cricket Archive.
  6. "12th match: Australia Women v New Zealand Women at Melbourne, Dec 10, 1988". [[ESPNcricinfo]].
  7. "3rd ODI: Australia Women v New Zealand Women at Melbourne, Jan 20, 1991". [[ESPNcricinfo]].
  8. "1st ODI: Australia Women v New Zealand Women at Melbourne, Feb 6, 2000". [[ESPNcricinfo]].
  9. "2nd ODI: Australia Women v New Zealand Women at Perth, Feb 8, 2000". [[ESPNcricinfo]].
  10. "3rd ODI: Australia Women v New Zealand Women at Perth, Feb 9, 2000". [[ESPNcricinfo]].
  11. Eyre, Rick. (6 February 2000). "Australia go one-up in Rose Bowl". ESPNcricinfo.
  12. Eyre, Rick. (8 February 2000). "Australia regain the Rose Bowl". ESPNcricinfo.
  13. Shane Brown. (20 May 2010). "Clive Lindsay Fairbairn OAM". The Age.
  14. (27 November 1911). "Tennis Championships.". [[The Argus (Melbourne).
  15. (30 November 1924). "Tennis Championships". The Argus.
  16. (21 January 1924). "Championship tennis". The Argus.
  17. "Lacrosse". Melbourne Cricket Club.
  18. (17 May 1902). "METROPOLITAN". The Herald.
  19. Vin Maskell. (11 March 2012). "Albert Cricket Ground, Victoria, Australia".
  20. "Queen Victoria 25 Miles Race". CyclingRanking.com.
  21. (25 May 1880). "THE QUEEN'S BIRTHDAY". The Argus.
Wikipedia Source

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