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Wanderers Stadium

Sports venue in Johannesburg, South Africa


Sports venue in Johannesburg, South Africa

FieldValue
nicknameThe Bullring
imageWanderers Stadium 2024.jpg
captionWanderers Stadium in 2024
countrySouth Africa
locationIllovo, Sandton, Johannesburg
seating_capacity34,000
coordinates
end1Corlett Drive End
end2Golf Course End
internationaltrue
firsttestdate24–29 December
firsttestyear1956
firsttesthomeSouth Africa
firsttesthomevar1928
firsttestawayEngland
lasttestdate8–11 March
lasttestyear2023
lasttesthomeSouth Africa
lasttestawayWest Indies
firstodidate13 December
firstodiyear1992
firstodihomeSouth Africa
firstodihomevar1928
firstodiawayIndia
lastodidate17 December
lastodiyear2023
lastodihomeSouth Africa
lastodiawayIndia
firstt20idate21 October
firstt20iyear2005
firstt20ihomeSouth Africa
firstt20iawayNew Zealand
lastt20idate14 December
lastt20iyear2023
lastt20ihomeSouth Africa
lastt20iawayIndia
firstwtestdate17–21 December
firstwtestyear1960
firstwtesthomeSouth Africa
firstwtesthomevar1928
firstwtestawayEngland
lastwtestdate24–27 March
lastwtestyear1972
lastwtesthomeSouth Africa
lastwtesthomevar1928
lastwtestawayNew Zealand
firstwodidate22 September
firstwodiyear2013
firstwodihomeSouth Africa
firstwodiawayBangladesh
lastwodidate6 February
lastwodiyear2022
lastwodihomeSouth Africa
lastwodiawayWest Indies
firstwt20idate21 February
firstwt20iyear2016
firstwt20ihomeSouth Africa
firstwt20iawayEngland
lastwt20idate3 February
lastwt20iyear2019
lastwt20ihomeSouth Africa
lastwt20iawaySri Lanka
year11956 – present
club1Transvaal
now known as Highveld Lions
year22018-2019
club2Jozi Stars
year32023-present
club3Joburg Super Kings
date17 December
year2023
sourcehttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/ground/59120.html Cricinfo

now known as Highveld Lions

The Wanderers Stadium, also known as the Bullring due to its intimidating atmosphere, is a cricket stadium situated just south of Sandton in Illovo, Johannesburg in Gauteng, South Africa. Test, One Day and First class cricket matches are played here. It is the home ground for the Imperial Lions and the Joburg Super Kings.

History

The stadium has a seating capacity of 34,000, and was built in 1956 to replace the Old Wanderers Stadium. It was completely overhauled following South Africa's readmission to international cricket in 1991. In 1996, five new 65 m floodlight masts replaced the existing four 30 m masts, enabling day-night limited-overs cricket. It is nicknamed 'The Bullring' due to its design and intimidating atmosphere.

On 1 October 2004, the Wanderers Clubhouse was virtually destroyed by fire.

Events

Wanderers Stadium hosted a rugby union test match in April 1980 between South Africa and the South American Jaguars while Johannesburg's regular venue, Ellis Park Stadium, was being redeveloped.

On 12 March 2006, this stadium hosted the greatest One-day International match ever played between South Africa and Australia in which a world record score of 434 was chased down by South Africa.

The stadium hosted the 2009 Indian Premier League's second semi-final and the final in which the Deccan Chargers beat the Royal Challengers Bangalore to grab the championship title. It also hosted the final of Champion League Twenty20 in the 2010 and 2012 edition.

The 2003 Cricket World Cup and 2007 T20 World Cup finals were held at the Wanderers Stadium.

On 18 January 2015, the Wanderers stadium saw South Africa's AB de Villiers break the 19-year-old record for the fastest ODI half-century, previously held by Sri Lankan maestro Sanath Jayasuriya, by making 50 off 16 balls against the West Indies. In the same match, he also broke Corey Anderson's fastest ODI century record (held for one year and seven days) by making 100 off 31 deliveries. He finished on 149, caught on the boundary in the final over, scored off 44 balls with a strike rate of 338.63.

On 21 February 2016, AB de Villiers scored the fastest 50 (21 balls) for South Africa in a T20I against England.{{cite web

Trivia

In July 2018, the stadium hosted former US President, Barack Obama at the Nelson Mandela Lecture.

References

References

  1. "www.wanderers.co.za".
  2. "A blaze destroys Wanderers Cricket Club {{!}} South African History Online".
  3. Michael Owen-Smith. (1990). "Test Match Grounds of the World". Willow Books.
  4. "South Africa vs West Indies 2nd ODI 2015". ESPNcricinfo.
  5. (17 July 2018). "Barack Obama delivers Mandela centenary address in Joburg". News24.
Info: Wikipedia Source

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