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Campbelltown Sports Stadium

Coordinates:34°3′1″S150°50′1″E / 34.05028°S 150.83361°E /-34.05028; 150.83361
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Stadium in Leumeah, New South Wales, Australia
"Orana Park" redirects here. For the New Zealand wildlife park, seeOrana Wildlife Park.

Campbelltown Sports Stadium
Orana Park
Map
Interactive map of Campbelltown Sports Stadium
Former namesOrana Park, Campbelltown Sports Ground
LocationOld Leumeah Rd,Leumeah,New South Wales 2560
Coordinates34°3′1″S150°50′1″E / 34.05028°S 150.83361°E /-34.05028; 150.83361
Public transitLeumeah
OwnerCampbelltown City Council
OperatorCampbelltown City Council
Capacity17,500[1]
Record attendance20,527 (Wests Tigers vsNorth Queensland Cowboys, 14 August 2005)
SurfaceGrass
Opened1955
Tenants
East Campbelltown Eagles (1961-1968)
Newtown Jets (1983)
Western Suburbs Magpies (1987–present)
Wests Tigers (NRL) (2000–present)
Macarthur Rams (2008)
Western Sydney Wanderers FC (W-League) (2012–2014)
Macarthur FC (A-League Men) (2020–present)

Campbelltown Sports Stadium is a multi-purposestadium inLeumeah, a suburb in theMacarthur region ofSouth Western Sydney,New South Wales,Australia, owned byCampbelltown City Council. Formerly known asOrana Park andCampbelltown Sports Ground, it is currently the home ground of theWestern Suburbs Magpies,Wests Tigers andMacarthur Bulls FC. The stadium has a nominal capacity of 17,500, with a recorded highest crowd figure of 20,527 for a game between Wests Tigers andNorth Queensland Cowboys in the2005 NRL season. It is located adjacent toLeumeah railway station andWests Leagues Club.

Campbelltown Stadium entrance
The Western Stand at sunset during the Wests Tigers vsSt George Illawarra Dragons match in April 2024

Stadium usage

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Rugby league

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In theNational Rugby League, the stadium was home to theWestern Suburbs Magpies club from 1987 until 1999 and was one of the home grounds for theNewtown Jets in 1983. The Magpies had merged with theBalmain Tigers for the 2000 season to form theWests Tigers, and thus, since 2000, this ground is being used on an occasional basis by the Wests Tigers, with four of their twelve annual home games played there, in accordance with their stadium deals. The Western Suburbs Magpies junior teams and Ron Massey Cup side also play most of their home games at Campbelltown.

The record crowd for the ground for a rugby league match has been 20,527 between the Wests Tigers and theNorth Queensland Cowboys on 14 August2005. The record crowd for Campbelltown in its previous oval configuration was 17,286 between Western Suburbs andSt George on 2 August1991. The record crowd for Newtown at the stadium is 10,686 against rivalParramatta in1983.[2]

List of rugby league test matches played at Campbelltown Stadium.[3]

Test#DateResultAttendanceNotes
117 October 2015 Tonga def. Cook Islands 28–84,8132017 Rugby League World Cup qualifier
26 May 2017 Papua New Guinea def. Cook Islands 32–2218,2712017 Pacific Tests
3 Tonga def. Fiji 26–24
4 England def. Samoa 30–10
523 June 2018 Papua New Guinea def. Fiji 26–1417,8022018 Pacific Tests
6 Tonga def. Samoa 38–22

Association football

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On 19 July 2008, AustralianA-League Men teamSydney FC played their first Pre-Season Cup match againstBrisbane Roar. Sydney won the match 2–1 in front of roughly 4,500 fans. Sydney FC also played a pre-season friendly here in preparation for their2010–11A-League season against local clubMacarthur Rams in which Sydney won 1–0.

Sydney FC played their first premiership match for A-League points at Campbelltown Stadium againstPerth Glory on 18 January 2012 (originally to be played on 7 December 2011).[4] The game ended up in a 1–1 draw and drew 5,505 fans.

The stadium was host for the local Macarthur Football Association Premier League finals in September 2012.

Western Sydney Wanderers FC defeatedNewcastle Jets FC 2–1 in a2012–13 season Regional Round match at the venue. The game was attended by 10,589 fans. The Wanderers would return to the stadium against the same opposition in the2016–17 season during the redevelopment ofParramatta Stadium. In 2016,Western Sydney Wanderers FC announced that the club would be playing all their2017 AFC Champions League games at Campbelltown Stadium.

In the2018–19 A-League season, the stadium played host to a match betweenWellington Phoenix FC andSydney FC in front of 5,115 people. Sydney FC won 1–0.[5]

The stadium also hosted a2019 FFA Cup match betweenSydney United 58 andWestern Sydney Wanderers in which the Wanderers won 7–1 in front of 5,061 people.[6]

In February 2020, the stadium played host to five matches in the2020 AFC Women's Olympic Qualifying Tournament.[7]

From the2020–21 A-League season,Macarthur FC were formed and play their home games at the ground.

In July 2023 the venue hosted Korea Republic as their training facility during the2023 FIFA Women's World Cup.

Panorama of Campbelltown Stadium prior toWestern Sydney Wanderers defeatingNewcastle Jets 2–1 in the2012–13A-League season

References

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  1. ^"Campbelltown Stadium".Austadiums.Archived from the original on 22 September 2022. Retrieved4 September 2022.
  2. ^"Rugby League Tables / Campbelltown / All Games".Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved21 March 2015.
  3. ^Ferguson, Shawn Dollin and Andrew."Campbelltown Stadium – Current Name: Campbelltown Stadium – Rugby League Project".rugbyleagueproject.org.Archived from the original on 12 May 2017. Retrieved7 May 2017.
  4. ^FFA Take A-League Into The RegionsArchived 2 October 2011 at theWayback Machine, au.fourfourtwo.com, 29 September 2011. Retrieved on 13 November 2011.
  5. ^"Wellington Phoenix vs Sydney FC, Hyundai A-League, Round 20, 23rd Feb 2019".Hyundai A-League. Retrieved1 December 2019.
  6. ^"Sydney United 58 FC vs Western Sydney Wanderers FC, FFA Cup, Round of 16, 28th Aug 2019".FFA Cup. 8 August 2019.Archived from the original on 28 August 2019. Retrieved1 December 2019.
  7. ^"Tickets now on sale for matches at Campbelltown Stadium".Matildas. 3 February 2020.Archived from the original on 5 February 2020. Retrieved24 May 2020.

External links

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