View from the terracing c.2008 | |
Location inSouth Lanarkshire | |
| Location | Rutherglen, Scotland |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 55°50′18″N4°13′44″W / 55.83833°N 4.22889°W /55.83833; -4.22889 |
| Owner | The late Billy King[1] |
| Surface | Grass |
| Opened | 1898 |
| Closed | 2020 |
| Tenants | |
| Clyde F.C. (1898–1986) Bridgeton Waverley F.C. (1923–1927) Glasgow Tigers (1988–1995, 1997–1998) Scottish Monarchs (1996) | |
Shawfield Stadium is a venue in theShawfield district of the town ofRutherglen,South Lanarkshire, Scotland, located close to the boundary withGlasgow.[2]
Originally a football ground, Shawfield was home toClyde F.C. from 1898 to 1986. Greyhound racing was introduced in 1932, and the stadium hosted theScottish Greyhound Derby from 1970 to 1985 and from 1989 to 2019. TheGlasgow Tigers speedway team were also based there, from 1988 to 1995 and 1997 to 1998, with theScottish Monarchs also racing there in 1996. Other sports includingboxing andathletics were also staged at Shawfield.
On 19 March 2020, an announcement was made to suspend racing because of theCOVID-19 pandemic. In the following two years the majority of trainers moved their greyhounds to other venues as the track became derelict.[3] During October 2022, the stadium's owner Billy King died, ending the likelihood of it ever reopening.[1]
John Bilsland (sole owner ofStanley in Liverpool) helped instigate the plans to open Shawfield in his home town and brought the greyhounds to the home ofClyde F.C. The football club had been based at the stadium since it opened in 1898[4] but were experiencing financial difficulties by 1930 resulting in the need to find new income streams. The club had tried previously to allow greyhound racing to take place at Shawfield but the Football league was opposed to the idea. Finally an agreement was reached with the chairman John McMahon and the Shawfield Greyhound Racing Company Ltd (SGRC) was born.[5]The track opened on 14 November 1932 in the North Rutherglen area of Glasgow and was a big galloping circuit of 473 yards with 125-yard straights with well banked bends and it became a very popular venue. When Shawfield opened for racing the city of Glasgow already hosted four other National Greyhound Racing Society affiliated tracks inAlbion,Carntyne,White City andFirhill. In addition there were the independent tracks ofClydeholm,Coatbridge andMount Vernon which totalled eight tracks in Glasgow at the time.[6]
The first recorded winner was 'Swordmanship' receiving six yards in a 303-yard handicap race, the time was 18.45 sec. The SGRC bought the stadium from Clyde FC in 1935.[6]

After the war had finished the SGRC was valued at £4,000 in 1946 by the taxman but the figure proposed by the owners was only £600 resulting in a dispute. As with most tracks at the time Glasgow experienced a profitable spell during the early fifties but both Albion and Firhill were closed to greyhound racing by the end of the decade. White City had shut by 1962 and in 1968 Carntyne was the latest track to close their doors which had a knock on effect for Shawfield. With theScottish Greyhound Derby left without a home there were only two tracks big enough to host the event,Powderhall Stadium or Shawfield. The copyright of the Scottish Derby was held by theGreyhound Racing Association (GRA) and they decided that Shawfield could host the 1970 Scottish Derby. Jim Layton was Racing Manager at the time and one year later the track also received another prestigious former Carntyne competition called theSt Mungo Cup.[7]
A fire at the track resulted in significant damage to public facilities. To combat this an investment program that included a state of the arttotalisator system, ray timing and photo finish equipment was planned and this period also saw the GRA arrive on the scene as they acquired the track under theirGRA Property Trust. The track made the National Intertrack final in 1976.[5]
In 1983, the stadium came on the open market and in 1984 the GRA looked to have agreed a deal to sell toAsda bur planning permission was refused.[1] During 1986, Clyde FC were given notice to leave and in May 1986 planning permission for houses was refused.[1] The stadium shut down on 25 October 1986. Supporters of the track campaigned to prevent its closure and, with the help of Billy McAllister, a former bookie, Racing Manager and racing reporter at the track, the Shawfield Action Group was formed. An 8,000 strong petition helped stave planning permission and there was some good news when a business consortium (led by track bookmaker Billy King) bought the track instead of the expected developers. On 11 June 1987 the track re-opened under the Shawfield Greyhound Racing and Leisure Company Ltd.[6] In 1988, the GRA lost their rights to the Scottish Derby following the sale of Powderhall and the Scottish Derby returned to its Glasgow roots. The management which included Robert Lithgow (Racing Manager), had already re-introduced the St Mungo Cup and William King Cup. A £100,000 facelift completed the takeover.
Billy King continued to ply his trade as a bookmaker and in late 2001 the Shawfield Greyhound Racing and Leisure Company Ltd became the Shawfield Greyhound Stadium Ltd.[8][1] The largetote board which dominated the south end of the track was demolished in 2004.[9]

It was the last remaining licensed track in Scotland until its closure in 2020. The venue then remained unused for two years following theCOVID-19 pandemic. In October 2022 the owner Billy King died of a suspected heart attack. Following his death, no further plans to reopen the stadium were announced.[1] It had previously been reported that the owners were considering redevelopment of the site for housing, pending the results of an environmental report investigating potential land contamination.[10]
In October 2023, plans were unveiled for the redevelopment of the site, involving the demolition of the stadium and its replacement with a mixed use development including housing and retail.[11]
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Clyde F.C. took over the site, previously a trotting track, in 1898,[16][4] having previously been based across theRiver Clyde atBarrowfield Park. The club earned additional revenue from using Shawfield forboxing andTrack and field;greyhound racing was introduced in 1932.[16] Clyde's financial difficulties led to the sale of Shawfield to the Shawfield Greyhound Racing Company Ltd in 1935, but the club continued to play there as tenants.[16] They invited emergingJunior teamBridgeton Waverley to play there temporarily in the 1920s.[17] During theSecond World War, Clyde almost had to leave Shawfield because the owners demanded the use of the stadium on Saturday afternoons.[18][19] Eventually a compromise was reached where the stadium would be used for dog racing on alternate Saturday afternoons, which enabled Clyde to continue hosting home fixtures despite logistical challenges.[19]

AfterWorld War II, Clyde and the other smaller clubs in the Glasgow area struggled to compete with the dominantOld Firm.[20] In addition to this, many of the heavily populated tenements surrounding Shawfield (Oatlands,Hutchesontown,Dalmarnock,Bridgeton and centralRutherglen districts) had been cleared in the 1960s, reducing Clyde's support base.[16][21] The club proposed to move to the new town ofEast Kilbride in 1966.[16] Four years later, Clyde attempted to take overHamilton Academical;[22] this collapsed when four of the Hamilton directors secured a lease onDouglas Park.[22] Clyde continued to play at Shawfield until 1986, when the GRA's redevelopment plans led to Clyde's eviction.[16] Following the collapse of the redevelopment plans, Clyde did not return to the ground, although this was proposed in 1988.[16] After a period of uncertainty playing atFirhill in the north of Glasgow (home of rivalsPartick Thistle) and then later at Hamilton, Clyde eventually accepted an offer from the town ofCumbernauld to move to what becameBroadwood Stadium.[16]
On 14 December 1957, a disaster occurred at the stadium during aScottish Football League match between Clyde andCeltic.[23] A very large crowd of 27,000 had been allowed into the stadium to see the fixture[24] (involving the team which had just won the League Cup and the team which would go on to lift the Scottish Cup at the end ofthe season), with reports of the time describing Shawfield as "bursting at the seams";[25]crushing was experienced among some of the spectators prior to kick-off. At the time this issue was a fairly common occurrence at popular events, and it was also normal for children in the crowd to be passed over the heads of the adults out of theterracing. In this instance the juveniles were passed over the 4-foot (1.2 m) high terracing boundary wall onto the greyhound track and sat on the track to watch the match, with their backs to the wall.[23][26]
In the opening minutes a goal by Celtic resulted in a surge forward among the packed crowd, and a section of the boundary wall collapsed forward under the strain, falling onto the boys sitting on its opposite side.[23][25][26] Players stopped to help the injured,[25][26] whilst supporters at the other end of the ground were unaware of any incident due to thesmog which enveloped the stadium,[25] and initially shouted for the game to be restarted. The match did resume following a 20-minute delay to rescue trapped boys and carry away the injured for treatment, despite some of the players being visibly distressed by what they had witnessed.[26][27] Celtic eventually won a contest played at particularly high intensity by a 6–3 scoreline.[27]
A total of 50 persons were injured, almost all of them children, with 13 detained in hospital suffering serious injuries and one fatality among them: a nine-year-old boy named James Ryan from Bridgeton whose chest was crushed.[23][24]
During thefatal accident inquiry the following February his uncle stated that James had been lifted over the wall onto the track only seconds before it collapsed,[23] and other boys who were injured also stated that they had still been in the stand at the time the goal was scored and had jumped over the wall to avoid being crushed just prior to it falling.[24] The inquiry heard evidence that the wall had been inspected following the incident and was of sound and legal construction, and it was only the extreme force that caused it to collapse.[23][24] The accident was blamed on unruly persons in the crowd who had repeatedly been rushing forward irresponsibly,[23] and on the absence of anycrush barriers in that area of the terracing which would have lessened the forward pressure exerted.[24] The police also stated that they had not formally agreed for any persons to be on the track at the time (although it was permitted in exceptional circumstances), and even larger attendances had previously been recorded at Shawfield for fixtures against Celtic andRangers.[24]
The stadium hosted fourScottish Football League XI representative matches:[28] in 1911 versus theSouthern League,[29] 1921 versus theIrish League XI,[30] and 1954 and 1956 versus theLeague of Ireland XI;[31][32] the Scottish side won all four matches.
The venue also hosted the annualGlasgow vs Sheffield Inter-City match in 1901, 1954, and 1956.[33][34] BothHarry Haddock andTommy Ring played in the two latter matches, with Ring scoring in both.[33]
The ground hosted various representative matches, including thebenefit match for thePlayers Union between a Scottish XI andEnglish XI in 1914,[35][36] the Scotland XI vsBritish Army international trial,[37] theScotland under-23 againstAuld Enemy[38] and then tenantsClyde,[39] AScotland Junior XI vsScotland 2nd XI was played in 1961.[40]
It also hosted threeScottish Junior Cup Finals, in 1909, 1942 and 1943 (two of these went to a replay, held elsewhere).[41] It annually hosted the (Evening Times Trophy)Central Junior League Final between 1944 and 1964.[42] Additionally, it held the 1953 Central League Cup final, withAshfield beating 2–1Kilsyth Rangers.[43]
Rutherglen Ladies, one of the leadingwomen's association football teams in Britain in the 1920s and 30s (when they were officially banned from participating in the sport) played several exhibition matches at Shawfield.[44][45]
The Glasgow Tigers returned to their home city in 1988 after racing inWorkington for one season. The Tigers raced there for a decade, apart from the 1996 season when they were temporarily in abeyance and replaced by the ill-fatedScottish Monarchs who had a team but no track due to the closure ofPowderhall. When the venue opened, the racing could be viewed from two straights and the third and fourth bends but over the years the viewing area was reduced to a small part of the stadium in front of the stand. They departed toAshfield Stadium ahead of the 1999 season.
Benny Lynch, the first Scottish boxing world champion,[46] had his first title defence and the firstworld championship match held in Scotland at Shawfield on October 13, 1937. Lynch retained his flyweight title after defeatingPeter Kane in front of 40,000 spectators.[47][48]