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Basin Reserve

The Basin Reserve, officially known as the Cello Basin Reserve for sponsorship reasons,[1] and commonly referred to as the Basin, is a cricket ground in Wellington, New Zealand. It has been used for Test matches, and is the main home ground for the Wellington Firebirds first-class team. The Basin Reserve is the only cricket ground to have New Zealand Historic Place status (Category 2) as it is the oldest Test cricket ground in the country.[2] The ground has been used for events other than cricket, such as concerts, sports events and other social gatherings, but now it is mostly used for cricket, particularly Test matches.

Cello Basin Reserve
The Basin
A view of Basin Reserve in 2008
Ground information
LocationMount Cook, Wellington, New Zealand
Coordinates41°18′1″S 174°46′49″E / 41.30028°S 174.78028°E / -41.30028; 174.78028Coordinates: 41°18′1″S 174°46′49″E / 41.30028°S 174.78028°E / -41.30028; 174.78028
Establishment1868
Capacity11,600
End names
Vance Stand End
Scoreboard End
International information
First Test24–27 January 1930:
 New Zealand v  England
Last Test17–20 March 2023:
 New Zealand v  Sri Lanka
First ODI9 March 1975:
 New Zealand v  England
Last ODI26 March 2021:
 New Zealand v  Bangladesh
First women's Test20–23 March 1948:
 New Zealand v  Australia
Last women's Test26–29 January 1990:
 New Zealand v  Australia
First WODI23 January 1982:
 Australia v  England
Last WODI11 December 2022:
 New Zealand v  Bangladesh
First WT20I28 February 2016:
 New Zealand v  Australia
Last WT20I10 February 2020:
 New Zealand v  South Africa
Team information
Wellington (1873–present)
As of 20 March 2023
Source: CricketArchive

The New Zealand Cricket Museum is located in the Old Grandstand. It houses cricket memorabilia and a reference library. It opened in 1987, and was relaunched in 2021.[3][4][5]

Location

The Basin Reserve is two kilometres south of the Wellington CBD at the foot of Mount Victoria. Government House, St Marks Church School, and the Wellington College boys' school are to the south of the Basin, across the street. At the eastern end of the basin is the Mount Victoria Tunnel, which increased the traffic flow around the Basin Reserve when it was built in 1931.

The Basin Reserve is also surrounded by numerous other Wellington landmarks, including Mount Cook Barracks, the National War Memorial, several colleges and high schools, the Caledonian Hotel and the former Dominion Museum. A fire station is located across the street from the ground: traditionally its occupants would watch ongoing matches during their down-time, and would set off the station's siren to mark New Zealand wickets taken or when a batsman reached a milestone like a 50 or century. The Basin Reserve is the intersection point for the Wellington suburbs of Mount Cook, Newtown and Mount Victoria.[6]

Construction history

The area that is now Basin Reserve was originally a lake (known as the Basin Lake), and there were plans to connect it to the sea by a canal to make it an alternative inner city harbour, with major warehouses and factories alongside it. However, the massive 1855 Wairarapa earthquake uplifted the area nearly 1.8 m (5.9 ft) and turned the lake into a swamp.[7] Due to the colonists' English roots, sport, particularly cricket, was a vital part of the community's way to relax. However, no land had been allocated by the city planners for recreational reserves. Although natural grounds, such as the Te Aro flat, provided a small area for matches, the colonists wanted more recreational land than they had. The matter became dire as buildings began to be erected on these plains, as flat land was hard to find in the mountainous Wellington. So, after the 1855 earthquake, which historians estimate measured magnitude 8,[8] influential citizens seized the chance in 1857 to suggest that the new land be drained and made into a recreational reserve. The Wellington council accepted the proposal and on 3 February 1863 prisoners from the Mount Cook Gaol began to level and drain the new land. The swamp was drained by September and a fence and hedges were placed around the entire area. However, massive population influxes from 1863 to 1866 (caused mostly by the Parliament being situated in Wellington) hampered construction on the Basin Reserve as workers were pulled to other areas.

After a council meeting on 11 December 1866 the Basin Reserve became Wellington's official cricket ground. No cattle or horses were allowed in the ground and only small hedges and shrubs were allowed to be planted so as not to hamper cricket games. Soon after, on 11 January 1868, the first game of cricket was played, although the ground had numerous stones and thistles on it, which the umpire later apologised for as some players got injured from them. Although it was the opening day, no ceremony or music was played, nor was the opening advertised with banners.

Soon after that first event, the Highland Games began to be held at the Basin Reserve. The games were organised by the Wellingtonian Caledonian Society, of which their headquarters, The Caledonian Hotel, still stands towards the south of the Basin Reserve. The society offered up prize money which brought many competitors to the region. Due to their success, the society petitioned to have new grandstands built at the western end of the Basin Reserve. They would measure 44 by 20 ft (13.4 by 6.1 m) and would cost approximately £250–£300. The stands would also hold food stalls and ground keepers. However, for the following years, even up until reportedly 1872, the Basin Reserve grounds were still extremely swampy, with small pools of swamp water and various weeds and shrubs sprouting over the fields. In late 1872, horses were used to level the playing field and this greatly improved the conditions.

 
Spectators and the William Wakefield Memorial

In 1882, the William Wakefield Memorial was erected at the Basin Reserve. The monument had been in storage for many years, and it was finally erected to commemorate one of the city's founders, William Wakefield, at the main sports ground.[9][10]

The pavilion has been a Category II registered Historic Place since 1982,[11] and the entire Basin Reserve has been a registered Historic Area since 1998.[12] The William Wakefield Memorial has a Category I registration.[10]

In 2012 the Museum Stand of the Basin was declared an earthquake risk and closed; a new player's pavilion was opened in December 2018 and renamed in 2020 in honour of the former Test cricketer Ewen Chatfield.[13]

Event history

 
Crowd in a Test match Between England and New Zealand in Basin Reserve in 2008

The first ever event played on the Basin Reserve was a one-day cricket match on 11 January 1868 between the Wellington Volunteers and the crew of HMS Falcon, which was docked in Wellington.[14] However, the game was hampered with injuries from numerous stones and thistles in the grass, which led to the injury of some players. The umpire apologised after the game to the players for the poor conditions of play.[15]

After that first event, local societies began organising athletic and sport meetings at the Basin Reserve. These meetings were eventually called the Highland Games and it was their success which led to the construction of the ground's grand stand. The events included athletics, racing, dancing and later wood-chopping and cycling. However, the ground was still swampy in some areas, but was remedied in late 1872. This allowed the first first-class game, Wellington against Auckland, to be played on 30 November 1873, which Wellington won easily. Another first at the Basin Reserve is reputedly what was the first game of rugby in the North Island.[8] The first rugby game held at the Basin Reserve was between the Wellington football team and the crew of HMS Rosario, which the sailors won by a single goal.

The Australasian athletic championships were held at Basin Reserve on 26–27 December 1911. These were a combined Australian and New Zealand championship in which New Zealanders won all the track events and Australians won all the field events.[16]

Before sailing on the 1921–22 Kangaroo tour of Great Britain, the Australian rugby league team stopped in Wellington for an exhibition match at the Basin Reserve.[17]

 
The main scoreboard named after cricket historian Don Neely

The first Test match played at the ground was between New Zealand and England, beginning on 24 January 1930. One-day international cricket was played at the Basin Reserve until 1999, after which it moved to the larger crowd capacity Westpac Stadium on the other side of Wellington. In what may be a one-off occasion, it returned during the Australian Tour in 2005 following a decision that the pitch at Hamilton's Westpac Park was unfit for cricket, however it is scheduled to host two more One-day internationals against Pakistan in 2017/18 and One-day international against India in 2018/19.

On 13 March 2011, the Basin Reserve was host to "Fill the Basin" a cricket event intended to raise money for the 2011 Canterbury earthquake. The game was played in front of more than 10,000 people with people sitting between the boundary rope and the fence. This is the biggest crowd at the Basin Reserve in the modern era. Players involved in the match included Shane Warne, Stephen Fleming, Tana Umaga, Richard Hadlee, Martin Crowe, other famous former New Zealand cricketers, current All Blacks Richie McCaw and Conrad Smith and actors Russell Crowe, Ian McKellen.[18] More than $500,000 was raised towards the relief efforts.[19]

In addition to cricket, other sports have also used the Basin Reserve, including rugby union, a rugby league Test match, a football pre-season match and exhibition Australian rules football matches. The Basin Reserve was during the 1950s and 1960s the major football ground in the Wellington area and was the scene of a number of international matches and Chatham Cup finals.

Statistics

Test matches

There have been 64 Test matches played at the Basin Reserve as of September 2020.[20] The average runs per wicket is 31.42 while the average runs per wicket through New Zealand is 31.27. The average runs per over is 2.85. The ground is more noted as suiting fast bowlers as opposed to spin bowlers. Nine of the top ten wicket takers at the ground are fast bowlers with top wicket taker being Chris Martin with 58[21] although he only has the 13th best bowling average on the ground.[22]

Brendon McCullum has the highest innings, 302, and is the first Black Cap to pass 300 runs in a test. The previous highest score at the ground and for any NZ test cricketer was the 299 runs by Martin Crowe in 1991[23] Almost a year later in 2015, Kumar Sangakkara scored his 12000th test runs and his 11th double century there while McCullum dropped three catches and scored a two-ball duck in the first innings. It is also a ground where Trent Boult made the most of his one-handed catches. One of which was the one that removed Sangakkara in 2015. In the same test, Kane Williamson scored his first test double century, with his 6th wicket partner BJ Watling scoring a century in the second innings. Williamson also contributed on the field to help NZ win the test match. His catch also made the top play on Sports Center in America[24] In 2017, this is also the ground where Henry Nicholls scored his maiden test century. Late in that year, Tom Blundell scored his maiden Test century on debut, then walked home while still in uniform as he lives near the ground.

The highest total set by a team here in Test cricket was by the New Zealand national cricket team when they scored 680/8 dec on 14 Feb 2014 against the Indian national cricket team. The most runs scored in this ground have been by Ross Taylor- 1279 runs, Kane Williamson (1137 runs) and Martin Crowe (1123 runs). The most wickets have been taken by Chris Martin- 60 wickets, followed by Daniel Vettori-57 wickets and Richard Hadlee- 53 wickets.

ODI matches

In ODI cricket, the highest total has been set by New Zealand against Pakistan when they scored 315/7 on 6 January 2018. The most runs scored in this ground have been by Martin Crowe (345 runs), Andrew Jones (311 runs) and Nathan Astle (285 runs). The most wickets have been taken by Danny Morrison-16 wickets, Chris Harris-13 wickets and Gavin Larsen-12 wickets. Despite the propensity to score Test centuries, Basin Reserve is not a ground for scoring ODI centuries. Only 4 had ever been scored. The most recent was by Martin Guptill on 19 January 2018 against Pakistan, 43 years since Bevan Congdon done so. The only away batsman to score an ODI century here was Shoaib Mohammad of Pakistan in 1989.

See also

References

  1. ^ "BRT announces new naming rights agreement with Cello". Basin Reserve. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  2. ^ England Cricket legend W. G. Grace remembered at New Zealand Cricket Museum
  3. ^ "New Zealand Cricket Museum". New Zealand Cricket Museum.
  4. ^ "New Zealand Cricket Museum on NZ Museums". nzmuseums.co.nz. Te Papa.
  5. ^ Boyack, Nicholas (18 December 2021). "Bradman and Crowe open the batting at cricket museum". stuff.co.nz. Dominion Post.
  6. ^ [1] 1 October 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ "3. The 1855 Wairarapa earthquake – Historic earthquakes – Te Ara: The Encyclopedia of New Zealand". Teara.govt.nz. 13 July 2012. Retrieved 14 February 2014.
  8. ^ a b Neely, D., Romanos, J. (2003). The Basin – An Illustrated History of the Basin Reserve. Canterbury University Press.
  9. ^ "William Wakefield Memorial". Cricket Wellington. Retrieved 25 May 2014.
  10. ^ a b "Basin Reserve". New Zealand Heritage List/Rārangi Kōrero. Heritage New Zealand. Retrieved 25 May 2014.
  11. ^ "Basin Reserve Pavilion". New Zealand Heritage List/Rārangi Kōrero. Heritage New Zealand. Retrieved 1 December 2009.
  12. ^ "Basin Reserve Historic Area". New Zealand Heritage List/Rārangi Kōrero. Heritage New Zealand. Retrieved 1 December 2009.
  13. ^ "New Zealand v India: After eight years dormant, Basin's 95-year-old stand is back". Stuff. 21 February 2020. Retrieved 9 March 2020.
  14. ^ Wiren, A. F. (3 February 1909). "Basin Reserve: A fragment of its history". Evening Post: 10.
  15. ^ Bell, Jamie (27 October 2015). "The Basin Reserve: Cricket comes to play". NZ Cricket Museum. Retrieved 19 September 2018.
  16. ^ "Australasian Championships - 1911-12".
  17. ^ Fagan, Sean (2009). . rl1908.com. Australia. Archived from the original on 8 October 2010. Retrieved 27 February 2011.
  18. ^ Geenty, Mark (14 March 2011). "A minute's silence, then three hours of fun". The Dominion Post. Retrieved 17 September 2011.
  19. ^ Duff, Michelle (14 March 2011). "Fill The Basin raises more than $500,000". The Dominion Post. Retrieved 17 September 2011.
  20. ^ "Statistics / Statsguru / Basin Reserve, Wellington". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 10 September 2020.
  21. ^ . Howstat.com. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 14 February 2014.
  22. ^ . Howstat.com. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 14 February 2014.
  23. ^ . Howstat.com. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 14 February 2014.
  24. ^ Kane Williamson Catch – #1 On Sportscenter Top 10 Plays

Bibliography

External links

  • Basin Reserve at Austadiums
  • Ground Profile at ESPNcricinfo
  • .
  • "The Basin Reserve: from lagoon to land" at New Zealand Cricket Museum
  • "The Basin Reserve: cricket comes to play" at New Zealand Cricket Museum

basin, reserve, officially, known, cello, sponsorship, reasons, commonly, referred, basin, cricket, ground, wellington, zealand, been, used, test, matches, main, home, ground, wellington, firebirds, first, class, team, only, cricket, ground, have, zealand, his. The Basin Reserve officially known as the Cello Basin Reserve for sponsorship reasons 1 and commonly referred to as the Basin is a cricket ground in Wellington New Zealand It has been used for Test matches and is the main home ground for the Wellington Firebirds first class team The Basin Reserve is the only cricket ground to have New Zealand Historic Place status Category 2 as it is the oldest Test cricket ground in the country 2 The ground has been used for events other than cricket such as concerts sports events and other social gatherings but now it is mostly used for cricket particularly Test matches Cello Basin ReserveThe BasinA view of Basin Reserve in 2008Ground informationLocationMount Cook Wellington New ZealandCoordinates41 18 1 S 174 46 49 E 41 30028 S 174 78028 E 41 30028 174 78028 Coordinates 41 18 1 S 174 46 49 E 41 30028 S 174 78028 E 41 30028 174 78028Establishment1868Capacity11 600End namesVance Stand EndScoreboard EndInternational informationFirst Test24 27 January 1930 New Zealand v EnglandLast Test17 20 March 2023 New Zealand v Sri LankaFirst ODI9 March 1975 New Zealand v EnglandLast ODI26 March 2021 New Zealand v BangladeshFirst women s Test20 23 March 1948 New Zealand v AustraliaLast women s Test26 29 January 1990 New Zealand v AustraliaFirst WODI23 January 1982 Australia v EnglandLast WODI11 December 2022 New Zealand v BangladeshFirst WT20I28 February 2016 New Zealand v AustraliaLast WT20I10 February 2020 New Zealand v South AfricaTeam informationWellington 1873 present As of 20 March 2023Source CricketArchiveThe New Zealand Cricket Museum is located in the Old Grandstand It houses cricket memorabilia and a reference library It opened in 1987 and was relaunched in 2021 3 4 5 Contents 1 Location 2 Construction history 3 Event history 4 Statistics 4 1 Test matches 4 2 ODI matches 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksLocation EditThe Basin Reserve is two kilometres south of the Wellington CBD at the foot of Mount Victoria Government House St Marks Church School and the Wellington College boys school are to the south of the Basin across the street At the eastern end of the basin is the Mount Victoria Tunnel which increased the traffic flow around the Basin Reserve when it was built in 1931 The Basin Reserve is also surrounded by numerous other Wellington landmarks including Mount Cook Barracks the National War Memorial several colleges and high schools the Caledonian Hotel and the former Dominion Museum A fire station is located across the street from the ground traditionally its occupants would watch ongoing matches during their down time and would set off the station s siren to mark New Zealand wickets taken or when a batsman reached a milestone like a 50 or century The Basin Reserve is the intersection point for the Wellington suburbs of Mount Cook Newtown and Mount Victoria 6 Construction history EditThe area that is now Basin Reserve was originally a lake known as the Basin Lake and there were plans to connect it to the sea by a canal to make it an alternative inner city harbour with major warehouses and factories alongside it However the massive 1855 Wairarapa earthquake uplifted the area nearly 1 8 m 5 9 ft and turned the lake into a swamp 7 Due to the colonists English roots sport particularly cricket was a vital part of the community s way to relax However no land had been allocated by the city planners for recreational reserves Although natural grounds such as the Te Aro flat provided a small area for matches the colonists wanted more recreational land than they had The matter became dire as buildings began to be erected on these plains as flat land was hard to find in the mountainous Wellington So after the 1855 earthquake which historians estimate measured magnitude 8 8 influential citizens seized the chance in 1857 to suggest that the new land be drained and made into a recreational reserve The Wellington council accepted the proposal and on 3 February 1863 prisoners from the Mount Cook Gaol began to level and drain the new land The swamp was drained by September and a fence and hedges were placed around the entire area However massive population influxes from 1863 to 1866 caused mostly by the Parliament being situated in Wellington hampered construction on the Basin Reserve as workers were pulled to other areas After a council meeting on 11 December 1866 the Basin Reserve became Wellington s official cricket ground No cattle or horses were allowed in the ground and only small hedges and shrubs were allowed to be planted so as not to hamper cricket games Soon after on 11 January 1868 the first game of cricket was played although the ground had numerous stones and thistles on it which the umpire later apologised for as some players got injured from them Although it was the opening day no ceremony or music was played nor was the opening advertised with banners Soon after that first event the Highland Games began to be held at the Basin Reserve The games were organised by the Wellingtonian Caledonian Society of which their headquarters The Caledonian Hotel still stands towards the south of the Basin Reserve The society offered up prize money which brought many competitors to the region Due to their success the society petitioned to have new grandstands built at the western end of the Basin Reserve They would measure 44 by 20 ft 13 4 by 6 1 m and would cost approximately 250 300 The stands would also hold food stalls and ground keepers However for the following years even up until reportedly 1872 the Basin Reserve grounds were still extremely swampy with small pools of swamp water and various weeds and shrubs sprouting over the fields In late 1872 horses were used to level the playing field and this greatly improved the conditions Spectators and the William Wakefield Memorial In 1882 the William Wakefield Memorial was erected at the Basin Reserve The monument had been in storage for many years and it was finally erected to commemorate one of the city s founders William Wakefield at the main sports ground 9 10 The pavilion has been a Category II registered Historic Place since 1982 11 and the entire Basin Reserve has been a registered Historic Area since 1998 12 The William Wakefield Memorial has a Category I registration 10 In 2012 the Museum Stand of the Basin was declared an earthquake risk and closed a new player s pavilion was opened in December 2018 and renamed in 2020 in honour of the former Test cricketer Ewen Chatfield 13 Event history Edit Crowd in a Test match Between England and New Zealand in Basin Reserve in 2008 The first ever event played on the Basin Reserve was a one day cricket match on 11 January 1868 between the Wellington Volunteers and the crew of HMS Falcon which was docked in Wellington 14 However the game was hampered with injuries from numerous stones and thistles in the grass which led to the injury of some players The umpire apologised after the game to the players for the poor conditions of play 15 After that first event local societies began organising athletic and sport meetings at the Basin Reserve These meetings were eventually called the Highland Games and it was their success which led to the construction of the ground s grand stand The events included athletics racing dancing and later wood chopping and cycling However the ground was still swampy in some areas but was remedied in late 1872 This allowed the first first class game Wellington against Auckland to be played on 30 November 1873 which Wellington won easily Another first at the Basin Reserve is reputedly what was the first game of rugby in the North Island 8 The first rugby game held at the Basin Reserve was between the Wellington football team and the crew of HMS Rosario which the sailors won by a single goal The Australasian athletic championships were held at Basin Reserve on 26 27 December 1911 These were a combined Australian and New Zealand championship in which New Zealanders won all the track events and Australians won all the field events 16 Before sailing on the 1921 22 Kangaroo tour of Great Britain the Australian rugby league team stopped in Wellington for an exhibition match at the Basin Reserve 17 The main scoreboard named after cricket historian Don NeelyThe first Test match played at the ground was between New Zealand and England beginning on 24 January 1930 One day international cricket was played at the Basin Reserve until 1999 after which it moved to the larger crowd capacity Westpac Stadium on the other side of Wellington In what may be a one off occasion it returned during the Australian Tour in 2005 following a decision that the pitch at Hamilton s Westpac Park was unfit for cricket however it is scheduled to host two more One day internationals against Pakistan in 2017 18 and One day international against India in 2018 19 On 13 March 2011 the Basin Reserve was host to Fill the Basin a cricket event intended to raise money for the 2011 Canterbury earthquake The game was played in front of more than 10 000 people with people sitting between the boundary rope and the fence This is the biggest crowd at the Basin Reserve in the modern era Players involved in the match included Shane Warne Stephen Fleming Tana Umaga Richard Hadlee Martin Crowe other famous former New Zealand cricketers current All Blacks Richie McCaw and Conrad Smith and actors Russell Crowe Ian McKellen 18 More than 500 000 was raised towards the relief efforts 19 In addition to cricket other sports have also used the Basin Reserve including rugby union a rugby league Test match a football pre season match and exhibition Australian rules football matches The Basin Reserve was during the 1950s and 1960s the major football ground in the Wellington area and was the scene of a number of international matches and Chatham Cup finals Statistics EditTest matches Edit There have been 64 Test matches played at the Basin Reserve as of September 2020 20 The average runs per wicket is 31 42 while the average runs per wicket through New Zealand is 31 27 The average runs per over is 2 85 The ground is more noted as suiting fast bowlers as opposed to spin bowlers Nine of the top ten wicket takers at the ground are fast bowlers with top wicket taker being Chris Martin with 58 21 although he only has the 13th best bowling average on the ground 22 Brendon McCullum has the highest innings 302 and is the first Black Cap to pass 300 runs in a test The previous highest score at the ground and for any NZ test cricketer was the 299 runs by Martin Crowe in 1991 23 Almost a year later in 2015 Kumar Sangakkara scored his 12000th test runs and his 11th double century there while McCullum dropped three catches and scored a two ball duck in the first innings It is also a ground where Trent Boult made the most of his one handed catches One of which was the one that removed Sangakkara in 2015 In the same test Kane Williamson scored his first test double century with his 6th wicket partner BJ Watling scoring a century in the second innings Williamson also contributed on the field to help NZ win the test match His catch also made the top play on Sports Center in America 24 In 2017 this is also the ground where Henry Nicholls scored his maiden test century Late in that year Tom Blundell scored his maiden Test century on debut then walked home while still in uniform as he lives near the ground The highest total set by a team here in Test cricket was by the New Zealand national cricket team when they scored 680 8 dec on 14 Feb 2014 against the Indian national cricket team The most runs scored in this ground have been by Ross Taylor 1279 runs Kane Williamson 1137 runs and Martin Crowe 1123 runs The most wickets have been taken by Chris Martin 60 wickets followed by Daniel Vettori 57 wickets and Richard Hadlee 53 wickets ODI matches Edit In ODI cricket the highest total has been set by New Zealand against Pakistan when they scored 315 7 on 6 January 2018 The most runs scored in this ground have been by Martin Crowe 345 runs Andrew Jones 311 runs and Nathan Astle 285 runs The most wickets have been taken by Danny Morrison 16 wickets Chris Harris 13 wickets and Gavin Larsen 12 wickets Despite the propensity to score Test centuries Basin Reserve is not a ground for scoring ODI centuries Only 4 had ever been scored The most recent was by Martin Guptill on 19 January 2018 against Pakistan 43 years since Bevan Congdon done so The only away batsman to score an ODI century here was Shoaib Mohammad of Pakistan in 1989 See also Edit Cricket portalList of Test cricket grounds List of international cricket centuries at Basin Reserve List of international cricket five wicket hauls at Basin ReserveReferences Edit BRT announces new naming rights agreement with Cello Basin Reserve Retrieved 10 October 2021 England Cricket legendW G Grace remembered at New Zealand Cricket Museum New Zealand Cricket Museum New Zealand Cricket Museum New Zealand Cricket Museum on NZ Museums nzmuseums co nz Te Papa Boyack Nicholas 18 December 2021 Bradman and Crowe open the batting at cricket museum stuff co nz Dominion Post 1 Archived 1 October 2006 at the Wayback Machine 3 The 1855 Wairarapa earthquake Historic earthquakes Te Ara The Encyclopedia of New Zealand Teara govt nz 13 July 2012 Retrieved 14 February 2014 a b Neely D Romanos J 2003 The Basin An Illustrated History of the Basin Reserve Canterbury University Press William Wakefield Memorial Cricket Wellington Retrieved 25 May 2014 a b Basin Reserve New Zealand Heritage List Rarangi Kōrero Heritage New Zealand Retrieved 25 May 2014 Basin Reserve Pavilion New Zealand Heritage List Rarangi Kōrero Heritage New Zealand Retrieved 1 December 2009 Basin Reserve Historic Area New Zealand Heritage List Rarangi Kōrero Heritage New Zealand Retrieved 1 December 2009 New Zealand v India After eight years dormant Basin s 95 year old stand is back Stuff 21 February 2020 Retrieved 9 March 2020 Wiren A F 3 February 1909 Basin Reserve A fragment of its history Evening Post 10 Bell Jamie 27 October 2015 The Basin Reserve Cricket comes to play NZ Cricket Museum Retrieved 19 September 2018 Australasian Championships 1911 12 Fagan Sean 2009 New Zealand Kangaroos rl1908 com Australia Archived from the original on 8 October 2010 Retrieved 27 February 2011 Geenty Mark 14 March 2011 A minute s silence then three hours of fun The Dominion Post Retrieved 17 September 2011 Duff Michelle 14 March 2011 Fill The Basin raises more than 500 000 The Dominion Post Retrieved 17 September 2011 Statistics Statsguru Basin Reserve Wellington ESPN Cricinfo Retrieved 10 September 2020 HowSTAT Grounds Top Players Howstat com Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 14 February 2014 HowSTAT Grounds Top Players Howstat com Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 14 February 2014 HowSTAT Grounds Top Players Howstat com Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 14 February 2014 Kane Williamson Catch 1 On Sportscenter Top 10 PlaysBibliography EditNeely D Romanos J 2003 The Basin An Illustrated History of the Basin Reserve Canterbury University Press ISBN 1 877257 05 2 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Basin Reserve Basin Reserve at Austadiums Ground Profile at ESPNcricinfo Quick information about the Basin Reserve The Basin Reserve from lagoon to land at New Zealand Cricket Museum The Basin Reserve cricket comes to play at New Zealand Cricket Museum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Basin Reserve amp oldid 1150409791, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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