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Plough Lane

Plough Lane, known as Cherry Red Records Stadium for sponsorship reasons,[2] is a multi-purpose football stadium in Wimbledon, south-west London, which has been the home of AFC Wimbledon since 3 November 2020.[1] A groundshare with rugby league side London Broncos began in 2022.[3]

The Cherry Red Records Stadium
Plough Lane
LocationPlough Lane, Wimbledon
Coordinates51°25′53″N 0°11′12″W / 51.43139°N 0.18667°W / 51.43139; -0.18667
Public transit Haydons Road, Earlsfield, Wimbledon
Wimbledon, Wimbledon Park, Tooting Broadway
OwnerAFC Wimbledon
OperatorAFC Wimbledon
Capacity9,215
Construction
Broke ground2019
Opened3 November 2020[1]
Construction cost£34 million
ArchitectKSS Design Group
BuilderBuckingham Group
Tenants
AFC Wimbledon (2020–present)
London Broncos (2022–present)
AFC Wimbledon Women (selected matches)

Stands edit

  • West Stand – 4,267 capacity
  • South Stand (rail seating terrace) – 1,092 capacity
  • East Stand – 2,391 capacity
  • North Stand (away end) – 1,465 capacity

History edit

Wimbledon F.C. played its matches at the original Plough Lane stadium from 1912 until 1991. AFC Wimbledon's new stadium lies approximately 200 yards further east. After 1991 Wimbledon F.C. began a ground-share with Crystal Palace at Selhurst Park, with the intention of moving to a new all-seater stadium elsewhere at a later date due to the original Plough Lane stadium being considered unsuitable for conversion into a modern all-seater stadium. Numerous locations within and beyond the borders of Merton were considered for a possible new stadium, but none of these came to fruition, and in 2003 the original Wimbledon club relocated 70 miles north to Milton Keynes, being rebranded as Milton Keynes Dons the following year.

In 2002 a phoenix club, AFC Wimbledon, was formed by a section of the club's supporters after the Football Association gave Wimbledon F.C. permission to move to Milton Keynes. In the meantime, AFC Wimbledon played at Kingsmeadow, at that time the home of Kingstonian.

Since its inception, AFC Wimbledon stated that one of its primary aims was to return to Merton, with a new stadium close to what it regards as its "spiritual home" of the original Plough Lane. This aim formed the basis of a project to create a new purpose-built stadium on the site of the Wimbledon Greyhound Stadium, located approximately 200 yards from the original Plough Lane football stadium, where the original Wimbledon side played for 80 years.

Plans to develop the greyhound stadium site as either a multi-purpose stadium or as a football stadium were publicised frequently by the club and the media prior to 2013. In 2013 AFC Wimbledon announced that discussions were underway with Merton Council over a joint bid for the greyhound stadium and the surrounding land, in cooperation with developer Galliard Homes, to build a new football stadium, 600 residential properties and a range of community facilities.[4]

Development edit

Construction proceeded with the permanent west stand initially, with main entry from the south off Plough Lane. This is a four-storey structure with general admission access from the first floor, and hospitality above. This structure seats 4,267 spectators; semi-permanent stands on the other three sides brings initial capacity to 9,215.[5][6] Among the semi-permanent seating, the most vocal home fans will be in the south, which will include a safe standing area; a family area along the east; and away fans will be in the north stand, which is isolated with its own entry.[7] A secondary entrance for home fans in the south and east stands is located on the easterly pedestrian-only street, Greyhound Parade.

The plans for the football stadium were approved unanimously by Merton Council on 10 December 2015.[8][9] Clearance of the site in preparation for the new football stadium and housing was begun on 16 March 2018.[10] The stadium's opening was initially planned for summer 2019, but did not take place until 3 November 2020.[11] The land's freehold was transferred to an AFC Wimbledon subsidiary on 24 December 2018, among other transactions that also formally transferred ownership of Kingsmeadow to Chelsea.[12]

Finances edit

The club thus purchased and cleared the site of the former Wimbledon Greyhound Stadium in anticipation of construction. In 2019 it was announced that a minimum of £2 million in crowdfunding would be needed to construct a scaled-down version of the original design with a single permanent stand and an initial capacity of 9,000; as of August 2019, the £2 million mark had been raised through Seedrs.[13] In November 2019 it emerged that financing of a final £11m needed to complete the ground as envisioned was not forthcoming; the club's fan ownership initially considered scaling down the project, or accepting outside investment into the club by relinquishing ownership to meet the shortfall.[14] However, alternative financing was quickly raised by club supporters by way of a bond issue which raised over £5 million. In May 2020, the final remaining financing needed to sign all construction contracts was confirmed following key investment from local businessman Nick Robertson.[15]

 
Panoramic view of the stadium from the south corner of the east stand, looking across to the west stand

Opening edit

AFC Wimbledon played their first match at the ground on 3 November 2020 against Doncaster Rovers - a 2–2 draw,[16] with the first ever goal at the new stadium scored by Wimbledon's Joe Pigott in the 18th minute of that match.[17] There were no fans in attendance though due to COVID-19 restrictions.

 
Plough Lane in rugby league configuration, as the London Broncos players are warming up

In December 2020, the Dons Trust announced that they were discussing a potential groundshare agreement with Rugby League side London Broncos.[18] A vote by the Trust membership in March 2021 resulted in 91.7% of those voting in favour.[19] It was subject to revised planning permission which had been opposed by a group of residents[20] but these issues were resolved before the 2022 season.

On 25 March 2021, an NHS COVID-19 vaccination centre opened in the stadium's event space; a number of the first to be vaccinated were club supporters.[21]

The first game at the new stadium with fans was on 18 May 2021 when 2,000 people watched the Dons play Liverpool's under-23 side in a test match.[22] The first match to take place at the ground with a capacity crowd was AFC Wimbledon's 3–3 draw against Bolton Wanderers on 14 August 2021.[23]

On 16 September 2021, the club agreed a further three year deal with their Kingsmeadow stadium sponsor Cherry Red Records and thus Plough Lane was renamed the Cherry Red Records Stadium.

On 30 January 2022, the London Broncos played their first match at Plough Lane against the Widnes Vikings.

On 5 March 2022, the FA Women's Continental League Cup Final between Chelsea Women and Manchester City Women was staged there.

The largest attendance at Plough Lane of 8,623 was recorded on 27 April 2024 for a league game against Walsall. The previous record and the highest for a cup game was 8,595 on 6 January 2024 for an FA Cup third round match against Ipswich Town.

Sponsorship edit

Current sponsors for the various parts of the stadium are:

The stadium as a whole is sponsored by Cherry Red Records since 16 September 2021; the company had previously been stadium sponsors at Kingsmeadow.[2]

  • The Ry Stand – As they had at Kingsmeadow under the name RyGas, the RyGroup of tradesmens' services are sponsoring the east stand opposite the main stand.[24]
  • The Cherry Red Records End – The north, away, stand.[25]
  • The Cappagh Stand – The west, or main, stand; sponsored by Cappagh, a local construction group.[26]
  • The South London Movers Stand – The south, home-supporters' stand; sponsored by South London Movers, a local bespoke-removals company.[27]

Expansion edit

The ground has planning permission to be expanded to 20,000 spectators.[28]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Palmer, Joe (29 September 2020). "An update from our Chief Executive". AFC Wimbledon. Retrieved 30 September 2020.
  2. ^ a b "New stadium sponsors announced". afcwimbledon.co.uk. AFC Wimbledon. Retrieved 16 September 2021.
  3. ^ Media, Broncos (16 July 2021). "Exciting groundshare partnership with AFC Wimbledon approved". London Broncos RL. Retrieved 22 July 2021.
  4. ^ Samuelson, Erik (19 September 2013). "New stadium a step closer". AFC Wimbledon. Retrieved 10 December 2015.
  5. ^ "Stadium update (June 2019): Part 2 – stadium design". YouTube. AFC Wimbledon. Retrieved 1 July 2019.
  6. ^ "Home Sweet Home". AFC Wimbledon. 8 July 2019. Retrieved 8 July 2019.
  7. ^ "DON'T MISS OUR HISTORIC RETURN TO PLOUGH LANE" (PDF). wearewimbledon.com. AFC Wimbledon. Retrieved 3 July 2020.
  8. ^ "Go-ahead for new stadium". AFC Wimbledon. 10 December 2015. Retrieved 10 December 2015.
  9. ^ "Wimbledon's Plough Lane return approved by planners". BBC News. 10 December 2015. Retrieved 10 December 2015.
  10. ^ "Demolition work starts to clear the way for new stadium". AFC Wimbledon. 16 March 2018. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
  11. ^ Hurst, Samantha (6 August 2019). "AFC Wimbledon Is Now Seeking £2 Million on Seedrs to Help Finance Return to a New Stadium on Plough Lane". Crowdfund Insider. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
  12. ^ "Plough Lane – land transfer complete". AFC Wimbledon. Retrieved 24 December 2018.
  13. ^ Collings, Simon (12 June 2019). "AFC Wimbledon hope to crowdfund £7m towards new Plough Lane stadium". Evening Standard. Retrieved 14 August 2019.
  14. ^ "Plough Lane: AFC Wimbledon say they need further £11m to complete new stadium". BBC Sport. 26 November 2019. Retrieved 26 November 2019.
  15. ^ "Stadium Announcement". AFC Wimbledon. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
  16. ^ "AFC Wimbledon 2–2 Doncaster Rovers". BBC Sport. Retrieved 3 November 2020.
  17. ^ Rosser, Jack (3 November 2020). "AFC Wimbledon denied in first Plough Lane game - as it happened!". Evening Standard. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  18. ^ "Following preliminary discussions with @LondonBroncosRL we have emailed a survey and Q&A..." The Dons Trust. Twitter. Retrieved 13 December 2020.
  19. ^ "Outcome of SGM resolution re London Broncos" (PDF). The Dons Trust. Retrieved 5 April 2021.
  20. ^ "Should Rugby be Allowed at AFC Wimbledon's Ground?". The Wimbledon Society. 16 May 2021. Retrieved 28 May 2021.
  21. ^ "NHS Covid-19 vaccination centre opens at Plough Lane". AFC Wimbledon. Retrieved 25 March 2021.
  22. ^ Doyle, Tom (19 May 2021). "'My wish has been granted' - AFC Wimbledon fans return to Plough Lane". Evening Standard. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  23. ^ "AFC Wimbledon 3-3 Bolton Wanderers". BBC Sport.
  24. ^ "Today we visit the new @AFCWimbledon ground #NewPloughPlane to see @The_RyGroup Stand". Ry. Twitter. Retrieved 19 November 2020.
  25. ^ "AFC WIMBLEDON| Cherry Red Sponsor Away Stand at Plough Lane". Cherry Red Records. 26 November 2020. Retrieved 3 December 2020.
  26. ^ "Ivor's message of thanks to sponsors ahead of landmark night". AFC Wimbledon. Retrieved 26 November 2020.
  27. ^ "South London Movers: South Stand Sponsors". AFC Wimbledon. Retrieved 12 August 2021.
  28. ^ "AFC Wimbledon Stadium Development". MSP Capital. Retrieved 8 March 2023.

External links edit

  • Official website

plough, lane, demolished, football, stadium, 1912, 1998, former, greyhound, stadium, this, site, demolished, wimbledon, stadium, known, cherry, records, stadium, sponsorship, reasons, multi, purpose, football, stadium, wimbledon, south, west, london, which, be. For the demolished football stadium see Plough Lane 1912 1998 For the former greyhound stadium on this site now demolished see Wimbledon Stadium Plough Lane known as Cherry Red Records Stadium for sponsorship reasons 2 is a multi purpose football stadium in Wimbledon south west London which has been the home of AFC Wimbledon since 3 November 2020 1 A groundshare with rugby league side London Broncos began in 2022 3 The Cherry Red Records StadiumPlough LaneLocationPlough Lane WimbledonCoordinates51 25 53 N 0 11 12 W 51 43139 N 0 18667 W 51 43139 0 18667Public transitHaydons Road Earlsfield Wimbledon Wimbledon Wimbledon Park Tooting BroadwayOwnerAFC WimbledonOperatorAFC WimbledonCapacity9 215ConstructionBroke ground2019Opened3 November 2020 1 Construction cost 34 millionArchitectKSS Design GroupBuilderBuckingham GroupTenantsAFC Wimbledon 2020 present London Broncos 2022 present AFC Wimbledon Women selected matches Contents 1 Stands 2 History 3 Development 3 1 Finances 4 Opening 4 1 Sponsorship 5 Expansion 6 References 7 External linksStands editWest Stand 4 267 capacity South Stand rail seating terrace 1 092 capacity East Stand 2 391 capacity North Stand away end 1 465 capacityHistory editWimbledon F C played its matches at the original Plough Lane stadium from 1912 until 1991 AFC Wimbledon s new stadium lies approximately 200 yards further east After 1991 Wimbledon F C began a ground share with Crystal Palace at Selhurst Park with the intention of moving to a new all seater stadium elsewhere at a later date due to the original Plough Lane stadium being considered unsuitable for conversion into a modern all seater stadium Numerous locations within and beyond the borders of Merton were considered for a possible new stadium but none of these came to fruition and in 2003 the original Wimbledon club relocated 70 miles north to Milton Keynes being rebranded as Milton Keynes Dons the following year In 2002 a phoenix club AFC Wimbledon was formed by a section of the club s supporters after the Football Association gave Wimbledon F C permission to move to Milton Keynes In the meantime AFC Wimbledon played at Kingsmeadow at that time the home of Kingstonian Since its inception AFC Wimbledon stated that one of its primary aims was to return to Merton with a new stadium close to what it regards as its spiritual home of the original Plough Lane This aim formed the basis of a project to create a new purpose built stadium on the site of the Wimbledon Greyhound Stadium located approximately 200 yards from the original Plough Lane football stadium where the original Wimbledon side played for 80 years Plans to develop the greyhound stadium site as either a multi purpose stadium or as a football stadium were publicised frequently by the club and the media prior to 2013 In 2013 AFC Wimbledon announced that discussions were underway with Merton Council over a joint bid for the greyhound stadium and the surrounding land in cooperation with developer Galliard Homes to build a new football stadium 600 residential properties and a range of community facilities 4 Development editConstruction proceeded with the permanent west stand initially with main entry from the south off Plough Lane This is a four storey structure with general admission access from the first floor and hospitality above This structure seats 4 267 spectators semi permanent stands on the other three sides brings initial capacity to 9 215 5 6 Among the semi permanent seating the most vocal home fans will be in the south which will include a safe standing area a family area along the east and away fans will be in the north stand which is isolated with its own entry 7 A secondary entrance for home fans in the south and east stands is located on the easterly pedestrian only street Greyhound Parade The plans for the football stadium were approved unanimously by Merton Council on 10 December 2015 8 9 Clearance of the site in preparation for the new football stadium and housing was begun on 16 March 2018 10 The stadium s opening was initially planned for summer 2019 but did not take place until 3 November 2020 11 The land s freehold was transferred to an AFC Wimbledon subsidiary on 24 December 2018 among other transactions that also formally transferred ownership of Kingsmeadow to Chelsea 12 Finances edit The club thus purchased and cleared the site of the former Wimbledon Greyhound Stadium in anticipation of construction In 2019 it was announced that a minimum of 2 million in crowdfunding would be needed to construct a scaled down version of the original design with a single permanent stand and an initial capacity of 9 000 as of August 2019 the 2 million mark had been raised through Seedrs 13 In November 2019 it emerged that financing of a final 11m needed to complete the ground as envisioned was not forthcoming the club s fan ownership initially considered scaling down the project or accepting outside investment into the club by relinquishing ownership to meet the shortfall 14 However alternative financing was quickly raised by club supporters by way of a bond issue which raised over 5 million In May 2020 the final remaining financing needed to sign all construction contracts was confirmed following key investment from local businessman Nick Robertson 15 nbsp Panoramic view of the stadium from the south corner of the east stand looking across to the west standOpening editAFC Wimbledon played their first match at the ground on 3 November 2020 against Doncaster Rovers a 2 2 draw 16 with the first ever goal at the new stadium scored by Wimbledon s Joe Pigott in the 18th minute of that match 17 There were no fans in attendance though due to COVID 19 restrictions nbsp Plough Lane in rugby league configuration as the London Broncos players are warming up In December 2020 the Dons Trust announced that they were discussing a potential groundshare agreement with Rugby League side London Broncos 18 A vote by the Trust membership in March 2021 resulted in 91 7 of those voting in favour 19 It was subject to revised planning permission which had been opposed by a group of residents 20 but these issues were resolved before the 2022 season On 25 March 2021 an NHS COVID 19 vaccination centre opened in the stadium s event space a number of the first to be vaccinated were club supporters 21 The first game at the new stadium with fans was on 18 May 2021 when 2 000 people watched the Dons play Liverpool s under 23 side in a test match 22 The first match to take place at the ground with a capacity crowd was AFC Wimbledon s 3 3 draw against Bolton Wanderers on 14 August 2021 23 On 16 September 2021 the club agreed a further three year deal with their Kingsmeadow stadium sponsor Cherry Red Records and thus Plough Lane was renamed the Cherry Red Records Stadium On 30 January 2022 the London Broncos played their first match at Plough Lane against the Widnes Vikings On 5 March 2022 the FA Women s Continental League Cup Final between Chelsea Women and Manchester City Women was staged there The largest attendance at Plough Lane of 8 623 was recorded on 27 April 2024 for a league game against Walsall The previous record and the highest for a cup game was 8 595 on 6 January 2024 for an FA Cup third round match against Ipswich Town Sponsorship edit Current sponsors for the various parts of the stadium are The stadium as a whole is sponsored by Cherry Red Records since 16 September 2021 the company had previously been stadium sponsors at Kingsmeadow 2 The Ry Stand As they had at Kingsmeadow under the name RyGas the RyGroup of tradesmens services are sponsoring the east stand opposite the main stand 24 The Cherry Red Records End The north away stand 25 The Cappagh Stand The west or main stand sponsored by Cappagh a local construction group 26 The South London Movers Stand The south home supporters stand sponsored by South London Movers a local bespoke removals company 27 Expansion editThe ground has planning permission to be expanded to 20 000 spectators 28 References edit a b Palmer Joe 29 September 2020 An update from our Chief Executive AFC Wimbledon Retrieved 30 September 2020 a b New stadium sponsors announced afcwimbledon co uk AFC Wimbledon Retrieved 16 September 2021 Media Broncos 16 July 2021 Exciting groundshare partnership with AFC Wimbledon approved London Broncos RL Retrieved 22 July 2021 Samuelson Erik 19 September 2013 New stadium a step closer AFC Wimbledon Retrieved 10 December 2015 Stadium update June 2019 Part 2 stadium design YouTube AFC Wimbledon Retrieved 1 July 2019 Home Sweet Home AFC Wimbledon 8 July 2019 Retrieved 8 July 2019 DON T MISS OUR HISTORIC RETURN TO PLOUGH LANE PDF wearewimbledon com AFC Wimbledon Retrieved 3 July 2020 Go ahead for new stadium AFC Wimbledon 10 December 2015 Retrieved 10 December 2015 Wimbledon s Plough Lane return approved by planners BBC News 10 December 2015 Retrieved 10 December 2015 Demolition work starts to clear the way for new stadium AFC Wimbledon 16 March 2018 Retrieved 15 April 2018 Hurst Samantha 6 August 2019 AFC Wimbledon Is Now Seeking 2 Million on Seedrs to Help Finance Return to a New Stadium on Plough Lane Crowdfund Insider Retrieved 24 August 2019 Plough Lane land transfer complete AFC Wimbledon Retrieved 24 December 2018 Collings Simon 12 June 2019 AFC Wimbledon hope to crowdfund 7m towards new Plough Lane stadium Evening Standard Retrieved 14 August 2019 Plough Lane AFC Wimbledon say they need further 11m to complete new stadium BBC Sport 26 November 2019 Retrieved 26 November 2019 Stadium Announcement AFC Wimbledon Retrieved 4 June 2020 AFC Wimbledon 2 2 Doncaster Rovers BBC Sport Retrieved 3 November 2020 Rosser Jack 3 November 2020 AFC Wimbledon denied in first Plough Lane game as it happened Evening Standard Retrieved 23 March 2023 Following preliminary discussions with LondonBroncosRL we have emailed a survey and Q amp A The Dons Trust Twitter Retrieved 13 December 2020 Outcome of SGM resolution re London Broncos PDF The Dons Trust Retrieved 5 April 2021 Should Rugby be Allowed at AFC Wimbledon s Ground The Wimbledon Society 16 May 2021 Retrieved 28 May 2021 NHS Covid 19 vaccination centre opens at Plough Lane AFC Wimbledon Retrieved 25 March 2021 Doyle Tom 19 May 2021 My wish has been granted AFC Wimbledon fans return to Plough Lane Evening Standard Retrieved 23 March 2023 AFC Wimbledon 3 3 Bolton Wanderers BBC Sport Today we visit the new AFCWimbledon ground NewPloughPlane to see The RyGroup Stand Ry Twitter Retrieved 19 November 2020 AFC WIMBLEDON Cherry Red Sponsor Away Stand at Plough Lane Cherry Red Records 26 November 2020 Retrieved 3 December 2020 Ivor s message of thanks to sponsors ahead of landmark night AFC Wimbledon Retrieved 26 November 2020 South London Movers South Stand Sponsors AFC Wimbledon Retrieved 12 August 2021 AFC Wimbledon Stadium Development MSP Capital Retrieved 8 March 2023 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Plough Lane Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Plough Lane amp oldid 1222165226, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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