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Sydney Cricket Ground

The Sydney Cricket Ground (SCG) is a sports stadium in Sydney, Australia. It is used for Test, One Day International and Twenty20 cricket, as well as, Australian rules football and occasionally for rugby league, rugby union and association football. It is the home ground for the New South Wales Blues cricket team, the Sydney Sixers of the Big Bash League and the Sydney Swans of the Australian Football League. It is owned and operated by the Venues NSW, who also hold responsibility for the Sydney Football Stadium.

Sydney Cricket Ground
SCG
During the fifth ODI between Australia and India.
Ground information
LocationMoore Park, Sydney, New South Wales
Coordinates33°53′30″S 151°13′29″E / 33.89167°S 151.22472°E / -33.89167; 151.22472Coordinates: 33°53′30″S 151°13′29″E / 33.89167°S 151.22472°E / -33.89167; 151.22472
Establishment1851; 172 years ago (1851)
Capacity48,000[1][2]
OwnerGovernment of New South Wales via Venues NSW
OperatorVenues NSW
TenantsCricket
Australia national cricket team
New South Wales cricket team
Sydney Sixers (BBL)
Sydney Sixers (WBBL)
Australian Rules
Sydney Swans (AFL)
End names
Paddington End (Northern End)
Randwick End (Southern End)
International information
First Test17–21 February 1882:
 Australia v  England
Last Test4–8 January 2023:
 Australia v  South Africa
First ODI13 January 1979:
 Australia v  England
Last ODI19 November 2022:
 Australia v  England
First T20I9 January 2007:
 Australia v  England
Last T20I9 November 2022:
 New Zealand v  Pakistan
First women's Test4–8 January 1935:
 Australia v  England
Last women's Test19–22 February 1949:
 Australia v  England
First WODI29 January 2000:
 Australia v  England
Last WODI12 December 2012:
 Australia v  New Zealand
First WT20I15 February 2009:
 Australia v  New Zealand
Last WT20I31 January 2016:
 Australia v  India
Team information
New South Wales Blues (1878–present)
Sydney Swans (AFL) (1982–present)
Sydney Sixers (BBL) (2011–present)
Sydney Sixers (WBBL) (2015–present)
NSW Waratahs (Super Rugby) (2018–2022)
Sydney Roosters (NRL) (2019–2022)
North Melbourne (AFL) (1999–2002)
As of 4 January 2023
Source: Cricinfo

History

Beginning

In 1811, the Governor of New South Wales, Lachlan Macquarie, established the second Sydney Common, about one-and-a-half miles (about 2,400m) wide and extending south from South Head Road (now Oxford St) to where Randwick Racecourse is today. Part sandhills, part swamp and situated on the south-eastern fringe of the city, it was used as a rubbish dump in the 1850s, and not regarded as an ideal place for sport. In 1851, part of the Sydney Common south of Victoria Barracks was granted to the British Army for use as a garden and cricket ground for the soldiers. Its first user was the 11th North Devonshire Regiment which flattened and graded the southern part of the rifle range adjacent to the Barracks.

In the next couple of years, the teams from Victoria Barracks combined themselves into a more permanent organisation and called themselves the Garrison Club. The ground therefore became known as the Garrison Ground when it was first opened in February 1854.

Up until that time Hyde Park had been the main sporting and racing ground in the colony but when it was dedicated as public gardens in 1856 city cricketers and footballers had to find somewhere else to play.

In the late 1860s another part of the Sydney Common, the area west of the Garrison Ground to the then Dowling Street, was opened for public recreation. It was named Moore Park after the Mayor of Sydney, Charles Moore, who planted a number of Moreton Bay Fig trees which exist to this day. As well as the location of Sydney's first zoo, Moore Park was a regular venue for games between Sydney rugby clubs Sydney University and the Wallaroos. Sydney at the time was a small, dense city and best navigated on foot and Moore Park was on the outskirts. It was not liked so much by cricketers because it was too far from the city.

 
England v Australia at SCG, 27 January 1883

When the commander of the Sydney garrison, Lieutenant-Colonel John Richardson, aligned his soldiers to the East Sydney Cricket Club, the Garrison Ground became known as the Civil and Military Ground. In 1870 British troops left Victoria barracks and the future of the Civil and Military Ground became uncertain. However, with the closure of the Albert Ground in the 1870s, the NSW Cricket Association (NSWCA) began regular use of the Civil and Military Ground.

In 1875, the NSW Government began to upgrade the ground. Despite efforts by Victoria Barracks and then the Carlingford, Redfern, Fitzroy and Albert cricket clubs to take control, the then president of the NSWCA, Richard Driver (after whom Driver Avenue outside the ground is named), persuaded the government to let the NSWCA look after the ground's administration. In 1876, the ground was dedicated by Governor Sir Hercules Robinson.

 
The Cricket Ground in 1892

The NSWCA had influential supporters. Driver himself was a prominent MP and solicitor for the City of Sydney Council. The Minister for Lands, Thomas Garrett, was also supportive; his son was about to break into the colonial side. It is hardly surprising therefore that within a couple of years of the NSWCA taking control of the ground, the governor, Sir Hercules Robinson, appointed Driver himself, William W. Stephen and Phillip Sheridan (after whom a grandstand was named), the first trustees. Two trustees were appointed by the government and one by the NSWCA. The close relationship between the Trust and the NSWCA is evidenced by the fact that they pooled funds for the next six years. The military's link with the ground was finally severed when John Richardson and the Sydney garrison went to fight in the Sudan. The trustees then took the opportunity to rename the ground the Association Ground

In 1883 the most prominent trustee, Sheridan, regarding the ground as the responsibility of the trustees, began to act independently of the NSWCA, resulting in the NSWCA losing control of the ground. Over the next century there was constant conflict between the Trust and the NSWCA over whether other sports such as rugby, tennis and cycling, the organisers of which were all keen to use the venue, had access to it. One conflict in 1904, over the Trust's plan to hold a cycling event which clashed with a cricket match, ended up in court. The NSWCA's influence was eventually reduced even further over the years due to changes in the way the State Government appointed trustees.

Development

 
The SCG scoreboard in January 1901

By the time of the first Sydney cricket test in February 1882, the ground could boast two grandstands; the Brewongle Stand at the southern end and the original Members' Stand, which had been built in 1878 in the north west corner where the current Members' Stand now sits. On opposite sides of the ground to the stands two spectator mounds were built. They became known as The Hill and the Paddington Hill.

In 1886, the Members' Pavilion was rebuilt at a cost of £6,625. Membership was levied at two guineas.

In 1881 a loop in the tram line, which ran down Randwick Road (now Anzac Parade), was built to service the Ground and the Pastoral and Agricultural Society Ground (later the RAS Showgrounds and now Fox Studios) next door.

In 1894 the ground finally received its modern name, the Sydney Cricket Ground, which was followed by the opening of the Hill Stand, situated between The Hill and the Paddington Hill. It became known as the Bob Stand during the Depression years because it cost one shilling (a bob) to enter.

The first SCG scoreboard was built in the two weeks leading up to the 1895–1896 inter-colonial match between New South Wales and Victoria. Although it was Sheridan's idea, the design was Ned Gregory's who believed that English scoreboards were inadequate. Requiring two men to operate it, the new scoreboard was hailed as one of the wonders of the cricket world. Boards with players' names on them were placed in different slits alongside scrolls of canvas with numbers painted on them which were rolled up and down to show the changing score. Under the scoreboard was a refreshment stall which sold, among other things, oysters.

 
Sydney Cricket Ground on 12 December 1903

In 1896 the Ladies' Stand was opened, along with a concrete cycling track which circled the inside of the ground.[3] One of the carpenters who built the formwork for the track was George Bradman, father of Don Bradman. In 1898 floodlights were built over the cycling track so that night events could be held. In 1904 the scoreboard was rebuilt at the top of The Hill and in 1909 the Sheridan Stand, named after Phil Sheridan, was opened at the southern end, replacing the earlier Smokers' Stand.

In the period up to World War I the SCG was used for a wide variety of sports including athletics, tennis, baseball, football and cycling. The cycling track however was removed in 1920. In 1924 Ned Gregory's scoreboard was closed and the concrete scoreboard at the back of the Hill opened.

 
A crowded SCG during a 1930s cricket match

During the 1920s, and 1930s crowds packed into the SCG to see Don Bradman play for New South Wales and Australia. Many of the huge gate takings that Bradman brought in for the NSWCA were spent on developing the ground. A large new stand was built at the northern end in two stages. It replaced the Northern Stand and was intended to also replace the Members' and Ladies' Stands. The first stage, begun while Bradman was still playing for New South Wales, was opened in 1936 at a cost of £90,000 and named the 'M.A. Noble Stand' after the great Australian captain Monty Noble. The second stage, completed in 1973 at a cost of $2 million, was named the Bradman Stand after the great man himself.

Further redevelopment of the ground began in 1978 with the advent of World Series Cricket (WSC) and games played at night. When media giant Kerry Packer failed to obtain the television broadcast rights for cricket, he bought the top 30–40 players in the world and staged his own competition, World Series Cricket.

Packer applied to use the SCG for WSC in 1977 but the SCG Trust, which administered the ground, refused. However the NSW Labor Government, under Premier Neville Wran, amended the Sydney Sports Ground and Cricket Ground Act to remove the Trust's power to decide who played at the SCG and the NSWCA's traditional right over the ground. A new Trust was established with 12 members appointed by the Government and two elected by SCG members. The new Trust had no WSC opponents, and although legal action by the NSWCA stopped WSC games being played at the SCG in 1977, they were played there in 1978.

 
The SCG scoreboard in 1950

In the years since WSC the character of the SCG has somewhat changed. Six light towers were built in 1978 at a cost of $1.2 million so that cricket could be played at night, and two huge new stands were constructed at the southern end of the ground. The new Brewongle Stand was built on the site of the old Brewongle Stand at a cost $8.9 million and opened in 1980. The Churchill Stand, named after rugby league legend Clive Churchill, replaced the Sheridan Stand at a cost of $8.2 million and was opened in 1986.

The old concrete scoreboard was closed in 1983 and a new electronic board erected above The Hill. This board allowed the crowd to see video replays and provided more scope for advertising. The old concrete scoreboard sat behind the Doug Walters Stand unused until 2006 when it was dismantled and stored offsite to make way for the Victor Trumper Stand.[4]

The Bob Stand has been moved to North Sydney Oval, replaced by the Bill O'Reilly Stand. This stand was originally named the Pat Hills Stand, after the NSW Labor Government Minister and SCG Trust member, when it was opened in 1984. However, the incoming Greiner Government changed the name to the O'Reilly Stand after the legendary spin bowler.

The Hill also has gone but the reason for that is a little harder to pin. Up until 1991 the Hill was a grassy slope without seating. It was the 'outer ground' costing the least to get in and attracting working class patronage. The invention of the beer can and the portable cooler in the 1960s increased alcohol consumption at cricket matches which in turn fuelled bad crowd behaviour. In the 1970s the advent of limited overs games held partially at night attracted a different kind of crowd to cricket at the SCG. They were less interested in the subtleties of the game and more in the excitement and spectacle. Brawling and excessive drinking were features of the crowd on the Hill at this time. Even the introduction of individual seating on the Hill in 1991[5] failed to completely eradicate crowd misbehaviour. Stricter measures such as banning alcohol were later implemented with greater success.

 
Sydney Cricket Ground members entrance, 2007

Further developments have taken place in more recent years with the internal reconstruction of the M.A. Noble stand completed in 1994 and the opening of the NSW Cricket Centre in 1997. This facility includes indoor training wickets and administrative offices for Cricket NSW (formerly NSW Cricket Association). In 1999 the original electronic scoreboard was replaced by a new higher-definition video screen. In the 21st century the Hill has been completely redeveloped with a new 12,000 seat Victor Trumper Stand, completed in 2008. This stand brings the SCG's capacity to 46,000 spectators. During the re-development, the 2 original light towers on the hill were replaced and the 4 other light towers were upgraded,[6] a new video screen was also installed in the Clive Churchill stand, replacing the screen that was on the hill.

The SCG Trust rebuilt the MA Noble, Don Bradman and Dally Messenger stands for the 2013–14 Ashes series, it increased ground capacity to 48,000 spectators. This redevelopment was mostly completed in March 2014 at a cost of $197.5 million and also included a large new video screen.

In September 2018, construction began on a new video screen to replace the video screen at the Messenger Stand with the LED panels for the screen transferred across from the Sydney Football Stadium with an upgrade to the video screen in the Clive Churchill Stand and new LED advertising banners being installed in all of the stands except for the Members' and Ladies' pavilions. The work was completed in time for Sydney FC's first ever A-League game at the SCG.[7]

Since 2015, the Trust are keen on redeveloping the Bill O'Reilly stand, and later the Churchill and Brewongle stands, further increasing the grounds capacity. The ground will be a near complete modern "bowl" stadium with the exception of the two heritage listed Members' and Ladies' pavilions.

Stands

In its present configuration, the SCG is a playing field surrounded by a collection of separate grandstand structures. From the northern end, clockwise, they are:

  • M.A Noble, Bradman and Messenger stands – Constructed in 2013/2014. The stand contains corporate boxes, media facilities and members seating for Trust members and in the winter for eligible Swans members. The Messenger Stand is also home to the main video screen for the ground.
  • Bill O'Reilly Stand (previously named Pat Hills Stand) – Built 1984 – Corporate boxes and public reserved seating.
  • Victor Trumper Stand – Constructed in 2007/2008, replaced Yabba's Hill and Doug Walters Stand, corporate boxes and public reserved seating.
  • Clive Churchill Stand – Built 1986 – Corporate boxes and public reserved seating. It also housed the Sydney Swans training and administration facilities before those were moved to the Royal Hall of Industries Building in the former Sydney Showground precinct in 2023.[8]
  • Brewongle Stand – Built 1980 – Corporate boxes and public reserved seating. It was previously thought that the stand was named after the aboriginal word for "camping place". However the stand was named after a tea room at the Sydney Cricket Ground.[9]
 
The Brewongle and Clive Churchill stands during Sydney Swans vs Collingwood in May 2021.
  • Ladies' Pavilion – Built 1896 – Originally females-only members' seating; also used for general public admission during events with low attendance. Now general members seating. Referred to as the Jane Mcgrath Stand on Day 3 of the annual Sydney Test, also known as Mcgrath Day or Pink day.
  • Members' Pavilion – Built 1878 – Members' seating. also contains the dressing rooms used by Australian Cricket Team. Extensions were made to the pavilion in 1903.[10]

Sydney Cricket Ground Trust

 
The Sydney Cricket Ground at night after a rugby match

The Sydney Cricket and Sports Ground Trust (popularly known as the Sydney Cricket Ground Trust) was the agency that operated the Sydney Cricket Ground and the old Sydney Football Stadium at Moore Park. In mid-2008, its head office The Sheridan Building is opened, making it the third building to erect in the Gold Members Car Park, alongside the Headquarters of Sydney Roosters and New South Wales Rugby Union. The trust was merged into Venues NSW, which now operates the SCG as well as the new Sydney Football Stadium.

Soon after it opened Sydney FC relocated their Headquarters inside the Sheridan Building. The Sydney Swans headquarters are located in the SCG accessible from Driver Avenue. In total, there are 4 different clubs from 4 different codes of sport with their headquarters reside at the ground.[11]

Statues

The Trust has commissioned ten bronze sculpture statues to be placed around the grounds of the SCG and SFS.

Order Date Honouree Sport, location Notes
1 4 January 2008 Richie Benaud OBE Cricket, bowler [12]
2 20 March 2008 Dally Messenger Rugby League, located outside of the SFS [13]
3 5 January 2009 Fred Spofforth Cricket, fast bowler [14]
4 5 June 2009 Trevor Allan Rugby union and rugby league footballer [15]
5 29 August 2009 Paul Roos Australian rules football [16]
6 7 December 2009 Stephen Yabba Gascoign Famous spectator Located inside the grounds, taking over two seats on the concourse in front of the new Victor Trumper stand.[17]
7 5 January 2010 Stan McCabe Cricket, batsman [18]
8 9 August 2010 Reg Gasnier AM Rugby league Part of the Basil Sellers Sports Sculpture project.[19]
Ken Catchpole OAM Rugby union Relocated in 2017 to outside the Rugby Australia House
Paul Kelly Australian rules football
Steve Waugh AO Cricket
12 2016 Johnny Warren MBE, OAM Football [20]
13 3 January 2018 Betty Cuthbert and Marlene Mathews Athletics The first female athletes to be honoured.[21][22]

Media Hall of Honour

In 2014 the Sydney Cricket and Sports Ground Trust opened the Media Hall of Honour at the MA Noble Stand's media centre with fifteen inaugural inductees:[23][24]

Cricket

Nature of Pitch

Sydney Cricket Ground is traditionally one of the most spin-friendly international cricket grounds in Australia, because the soil and foundation of the pitch and playing surface is primarily 'Bulli soil' from Bulli, New South Wales.[25] The SCG along with the Gabba in Brisbane are the only major test venues in Australia not to have switched to a drop-in pitch.[26]Sydney Cricket Ground Pitch Report & All T20 Record In Hindi

Cricketing History and Notable events

In 1854 the Garrison Club defeated the Royal Victoria Club in the first recorded cricket match to be played at what was then the Garrison Ground. Although games were played at the Domain, the Garrison Ground was used for practice by the NSW cricket team in 1860 and by the Victorian team in 1861 the before inter-colonial matches in those years.

Cricket was first played in Australia in Sydney's Hyde Park in 1803. However, up until the appointment of trustees to look after the SCG in the late 1870s, several different grounds had been used. The Domain was first used for inter-colonial games and then the Albert Ground in Redfern but in time both became unavailable, the Domain because of its poor condition and because it could not be fenced in and the Albert Ground because it closed in the late 1870s.

After the closure of the Albert Ground the New South Wales Cricket Association began using the Association Ground. The first game played there was the final of the Civil Service Challenge Cup on 25 October 1877, between the New South Wales Government Printing Office and the Audit Office. The first first-class match was the inter-colonial game between New South Wales and Victoria played on 22, 23 and 25 February 1878 where New South Wales won by 1 wicket.[27]

During the 1878–79 season Lord Harris' England team toured Australia. The feature of the tourists game against New South Wales at the SCG in 1879 was a riot sparked apparently when the crowd disagreed with an umpiring decision by George Coulthard that went against the locals. Lord Harris believed the invasion of the ground by about 2000 spectators was actually started by bookmakers in the stand. One of the umpires for the match was Edmund Barton, later to become Australia's first Prime Minister.

By the time its first Test match was played at the SCG between 17 February and 21 February 1882 the ground was in fine condition. The NSWCA had appointed Ned Gregory as curator and given him a cottage next to the ground for him and his family. Australia won that game by overhauling England's scores of 133 and 232 with scores of 197 and 5 for 169.

The ground high score in Test cricket was held for more than a century by Englishman Reg "Tip" Foster, who scored 287 in an Australia-England match in 1903. In the 100th test to be played at the SCG in January 2012, Michael Clarke was joined first by Ricky Ponting in a partnership of 288 and then by Michael Hussey in a partnership of 334 and built a score of 329 not out against India.[28]

Don Bradman made his first visit to the ground in the 1920–21 season to watch the Fifth Test of the Australia and England series. In that game Charlie Macartney scored 170 to help seal a win for Australia.

Bradman scored the highest ever first-class innings of 452 at the SCG for New South Wales against Queensland in 1928–29. This record was surpassed by Hanif Mohammad who scored 499 run out at Karachi. It was further bettered by the West Indian Brian Lara who scored 501 in 1994 at Edgbaston.

The 1928–29 season was a big one for cricket. On 15 December, the largest ever crowd to attend a cricket match at the SCG, 58,446, saw Australia and England play. With changes to the ground seating the record is unlikely to be beaten.

 
Shane Warne is pictured bowling one of his last balls in Test cricket
 
South Africa playing against Australia in 2009

In the last test of the 1970–71 English tour, England fast bowler John Snow struck Australian spinner and tailender Terry Jenner on the head with a bouncer. The Sydney crowd let Snow and the English know they were not happy with his behaviour and when Snow took up his fielding position on the fence a spectator spoke to him and grabbed him by the shirt. Cans were thrown onto the field and England captain Ray Illingworth took his team from the ground.

The first women's club cricket match was held at the SCG in 1886 when the Fernleas played the Siroccos. Although cricket was not seen as an appropriate game for women, women's cricket associations were formed in Victoria in 1905 and other states in the 1920s, and 1930s.

Night cricket was first played at the SCG on 28 November 1978 with World Series Cricket. A crowd of 50,000 packed the ground.

The SCG was the scene of Shane Warne's first (1992) and final Tests (2007). In 2007, Justin Langer and Glenn McGrath also played their final Tests.

 
Celebrations at the SCG after Australia won the Ashes 5–0 in 2014

During the 100th Test match held at SCG, on 3 January 2012, Michael Clarke scored his maiden triple century against India and was the first player to do so at the ground. Exactly nine years before, Steve Waugh scored a century to retain The Ashes, and it was also the scene of his final test against India in 2004.

The SCG was venue of two 5-0 Ashes Series clean sweeps (completed in early 2007 and 2014).

SCG is the traditional ground for hosting New Year Tests, as well as the traditional final match of the Australian Ashes Series. Since 2008, the New Year Test has also been named the Pink Test, organised by Glenn McGrath and the McGrath Foundation, named for his late wife Jane McGrath to raise breast cancer awareness, and on the third day, even if the day's play is rained out, is named Pink Day or Jane McGrath Day in her honour.[29]

The SCG was the scene of tragedy on 25 November 2014, when a bouncer from Sean Abbott struck Phillip Hughes's neck, knocking him unconscious. Hughes later died as a result of a subarachnoid haemorrhage on 27 November, having never regained consciousness.[30]

Since 2015, it is the venue where David Warner scored three consecutive centuries in Tests (2015–17). Steve Smith and Don Bradman scored four in a row at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. During the streak, he scored a century within the first session of the game in 2017 against Pakistan. He also scored a half century in the second innings. The half century streak continued to three when he scored a half century in the first innings of the final test in the 2017-18 Ashes series, but the century streak ended as Australia won by an innings, and was not required to bat again.

On 12 January 2019, Australia won the first ODI against India at the Sydney Cricket Ground by 34 runs, to record their 1,000th win in international cricket.[31]

Rugby league

The SCG has hosted 1,392 top-level premiership rugby league games – more than any other ground in Australia (as of 2015), in addition to 70 Test matches and World Cup games. Between 1913 and 1987, the NSWRFL Premiership Final was always played at the SCG, unless circumstances dictated otherwise. Due to the ground's historical significance to rugby league, it is often used for special heritage matches for National Rugby League club and representative matches.

Rugby league was first played at the SCG on 22 June 1911 between Australia and New Zealand.[32] The ground was first used by the New South Wales Rugby Football League in 1913. At this time the Trust only gave players access to dressing sheds in the Sheridan Stand and did not allow use of the rooms in the Members' Stand. This rule was relaxed in 1918. The 1915 NSWRFL season's first round match between defending premiers Eastern Suburbs and Glebe was played in front of a record crowd of 13,000.[33]

The 1920 Great Britain Lions tour saw the British rugby league team tour Australia for the first time since World War I and huge crowds attended their games. The first match of the tour was at the SCG against Metropolis in front of nearly 68,000 spectators. Australia won the first Test in Brisbane and in the second Test at the SCG on 3 July. The Australians sealed the series, scoring five tries to win 21–8 and secure the Ashes series for the first time at home.

The attendance record for a rugby league match in Australia was broken in 1932 when 70,204 people saw Australia play England in the first test of the 1932 Ashes series at the Cricket Ground.[34] It was also in this game that the Australians first wore the green jersey with a double gold 'V', which they have been wearing ever since. The English side boasted one of the great rugby league back lines consisting of captain Jim Sullivan (fullback), Alf Ellaby and Stan Smith (wings), and Artie Atkinson and Stan Brogden in the centres. The gates of the SCG had to be closed to prevent another 15,000 people from entering. Australia lost the game 8–6. The second game was the famous "Battle of Brisbane" Test, which Australia won. In the third Test back at the SCG Australia lead 11–3 until late in the game. Incredibly, England scored three quick tries to snatch the game (18–13) and the series. The attendance of the first test stood as the highest recorded crowd for an international rugby league match until 73,631 fans attended the 1992 World Cup Final between Australia and Great Britain at the famous Wembley Stadium in London, England.

 
Unrecognizable after playing on a muddy SCG, footballers of the British and Australian national rugby league sides leave the field after the first Test on 12 June 1950.

The next tour by England was in 1946, knows as The "Indomitables" tour due to the Great Britain team traveling to Australia on the Royal Navy's Aircraft carrier HMS Indomitable. The first test played on 17 June was an 8 – 8 draw, the opening try of the series was scored by the legendary Frank Whitcombe for the tourists, in front of a crowd of 64,527. England went on to win The Ashes. In 1950 Australia had not won a series against the team Lions for 30 years but this time there was a big change. Britain had won the first Test and Australia the second, which made the third SCG Test the decider. The tour coincided with a record amount of rain and by the time the teams arrived the SCG was a mud heap. Forty tonnes of soil were brought in and spread over the surface to try and dry it out. Tied 2–2 at half time, Australia scored the only try of the match late in the second half when winger Ron Roberts crossed in the corner to seal the win. At the end of the game the crowd of over 47,000 jumped the fence and invaded the field and congregated in front of the Members' Stand cheering and calling for Aussie captain Clive Churchill.

The 1963 NSWRFL Grand Final was won by the St George Dragons 8–3 in front of 69,860 fans in atrocious conditions. It was the Dragons eighth consecutive premiership and their third consecutive grand final win against the Western Suburbs Magpies. The match's only try, scored by Dragons winger Johnny King, was clouded in controversy after he appeared to be tackled when a defender knocked him flat on the ground, only to get up and carry the ball to the try line under howls of protest from Wests players who believe that the referee had called King to play the ball. That try became the centre of furore when rumors spread that match referee Darcy Lawler had bet on St. George to win (Wests captain Arthur Summons later claimed one of his players announced to his teammates before the game that any who had bet on the Magpies to win had better lay off their bets as referee Lawler had backed St. George). After the match, photographer John O'Gready took the iconic rugby league photograph, "The Gladiators", depicting Arthur Summons supporting St. George captain Norm Provan. The photo of Summons and Provan was later used as the basis for the Winfield Cup trophy, and continues to be used to this day with the National Rugby League's Telstra Premiership Trophy.

On 18 September 1965, the largest ever official crowd at the SCG, 78,056, saw St George defeat the South Sydney Rabbitohs 12–8 in the NSWRFL grand final. Gates were ordered to be closed two hours before the game began and children were allowed to sit inside the fence. Contemporary accounts indicate that many more – perhaps thousands – gained other means of access and sat on grandstand roofs or went into the Sydney Showground (Moore Park) and viewed the match from the stairways and roof of the main pavilion. Estimates from people there that day put the crowd as high as 90,000. This would stand as the largest rugby league crowd in Australia until Game 2 of the 1994 State of Origin series when 87,161 attended the game at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. Due to the overcrowding of the ground during the grand final, the New South Wales Police Force imposed a 70,000 capacity limit on the Cricket Ground for safety reasons.

The SCG hosted the 1968 Rugby League World Cup Final, won 20–2 by the Johnny Raper led Australians over France in front of 54,290. The Australian team that day, coached by Harry Bath, boasted legends of the Australian game in Raper (Lock), Eric Simms (Fullback), Graeme Langlands and Johnny Greaves (centres), Bob Fulton (Five-eighth), Billy Smith (halfback), Arthur Beetson (prop) and Dick Thornett and Ron Coote (second-row). Although the Final attracted over 54,000 fans, this was actually not the highest attendance of the 1968 World Cup. That came during the opening game of the tournament when 62,256 saw Australia defeat Great Britain 25–10. This would stand as the highest attendance for a World Cup match until 73,631 attended the 1992 World Cup Final to see Australia again defeat Great Britain 10–6 at the famous Wembley Stadium in London.

One of the most courageous efforts at the SCG was John Sattler's performance in the 1970 grand final between South Sydney and the Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles. In the first ten minutes of the game, South's captain Sattler had his jaw broken by a punch from Manly forward John Bucknall in an off-the-ball incident. Sattler went down but pulled himself up on teammate Michael Cleary, asking the winger to help him so that the other players would not know he was hurt. In an act of supreme courage Sattler played on, refusing treatment at half time and pleas from teammates not to take the field again, to lead Souths to a famous 23–12 win. It was not until well after the game that he went to hospital. The Australian side to tour Britain was selected that night and, but for his injury, Sattler would have been picked as captain.

The Cricket Ground hosted what many consider to be the toughest grand final of all in 1973 when defending premiers Manly-Warringah faced the Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks, who were playing in their first ever grand final after joining the competition in 1967. The Sharks were Captain-coached by Great Britain halfback Tommy Bishop and had a forward pack led by his tough St. Helens and GB teammate Cliff Watson and 1973 Rothmans Medallist Ken Maddison, along with goal kicking 18-year-old whiz-kid centre Steve Rogers. Manly were coached by Ron Willey and captained by tough hooker Freddy Jones, and could boast internationals Ken Irvine, Ray Branighan, Bob Fulton, John O'Neill, British lock Malcolm Reilly, as well as tough tackling second-row forward Terry Randall and 19-year-old fullback Graham Eadie. From the opening kick off the game descended into a series of high or late tackles and several all-in brawls, though surprisingly referee Keith Page didn't send any player off, despite threatening to do so and repeatedly handing out cautions, including twice to all 26 players on the field. In the opening minutes of the game, Mal Reilly was felled in back play by Cronulla hooker Ron "Rocky" Turner well after he kicked the ball and, after writhing on the ground in agony with a badly bruised hip, left the field for a pain killing injection. When he returned he created mayhem with strong-arm tactics, although he was clearly out of sorts football wise and was replaced after just 25 minutes by John Bucknell. In the end, the difference between the two teams was Manly's international centre Bob Fulton who scored two tries in leading Manly to a 10–7 win. The game was described by Sunday Telegraph writer Ian Heads as "A grand final as tough and dirty as any bar-room brawl".[35]

In 1975, in one of the most memorable grand finals ever, the Arthur Beetson captained, Jack Gibson coached Eastern Suburbs Roosters, defeated St. George 38–0 to win the premiership. That Roosters team is considered one of the best sides ever assembled and the eight tries to nil scoreline remained a record winning margin in a grand final until the 2008 NRL Grand Final played between Manly Warringah and the Melbourne Storm, Manly winning by the tune of 40–0. However, the game was famous for reasons other than the scoreline. St George's Captain-coach Graeme Langlands played with a misdirected pain killing injection that made his right leg go numb and prevented him from playing anywhere near his best. Easts were without two of their stars, rookie fullback Russell Fairfax and centre Mark Harris, and coach Jack Gibson gambled on an unknown player to help fill the void – John Rheinberger – who played in his first only first grade game in the grand final. Leading by only 5–0 at half-time, the Roosters scored an avalanche of tries after the interval to humiliate the Dragons. Earlier in the same season, the Roosters recorded the longest winning streak of any first grade rugby league football club – 19 matches. It was the Eastern Suburbs Roosters' eleventh premiership victory and their second in succession.

The SCG hosted its second Rugby League World Cup Final in 1977. On 25 June Australia defeated Great Britain 13–12 in front of just 24,457 fans. The match was highlighted by a 60-metre try to Manly-Warringah centre Russel Gartner who outpaced the Lions chasers late in the first half to give Australia an 8–5 lead. This would prove to be (as of 2016) the last World Cup game played at the SCG.

In 1981, another memorable and emotional rugby league grand final was played at the SCG. Since joining the Sydney Premiership in 1947, the Parramatta Eels had not won a grand final. In 1976 and 1977 it had suffered consecutive losses, first to Manly-Warringah (who also joined the league in 1947) and then St George in the first replayed grand final. In 1981, the Eels 'dream team' (another team coached by Jack Gibson), comprising internationals Ray Price, Mick Cronin, Ron Hilditch and Bob "The Bear" O'Reilly, as well as budding stars Peter Sterling, Brett Kenny, Steve Ella, Eric Grothe and John Muggleton, outscored the Tommy Raudonikis captained Newtown four tries to three to win 20–11 and secure their first premiership. Playing second-row for Newtown that day was future dual grand final winning, and NSW State of Origin coach Phil Gould. Financial pressures at the Newtown club would result in the Jets competing in the New South Wales Rugby League first grade competition for only two seasons following their 1981 grand final appearance.

The 1986 NSWRL Grand Final at the SCG between the John Monie coached Parramatta and defending premiers Canterbury-Bankstown, coached by Warren Ryan, and played in front of one of the smallest grand final crowds in years (45,843), would go down as the lowest scoring and only try-less grand final in NSWRL history. Parramatta won their 4th premiership in six years with a tough 4–2 win thanks to two Mick Cronin goals to send captain Ray Price, and Cronin, into rugby league retirement on the winning note they deserved after stellar careers for Parramatta, NSW and Australia. Cronin retired from the game having scored 1,971 points in the Sydney premiership (75 tries, 865 goals and 2 field goals, all for Parramatta), at the time the record number of points scored in a career.

The last rugby league grand final played at the Cricket Ground was the 1987 decider between the Bob Fulton coached Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles and the Canberra Raiders, who had joined the premiership in 1982. In front of 50,201 fans on an unseasonably warm day in Sydney, the Sea Eagles ran out 18–8 winners, scoring two tries to one with dual rugby international Michael O'Connor scoring 14 of Manly's points with a try and a perfect 5/5 goal kicking. Manly's other try scorer that day, Five-eighth Cliff Lyons won the Clive Churchill Medal as the man of the match.

The ground lost the grand final and numerous games to the Sydney Football Stadium (SFS) in 1988. Even so, between 1988 and 2018 the ground continued to host occasional National Rugby League matches,[36][37] mostly featuring the Heritage round game between St George Illawarra and South Sydney and the 2008 Centenary ANZAC Test between Australia and New Zealand, in what was the first test held at the famous old ground since the Wally Lewis captained Australians had defeated the Kiwis 29–12 on 19 July 1986 in front of 34,302 fans. The 2008 Kangaroos, kitted out in replica 1908 jumpers depicting the colours of NSW and Qld, ran out 28-12 winners in front of 34,571 fans, the largest Test crowd in Sydney since the first Ashes test of the 1992 Great Britain Lions tour when 40,141 attended Game 1 at the SFS.

Regular rugby league action returned to the SCG on 16 March 2019 with the Sydney Roosters calling the SCG home after the Sydney Football Stadium was demolished to make way for the Sydney Football Stadium (2022) on the site. The Anzac Day clash between St George Illawarra and the Sydney Roosters will also be held at the SCG while the Roosters call the cricket ground home.[38]

 
The Bill O'Reilly and Dally Messenger Stands during the Sydney Roosters vs St George Illawarra ANZAC Day clash in 2021

State of Origin

The Cricket Ground hosted six State of Origin series games from 1982–1987

Game# Date Result Attendance Year
1 22 June 1982   Queensland def.   New South Wales 10–5 20,242 1982
2 21 June 1983   New South Wales def.   Queensland 10–6 21,620 1983
3 19 June 1984   Queensland def.   New South Wales 14–2 29,088 1984
4 11 June 1985   New South Wales def.   Queensland 21–14 39,068 1985
5 10 June 1986   New South Wales def.   Queensland 24–20 40,707 1986
6 16 June 1987   Queensland def.   New South Wales 12–6 42,048 1987

Tennis

In 1885 the first inter-colonial tennis match was held at the SCG when Victoria played New South Wales although forms of the game were no doubt played in Australia from its colonial beginnings. All colonies of Australia were well established when the final versions of the rules of the game were codified by the Marylebone Cricket Club in 1875 and by the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club in 1877 when it held its first tournament at Wimbledon.

Tennis was regularly played at the SCG in the early days. The Sydney tournament which was to become the New South Wales Open, was first played at the SCG in 1885 before moving to the NSW Lawn Tennis Club's courts at Double Bay, then to White City and later to the Olympic Tennis Centre at Homebush Bay. The SCG was the host of the 1908 Australasian Championships.[39]

Motor racing

In 1898, Sydney cycle firm, Gavin Gibson Ltd, imported seven motorised tricycles produced by Count Jules-Albert de Dion and powered by one cylinder petrol engines designed by his partner Georges Bouton. On the evening of 1 January 1901, these seven machines raced around the concrete cycle track which ringed the inside of the SCG in those days to compete in Australia's first ever motor race.

Empire Games

The SCG was the main stadium for the 1938 British Empire Games which were tied into the State's sesqui-centenary celebrations. Perhaps because of this the Federal Government provided no money and only £10,000 came from the State Government to cover the organising committee's administrative costs. The budget was therefore, very tight and using the existing SCG was one way of making ends meet. Cyclist Edgar "Dunc" Gray led the teams onto the ground and athletes ran on a makeshift grass track.

Rugby union

Club rugby was first played at the then Civil and Military Ground as early as 1870, and the first inter-colonial game was played there in 1882. NSW beat Queensland 28–4. From June 1911 the NSW Rugby League had exclusive use of the SCG, as well as the Sydney Sports Ground and the Sydney Showground, preventing rugby union games from being played there. Over the years the SCG hosted 71 rugby union tests before Sydney international matches were moved first to Waratah Rugby Park (Concord Oval), then the Sydney Football Stadium and later Stadium Australia. The largest ever crowd to watch a rugby union match at the SCG was 49,327 who saw NSW played New Zealand on 13 July 1907.

Of those 71 tests none could have been more dramatic than the game against the South African Springboks on 7 August 1971. Marred by anti-apartheid protests, field invasions and objects being thrown onto the ground and halted several times to remove golf balls and protestors, it was won by South Africa who went through the tour undefeated.

The SCG has been both a happy and unhappy hunting ground for Australian rugby union. One of the worst incidents to occur there was the sad demise of Ken Catchpole's international career. Robbed of a glorious retirement, his career ended in a disgraceful scandal. Australia was playing the New Zealand All Blacks and while Catchpole was trapped on the bottom of a ruck New Zealander second rower, Colin Meads, tried to drag him out by one leg, splitting him like a wishbone. Australia, although well beaten on this occasion, was well served by international-standard halfbacks and 20-year-old John Hipwell ran on for his first test as Catchpole was carried off. It was a sad end to an illustrious career.

Dramatic though that game was, no test could have been as important in the development of Australian Rugby Union than the game against the touring Welsh team in 1978.

The 1978 Welsh had arrived in Australia as (the then) Five Nations Champions, Triple Crown winners, the best rugby union team in the world but they were a sad and sorry bunch by the time they got to Sydney for the last game of the tour, the second test. The team was decimated by injuries and in two earlier tour games had suffered a last minute loss to Sydney and a humiliating defeat midweek to the Australian Capital Territory.

Rumours abounded that the Welsh were ready for a big 'get square' with Australian prop Steve Finnane, the so-called 'enforcer' of the Australian team. Finnane and other senior members of the team had vowed to avenge the defeat of the Australians by the Welsh on their last tour of the UK several years before. The SCG crowd didn't have long to wait because after the very first scrum Welsh prop Graham Price came out holding his bloodied jaw, the victim of a Finnane punch. Price had bored in on Finnane, his opposite number in the front row and Finnane reacted.

After Price left the field and the game continued for a short while until the Welsh, using a pre-determined code word, sparked an all-in-brawl. Wales lost the test and the two-test series.

In 1979 there was a one-off game against the All Blacks at the SCG. The kicking of a young five-eighth named Tony Melrose closed out the New Zealanders and Australia won a try-less game 12–6, to take back the Bledisloe Cup for the first time since 1949. The following year the Australians showed it was no fluke by beating New Zealand two tests to one in Australia to successfully defend the trophy for the first time.

On 14 April 2018 the NSW Waratahs played a home game at the SCG against the Queensland Reds in the Waratahs first appearance at the ground in 35 years.[40][41]

For the 2019 Super Rugby season the Waratahs will stage 3 of their home games at the SCG while the Sydney Football Stadium is rebuilt.[42] In July 2022 the SCG staged a rugby union test for the first time since 1986 when Australia played England.[43]

Australian rules football

 
A New South Wales player marks over a West Australian opponent in the goal square at the 1933 Australian Football Carnival. The old Sydney Showground is in the background

The first Australian rules football match to be played at the SCG was Inter-Colonial football match played between Victoria and New South Wales on 6 August 1881.

Essendon and Melbourne played a premiership match at Moore Park in 1904 in front of the Governor General and Governor of NSW. Melbourne won and both teams had to return home by boat down the coast; two other matches (Fitzroy v Collingwood and Geelong v Carlton, which had been postponed) were also played there in 1903. In 1922, Port Adelaide played a combined New South Wales side on the ground.[44]

In the subsequent decades, the ground was rarely used for Australian Rules, except for the occasional exhibition match or interstate football carnival.

Richmond played Collingwood there in 1952, and eight VFL matches were played there in 1979–1981, but Australian rules football was not to make a regular comeback to the SCG until 1982, when South Melbourne relocated to Sydney and made the SCG its home ground.

Sydney Swans

 
Sydney Swans playing the Western Bulldogs at the SCG in 2008

South Melbourne was formed in 1867, a foundation member of the first Australian rules competition the Victorian Football Association (VFA) and also its later replacement the Victorian Football League (VFL). The club won five premierships with the VFA up to 1890 and three more in the VFL in the first half of the 20th century, but a lack of success in the post-war years and serious financial troubles left them ripe for relocation when the game's administrators were looking to expand the competition into other states.[45]

In 1982 South Melbourne moved to Sydney and the SCG to become the Sydney Swans. Despite their shaky financial situation, the Swans were the flavour of Sydney in the early years; the Swans matches at the SCG were the place to be seen, rivaling Sydney's main winter sport, rugby league. In the late 1980s Sydney Rules Ltd, the company which ran the licence for the club, recorded a profit of $600,000. However, when the stock market crashed in October 1987, the Swans went with it, but the Swans have since managed to hold on and have gained a foothold in Sydney.[46][47][48]

 
View towards the members' stands as seen during the 2018 second elimination final between the Swans and the Giants

The SCG most notably hosted Sydney's preliminary final against Essendon in 1996, in which full forward Tony Lockett scored a behind after the final siren to give Sydney a one-point win, sending the Swans into their first grand final since 1945. Between 2003 and 2015, most Sydney Swans home finals had been played at the larger Stadium Australia unless it was otherwise booked. Since 2016, all Swans home finals (with the exception of a Sydney Derby in 2016) have been played at the SCG.

There have been two modern-day pitch invasions witnessed at the ground: first in 1999, when Tony Lockett kicked his 1300th career goal to become the highest goalkicker in VFL/AFL history,[49] and second in 2022 when Lance Franklin kicked his 1000th career goal becoming only the sixth player to kick as many goals in VFL/AFL history.[50]

On 9 September 2017, the largest ever crowd to watch an Australian Rules game at the SCG, 46,323, came to see the Swans defeat Essendon in an Elimination Final.

The SCG was the shortest field used for AFL games, at 153 metres long, but Geelong's Kardinia Park is narrower. However recent works on the Northern Stand facilitated an extension of the playing surface means it is no longer the shortest ground in the league.

Other sports

The SCG has been a popular arena for a whole range of sports before the turn of the 20th century including cricket, tennis, baseball, soccer and cycling with athletics being staged there as early as 1879. On New Year's Day, 1880, possibly some of the most exotic sports ever seen at the SCG were staged when the 12th Annual Highlands Games was held. Organised by the Scottish community events included tossing the caber, putting the stone and other traditional Highland sports as well as Highland dancing. A crowd of 5000 attended. On 5 May 1964, 51,566 soccer fans came to the SCG to see NSW take on English club Everton F.C. In 1974 the Socceroos defeated Uruguay 2–0 in front of a capacity crowd in a friendly match before the World Cup Finals. It was announced in April 2018 that Sydney FC will stage 6 of their 13 home matches in the 2019-2020 A-League season with the other 7 games to be split between Jubilee Oval and Leichhardt Oval while the Sydney Football Stadium is demolished and rebuilt.[51] Sydney FC played their first game at the SCG on 27 October 2018 against rivals Western Sydney Wanderers FC in front of 30,688 fans.[52]

US Major League Baseball – 22/23 March 2014

 
Major League Baseball starts its 2014 season at the Sydney Cricket Ground

In June 2013, Major League Baseball, the New South Wales Government, and the Sydney Cricket Ground announced that the season opening first two games of the 2014 MLB season would be played at the SCG between the Arizona Diamondbacks and the Los Angeles Dodgers, on Saturday 22 March (7pm AEST / 0800 UTC / 1am PDT) and Sunday 23 March (1pm AEST / 0200 UTC / 7pm PDT Saturday 22 March) 2014.[53][54][55][56]

The Northern Stand was completed for the 2013–14 Ashes series, and provided the main stand behind home plate, with premium seating. The temporary outfield fence arced from the eastern Bill O'Reilly Stand (left field / third base line) and the western Brewongle Stand (right field / first base line).[53][57] Two bullpens were positioned behind the outfield fence. Seating was restricted in the Victor Trumper Stand and the Clive Churchill Stand due to eye-line restrictions caused by the outfield fence and the need for a batter's eye space in centre field. Its dimensions were 328 feet (99.974 m) to foul lines, 370 feet (112.776 m) to power alleys, and 400 feet (121.920 m) to centre field.

It was announced that due to the restricted seating the SCG's capacity would be 38,000 for baseball. Game 1 of the series, won 3-1 by the Dodgers with the win going to their ace pitcher Clayton Kershaw, attracted 38,266 fans while Game 2, won 7-5 by the Dodgers, attracted 38,079 fans.[58][59] As the games took place approximately one week before the normal season opening date, both the Diamondbacks and the Dodgers actually returned to their Spring Training schedules once the series ended.

Major League Baseball is a significant co-owner of the Australian Baseball League relaunched in 2010, and cooperates with the Australian Baseball Federation.[55]

Test cricket records

Batting

 
Ricky Ponting holds the record for most career runs at the SCG
 
Wally Hammond scored 808 runs in 7 innings at the ground; a record for non-Australians
 
Michael Clarke scored 329* against India in 2012, the highest score at the ground
 
Shane Warne has taken the most wickets at the ground, with 64
 
George Lohmann took 35 wickets in eight innings; the most of any non-Australian
 
Tendulkar made 241*, as India totalled 7/705 declared in 2004
 
Bradman and Barnes during their partnership of 405
Most career runs[60]
Runs Player Period
1,480 (27 innings)   Ricky Ponting 1996–2012
1,177 (29 innings)   Allan Border 1979–1994
1,150 (22 innings)   Greg Chappell 1971–1984
1,127 (21 innings)   David Boon 1984–1995
1,084 (25 innings)   Steve Waugh 1986–2004
Most career runs (non-Australia)[61]
Runs Player Period
808 (7 innings)   Wally Hammond 1928–1946
785 (9 innings)   Sachin Tendulkar 1992–2012
654 (15 innings)   Jack Hobbs 1908–1928
569 (11 innings)   David Gower 1979–1991
549 (7 innings)   VVS Laxman 2000–2012
Highest individual scores[62]
Runs Player Date
329* v. India   Michael Clarke 3 Jan 2012
287 v. Australia   R. E. Foster 11 Dec 1903
277 v. Australia   Brian Lara 2 Jan 1993
251 v. Australia   Wally Hammond 14 Dec 1928
242 v. West Indies   Doug Walters 14 Feb 1969
Most centuries[63]
Centuries Player Period
6 (27 innings)   Ricky Ponting 1996–2012
4 (7 innings)   Wally Hammond 1928–1946
4 (10 innings)   Usman Khawaja 2011–2023
4 (15 innings)   Steve Smith 2011–2023
4 (18 innings)   David Warner 2012–2023
Highest batting average (5+ innings)[64]
Average Player Period
161.60 (7 innings, 2 NO)   Wally Hammond 1928–1946
157.00 (9 innings, 4 NO)   Sachin Tendulkar 1931–1947
130.83 (10 innings, 4 NO)   Usman Khawaja 2011–2022
94.00 (13 innings, 5 NO)   Michael Hussey 2006–2013
78.42 (7 innings, 0 NO)   VVS Laxman 2000–2012

Bowling

Most career wickets[65]
Wickets Player Period
64 (26 innings)   Shane Warne 1992–2007
53 (16 innings)   Stuart MacGill 1999–2006
50 (24 innings)   Glenn McGrath 1993–2006
45 (12 innings)   Charles Turner 1887–1895
43 (16 innings)   Dennis Lillee 1971–1984
Most career wickets (non-Australia)[66]
Wickets Player Period
35 (8 innings)   George Lohmann 1887–1892
28 (10 innings)   Sydney Barnes 1901–1912
24 (10 innings)   Bobby Peel 1885–1895
24 (6 innings)   Maurice Tate 1924–1928
23 (13 innings)   Billy Bates 1882–1887
23 (7 innings)   Tom Richardson 1894–1898
Best innings figures[67]
Figures Player Date
8/35 v. Australia   George Lohmann 25 Feb 1887
8/58 v. Australia   George Lohmann 29 Jan 1892
8/94 v. Australia   Tom Richardson 26 Feb 1898
8/141 v. Australia   Anil Kumble 2 Jan 2004
7/40 v. Australia   Dick Barlow 26 Jan 1883
7/40 v. Australia   John Snow 9 Jan 1971
7/43 v. England   Charles Turner 10 Feb 1888
7/44 v. England   Fred Spofforth 26 Jan 1883
7/46 v. West Indies   Allan Border 26 Jan 1989
7/50 v. England   Stuart MacGill 2 Jan 1999

Note: best innings figures limited to 10; there have actually been 23 seven-wicket innings hauls at the Sydney Cricket Ground.

Best match figures[68]
Figures Player Date
12/87 v. England   Charles Turner 10 Feb 1888
12/107 v. England   Stuart MacGill 2 Jan 1999
12/128 v. South Africa   Shane Warne 2 Jan 1994
12/165 v. Australia   Imran Khan 14 Jan 1977
12/175 v. England   Herbert Hordern 15 Dec 1911
12/279 v. Australia   Anil Kumble 2 Jan 2004
Lowest strike rate (4+ innings)[69]
Strike rate Player Period
29.7 (4 wickets)   Michael Clarke 2005–2014
31.6 (12 wickets)   Frank Tyson 1954–1955
32.1 (13 wickets)   Richard Hadlee 1974–1985
32.4 (11 wickets)   Tom Horan 1882–1885
34.8 (35 wickets)   George Lohmann 1887–1892

Team records

Highest innings scores[70]
Score Team Date
7/705d   India v. Australia 2 Jan 2004
8/659d   Australia v. England 13 Dec 1946
4/659d   Australia v. India 3 Jan 2012
7/649d   Australia v. England 4 Jan 2018
644   England v. Australia 3 Jan 2011
Lowest completed innings[71]
Score Team Date
42   Australia v. England 10 Feb 1888
45   England v. Australia 28 Jan 1887
65   England v. Australia 1 Feb 1895
72   England v. Australia 1 Feb 1895
77   England v. Australia 14 Mar 1885

Partnership records

Highest partnerships[72]
Runs Wicket Players Match Date
405 5th Sid Barnes (234) & Don Bradman (234)   Australia v.   England 13 Dec 1946
353 4th Sachin Tendulkar (241*) & VVS Laxman (178)   India v.   Australia 2 Jan 2004
336 4th Doug Walters (242) & Bill Lawry (151)   Australia v.   West Indies 14 Feb 1969
334* 5th Michael Clarke (329*) & Michael Hussey (150*)   Australia v.   India 3 Jan 2012
293 3rd Brian Lara (277) & Richie Richardson (109)   West Indies v.   Australia 2 Jan 1993
Highest partnerships by wicket[73]
Runs Wicket Players Match Date
234 1st Bob Barber (185) & Geoffrey Boycott (84)   England v.   Australia 7 Jan 1966
224 2nd Clem Hill (191) & Warren Bardsley (132)   Australia v.   South Africa 9 Dec 1910
224 Sunil Gavaskar (172) & Mohinder Amarnath (138)   India v.   Australia 2 Jan 1986
293 3rd Brian Lara (277) & Richie Richardson (109)   West Indies v.   Australia 2 Jan 1993
353 4th Sachin Tendulkar (241*) & VVS Laxman (178)   India v.   Australia 2 Jan 2004
405 5th Sid Barnes (234) & Don Bradman (234)   Australia v.   England 13 Dec 1946
187 6th Warwick Armstrong (158) & Charles Kelleway (78)   Australia v.   England 17 Dec 1920
204 7th Rishabh Pant (159*) & Ravindra Jadeja (81)   India v.   Australia 3 Jan 2019
154 8th George Bonnor (128) & Sammy Jones (40)   Australia v.   England 14 Mar 1885
154 9th Syd Gregory (201) & Jack Blackham (74)   Australia v.   England 14 Dec 1894
130 10th R. E. Foster (287) & Wilfred Rhodes (40*)   England v.   Australia 11 Dec 1903

All records correct as of 2 July 2021.

Seating capacity and other records

Preceded by Home of the Sydney Swans 
1982 – present
Succeeded by
Current ground
Preceded by
Sydney Common
Home of the New South Wales Blues 
1878 – present
Succeeded by
Current ground
Preceded by
First venue
Home of the Sydney Sixers 
2011 – present
Succeeded by
Current ground
Preceded by
First venue
Host of the New South Wales Rugby League premiership grand final 
1908–1987
Succeeded by
Preceded by
No designated final, effectively  Odsal Stadium
Host of the Rugby League World Cup final 
1968
Succeeded by
Preceded by
First venue
Host of the World Club Challenge 
1976
Succeeded by
Preceded by Grand Final stadiums of Tuyul Rugby Sevens 
1998
Succeeded by

Gallery

See also

References

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External links

  • Official website  
  • Google Maps satellite image of SCG
  • Retrosheet details of the 2014 baseball games

sydney, cricket, ground, sports, stadium, sydney, australia, used, test, international, twenty20, cricket, well, australian, rules, football, occasionally, rugby, league, rugby, union, association, football, home, ground, south, wales, blues, cricket, team, sy. The Sydney Cricket Ground SCG is a sports stadium in Sydney Australia It is used for Test One Day International and Twenty20 cricket as well as Australian rules football and occasionally for rugby league rugby union and association football It is the home ground for the New South Wales Blues cricket team the Sydney Sixers of the Big Bash League and the Sydney Swans of the Australian Football League It is owned and operated by the Venues NSW who also hold responsibility for the Sydney Football Stadium Sydney Cricket GroundSCGDuring the fifth ODI between Australia and India Ground informationLocationMoore Park Sydney New South WalesCoordinates33 53 30 S 151 13 29 E 33 89167 S 151 22472 E 33 89167 151 22472 Coordinates 33 53 30 S 151 13 29 E 33 89167 S 151 22472 E 33 89167 151 22472Establishment1851 172 years ago 1851 Capacity48 000 1 2 OwnerGovernment of New South Wales via Venues NSWOperatorVenues NSWTenantsCricketAustralia national cricket teamNew South Wales cricket teamSydney Sixers BBL Sydney Sixers WBBL Australian RulesSydney Swans AFL End namesPaddington End Northern End Randwick End Southern End International informationFirst Test17 21 February 1882 Australia v EnglandLast Test4 8 January 2023 Australia v South AfricaFirst ODI13 January 1979 Australia v EnglandLast ODI19 November 2022 Australia v EnglandFirst T20I9 January 2007 Australia v EnglandLast T20I9 November 2022 New Zealand v PakistanFirst women s Test4 8 January 1935 Australia v EnglandLast women s Test19 22 February 1949 Australia v EnglandFirst WODI29 January 2000 Australia v EnglandLast WODI12 December 2012 Australia v New ZealandFirst WT20I15 February 2009 Australia v New ZealandLast WT20I31 January 2016 Australia v IndiaTeam informationNew South Wales Blues 1878 present Sydney Swans AFL 1982 present Sydney Sixers BBL 2011 present Sydney Sixers WBBL 2015 present NSW Waratahs Super Rugby 2018 2022 Sydney Roosters NRL 2019 2022 North Melbourne AFL 1999 2002 As of 4 January 2023Source Cricinfo Contents 1 History 1 1 Beginning 1 2 Development 2 Stands 3 Sydney Cricket Ground Trust 3 1 Statues 3 2 Media Hall of Honour 4 Cricket 4 1 Nature of Pitch 4 2 Cricketing History and Notable events 5 Rugby league 5 1 State of Origin 6 Tennis 7 Motor racing 8 Empire Games 9 Rugby union 10 Australian rules football 10 1 Sydney Swans 11 Other sports 11 1 US Major League Baseball 22 23 March 2014 12 Test cricket records 12 1 Batting 12 2 Bowling 12 3 Team records 12 4 Partnership records 13 Seating capacity and other records 14 Gallery 15 See also 16 References 17 External linksHistory EditBeginning Edit In 1811 the Governor of New South Wales Lachlan Macquarie established the second Sydney Common about one and a half miles about 2 400m wide and extending south from South Head Road now Oxford St to where Randwick Racecourse is today Part sandhills part swamp and situated on the south eastern fringe of the city it was used as a rubbish dump in the 1850s and not regarded as an ideal place for sport In 1851 part of the Sydney Common south of Victoria Barracks was granted to the British Army for use as a garden and cricket ground for the soldiers Its first user was the 11th North Devonshire Regiment which flattened and graded the southern part of the rifle range adjacent to the Barracks In the next couple of years the teams from Victoria Barracks combined themselves into a more permanent organisation and called themselves the Garrison Club The ground therefore became known as the Garrison Ground when it was first opened in February 1854 Up until that time Hyde Park had been the main sporting and racing ground in the colony but when it was dedicated as public gardens in 1856 city cricketers and footballers had to find somewhere else to play In the late 1860s another part of the Sydney Common the area west of the Garrison Ground to the then Dowling Street was opened for public recreation It was named Moore Park after the Mayor of Sydney Charles Moore who planted a number of Moreton Bay Fig trees which exist to this day As well as the location of Sydney s first zoo Moore Park was a regular venue for games between Sydney rugby clubs Sydney University and the Wallaroos Sydney at the time was a small dense city and best navigated on foot and Moore Park was on the outskirts It was not liked so much by cricketers because it was too far from the city England v Australia at SCG 27 January 1883 When the commander of the Sydney garrison Lieutenant Colonel John Richardson aligned his soldiers to the East Sydney Cricket Club the Garrison Ground became known as the Civil and Military Ground In 1870 British troops left Victoria barracks and the future of the Civil and Military Ground became uncertain However with the closure of the Albert Ground in the 1870s the NSW Cricket Association NSWCA began regular use of the Civil and Military Ground In 1875 the NSW Government began to upgrade the ground Despite efforts by Victoria Barracks and then the Carlingford Redfern Fitzroy and Albert cricket clubs to take control the then president of the NSWCA Richard Driver after whom Driver Avenue outside the ground is named persuaded the government to let the NSWCA look after the ground s administration In 1876 the ground was dedicated by Governor Sir Hercules Robinson The Cricket Ground in 1892 The NSWCA had influential supporters Driver himself was a prominent MP and solicitor for the City of Sydney Council The Minister for Lands Thomas Garrett was also supportive his son was about to break into the colonial side It is hardly surprising therefore that within a couple of years of the NSWCA taking control of the ground the governor Sir Hercules Robinson appointed Driver himself William W Stephen and Phillip Sheridan after whom a grandstand was named the first trustees Two trustees were appointed by the government and one by the NSWCA The close relationship between the Trust and the NSWCA is evidenced by the fact that they pooled funds for the next six years The military s link with the ground was finally severed when John Richardson and the Sydney garrison went to fight in the Sudan The trustees then took the opportunity to rename the ground the Association GroundIn 1883 the most prominent trustee Sheridan regarding the ground as the responsibility of the trustees began to act independently of the NSWCA resulting in the NSWCA losing control of the ground Over the next century there was constant conflict between the Trust and the NSWCA over whether other sports such as rugby tennis and cycling the organisers of which were all keen to use the venue had access to it One conflict in 1904 over the Trust s plan to hold a cycling event which clashed with a cricket match ended up in court The NSWCA s influence was eventually reduced even further over the years due to changes in the way the State Government appointed trustees Development Edit The SCG scoreboard in January 1901 By the time of the first Sydney cricket test in February 1882 the ground could boast two grandstands the Brewongle Stand at the southern end and the original Members Stand which had been built in 1878 in the north west corner where the current Members Stand now sits On opposite sides of the ground to the stands two spectator mounds were built They became known as The Hill and the Paddington Hill In 1886 the Members Pavilion was rebuilt at a cost of 6 625 Membership was levied at two guineas In 1881 a loop in the tram line which ran down Randwick Road now Anzac Parade was built to service the Ground and the Pastoral and Agricultural Society Ground later the RAS Showgrounds and now Fox Studios next door In 1894 the ground finally received its modern name the Sydney Cricket Ground which was followed by the opening of the Hill Stand situated between The Hill and the Paddington Hill It became known as the Bob Stand during the Depression years because it cost one shilling a bob to enter The first SCG scoreboard was built in the two weeks leading up to the 1895 1896 inter colonial match between New South Wales and Victoria Although it was Sheridan s idea the design was Ned Gregory s who believed that English scoreboards were inadequate Requiring two men to operate it the new scoreboard was hailed as one of the wonders of the cricket world Boards with players names on them were placed in different slits alongside scrolls of canvas with numbers painted on them which were rolled up and down to show the changing score Under the scoreboard was a refreshment stall which sold among other things oysters Sydney Cricket Ground on 12 December 1903 In 1896 the Ladies Stand was opened along with a concrete cycling track which circled the inside of the ground 3 One of the carpenters who built the formwork for the track was George Bradman father of Don Bradman In 1898 floodlights were built over the cycling track so that night events could be held In 1904 the scoreboard was rebuilt at the top of The Hill and in 1909 the Sheridan Stand named after Phil Sheridan was opened at the southern end replacing the earlier Smokers Stand In the period up to World War I the SCG was used for a wide variety of sports including athletics tennis baseball football and cycling The cycling track however was removed in 1920 In 1924 Ned Gregory s scoreboard was closed and the concrete scoreboard at the back of the Hill opened A crowded SCG during a 1930s cricket match During the 1920s and 1930s crowds packed into the SCG to see Don Bradman play for New South Wales and Australia Many of the huge gate takings that Bradman brought in for the NSWCA were spent on developing the ground A large new stand was built at the northern end in two stages It replaced the Northern Stand and was intended to also replace the Members and Ladies Stands The first stage begun while Bradman was still playing for New South Wales was opened in 1936 at a cost of 90 000 and named the M A Noble Stand after the great Australian captain Monty Noble The second stage completed in 1973 at a cost of 2 million was named the Bradman Stand after the great man himself Further redevelopment of the ground began in 1978 with the advent of World Series Cricket WSC and games played at night When media giant Kerry Packer failed to obtain the television broadcast rights for cricket he bought the top 30 40 players in the world and staged his own competition World Series Cricket Packer applied to use the SCG for WSC in 1977 but the SCG Trust which administered the ground refused However the NSW Labor Government under Premier Neville Wran amended the Sydney Sports Ground and Cricket Ground Act to remove the Trust s power to decide who played at the SCG and the NSWCA s traditional right over the ground A new Trust was established with 12 members appointed by the Government and two elected by SCG members The new Trust had no WSC opponents and although legal action by the NSWCA stopped WSC games being played at the SCG in 1977 they were played there in 1978 The SCG scoreboard in 1950 In the years since WSC the character of the SCG has somewhat changed Six light towers were built in 1978 at a cost of 1 2 million so that cricket could be played at night and two huge new stands were constructed at the southern end of the ground The new Brewongle Stand was built on the site of the old Brewongle Stand at a cost 8 9 million and opened in 1980 The Churchill Stand named after rugby league legend Clive Churchill replaced the Sheridan Stand at a cost of 8 2 million and was opened in 1986 The old concrete scoreboard was closed in 1983 and a new electronic board erected above The Hill This board allowed the crowd to see video replays and provided more scope for advertising The old concrete scoreboard sat behind the Doug Walters Stand unused until 2006 when it was dismantled and stored offsite to make way for the Victor Trumper Stand 4 The Bob Stand has been moved to North Sydney Oval replaced by the Bill O Reilly Stand This stand was originally named the Pat Hills Stand after the NSW Labor Government Minister and SCG Trust member when it was opened in 1984 However the incoming Greiner Government changed the name to the O Reilly Stand after the legendary spin bowler The Hill also has gone but the reason for that is a little harder to pin Up until 1991 the Hill was a grassy slope without seating It was the outer ground costing the least to get in and attracting working class patronage The invention of the beer can and the portable cooler in the 1960s increased alcohol consumption at cricket matches which in turn fuelled bad crowd behaviour In the 1970s the advent of limited overs games held partially at night attracted a different kind of crowd to cricket at the SCG They were less interested in the subtleties of the game and more in the excitement and spectacle Brawling and excessive drinking were features of the crowd on the Hill at this time Even the introduction of individual seating on the Hill in 1991 5 failed to completely eradicate crowd misbehaviour Stricter measures such as banning alcohol were later implemented with greater success Sydney Cricket Ground members entrance 2007 Further developments have taken place in more recent years with the internal reconstruction of the M A Noble stand completed in 1994 and the opening of the NSW Cricket Centre in 1997 This facility includes indoor training wickets and administrative offices for Cricket NSW formerly NSW Cricket Association In 1999 the original electronic scoreboard was replaced by a new higher definition video screen In the 21st century the Hill has been completely redeveloped with a new 12 000 seat Victor Trumper Stand completed in 2008 This stand brings the SCG s capacity to 46 000 spectators During the re development the 2 original light towers on the hill were replaced and the 4 other light towers were upgraded 6 a new video screen was also installed in the Clive Churchill stand replacing the screen that was on the hill The SCG Trust rebuilt the MA Noble Don Bradman and Dally Messenger stands for the 2013 14 Ashes series it increased ground capacity to 48 000 spectators This redevelopment was mostly completed in March 2014 at a cost of 197 5 million and also included a large new video screen In September 2018 construction began on a new video screen to replace the video screen at the Messenger Stand with the LED panels for the screen transferred across from the Sydney Football Stadium with an upgrade to the video screen in the Clive Churchill Stand and new LED advertising banners being installed in all of the stands except for the Members and Ladies pavilions The work was completed in time for Sydney FC s first ever A League game at the SCG 7 Since 2015 the Trust are keen on redeveloping the Bill O Reilly stand and later the Churchill and Brewongle stands further increasing the grounds capacity The ground will be a near complete modern bowl stadium with the exception of the two heritage listed Members and Ladies pavilions Stands EditIn its present configuration the SCG is a playing field surrounded by a collection of separate grandstand structures From the northern end clockwise they are M A Noble Bradman and Messenger stands Constructed in 2013 2014 The stand contains corporate boxes media facilities and members seating for Trust members and in the winter for eligible Swans members The Messenger Stand is also home to the main video screen for the ground Bill O Reilly Stand previously named Pat Hills Stand Built 1984 Corporate boxes and public reserved seating Victor Trumper Stand Constructed in 2007 2008 replaced Yabba s Hill and Doug Walters Stand corporate boxes and public reserved seating Clive Churchill Stand Built 1986 Corporate boxes and public reserved seating It also housed the Sydney Swans training and administration facilities before those were moved to the Royal Hall of Industries Building in the former Sydney Showground precinct in 2023 8 Brewongle Stand Built 1980 Corporate boxes and public reserved seating It was previously thought that the stand was named after the aboriginal word for camping place However the stand was named after a tea room at the Sydney Cricket Ground 9 The Brewongle and Clive Churchill stands during Sydney Swans vs Collingwood in May 2021 Ladies Pavilion Built 1896 Originally females only members seating also used for general public admission during events with low attendance Now general members seating Referred to as the Jane Mcgrath Stand on Day 3 of the annual Sydney Test also known as Mcgrath Day or Pink day Members Pavilion Built 1878 Members seating also contains the dressing rooms used by Australian Cricket Team Extensions were made to the pavilion in 1903 10 Sydney Cricket Ground Trust Edit The Sydney Cricket Ground at night after a rugby match Main articles Sydney Cricket Ground Trust and Venues NSW The Sydney Cricket and Sports Ground Trust popularly known as the Sydney Cricket Ground Trust was the agency that operated the Sydney Cricket Ground and the old Sydney Football Stadium at Moore Park In mid 2008 its head office The Sheridan Building is opened making it the third building to erect in the Gold Members Car Park alongside the Headquarters of Sydney Roosters and New South Wales Rugby Union The trust was merged into Venues NSW which now operates the SCG as well as the new Sydney Football Stadium Soon after it opened Sydney FC relocated their Headquarters inside the Sheridan Building The Sydney Swans headquarters are located in the SCG accessible from Driver Avenue In total there are 4 different clubs from 4 different codes of sport with their headquarters reside at the ground 11 Statues Edit The Trust has commissioned ten bronze sculpture statues to be placed around the grounds of the SCG and SFS Order Date Honouree Sport location Notes1 4 January 2008 Richie Benaud OBE Cricket bowler 12 2 20 March 2008 Dally Messenger Rugby League located outside of the SFS 13 3 5 January 2009 Fred Spofforth Cricket fast bowler 14 4 5 June 2009 Trevor Allan Rugby union and rugby league footballer 15 5 29 August 2009 Paul Roos Australian rules football 16 6 7 December 2009 Stephen Yabba Gascoign Famous spectator Located inside the grounds taking over two seats on the concourse in front of the new Victor Trumper stand 17 7 5 January 2010 Stan McCabe Cricket batsman 18 8 9 August 2010 Reg Gasnier AM Rugby league Part of the Basil Sellers Sports Sculpture project 19 Ken Catchpole OAM Rugby union Relocated in 2017 to outside the Rugby Australia HousePaul Kelly Australian rules footballSteve Waugh AO Cricket12 2016 Johnny Warren MBE OAM Football 20 13 3 January 2018 Betty Cuthbert and Marlene Mathews Athletics The first female athletes to be honoured 21 22 Media Hall of Honour Edit In 2014 the Sydney Cricket and Sports Ground Trust opened the Media Hall of Honour at the MA Noble Stand s media centre with fifteen inaugural inductees 23 24 Richie Benaud EH Tiger Black JHW Jack Fingleton Ian Heads Frank Hyde Norman May Alan McGilvray AG Johnnie Moyes John O Gready Bill O Reilly Ray Robinson Jim Shepherd Ray WarrenCricket EditNature of Pitch Edit Sydney Cricket Ground is traditionally one of the most spin friendly international cricket grounds in Australia because the soil and foundation of the pitch and playing surface is primarily Bulli soil from Bulli New South Wales 25 The SCG along with the Gabba in Brisbane are the only major test venues in Australia not to have switched to a drop in pitch 26 Sydney Cricket Ground Pitch Report amp All T20 Record In Hindi Cricketing History and Notable events Edit In 1854 the Garrison Club defeated the Royal Victoria Club in the first recorded cricket match to be played at what was then the Garrison Ground Although games were played at the Domain the Garrison Ground was used for practice by the NSW cricket team in 1860 and by the Victorian team in 1861 the before inter colonial matches in those years Cricket was first played in Australia in Sydney s Hyde Park in 1803 However up until the appointment of trustees to look after the SCG in the late 1870s several different grounds had been used The Domain was first used for inter colonial games and then the Albert Ground in Redfern but in time both became unavailable the Domain because of its poor condition and because it could not be fenced in and the Albert Ground because it closed in the late 1870s After the closure of the Albert Ground the New South Wales Cricket Association began using the Association Ground The first game played there was the final of the Civil Service Challenge Cup on 25 October 1877 between the New South Wales Government Printing Office and the Audit Office The first first class match was the inter colonial game between New South Wales and Victoria played on 22 23 and 25 February 1878 where New South Wales won by 1 wicket 27 Main article Sydney Riot of 1879 During the 1878 79 season Lord Harris England team toured Australia The feature of the tourists game against New South Wales at the SCG in 1879 was a riot sparked apparently when the crowd disagreed with an umpiring decision by George Coulthard that went against the locals Lord Harris believed the invasion of the ground by about 2000 spectators was actually started by bookmakers in the stand One of the umpires for the match was Edmund Barton later to become Australia s first Prime Minister By the time its first Test match was played at the SCG between 17 February and 21 February 1882 the ground was in fine condition The NSWCA had appointed Ned Gregory as curator and given him a cottage next to the ground for him and his family Australia won that game by overhauling England s scores of 133 and 232 with scores of 197 and 5 for 169 The ground high score in Test cricket was held for more than a century by Englishman Reg Tip Foster who scored 287 in an Australia England match in 1903 In the 100th test to be played at the SCG in January 2012 Michael Clarke was joined first by Ricky Ponting in a partnership of 288 and then by Michael Hussey in a partnership of 334 and built a score of 329 not out against India 28 Don Bradman made his first visit to the ground in the 1920 21 season to watch the Fifth Test of the Australia and England series In that game Charlie Macartney scored 170 to help seal a win for Australia Bradman scored the highest ever first class innings of 452 at the SCG for New South Wales against Queensland in 1928 29 This record was surpassed by Hanif Mohammad who scored 499 run out at Karachi It was further bettered by the West Indian Brian Lara who scored 501 in 1994 at Edgbaston The 1928 29 season was a big one for cricket On 15 December the largest ever crowd to attend a cricket match at the SCG 58 446 saw Australia and England play With changes to the ground seating the record is unlikely to be beaten Shane Warne is pictured bowling one of his last balls in Test cricket South Africa playing against Australia in 2009 In the last test of the 1970 71 English tour England fast bowler John Snow struck Australian spinner and tailender Terry Jenner on the head with a bouncer The Sydney crowd let Snow and the English know they were not happy with his behaviour and when Snow took up his fielding position on the fence a spectator spoke to him and grabbed him by the shirt Cans were thrown onto the field and England captain Ray Illingworth took his team from the ground The first women s club cricket match was held at the SCG in 1886 when the Fernleas played the Siroccos Although cricket was not seen as an appropriate game for women women s cricket associations were formed in Victoria in 1905 and other states in the 1920s and 1930s Night cricket was first played at the SCG on 28 November 1978 with World Series Cricket A crowd of 50 000 packed the ground The SCG was the scene of Shane Warne s first 1992 and final Tests 2007 In 2007 Justin Langer and Glenn McGrath also played their final Tests Celebrations at the SCG after Australia won the Ashes 5 0 in 2014 During the 100th Test match held at SCG on 3 January 2012 Michael Clarke scored his maiden triple century against India and was the first player to do so at the ground Exactly nine years before Steve Waugh scored a century to retain The Ashes and it was also the scene of his final test against India in 2004 The SCG was venue of two 5 0 Ashes Series clean sweeps completed in early 2007 and 2014 SCG is the traditional ground for hosting New Year Tests as well as the traditional final match of the Australian Ashes Series Since 2008 the New Year Test has also been named the Pink Test organised by Glenn McGrath and the McGrath Foundation named for his late wife Jane McGrath to raise breast cancer awareness and on the third day even if the day s play is rained out is named Pink Day or Jane McGrath Day in her honour 29 The SCG was the scene of tragedy on 25 November 2014 when a bouncer from Sean Abbott struck Phillip Hughes s neck knocking him unconscious Hughes later died as a result of a subarachnoid haemorrhage on 27 November having never regained consciousness 30 Since 2015 it is the venue where David Warner scored three consecutive centuries in Tests 2015 17 Steve Smith and Don Bradman scored four in a row at the Melbourne Cricket Ground During the streak he scored a century within the first session of the game in 2017 against Pakistan He also scored a half century in the second innings The half century streak continued to three when he scored a half century in the first innings of the final test in the 2017 18 Ashes series but the century streak ended as Australia won by an innings and was not required to bat again On 12 January 2019 Australia won the first ODI against India at the Sydney Cricket Ground by 34 runs to record their 1 000th win in international cricket 31 Rugby league EditSee also List of rugby league test matches at the Sydney Cricket Ground The SCG has hosted 1 392 top level premiership rugby league games more than any other ground in Australia as of 2015 in addition to 70 Test matches and World Cup games Between 1913 and 1987 the NSWRFL Premiership Final was always played at the SCG unless circumstances dictated otherwise Due to the ground s historical significance to rugby league it is often used for special heritage matches for National Rugby League club and representative matches Rugby league was first played at the SCG on 22 June 1911 between Australia and New Zealand 32 The ground was first used by the New South Wales Rugby Football League in 1913 At this time the Trust only gave players access to dressing sheds in the Sheridan Stand and did not allow use of the rooms in the Members Stand This rule was relaxed in 1918 The 1915 NSWRFL season s first round match between defending premiers Eastern Suburbs and Glebe was played in front of a record crowd of 13 000 33 The 1920 Great Britain Lions tour saw the British rugby league team tour Australia for the first time since World War I and huge crowds attended their games The first match of the tour was at the SCG against Metropolis in front of nearly 68 000 spectators Australia won the first Test in Brisbane and in the second Test at the SCG on 3 July The Australians sealed the series scoring five tries to win 21 8 and secure the Ashes series for the first time at home The attendance record for a rugby league match in Australia was broken in 1932 when 70 204 people saw Australia play England in the first test of the 1932 Ashes series at the Cricket Ground 34 It was also in this game that the Australians first wore the green jersey with a double gold V which they have been wearing ever since The English side boasted one of the great rugby league back lines consisting of captain Jim Sullivan fullback Alf Ellaby and Stan Smith wings and Artie Atkinson and Stan Brogden in the centres The gates of the SCG had to be closed to prevent another 15 000 people from entering Australia lost the game 8 6 The second game was the famous Battle of Brisbane Test which Australia won In the third Test back at the SCG Australia lead 11 3 until late in the game Incredibly England scored three quick tries to snatch the game 18 13 and the series The attendance of the first test stood as the highest recorded crowd for an international rugby league match until 73 631 fans attended the 1992 World Cup Final between Australia and Great Britain at the famous Wembley Stadium in London England Unrecognizable after playing on a muddy SCG footballers of the British and Australian national rugby league sides leave the field after the first Test on 12 June 1950 The next tour by England was in 1946 knows as The Indomitables tour due to the Great Britain team traveling to Australia on the Royal Navy s Aircraft carrier HMS Indomitable The first test played on 17 June was an 8 8 draw the opening try of the series was scored by the legendary Frank Whitcombe for the tourists in front of a crowd of 64 527 England went on to win The Ashes In 1950 Australia had not won a series against the team Lions for 30 years but this time there was a big change Britain had won the first Test and Australia the second which made the third SCG Test the decider The tour coincided with a record amount of rain and by the time the teams arrived the SCG was a mud heap Forty tonnes of soil were brought in and spread over the surface to try and dry it out Tied 2 2 at half time Australia scored the only try of the match late in the second half when winger Ron Roberts crossed in the corner to seal the win At the end of the game the crowd of over 47 000 jumped the fence and invaded the field and congregated in front of the Members Stand cheering and calling for Aussie captain Clive Churchill The 1963 NSWRFL Grand Final was won by the St George Dragons 8 3 in front of 69 860 fans in atrocious conditions It was the Dragons eighth consecutive premiership and their third consecutive grand final win against the Western Suburbs Magpies The match s only try scored by Dragons winger Johnny King was clouded in controversy after he appeared to be tackled when a defender knocked him flat on the ground only to get up and carry the ball to the try line under howls of protest from Wests players who believe that the referee had called King to play the ball That try became the centre of furore when rumors spread that match referee Darcy Lawler had bet on St George to win Wests captain Arthur Summons later claimed one of his players announced to his teammates before the game that any who had bet on the Magpies to win had better lay off their bets as referee Lawler had backed St George After the match photographer John O Gready took the iconic rugby league photograph The Gladiators depicting Arthur Summons supporting St George captain Norm Provan The photo of Summons and Provan was later used as the basis for the Winfield Cup trophy and continues to be used to this day with the National Rugby League s Telstra Premiership Trophy On 18 September 1965 the largest ever official crowd at the SCG 78 056 saw St George defeat the South Sydney Rabbitohs 12 8 in the NSWRFL grand final Gates were ordered to be closed two hours before the game began and children were allowed to sit inside the fence Contemporary accounts indicate that many more perhaps thousands gained other means of access and sat on grandstand roofs or went into the Sydney Showground Moore Park and viewed the match from the stairways and roof of the main pavilion Estimates from people there that day put the crowd as high as 90 000 This would stand as the largest rugby league crowd in Australia until Game 2 of the 1994 State of Origin series when 87 161 attended the game at the Melbourne Cricket Ground Due to the overcrowding of the ground during the grand final the New South Wales Police Force imposed a 70 000 capacity limit on the Cricket Ground for safety reasons The SCG hosted the 1968 Rugby League World Cup Final won 20 2 by the Johnny Raper led Australians over France in front of 54 290 The Australian team that day coached by Harry Bath boasted legends of the Australian game in Raper Lock Eric Simms Fullback Graeme Langlands and Johnny Greaves centres Bob Fulton Five eighth Billy Smith halfback Arthur Beetson prop and Dick Thornett and Ron Coote second row Although the Final attracted over 54 000 fans this was actually not the highest attendance of the 1968 World Cup That came during the opening game of the tournament when 62 256 saw Australia defeat Great Britain 25 10 This would stand as the highest attendance for a World Cup match until 73 631 attended the 1992 World Cup Final to see Australia again defeat Great Britain 10 6 at the famous Wembley Stadium in London One of the most courageous efforts at the SCG was John Sattler s performance in the 1970 grand final between South Sydney and the Manly Warringah Sea Eagles In the first ten minutes of the game South s captain Sattler had his jaw broken by a punch from Manly forward John Bucknall in an off the ball incident Sattler went down but pulled himself up on teammate Michael Cleary asking the winger to help him so that the other players would not know he was hurt In an act of supreme courage Sattler played on refusing treatment at half time and pleas from teammates not to take the field again to lead Souths to a famous 23 12 win It was not until well after the game that he went to hospital The Australian side to tour Britain was selected that night and but for his injury Sattler would have been picked as captain The Cricket Ground hosted what many consider to be the toughest grand final of all in 1973 when defending premiers Manly Warringah faced the Cronulla Sutherland Sharks who were playing in their first ever grand final after joining the competition in 1967 The Sharks were Captain coached by Great Britain halfback Tommy Bishop and had a forward pack led by his tough St Helens and GB teammate Cliff Watson and 1973 Rothmans Medallist Ken Maddison along with goal kicking 18 year old whiz kid centre Steve Rogers Manly were coached by Ron Willey and captained by tough hooker Freddy Jones and could boast internationals Ken Irvine Ray Branighan Bob Fulton John O Neill British lock Malcolm Reilly as well as tough tackling second row forward Terry Randall and 19 year old fullback Graham Eadie From the opening kick off the game descended into a series of high or late tackles and several all in brawls though surprisingly referee Keith Page didn t send any player off despite threatening to do so and repeatedly handing out cautions including twice to all 26 players on the field In the opening minutes of the game Mal Reilly was felled in back play by Cronulla hooker Ron Rocky Turner well after he kicked the ball and after writhing on the ground in agony with a badly bruised hip left the field for a pain killing injection When he returned he created mayhem with strong arm tactics although he was clearly out of sorts football wise and was replaced after just 25 minutes by John Bucknell In the end the difference between the two teams was Manly s international centre Bob Fulton who scored two tries in leading Manly to a 10 7 win The game was described by Sunday Telegraph writer Ian Heads as A grand final as tough and dirty as any bar room brawl 35 In 1975 in one of the most memorable grand finals ever the Arthur Beetson captained Jack Gibson coached Eastern Suburbs Roosters defeated St George 38 0 to win the premiership That Roosters team is considered one of the best sides ever assembled and the eight tries to nil scoreline remained a record winning margin in a grand final until the 2008 NRL Grand Final played between Manly Warringah and the Melbourne Storm Manly winning by the tune of 40 0 However the game was famous for reasons other than the scoreline St George s Captain coach Graeme Langlands played with a misdirected pain killing injection that made his right leg go numb and prevented him from playing anywhere near his best Easts were without two of their stars rookie fullback Russell Fairfax and centre Mark Harris and coach Jack Gibson gambled on an unknown player to help fill the void John Rheinberger who played in his first only first grade game in the grand final Leading by only 5 0 at half time the Roosters scored an avalanche of tries after the interval to humiliate the Dragons Earlier in the same season the Roosters recorded the longest winning streak of any first grade rugby league football club 19 matches It was the Eastern Suburbs Roosters eleventh premiership victory and their second in succession The SCG hosted its second Rugby League World Cup Final in 1977 On 25 June Australia defeated Great Britain 13 12 in front of just 24 457 fans The match was highlighted by a 60 metre try to Manly Warringah centre Russel Gartner who outpaced the Lions chasers late in the first half to give Australia an 8 5 lead This would prove to be as of 2016 the last World Cup game played at the SCG In 1981 another memorable and emotional rugby league grand final was played at the SCG Since joining the Sydney Premiership in 1947 the Parramatta Eels had not won a grand final In 1976 and 1977 it had suffered consecutive losses first to Manly Warringah who also joined the league in 1947 and then St George in the first replayed grand final In 1981 the Eels dream team another team coached by Jack Gibson comprising internationals Ray Price Mick Cronin Ron Hilditch and Bob The Bear O Reilly as well as budding stars Peter Sterling Brett Kenny Steve Ella Eric Grothe and John Muggleton outscored the Tommy Raudonikis captained Newtown four tries to three to win 20 11 and secure their first premiership Playing second row for Newtown that day was future dual grand final winning and NSW State of Origin coach Phil Gould Financial pressures at the Newtown club would result in the Jets competing in the New South Wales Rugby League first grade competition for only two seasons following their 1981 grand final appearance The 1986 NSWRL Grand Final at the SCG between the John Monie coached Parramatta and defending premiers Canterbury Bankstown coached by Warren Ryan and played in front of one of the smallest grand final crowds in years 45 843 would go down as the lowest scoring and only try less grand final in NSWRL history Parramatta won their 4th premiership in six years with a tough 4 2 win thanks to two Mick Cronin goals to send captain Ray Price and Cronin into rugby league retirement on the winning note they deserved after stellar careers for Parramatta NSW and Australia Cronin retired from the game having scored 1 971 points in the Sydney premiership 75 tries 865 goals and 2 field goals all for Parramatta at the time the record number of points scored in a career The last rugby league grand final played at the Cricket Ground was the 1987 decider between the Bob Fulton coached Manly Warringah Sea Eagles and the Canberra Raiders who had joined the premiership in 1982 In front of 50 201 fans on an unseasonably warm day in Sydney the Sea Eagles ran out 18 8 winners scoring two tries to one with dual rugby international Michael O Connor scoring 14 of Manly s points with a try and a perfect 5 5 goal kicking Manly s other try scorer that day Five eighth Cliff Lyons won the Clive Churchill Medal as the man of the match The ground lost the grand final and numerous games to the Sydney Football Stadium SFS in 1988 Even so between 1988 and 2018 the ground continued to host occasional National Rugby League matches 36 37 mostly featuring the Heritage round game between St George Illawarra and South Sydney and the 2008 Centenary ANZAC Test between Australia and New Zealand in what was the first test held at the famous old ground since the Wally Lewis captained Australians had defeated the Kiwis 29 12 on 19 July 1986 in front of 34 302 fans The 2008 Kangaroos kitted out in replica 1908 jumpers depicting the colours of NSW and Qld ran out 28 12 winners in front of 34 571 fans the largest Test crowd in Sydney since the first Ashes test of the 1992 Great Britain Lions tour when 40 141 attended Game 1 at the SFS Regular rugby league action returned to the SCG on 16 March 2019 with the Sydney Roosters calling the SCG home after the Sydney Football Stadium was demolished to make way for the Sydney Football Stadium 2022 on the site The Anzac Day clash between St George Illawarra and the Sydney Roosters will also be held at the SCG while the Roosters call the cricket ground home 38 The Bill O Reilly and Dally Messenger Stands during the Sydney Roosters vs St George Illawarra ANZAC Day clash in 2021 State of Origin Edit The Cricket Ground hosted six State of Origin series games from 1982 1987 Game Date Result Attendance Year1 22 June 1982 Queensland def New South Wales 10 5 20 242 19822 21 June 1983 New South Wales def Queensland 10 6 21 620 19833 19 June 1984 Queensland def New South Wales 14 2 29 088 19844 11 June 1985 New South Wales def Queensland 21 14 39 068 19855 10 June 1986 New South Wales def Queensland 24 20 40 707 19866 16 June 1987 Queensland def New South Wales 12 6 42 048 1987Tennis EditIn 1885 the first inter colonial tennis match was held at the SCG when Victoria played New South Wales although forms of the game were no doubt played in Australia from its colonial beginnings All colonies of Australia were well established when the final versions of the rules of the game were codified by the Marylebone Cricket Club in 1875 and by the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club in 1877 when it held its first tournament at Wimbledon Tennis was regularly played at the SCG in the early days The Sydney tournament which was to become the New South Wales Open was first played at the SCG in 1885 before moving to the NSW Lawn Tennis Club s courts at Double Bay then to White City and later to the Olympic Tennis Centre at Homebush Bay The SCG was the host of the 1908 Australasian Championships 39 Motor racing EditIn 1898 Sydney cycle firm Gavin Gibson Ltd imported seven motorised tricycles produced by Count Jules Albert de Dion and powered by one cylinder petrol engines designed by his partner Georges Bouton On the evening of 1 January 1901 these seven machines raced around the concrete cycle track which ringed the inside of the SCG in those days to compete in Australia s first ever motor race Empire Games EditThe SCG was the main stadium for the 1938 British Empire Games which were tied into the State s sesqui centenary celebrations Perhaps because of this the Federal Government provided no money and only 10 000 came from the State Government to cover the organising committee s administrative costs The budget was therefore very tight and using the existing SCG was one way of making ends meet Cyclist Edgar Dunc Gray led the teams onto the ground and athletes ran on a makeshift grass track Rugby union EditClub rugby was first played at the then Civil and Military Ground as early as 1870 and the first inter colonial game was played there in 1882 NSW beat Queensland 28 4 From June 1911 the NSW Rugby League had exclusive use of the SCG as well as the Sydney Sports Ground and the Sydney Showground preventing rugby union games from being played there Over the years the SCG hosted 71 rugby union tests before Sydney international matches were moved first to Waratah Rugby Park Concord Oval then the Sydney Football Stadium and later Stadium Australia The largest ever crowd to watch a rugby union match at the SCG was 49 327 who saw NSW played New Zealand on 13 July 1907 Of those 71 tests none could have been more dramatic than the game against the South African Springboks on 7 August 1971 Marred by anti apartheid protests field invasions and objects being thrown onto the ground and halted several times to remove golf balls and protestors it was won by South Africa who went through the tour undefeated The SCG has been both a happy and unhappy hunting ground for Australian rugby union One of the worst incidents to occur there was the sad demise of Ken Catchpole s international career Robbed of a glorious retirement his career ended in a disgraceful scandal Australia was playing the New Zealand All Blacks and while Catchpole was trapped on the bottom of a ruck New Zealander second rower Colin Meads tried to drag him out by one leg splitting him like a wishbone Australia although well beaten on this occasion was well served by international standard halfbacks and 20 year old John Hipwell ran on for his first test as Catchpole was carried off It was a sad end to an illustrious career Dramatic though that game was no test could have been as important in the development of Australian Rugby Union than the game against the touring Welsh team in 1978 The 1978 Welsh had arrived in Australia as the then Five Nations Champions Triple Crown winners the best rugby union team in the world but they were a sad and sorry bunch by the time they got to Sydney for the last game of the tour the second test The team was decimated by injuries and in two earlier tour games had suffered a last minute loss to Sydney and a humiliating defeat midweek to the Australian Capital Territory Rumours abounded that the Welsh were ready for a big get square with Australian prop Steve Finnane the so called enforcer of the Australian team Finnane and other senior members of the team had vowed to avenge the defeat of the Australians by the Welsh on their last tour of the UK several years before The SCG crowd didn t have long to wait because after the very first scrum Welsh prop Graham Price came out holding his bloodied jaw the victim of a Finnane punch Price had bored in on Finnane his opposite number in the front row and Finnane reacted After Price left the field and the game continued for a short while until the Welsh using a pre determined code word sparked an all in brawl Wales lost the test and the two test series In 1979 there was a one off game against the All Blacks at the SCG The kicking of a young five eighth named Tony Melrose closed out the New Zealanders and Australia won a try less game 12 6 to take back the Bledisloe Cup for the first time since 1949 The following year the Australians showed it was no fluke by beating New Zealand two tests to one in Australia to successfully defend the trophy for the first time On 14 April 2018 the NSW Waratahs played a home game at the SCG against the Queensland Reds in the Waratahs first appearance at the ground in 35 years 40 41 For the 2019 Super Rugby season the Waratahs will stage 3 of their home games at the SCG while the Sydney Football Stadium is rebuilt 42 In July 2022 the SCG staged a rugby union test for the first time since 1986 when Australia played England 43 Australian rules football Edit A New South Wales player marks over a West Australian opponent in the goal square at the 1933 Australian Football Carnival The old Sydney Showground is in the background The first Australian rules football match to be played at the SCG was Inter Colonial football match played between Victoria and New South Wales on 6 August 1881 Essendon and Melbourne played a premiership match at Moore Park in 1904 in front of the Governor General and Governor of NSW Melbourne won and both teams had to return home by boat down the coast two other matches Fitzroy v Collingwood and Geelong v Carlton which had been postponed were also played there in 1903 In 1922 Port Adelaide played a combined New South Wales side on the ground 44 In the subsequent decades the ground was rarely used for Australian Rules except for the occasional exhibition match or interstate football carnival Richmond played Collingwood there in 1952 and eight VFL matches were played there in 1979 1981 but Australian rules football was not to make a regular comeback to the SCG until 1982 when South Melbourne relocated to Sydney and made the SCG its home ground Sydney Swans Edit Main article Sydney Swans Sydney Swans playing the Western Bulldogs at the SCG in 2008 South Melbourne was formed in 1867 a foundation member of the first Australian rules competition the Victorian Football Association VFA and also its later replacement the Victorian Football League VFL The club won five premierships with the VFA up to 1890 and three more in the VFL in the first half of the 20th century but a lack of success in the post war years and serious financial troubles left them ripe for relocation when the game s administrators were looking to expand the competition into other states 45 In 1982 South Melbourne moved to Sydney and the SCG to become the Sydney Swans Despite their shaky financial situation the Swans were the flavour of Sydney in the early years the Swans matches at the SCG were the place to be seen rivaling Sydney s main winter sport rugby league In the late 1980s Sydney Rules Ltd the company which ran the licence for the club recorded a profit of 600 000 However when the stock market crashed in October 1987 the Swans went with it but the Swans have since managed to hold on and have gained a foothold in Sydney 46 47 48 View towards the members stands as seen during the 2018 second elimination final between the Swans and the Giants The SCG most notably hosted Sydney s preliminary final against Essendon in 1996 in which full forward Tony Lockett scored a behind after the final siren to give Sydney a one point win sending the Swans into their first grand final since 1945 Between 2003 and 2015 most Sydney Swans home finals had been played at the larger Stadium Australia unless it was otherwise booked Since 2016 all Swans home finals with the exception of a Sydney Derby in 2016 have been played at the SCG There have been two modern day pitch invasions witnessed at the ground first in 1999 when Tony Lockett kicked his 1300th career goal to become the highest goalkicker in VFL AFL history 49 and second in 2022 when Lance Franklin kicked his 1000th career goal becoming only the sixth player to kick as many goals in VFL AFL history 50 On 9 September 2017 the largest ever crowd to watch an Australian Rules game at the SCG 46 323 came to see the Swans defeat Essendon in an Elimination Final The SCG was the shortest field used for AFL games at 153 metres long but Geelong s Kardinia Park is narrower However recent works on the Northern Stand facilitated an extension of the playing surface means it is no longer the shortest ground in the league Other sports EditThe SCG has been a popular arena for a whole range of sports before the turn of the 20th century including cricket tennis baseball soccer and cycling with athletics being staged there as early as 1879 On New Year s Day 1880 possibly some of the most exotic sports ever seen at the SCG were staged when the 12th Annual Highlands Games was held Organised by the Scottish community events included tossing the caber putting the stone and other traditional Highland sports as well as Highland dancing A crowd of 5000 attended On 5 May 1964 51 566 soccer fans came to the SCG to see NSW take on English club Everton F C In 1974 the Socceroos defeated Uruguay 2 0 in front of a capacity crowd in a friendly match before the World Cup Finals It was announced in April 2018 that Sydney FC will stage 6 of their 13 home matches in the 2019 2020 A League season with the other 7 games to be split between Jubilee Oval and Leichhardt Oval while the Sydney Football Stadium is demolished and rebuilt 51 Sydney FC played their first game at the SCG on 27 October 2018 against rivals Western Sydney Wanderers FC in front of 30 688 fans 52 US Major League Baseball 22 23 March 2014 Edit Major League Baseball starts its 2014 season at the Sydney Cricket Ground In June 2013 Major League Baseball the New South Wales Government and the Sydney Cricket Ground announced that the season opening first two games of the 2014 MLB season would be played at the SCG between the Arizona Diamondbacks and the Los Angeles Dodgers on Saturday 22 March 7pm AEST 0800 UTC 1am PDT and Sunday 23 March 1pm AEST 0200 UTC 7pm PDT Saturday 22 March 2014 53 54 55 56 The Northern Stand was completed for the 2013 14 Ashes series and provided the main stand behind home plate with premium seating The temporary outfield fence arced from the eastern Bill O Reilly Stand left field third base line and the western Brewongle Stand right field first base line 53 57 Two bullpens were positioned behind the outfield fence Seating was restricted in the Victor Trumper Stand and the Clive Churchill Stand due to eye line restrictions caused by the outfield fence and the need for a batter s eye space in centre field Its dimensions were 328 feet 99 974 m to foul lines 370 feet 112 776 m to power alleys and 400 feet 121 920 m to centre field It was announced that due to the restricted seating the SCG s capacity would be 38 000 for baseball Game 1 of the series won 3 1 by the Dodgers with the win going to their ace pitcher Clayton Kershaw attracted 38 266 fans while Game 2 won 7 5 by the Dodgers attracted 38 079 fans 58 59 As the games took place approximately one week before the normal season opening date both the Diamondbacks and the Dodgers actually returned to their Spring Training schedules once the series ended Major League Baseball is a significant co owner of the Australian Baseball League relaunched in 2010 and cooperates with the Australian Baseball Federation 55 Test cricket records EditBatting Edit Ricky Ponting holds the record for most career runs at the SCG Wally Hammond scored 808 runs in 7 innings at the ground a record for non Australians Michael Clarke scored 329 against India in 2012 the highest score at the ground Shane Warne has taken the most wickets at the ground with 64 George Lohmann took 35 wickets in eight innings the most of any non Australian Tendulkar made 241 as India totalled 7 705 declared in 2004 Bradman and Barnes during their partnership of 405 Most career runs 60 Runs Player Period1 480 27 innings Ricky Ponting 1996 20121 177 29 innings Allan Border 1979 19941 150 22 innings Greg Chappell 1971 19841 127 21 innings David Boon 1984 19951 084 25 innings Steve Waugh 1986 2004Most career runs non Australia 61 Runs Player Period808 7 innings Wally Hammond 1928 1946785 9 innings Sachin Tendulkar 1992 2012654 15 innings Jack Hobbs 1908 1928569 11 innings David Gower 1979 1991549 7 innings VVS Laxman 2000 2012Highest individual scores 62 Runs Player Date329 v India Michael Clarke 3 Jan 2012287 v Australia R E Foster 11 Dec 1903277 v Australia Brian Lara 2 Jan 1993251 v Australia Wally Hammond 14 Dec 1928242 v West Indies Doug Walters 14 Feb 1969Most centuries 63 Centuries Player Period6 27 innings Ricky Ponting 1996 20124 7 innings Wally Hammond 1928 19464 10 innings Usman Khawaja 2011 20234 15 innings Steve Smith 2011 20234 18 innings David Warner 2012 2023Highest batting average 5 innings 64 Average Player Period161 60 7 innings 2 NO Wally Hammond 1928 1946157 00 9 innings 4 NO Sachin Tendulkar 1931 1947130 83 10 innings 4 NO Usman Khawaja 2011 202294 00 13 innings 5 NO Michael Hussey 2006 201378 42 7 innings 0 NO VVS Laxman 2000 2012Bowling Edit Most career wickets 65 Wickets Player Period64 26 innings Shane Warne 1992 200753 16 innings Stuart MacGill 1999 200650 24 innings Glenn McGrath 1993 200645 12 innings Charles Turner 1887 189543 16 innings Dennis Lillee 1971 1984Most career wickets non Australia 66 Wickets Player Period35 8 innings George Lohmann 1887 189228 10 innings Sydney Barnes 1901 191224 10 innings Bobby Peel 1885 189524 6 innings Maurice Tate 1924 192823 13 innings Billy Bates 1882 188723 7 innings Tom Richardson 1894 1898Best innings figures 67 Figures Player Date8 35 v Australia George Lohmann 25 Feb 18878 58 v Australia George Lohmann 29 Jan 18928 94 v Australia Tom Richardson 26 Feb 18988 141 v Australia Anil Kumble 2 Jan 20047 40 v Australia Dick Barlow 26 Jan 18837 40 v Australia John Snow 9 Jan 19717 43 v England Charles Turner 10 Feb 18887 44 v England Fred Spofforth 26 Jan 18837 46 v West Indies Allan Border 26 Jan 19897 50 v England Stuart MacGill 2 Jan 1999Note best innings figures limited to 10 there have actually been 23 seven wicket innings hauls at the Sydney Cricket Ground Best match figures 68 Figures Player Date12 87 v England Charles Turner 10 Feb 188812 107 v England Stuart MacGill 2 Jan 199912 128 v South Africa Shane Warne 2 Jan 199412 165 v Australia Imran Khan 14 Jan 197712 175 v England Herbert Hordern 15 Dec 191112 279 v Australia Anil Kumble 2 Jan 2004Lowest strike rate 4 innings 69 Strike rate Player Period29 7 4 wickets Michael Clarke 2005 201431 6 12 wickets Frank Tyson 1954 195532 1 13 wickets Richard Hadlee 1974 198532 4 11 wickets Tom Horan 1882 188534 8 35 wickets George Lohmann 1887 1892Team records Edit Highest innings scores 70 Score Team Date7 705d India v Australia 2 Jan 20048 659d Australia v England 13 Dec 19464 659d Australia v India 3 Jan 20127 649d Australia v England 4 Jan 2018644 England v Australia 3 Jan 2011Lowest completed innings 71 Score Team Date42 Australia v England 10 Feb 188845 England v Australia 28 Jan 188765 England v Australia 1 Feb 189572 England v Australia 1 Feb 189577 England v Australia 14 Mar 1885Partnership records Edit Highest partnerships 72 Runs Wicket Players Match Date405 5th Sid Barnes 234 amp Don Bradman 234 Australia v England 13 Dec 1946353 4th Sachin Tendulkar 241 amp VVS Laxman 178 India v Australia 2 Jan 2004336 4th Doug Walters 242 amp Bill Lawry 151 Australia v West Indies 14 Feb 1969334 5th Michael Clarke 329 amp Michael Hussey 150 Australia v India 3 Jan 2012293 3rd Brian Lara 277 amp Richie Richardson 109 West Indies v Australia 2 Jan 1993Highest partnerships by wicket 73 Runs Wicket Players Match Date234 1st Bob Barber 185 amp Geoffrey Boycott 84 England v Australia 7 Jan 1966224 2nd Clem Hill 191 amp Warren Bardsley 132 Australia v South Africa 9 Dec 1910224 Sunil Gavaskar 172 amp Mohinder Amarnath 138 India v Australia 2 Jan 1986293 3rd Brian Lara 277 amp Richie Richardson 109 West Indies v Australia 2 Jan 1993353 4th Sachin Tendulkar 241 amp VVS Laxman 178 India v Australia 2 Jan 2004405 5th Sid Barnes 234 amp Don Bradman 234 Australia v England 13 Dec 1946187 6th Warwick Armstrong 158 amp Charles Kelleway 78 Australia v England 17 Dec 1920204 7th Rishabh Pant 159 amp Ravindra Jadeja 81 India v Australia 3 Jan 2019154 8th George Bonnor 128 amp Sammy Jones 40 Australia v England 14 Mar 1885154 9th Syd Gregory 201 amp Jack Blackham 74 Australia v England 14 Dec 1894130 10th R E Foster 287 amp Wilfred Rhodes 40 England v Australia 11 Dec 1903All records correct as of 2 July 2021 Seating capacity and other records EditSeating capacity 48 000 74 Largest rugby league match attendance 78 056 St George v South Sydney 18 September 1965 Largest cricket match attendance 58 446 Australia v England 15 December 1928 Largest association football soccer match attendance 51 566 NSW v Everton 2 May 1964 Largest rugby union match attendance 49 327 NSW v New Zealand 13 July 1907 Largest Australian rules football match attendance 46 323 Sydney v Essendon 9 September 2017 Largest concert attendance 45 191 WaveAid benefit concert 29 January 2005 Largest Big Bash League attendance 39 756 Sydney Sixers v Sydney Thunder 14 January 2017 Preceded byLake Oval Albert Park South Melbourne Football Club Home of the Sydney Swans 1982 present Succeeded byCurrent groundPreceded bySydney Common Home of the New South Wales Blues 1878 present Succeeded byCurrent groundPreceded byFirst venue Home of the Sydney Sixers 2011 present Succeeded byCurrent groundPreceded byFirst venue Host of the New South Wales Rugby League premiership grand final 1908 1987 Succeeded bySydney Football StadiumPreceded byNo designated final effectively Odsal Stadium Host of the Rugby League World Cup final 1968 Succeeded by Headingley Rugby StadiumPreceded byFirst venue Host of the World Club Challenge 1976 Succeeded by Central ParkPreceded by WACA Ground Grand Final stadiums of Tuyul Rugby Sevens 1998 Succeeded by Chichibunomiya Rugby StadiumGallery Edit Large light towers were added to the ground in the late 1970s to capitalise on night cricket The historic Members Pavilion under lights with the Sydney skyline behind Sydney Cricket Ground looking over Yabba s Hill and the Pat Hills Stand before redevelopment during 5th Test 1982 83 Ashes SeriesSee also Edit Architecture portal Cricket portalHistory of Test cricket to 1883 History of Test cricket 1884 to 1889 History of Test cricket 1890 to 1900 List of Test cricket grounds Melbourne Cricket Ground List of international cricket centuries at the Sydney Cricket Ground List of international cricket five wicket hauls at the Sydney Cricket Ground List of Australian rules football statues a list of Australian rules football related statues across AustraliaReferences Edit Seating Capacities sydneycricketground com au Sydney Cricket amp Sports Ground Trust Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 13 September 2015 Sydney Cricket Ground Austadiums com Austadiums Archived from the original on 19 January 2016 Retrieved 13 September 2015 AMATEUR CYCLING CARNIVAL Truth Sydney NSW 1894 1954 Sydney NSW National Library of Australia 13 December 1896 p 6 Archived from the original on 3 July 2022 Retrieved 2 June 2015 Iconic SCG cricket scoreboard returns to Sydney home ABC News 13 September 2018 Archived from the original on 18 October 2018 Retrieved 10 November 2018 Over the hill an era ends at the SCG Austadiums austadiums com Archived from the original on 4 January 2018 Retrieved 26 April 2018 It s all looking bright for the SCG Austadiums austadiums com Archived from the original on 4 January 2018 Retrieved 26 April 2018 New SCG scoreboard debuts as soccer returns Austadiums Archived from the original on 21 April 2019 Retrieved 10 November 2018 Swans enjoy first official day at new HQ sydneyswans com au Retrieved 12 January 2023 Huxley John 24 November 2011 Not everyone s cup of tea but Brewongle stands tall in name game The Sydney Morning Herald Archived from the original on 14 May 2014 Retrieved 9 January 2014 Our grand stands through time www scgt nsw gov au Archived from the original on 24 January 2020 Retrieved 9 January 2020 History of Sydney Cricket Ground footballcoal com Retrieved 1 February 2022 Bronzed Benaud stands tall at SCG ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation 4 January 2008 Archived from the original on 7 February 2008 Retrieved 5 January 2010 Statue honours Dally Messenger ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation 30 March 2008 Retrieved 5 January 2010 Spofforth statue unveiled at SCG ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation 5 January 2009 Archived from the original on 1 December 2021 Retrieved 5 January 2010 Trevor Allan immortalised in bronze Sydney Cricket Ground Trust 6 June 2009 Archived from the original on 14 March 2011 Retrieved 5 January 2010 Paul Roos honoured with AFL sculpture Sydney Cricket Ground Trust 29 August 2009 Archived from the original on 30 September 2009 Retrieved 5 January 2010 Roebuck Peter 8 December 2009 Yabba back on the Hill The Age Archived from the original on 19 January 2010 Retrieved 5 January 2010 SCG statue immortalises McCabe ABC Sport Australian Broadcasting Corporation 5 January 2010 Archived from the original on 23 November 2010 Retrieved 5 January 2010 Ritchie Dean 9 August 2010 Reg Gasnier immortalised in bronze Herald and Weekly Times Australia Archived from the original on 15 June 2011 Retrieved 2 October 2010 Johnny Warren Sculpture Unveiling the Legend YouTube Archived from the original on 30 March 2019 Retrieved 29 June 2016 Bronze sculptures of Australia s olympic athletes Betty Cuthbert and Marlene Mathews Photos and Images european pressphoto agency Epa eu Archived from the original on 4 January 2018 Retrieved 3 January 2018 Cuthbert and Mathews our first ladies in bronze Precinct Scgt nsw gov au Archived from the original on 3 January 2018 Retrieved 3 January 2018 SCG Trust unveils inaugural inductees in 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on 9 July 2021 Retrieved 2 July 2021 Sydney Cricket Ground Cricket Team Records amp Stats ESPNcricinfo com Cricinfo Archived from the original on 3 July 2022 Retrieved 28 December 2021 Seating Capacities Archived from the original on 6 April 2011 Retrieved 10 August 2011 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sydney Cricket Ground Official website Google Maps satellite image of SCG Retrosheet details of the 2014 baseball gamesPreceded byParc des Princes 1954 Stade de Gerland 1972 Rugby League World Cup Final venue1968 1977 Succeeded byHeadingley 1970 Eden Park 1988 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sydney Cricket Ground amp oldid 1133075068, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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