McLean Park

McLean Park
Ground information
Location Napier, New Zealand
Coordinates 39°30′7″S 176°54′46″E / 39.50194°S 176.91278°E / -39.50194; 176.91278Coordinates: 39°30′7″S 176°54′46″E / 39.50194°S 176.91278°E / -39.50194; 176.91278
Establishment 1911[1]
Capacity 19,700
Owner Napier City Council
Operator Napier City Council
Tenants Hurricanes (Super Rugby)
Hawke's Bay Rugby Union (ITM Cup)
Central Stags (State Championship/State Shield/State Twenty20)
End names
Centennial stand end
Embankment end
International information
First Test 16 February 1979:
 New Zealand v  Pakistan
Last Test 26 January 2012:
 New Zealand v  Zimbabwe
First ODI 19 March 1982:
 New Zealand v  Sri Lanka
Last ODI 2 February 2017:
 New Zealand v  Australia
First T20I 3 January 2017:
 New Zealand v  Bangladesh
Team information
Central Districts (1952)
As of 10 February 2017
Source: Cricinfo

McLean Park is a sports ground in Napier, New Zealand. The two main sports played at the ground are cricket and rugby union. It is one of the largest cricket grounds in New Zealand.

McLean Park is a sports ground of international standards which includes the main outdoor stadium and the indoor Rodney Green Centennial Events Centre. The home teams for this ground are the Hawke's Bay Rugby Union and Central Districts Cricket Association. The two ends of the stadium are named the Centennial Stand End and Embankment End. Its close proximity to the International Date Line makes it the world's easternmost Test match ground.

Ground

The ground was initially named 'Sir Donald McLean Park' by an act of Parliament after Sir Douglas McLean (also spelt Maclean) donated ten acres of land as a memorial to his father.[1] In cricket, the ground is primarily a one-day venue with square dimensions that allow attacking batsman to score freely especially in the opening overs. There are four covered stands and a large grass bank opposite the Centennial Stand. The wicket tends to slow up throughout the day therefore captains prefer to set targets on this pitch. It has held first class matches since 1952 and ten tests since 1979. New Zealand's Test record at the ground is seven draws, one win and two losses. It has held at least a single one-day international every season since 1990. The ground has a capacity of 19,700 and the pitch is turf. It has been announced they will no longer host one-day internationals after 2017/18 season due to poor drainage.

Usage

Cricket

The ground is used for hosting both ODIs and Test matches. It has hosted a total of 10 Tests, 42 ODIs and 1 T20I. The first ODI played here was between New Zealand and Sri Lanka in Rothman's Cup of 1982/83. In this match New Zealand defeated Sri Lanka by 7 wickets.

Rugby

McLean Park is the home stadium of the Hawkes Bay Magpies in the Mitre 10 Cup. It has also hosted several New Zealand Maori games in the past. During the 1987 Rugby World Cup the stadium played host to the Pool 2 game between Canada and Tonga on 24 May 1987. At the 2011 Rugby World Cup, McLean Park was again chosen as a venue and hosted two games in Pool A, France vs. Canada on 18 September 2011 and Canada vs. Japan on 27 September 2011.

To date the stadium has only hosted two All Blacks tests. The first was played on 7 June 1996, when the All Blacks beat Manu Samoa 51-10 on Samoa's tour of New Zealand. This test has the distinction of being the first home test in which the All Blacks played under floodlights.[2] The second test featuring the All Blacks took place on 6 September 2014. This was a round 3 clash in the Rugby Championship between the All Blacks and Argentina. The All Blacks won 28-9.

The stadium also serves as an alternative home venue for the Hurricanes franchise in Super Rugby. A total of 11 Super Rugby matches have been played at McLean Park, the first being on 15 March 1996, when the Hurricanes beat Transvaal by 32-16. In the aftermath of the 2011 Christchurch earthquake, the Crusaders used the stadium as a home ground for two matches against the Chiefs in 2011 and 2012.

Rugby League

Melbourne Storm Rugby League played an NRL game against St. George-Illawarra Dragons at the stadium on 25 July 2015.[3]

Redevelopments

Redevelopment of the park has recently finished and the new Graham Lowe Stand opened on Saturday 1 August 2009 when the Hawke's Bay Magpies opened their Air New Zealand Cup campaign with a win against Auckland. Redevelopments took just one year to complete. The stand was built for the 2011 Rugby World Cup and to a lesser extent the 2015 Cricket World Cup of which both events will have games at the venue. In 2018 in response to drainage issues preventing ODI matches from being played at McLean Park, the outfield was in the process of being resurfaced, however delays have forced 2 ODIs in January 2018 against Pakistan and against England in February 2018 to be moved.[4]

Statistics

Test matches

McLean Park is regarded as one of the most batting friendly wickets in the world. The average runs per wickets is 39.45 which is almost eight runs higher than Eden Park which, at 31.46 is the second most batting friendly wicket in New Zealand. No pitch throughout the world which has had more than five test matches has a higher runs per wicket[5] The batting friendly conditions means that it is hard to produce results here and seven on the ten tests played here have been draws with the other two losses to New Zealand which featured characteristic batting collapses.New Zealand won a lone test here against Zimbabwe.[6] Brendan McCullum is the top run scorer on the ground with 411[7] while Iain O'Brien has the most wickets with 15.[8]

One Day Internationals

McLean Park also has been known as a good batting strip for one day cricket. The average runs per wicket is 30.66 while the average runs per over is 4.90. It has been known as a good ground for New Zealand with 20 of the 33 matches played having been won by the home side while two matches, both against England, were tied.[9] Ricky Ponting has the highest individual score on the ground of 141 not out which came in the highest team score on the ground of 347/5. Stephen Fleming and Nathan Astle[10] share the record for most runs on the ground with 743 while Daniel Vettori with 23 easily has the most wickets.[11] It was selected as a venue for the 2015 Cricket World Cup and hosted 3 matches.

Twenty20 Internationals

The first T20I at the venue was held on 3 January 2017, between New Zealand and Bangladesh. With that, McLean park became the sixth venue in New Zealand to host a T20 international.[12]

The highest total set by a team here in Test cricket was by the New Zealand national cricket team when they scored 619/9 dec on 26 Mar 2009 against the Indian national cricket team. The most runs scored in this ground have been by Brendon McCullum (494 runs), Ross Taylor-420 runs and Jesse Ryder (317 runs). The most wickets have been taken by Chris Martin- 22 wickets, followed by Ian O'Brien-15 wickets and Jeetan Patel- 14 wickets.

In ODI cricket, the highest total has been set by the New Zealand national cricket team against the Zimbabwean national cricket team when they scored 373/8 on 9 Feb 2012. The most runs scored in this ground have been by Nathan Astle and Stephen Fleming-(743 runs), followed by Ross Taylor-710 runs. The most wickets have been taken by Daniel Vettori-30 wickets.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "Rugby Union – Grounds – McLean Park, Napier". ESPN scrum.
  2. "Napier tipped to host All Blacks test". Hawkes Bay Today. 13 August 2013.
  3. HAMISH BIDWELL (26 February 2015). "Hard cash behind Melbourne Storm's trip to Napier, nothing else". Stuff.
  4. "England ODI moved out of McLean Park". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 2018-04-27.
  5. "HowSTAT! Grounds Runs Per Wicket". howstat.com.
  6. "HowSTAT! Ground Statistics". howstat.com.
  7. "HowSTAT! Grounds – Top Players". howstat.com.
  8. "HowSTAT! Grounds – Top Players". howstat.com.
  9. "HowSTAT! Ground Statistics (ODI)". howstat.com.
  10. "HowSTAT! Grounds – Top Players (ODI)". howstat.com.
  11. "HowSTAT! Grounds – Top Players (ODI)". howstat.com.
  12. "New year, new format offers hope for Bangladesh". ESPNcricinfo.
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