Location | Ipswich, Queensland |
---|---|
Coordinates | 27°38′24″S152°45′41″E / 27.64000°S 152.76139°E Coordinates: 27°38′24″S152°45′41″E / 27.64000°S 152.76139°E |
Owner | City of Ipswich |
Capacity | 3,500 |
Surface | Grass |
Tenants | |
Western Pride FC |
Briggs Road Sporting Complex is an Association football stadium located in the Ipswich, Queensland suburb of Flinders View.
The ground is home to Western Pride FC, which plays in the Australian second-tier National Premier Leagues Queensland competition.
The facility contains three rectangular fields and a training area. [1]
Briggs Road Sporting Complex forms a larger sporting precinct with the neighbouring Ipswich Hockey Complex, which together have been used for sporting carnivals and regional trials.
Briggs Road Sporting Complex was the home of Ipswich Junior Rugby league and briefly state league side Ipswich Jets. [2] It hosted the 2012 Murri Rugby League Carnival. [3]
On Wednesday May 18, 2016, a crowd of reported variously as between 1200 and 3200 watched Western Pride FC played New Zealand national football team with the visitors winning 2–0. [4]
On Saturday 1 September 2017, a crowd of 3383 watched Western Pride win the National Premier Leagues Queensland Grand Final against Moreton Bay United FC. [5]
The grandstand and clubhouse is named after Ipswich resident Senator Neville Bonner, the first of the country's indigenous Australians to become a member of the Australian Parliament. [6]
The clubhouse features a function room, canteen and bar.
Ipswich is a city in South East Queensland, Australia. Situated on the Bremer River, it is approximately 40 kilometres (25 mi) west of the Brisbane central business district. The city is renowned for its architectural, natural and cultural heritage. Ipswich preserves and operates from many of its historical buildings, with more than 6000 heritage-listed sites and over 500 parks. Ipswich began in 1827 as a mining settlement.
Stadium Australia, is a multi-purpose stadium located in the Sydney Olympic Park, in Sydney, Australia. The stadium, which in Australia is sometimes referred to as Sydney Olympic Stadium, Homebush Stadium or simply the Olympic Stadium, was completed in March 1999 at a cost of A$690 million to host the 2000 Summer Olympics. The Stadium was leased by a private company, the Stadium Australia Group, until the Stadium was sold back to the NSW Government on 1 June 2016 after NSW Premier Michael Baird announced the Stadium was to be redeveloped as a world-class rectangular stadium. The Stadium is owned by Venues NSW on behalf of the NSW Government.
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Murri is a demonym for Aboriginal Australians of modern-day Queensland and north-western New South Wales. For some people and organisations, the use of Indigenous language regional terms is an expression of pride in their heritage. The term includes many ethno-linguistic groups within the area, such as the Kamilaroi (Gamilaraay) and Yuggera (Jagera) peoples.
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Australian rules football in Queensland was the first official football code played in 1866. The Colony of Queensland was the second after Victoria to adopt Australian rules football, just days after there rules were widely published. For two decades it was the most popular football code, however a strong desire for representative football success saw Queenslanders favour British football variants for more than a century. 120 years later in 1986 Queensland was the first state awarded a licence to have a club, the Brisbane Bears, in the national competition, also its first privately owned club. However the Gold Coast based Bears had a detrimental effect until the 1993 redevelopment of the Brisbane Cricket Ground (Gabba). In contrast the Bears transformation into a Brisbane and traditional membership based club resulted in enormous growth, and a tripling of average AFL attendances by 1996.
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North Ipswich Reserve presently known as Qld Group Stadium and formally Bendigo Bank Oval due to naming rights is a sports venue in Ipswich, Queensland. Originally an Australian rules football oval, it became a primarily rugby league venue in the 1920s as that code experienced an explosion in local popularity. It is currently home to the Ipswich Jets, who play in the Queensland Wizard Cup. On occasion the venue plays host to National Rugby League trial matches, most recently when the Sydney Roosters played the Jets.
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