Former names | Southern Cross Group Stadium Remondis Stadium Toyota Stadium Ronson Field Caltex Field Endeavour Field |
---|---|
Location | Woolooware, New South Wales |
Coordinates | 34°2′19″S151°8′27″E / 34.03861°S 151.14083°E |
Owner | Cronulla-Sutherland Rugby League Club |
Operator | Cronulla-Sutherland Rugby League Football Club |
Capacity | 12,000 [1] (capacity reduced due to redevelopment) 15,000 [2] (2023–present) 22,000 (1968–2019) |
Record attendance | 22,302 – Sharks vs St George Illawarra, 2004 |
Surface | Grass |
Opened | 1960 |
Tenants | |
Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks (NRL) (1968–2019, 2022–present) Olympic Sharks (NSL) (2001–2003) |
Sharks Stadium, known historically as Endeavour Field and colloquially as Shark Park, [3] [4] is a rugby league stadium in the southern Sydney suburb of Woolooware, New South Wales, Australia. It is the home ground of the Cronulla-Sutherland Rugby League Club, which represents the Cronulla and Sutherland Shire areas in the National Rugby League competition. The Sharks are as of 2023 just one of two professional sporting clubs in Australia (excluding the Australian Football League's ownership of Docklands Stadium) that own and operate their home ground (alongside the Dolphins via their parent club Redcliffe who compete in the QRL with their home ground, Kayo Stadium) as well as Western United's future home ground Wyndham City Stadium. The Sharkies Leagues Club sits beside the stadium.
The stadium was built in 1966 and currently has a capacity of 20,000. [4]
In 1991, the original western grandstand was demolished and the new Endeavour Stand was built in its place for the 1992 season. [5]
The Cronulla-Sutherland Rugby League Club own the stadium and Leagues Club next door, one of only two NRL clubs to own their own stadium. Local councils usually own sporting venues in Australia.
On 21 April 2006, the Federal Government announced a A$9.6 million grant would be given to the Cronulla Sharks to upgrade the stadium. The upgrade included a new covered stand to seat over 1,500 spectators at the southern end. The new stand was completed in time for the 2008 season.
Renovations are also planned for the ET Stand (originally the Endeavour Stand), named for Cronulla club legend and games record holder Andrew Ettingshausen, and the Peter Burns Stand.
As of June 2020, the Leagues Club is undergoing redevelopment with the Leagues Club closing its doors on 15 December 2019, [6] with the facility originally due to reopen in early 2022. [7] Due to the COVID-19 pandemic impacting construction timelines in the Leagues Club site, the completion date has been pushed back to early 2023, [8] but Cronulla returned to playing home games at the stadium again in 2022 with a temporary capacity of 12,000 in place until mid-2023. [9] Further delays in construction resulted in a new completion date of mid-2024 announced in July 2023. [10]
In the NRL competition, the Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks team has been playing at this venue since midway through the 1968 NSWRFL season, [11] which was the club's second season into the competition (they had previously played at Sutherland Oval from 1967 until 1968).
High turnout in crowd numbers are usual when Cronulla play local-derby rivals, the St George Illawarra Dragons. The ground attendance record is 22,302, which was set when Cronulla-Sutherland took on St George in May 2004.
In late 2017, the ground hosted the 2017 Women's Rugby League World Cup tournament. It played host to the group stages and semi-finals matches.
During the 2019 NRL season, it was announced that the ground and the Cronulla leagues club would be undergoing renovations and as a result Cronulla revealed that for the next two years that they would be playing home matches away from their spiritual home with Kogarah Oval, WIN Stadium and the new Western Sydney Stadium as new temporary home grounds. [12] [13]
The Sydney Olympic FC club played at the ground for two seasons, from 2001 until 2003, in the former National Soccer League.
The ground has had numerous naming rights deals. Names of this ground over the years have been:
The Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks are an Australian professional rugby league club based in Cronulla, in the Sutherland Shire, Southern Sydney, New South Wales. The Cronulla Sharks compete in the National Rugby League (NRL), Australasia's premier rugby league competition. The Sharks, as they are commonly known, were admitted to the New South Wales Rugby League premiership, predecessor of the Australian Rugby League and the current National Rugby League competition, in January 1967. The club competed in every premiership season since then and, during the Super League war, joined the rebel competition before continuing on in the re-united NRL Premiership. The Sharks have been in competition for 56 years, appearing in four grand finals, winning their first premiership in 2016 after defeating the Melbourne Storm at Stadium Australia.
The Northern Eagles were a rugby league team that competed in the National Rugby League (NRL) between 2000 and 2002. The club was formed during the rationalisation process of the NRL by forming a joint venture with the North Sydney Bears and the Manly Warringah Sea Eagles in 2000. The team shared home games between Brookvale Oval and Central Coast Stadium, Gosford, New South Wales.
Andrew "ET" Ettingshausen is an Australian former professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1980s, 1990s, and early 2000s. He played his first grade Australian club football for the Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks, retiring at the end of the 2000 NRL season having played 328 first grade games for the club, the NSWRL/ARL/SL/NRL record for most games at a single club. This record stood for ten years, before ultimately being broken by Darren Lockyer for the Broncos in 2010.
Woolooware is a suburb in southern Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. Woolooware is located 24 kilometres (15 mi) south of the Sydney central business district in the Sutherland Shire. It shares the 2230 postcode with Cronulla.
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Joshua Morris is a former Australian professional rugby league footballer who last played as a centre for the Sydney Roosters in the NRL and Australia at international level.
The history of the Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks rugby League Football Club goes back to its foundation in the 1960s.
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Valentine Holmes is an Australian professional rugby league footballer who plays as a centre or winger for the St George Illawarra Dragons in the National Rugby League and Australia at international level.
The Cronulla Sutherland Leagues Club, known as Sharkies, is a licensed club that was established for the purpose of promoting the development of the Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks and rugby league. The leagues club sits beside the Sharks home ground, Endeavour Field and is located on Captain Cook Drive at Woolooware.
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