Location | Cambridge, New Zealand |
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Coordinates | 37°53′8.9″S175°27′17.6″E / 37.885806°S 175.454889°E Coordinates: 37°53′8.9″S175°27′17.6″E / 37.885806°S 175.454889°E |
Opened | 1948 |
John Kerkhof Park is a venue for football (soccer) matches in Cambridge, New Zealand. It is the all-year home [1] of Cambridge FC who compete in the Northern League (New Zealand). [2]
The ground was also the training base and home ground [3] for WaiBOP United between 2013 and 2015 when they played in New Zealand's highest level domestic competition, the ASB Premiership.
In 2016, John Kerkhof Park became the training base and home ground for the WaiBOP team in New Zealand's National Women's League, hosting three NWL games in each of the 2016 and 2017 seasons. In 2019, Cambridge was named as the host club for six NWL games and the training base for the WaiBOP team. [4] In 2020, the ground was again named as the host venue for WaiBOP's ISPS Handa Women's Premiership fixtures. [5]
The ground was also used for two National Youth League games and one ISPS Handa Premiership match (between Hamilton Wanderers and Eastern Suburbs) in 2018. [6] In 2019, the ground hosted a national league double header when Hamilton Wanderers played Auckland City in the National Youth League and the ISPS Handa Premiership. [7]
The grounds in Vogel Street, Cambridge, are owned by the Waipa District Council which leases them to Cambridge FC on a long-term basis.
They consist of a premium pitch used for Northern League (New Zealand) and feature games such as national league fixtures, and 25 pitches used for senior, youth and junior games.
For major games, volunteer workers erect a mini-stadium using temporary grandstands and seating, providing a ground capacity for up to about 1,200 spectators, with seating for about 600.
Cambridge FC was founded in 1948 and has played at John Kerkhof Park since 1967. [1]
It was named after John Kerkhof, a Dutch immigrant who settled in Cambridge and who with other members of the Kerkhof family built the ground's club and changing room facilities still used today. [1]
In 2008, a tornado caused severe damage to the clubrooms, requiring repairs to the roof, windows and walls. [8]
In 2010, the Cambridge Sevens tournaments for men and women were held for the first time, drawing seven-a-side football teams from around the North Island of New Zealand. The events have since been held annually in late summer. [9]
In 2012, Cambridge FC announced that John Kerkhof Park would become the home base for Cambridge Baseball Club. This was discontinued in 2014 when the baseball club became inactive.
In 2013, Cambridge FC and the neighbouring Cambridge Harriers and Athletics Club began a partnership, enabling the football club to play some games at the adjacent athletics track while it developed John Kerkhof Park.
In 2013, John Kerkhof Park was used to host a series of regionally significant football events including the Soccer Shop Waikato Cup and Plate Finals, [10] an All Stars game between Waikato and Bay of Plenty [11] and an All Stars game for top women's players in the region. [12] This led to the appointment of the venue as the home of national league football for five ASB Premiership fixtures.
In 2014, Cambridge FC announced it would construct an additional building at a cost of $200,000 to provide six more changing rooms for use at the venue. [13]
In 2016, with its new changing facilities operational, the club set a new club record by hosting six senior competition matches in a single day. [1]
John Kerkhof Park hosted the finals of the Soccer Shop men's Waikato Cup and Plate in 2013, 2016, 2017 [14] and 2019. [15] It hosted the women's Waikato Cup and Plate finals in 2016, 2018, [16] and 2019. [15]
National league football returned to Cambridge in 2018 and 2019 when the club hosted matches for ISPS Handa Premiership team Hamilton Wanderers and three of that club's National Youth League fixtures. [17]
In 2018, Cambridge FC formed a three-year partnership with Cambridge Cricket Association to enable junior cricket to be played at the northern end of the grounds. [18]
The New Zealand Football Championship was a men's association football league at the top of the New Zealand league system. Founded in 2004, the New Zealand Football Championship was the successor to a myriad of short-lived football leagues in the country, including the National Soccer League, the National Summer Soccer League and the New Zealand Superclub League. The league was contested by ten teams in a franchise system. For sponsorship reasons, the competition was known as the ISPS Handa Men's Premiership. From the 2021–22 season, it was replaced by the New Zealand National League.
WaiBOP United was a football club based in Hamilton, New Zealand. The club was founded in 2004 and disbanded in 2016 and played in the ASB Premiership. WaiBOP United played their home fixtures at John Kerkhof Park, Cambridge. The club's social media accounts are now inactive.
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The 2016 National Women's League was the fourteenth season of the NWL since its establishment in 2002. Seven teams were involved this season, after being in the competition the last few seasons as preparation for the FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup, the NZ Development Squad wasn't included in the league anymore.
The 2018 National Women's League was the sixteenth season of the NWL, New Zealand's top level women's football league since its establishment in 2002. Seven teams were again involved in this season representing the different regions in New Zealand. This was the first year that the league had two rounds with the two highest-placed sides progressing to a one-off grand final. The season also featured a double header round over Labour weekend, in which all sides except Capital played two matches over the weekend.
The 2018–19 New Zealand Football Championship season was the fifteenth season of the NZFC since its establishment in 2004. Ten teams competed in the competition with Auckland City and Team Wellington representing the ISPS Handa Premiership in the 2019 OFC Champions League after finishing Champions and Premiers and runner-up respectively in the 2017–18 competition.
The 2019 National Women's League was the seventeenth season of the NWL, New Zealand's top level women's football league since its establishment in 2002. Seven teams were involved in this season representing the different regions in New Zealand. This was the second year that the league played two rounds, with the two highest-placed sides progressing to a one-off grand final. The season also featured a double header round over Labour weekend, in which all sides except Central played two matches over the weekend.
The 2020 Women's Premiership was the eighteenth season of the league, New Zealand's top level women's football league since its establishment in 2002. Seven teams again were involved in the season representing the different regions in New Zealand. The league after consultation and feedback from stakeholders, was reverted to a single round-robin format, with the two highest-placed sides progressing to a one-off grand final. Canterbury United Pride was again the team to beat, as they were looking at a threepeat, having played in every final since 2013, won five out of seven of those finals, including the last two years.
The 2020–21 New Zealand Football Championship season is the seventeenth season of the NZFC since its establishment in 2004. Eight teams compete in the competition with Auckland City and Team Wellington representing the ISPS Handa Men's Premiership in the 2021 OFC Champions League after Auckland City finished Premiers, with Team Wellington finishing regular season runners-up in the 2019–20 competition, after the remainder of the competition was cancelled mid-March due to the COVID-19 pandemic in New Zealand. The change from ten teams to eight teams was due to Tasman United and Southern United joining Canterbury United to form a united South Island team, playing under the Canterbury United name. Auckland City won the league with a game in hand, taking top spot for their 12th premiership.