Wanderers Stadium
The Bullring | |||||
![]() Wanderers Stadium in 2007 | |||||
Ground information | |||||
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Location | Illovo, Sandton, Johannesburg | ||||
Coordinates | 26°7′52.17″S 28°3′26.69″E / 26.1311583°S 28.0574139°ECoordinates: 26°7′52.17″S 28°3′26.69″E / 26.1311583°S 28.0574139°E | ||||
Capacity | 34,000[1] | ||||
End names | |||||
Corlett Drive End Golf Course End | |||||
International information | |||||
First Test | 24–29 December 1956:![]() ![]() | ||||
Last Test | 3–7 January 2022:![]() ![]() | ||||
First ODI | 13 December 1992:![]() ![]() | ||||
Last ODI | 20 March 2022:![]() ![]() | ||||
First T20I | 21 October 2005:![]() ![]() | ||||
Last T20I | 12 April 2021:![]() ![]() | ||||
First women's Test | 17–21 December 1960:![]() ![]() | ||||
Last women's Test | 24–28 March 1972:![]() ![]() | ||||
First WODI | 22 September 2013:![]() ![]() | ||||
Last WODI | 14 February 2016:![]() ![]() | ||||
First WT20I | 21 February 2016:![]() ![]() | ||||
Last WT20I | 3 February 2019:![]() ![]() | ||||
Team information | |||||
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As of 20 March 2022 Source: Cricinfo |
The Wanderers Stadium (Imperial Wanderers due to sponsorship reasons and affectionately known as the Bullring due to its intimidating atmosphere) is a stadium situated just south of Sandton in Illovo, Johannesburg in Gauteng Province, South Africa. Test, One Day and First class cricket matches are played here. It is also the home ground for the Highveld Lions, formerly known as Gauteng (Transvaal).
Sponsorship
Imperial Logistics Has Acquired The Naming Rights Of Wanderers Stadium In 2020 Which As Of Now, The Contract Will End In 2025[2]
History
The stadium has a seating capacity of 34,000, and was built in 1956 to replace the Old Wanderers Stadium. It was completely overhauled following South Africa's readmission to international cricket in 1991. In 1996, five new 65-metre-high (213 ft) floodlight masts replaced the existing four 30-metre-high (98 ft) masts, enabling day-night limited-overs cricket. It is nicknamed 'The Bullring' due to its design and intimidating atmosphere.
On 1 October 2004, the Wanderers Clubhouse was virtually destroyed by fire. At that stage it was known as Liberty Life Wanderers, but as from the 2008/09 season, Bidvest Group took up the sponsoring of the ground, thus it became Bidvest Wanderers Stadium until the end of September 2019.
On 4 October 2019, the Wanderers Stadium announced a new naming rights deal with Imperial Logistics. The stadium is now referred to as Imperial Wanderers Stadium.
Domestic hosting
The stadium had also hosted the 2009 Indian Premier League's second semi-final and the final in which the Deccan Chargers beat the Royal Challengers Bangalore to grab the championship title.
The Wanderers Stadium also hosted a rugby union test match in April 1980 between South Africa and the South American Jaguars while Johannesburg's normal venue, Ellis Park Stadium, was being redeveloped.[3]
Trivia
The ground is among the most historically significant cricket grounds of the twenty-first century. It has staged some of the most important matches in ODI and T20I history, and has witnessed a number of outstanding world records.
The 2003 Cricket World Cup final was held at the Wanderers Stadium. This stadium also hosted one of the greatest One-day international matches, played between South Africa and Australia in which a world record score of 434 was chased down by South Africa.
On 18 January 2015, the Wanderers stadium saw South Africa's AB de Villiers break the 19-year-old record for fastest ODI half-century, previously held by Sri Lankan maestro Sanath Jayasuriya, by making 50 off 16 balls against the West Indies. In the same match, he also broke Corey Anderson's fastest ODI century record (held for one year and seven days) by making 100 off 31 deliveries. He finished on 149, caught on the boundary in the final over, scored off 44 balls with a strike rate of 338.63.[4]
On 21 February 2016, AB de Villiers scored the fastest 50 (21 balls) for South Africa in a T20I against England.[5]
In July 2018, the stadium hosted former US President, Barack Obama at the Nelson Mandela Lecture. [6]
See also
- List of Test cricket grounds
- List of international cricket centuries at the Wanderers Stadium
- List of international five-wicket hauls at the Wanderers Stadium
References
- ^ www.wanderers.co.za
- ^ "Imperial Logistics - ESG - CSI and partnerships - Imperial Wanderers Stadium". www.imperiallogistics.com. Retrieved 5 January 2022.
- ^ Michael Owen-Smith (1990). Tim Jolland (ed.). Test Match Grounds of the World. Willow Books. p. 186. ISBN 0002182823.
- ^ "South Africa vs West Indies 2nd ODI 2015". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 18 January 2015.
- ^ "Dominant SA cruise to nine-wicket win". ESPNcricinfo. 21 February 2016. Retrieved 21 February 2016.
- ^ "Barack Obama delivers Mandela centenary address in Joburg". News24. 17 July 2018. Retrieved 17 July 2018.
External links
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4a/Commons-logo.svg/30px-Commons-logo.svg.png)
Events and tenants | ||
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Preceded by | Cricket World Cup Final Venue 2003 |
Succeeded by |
- Articles with short description
- Short description with empty Wikidata description
- Use South African English from January 2020
- All Wikipedia articles written in South African English
- Use dmy dates from October 2021
- Coordinates not on Wikidata
- Commons category link is the pagename
- Sports venues completed in 1956
- Sports venues in Johannesburg
- Cricket grounds in South Africa
- 2003 Cricket World Cup stadiums
- Highveld Lions
- Test cricket grounds in South Africa