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Headingley

Leeds, England

Ground profile

Headingley Cricket Ground,
St. Michael's Lane,
Leeds, West Yorkhire. LS6 3BR
(Phone: 0113-278-7394)

Also or formerly known as Headingley Grounds
Established 1890
Named after Headingley is a suburb of Leeds
Capacity 17000
Floodlights No
End names Kirkstall Lane End, Football Stand End
Home team(s) Yorkshire
Current local time 19:22, Fri Jul 25, 2008 (UTC +0100)
External links Weather

Next match
Wed 30 July 2008 - Sat 2 Yorkshire v Surrey, County Championship Division One
11:00 local time
Full list of forthcoming matches

Records and statistics
Statistics Ground records | Statsguru Tests | Statsguru ODIs
First Test England v Australia - Jun 29-Jul 1, 1899 scorecard
Last Test England v South Africa - Jul 18-21, 2008 scorecard
First ODI England v West Indies - Sep 5, 1973 scorecard
Last ODI England v India - Sep 2, 2007 scorecard

 Notes

Train Nearest station: Leeds (2 miles away) - then take buses 74, 75, 76 or 77.
Car No parking in the immediate vicinity. Park and ride available from Beckett Campus, Leeds Metropolitan University.
Map Click here
Hotels Click here

 Profile

Tucked away in the sleepy backstreets of suburban Leeds, Headingley staged possibly the most dramatic comeback in Test cricket when, in 1981, England beat Australia by 18 runs. England had followed on 227 runs behind and were 135 for 7 in their second innings before the combined heroics of Ian Botham, with the bat, and Willis, with the ball, beat odds of 500/1.

Since the initial first-class match was held there in 1899, against Kent, Headingley spectators have witnessed some great feats, including two Test triple-centuries by Don Bradman in 1930 and 1934. During the first innings Bradman scored 309 of his eventual 334 in a single day, the only instance of 300 in a day in a Test. The Surrey left-hander John Edrich also made a Test triple hundred here, against New Zealand in 1965. And, fittingly, Geoff Boycott brought up his hundreth hundred against Australia in 1977.

Test cricket had first come to Headingley nearly 100 years earlier, in 1889, one year after the ground was established. The home of Yorkshire County Cricket, the Headingley ground wasn't actually owned by the club until they finally bought it in 2005 for £12 million.

The ground is named after a suburb of the city of Leeds, and it is linked to a rugby league ground, home of the Leeds Rhinos. Unusually, there is no pavilion at Headingley; players have to make do with a modern dressing-room in the stands. The wicket is variable, and - particularly when there is cloud cover, too - aids seam bowling.

 Latest Articles

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 Latest Photos

May 28, 2007

They make 'em tough in Yorkshire: resolute fans defy the rain with bin bags on their heads
They make 'em tough in Yorkshire: resolute fans defy the rain with bin bags on their heads
© Getty Images

May 27, 2007

Two bright umbrellas make a stark contrast to the leaden sky at Headingley
Two bright umbrellas make a stark contrast to the leaden sky at Headingley
© Jon Hall / Cricinfo Ltd

May 27, 2007

Puddles in the Western Terrace at Headingley
Puddles in the Western Terrace at Headingley
© Jon Hall / Cricinfo Ltd

View the full list of 25 related images


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