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England ground profiles - back to home
St Lawrence Ground
Canterbury, England
Ground profile
St Lawrence Ground,
Old Dover Road,
Canterbury,
Kent CT1 3NZ
(Tel: 01227 456886 Fax: 01227 762168)
Established 1847
Capacity 15000
End names Pavilion End, Nackington Road End
Home team(s) Kent
Current local time 05:12, Sat Oct 11, 2008 (UTC +0100)
External links Weather
Next match
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Sat 15 August 2009 - Sun 16
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Kent v Australians, Tour Match
match played against England Lions at Canterbury if Kent involved in Twenty20 Finals Day. |
11:00 local time |
| Full list of forthcoming matches |
Travel
Train Mainline station Canterbury East or West Car South of town centre. Parking at the ground, including around the boundary for county matches
Map & Hotels Click here
Early in 2005 Canterbury lost its most iconic feature - after 200 years the famous lime tree, situated just inside the boundary, was blown down during winter storms. It was the end of an era, but not of a tradition, as Kent had planned ahead and had been growing a replacement. Just ahead of the 2005 season, the new tree was replanted by Colin Cowdrey, although at its current height, it won't be stopping too many sixes just yet. The St Lawrence Ground was built around the tree in 1847 and is quintessentially English with space for spectators to watch from their deckchairs or cars. Kent's long history of producing England wicketkeepers is remembered with the Leslie Ames Stand, prior to 1973 it was known as the Iron Stand. In 1999 the ground was England's base for their preparations for the World Cup, and hosted the match between England and Kenya - Canterbury's first ODI. In 2000 it was placed on the rota for the Natwest Series.
Andrew McGlashan (March 2005)

Jun 30, 2005 |
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A general view of Canterbury during the ODI © Getty Images |
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Mar 8, 2005 |
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Robert Neame plants the new lime tree © Getty Images |
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Mar 8, 2005 |
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Robert Neame plants the new lime tree © Getty Images |
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View the full list of 19 related images

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