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Coordinates: 53°45′53.53″N 1°45′25.48″W / 53.7648694°N 1.7570778°W / 53.7648694; -1.7570778
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{{Infobox_Stadium |
{{Infobox Indian Jurisdiction |
stadium_name = Grattan Stadium|
native_name= Askaripur |
type= village |
image = |
location = [[Odsal]], [[Bradford]], [[England]] |
locator_position=left|
broke_ground = |
latd = 29.7|longd=78.27|
opened = 1933|
state_name= Uttar Pradesh |
closed = Open|
district=[[Bijnor District|Askaripur]] |
owner = [[Bradford Bulls]]|
leader_title= District Magistrate|
surface = Grass|
leader_name= Ms.Deepika Duggal |
tenants = <center>[[Bradford Bulls]]<center>|
altitude= 127 |
seating_capacity = <center> 27,491<ref>[http://www.worldstadiums.com/europe/countries/united_kingdom/england/yorkshire_humber.shtml www.worldstadiums.com]</ref><center>|
population_as_of = 2001 |
population_total = 5000 |
population_density = |
area_magnitude = 9 |
area_total= |
area_telephone= 0515 |
postal_code= 209 801|
vehicle_code_range= UP-20 |
footnotes = |
}}
}}
'''Odsal Stadium''' is a stadium situated in [[Bradford]] in [[West Yorkshire]], [[England]]. The venue is used for [[rugby league]] and has been the home ground of [[Bradford Bulls]] since [[1934]]. The official name of the stadium is the '''Grattan Stadium''' due to sponsorship from [[Grattan]].


Odsal has also hosted many other sports, including [[football (soccer)|association football]], [[Motorcycle speedway|speedway]], [[stock car racing]], [[basketball]] featuring the [[Harlem Globetrotters]], [[wrestling]], [[show jumping]] and [[kabaddi]]. The stadium boasts one of the largest attendances of all time for [[rugby league]] (102,569) when [[Halifax RLFC|Halifax]] played [[Warrington Wolves|Warrington]] on the [[5 May]] [[1954]].<ref>[http://www.bradfordbulls.co.uk/bb_stadium_full.asp?stadiumid=2 GRATTAN STADIUM, ODSAL] Bradford Bulls</ref>
The village of '''Askaripur''' ([[Hindi]]: अस्करीपुर is a district headquarters of [[Bijnor District]] in [[Uttar Pradesh]], [[India]] between [[Nurpur]] and [[Chandpur]]. It is approx 45 km from Bijnor. It is connected to these two cities by roadway. The nearest airport is at [[New Delhi Airport|New Delhi]] about 150 km from Askaripur.


== History ==
==History==
The [[Bradfrord Northern]] club signed a ten year deal on [[20 June]] [[1933]] with Bradford Council to make it their home ground. At the time it was just a *tip; the Bradford Director of Cleansing organised a controlled tipping effort that saw 140,000 cart loads of household waste removed from the banking at Odsal. To be able to turf the pitch, and other areas, a turf fund was put into place, the fund raised a total of £900, enough to do the job. A stand was erected at the cost of £2,000, which was paid by the Rugby Football League. The club house and dressing rooms were officially opened before a match against Hull on the [[2 February]] [[1935]]. During the Second World War the lower floor of the club house was also used as an Air Raid Precautions centre, and one of the dressing rooms was the map room.


Odsal is famous for at one time holding the world record for the largest rugby league crowd of 102,569 at the replay of the [[1954 Challenge Cup]] final between [[Warrington Wolves|Warrington]] and [[Halifax RLFC|Halifax]] on [[5 May]] [[1954]]. However it is thought that many more attended the game, as this figure doesn't include thousands who watched the game from outside the stadium. The official record attendance of 102,569 for a rugby league fixture stood for roughly 45 years before being broken in 1999 following the opening of [[Stadium Australia]].


The ground's clubhouse had to be re-furbished when it was condemned in the mid 1980s. The social facilities were also upgraded at the same time. Following the [[Bradford fire|Valley Parade fire]] disaster of 1985, Odsal Stadium played host to [[Bradford City A.F.C.|Bradford City]]'s Division Two Home games until December 1986. Odsal Stadium also held a modern day attendance record for almost 6 years. On [[3 September]] [[1999]], a then [[Super League (Europe)|Super League]] record crowd of 24,020 saw [[Bradford Bulls]] defeat [[Leeds Rhinos]] by 19 points to 18. On [[25 March]] [[2005]], [[Wigan Warriors]] set a new Super League record crowd when 25,004 supporters packed into the [[JJB Stadium]] for the huge local derby against [[St Helens RFC|St Helens]]. The [[Bradford Dukes]] rode their last speedway meeting in 1997, winning the league title. Odsal has also hosted the [[Speedway Grand Prix of Great Britain|speedway world final]]. The redevelopment means its now impossible for speedway to return.
== Personalities ==


The [[Bradford Bulls]] moved away from Odsal in 2001 because the ground was due to be improved with a major redevelopment by raising the level of the pitch, rotating it 90 degrees, and adding a retail/hotel/leisure complex on the side. Planning had started in 1996 with the failed [[Bradford Superdome]] project which was canned shortly before the latest "super stadium" proposal. Bradford moved from Odsal Stadium to Bradford City's home ground [[Valley Parade]] while the building work was supposed to have been done, but for planning issues and the government's intervention, the redevelopment of the stadium failed to get off the ground. The first match played following their return to Odsal was against [[Yorkshire]] rivals [[Wakefield Trinity Wildcats]] on Sunday, [[9 March]] [[2003]], which attracted an attendance of 20,283. Bradford Bulls won the game 22-10. During the two years at Valley Parade, the Bulls agreed to take controlling interests of the stadium back from [[City of Bradford|Bradford Council]]. With redevelopment plans failing to get off the ground the Bulls decided to go ahead with improvements to the main stand and the construction of a new stand which consisted of corporate facilities and media facilities. Further improvements are being planned with an option of building a roof over the uncovered areas of the terracing. The official name of the stadium was changed from Odsal to Grattan Stadium on [[20 June]] [[2006]], by selling the naming rights to [[Grattan]] they would receive £500,000 in a four year deal. This ended rumours regarding a permanent return to [[Bradford City A.F.C.|Bradford City]]'s [[Valley Parade]].
One of the most famous personalities of Askaripur is [[Ashok K. Chauhan]] (born 1942 at Askaripur). Dr Ashok K Chauhan set up the Amity International School in New Delhi in 1991, managed by Dr Ashok K Chauhan 's non-profit Ritnand Balved Education Foundation. In 1995, the Amity group expanded into higher education and within a few years has grown to serve more than 40,000 full-time students across 22 campuses, offering more than 130 courses at graduate and postgraduate level.


With the return to Odsal Stadium for 2003 the Bulls highlighted the requirement to create hospitality, conference and banqueting facilities to enable the stadium, and club, to compete with the likes of [[Wigan Warriors]]' [[JJB Stadium]], [[Leeds Rhinos]]' [[Headingley Carnegie Stadium]] and [[Huddersfield Giants]]' [[Galpharm Stadium]]. It was therefore decided that the existing 'Pits' area of the stadium, used previously for the now defunct speedway club, would be developed into a two-tier structure housing the club's corporate operations. The construction of the corporate facility began in November 2002 and was completed in time for the Bulls biggest game of [[Super League VIII]] against [[Leeds Rhinos]] on [[26 April]] [[2003]]. The facility includes executive boxes, a restaurant, bar, players' lounge, media facility, directors' lounge and scoreboard, and the imposing structure completes the unique natural bowl of the stadium. In December 2003 Bradford Bulls announced an agreement with regional window and conservatory company Coral, which saw the facility renamed as the Coral Stand.
First engineer from the village of Askaripur was Mr. Surendra Singh who retired as zonal chief engineer from [[Uttar Pradesh State Electricity Board|UPSEB]]
== Geography ==


On 12 July 2006 the stadium played host to an attempt to break the world record for the largest [[haka]]; although 1,700 people took part, the record was not broken.<ref>[http://www.dfes.gov.uk/playingforsuccess/index.cfm?SectionID=1&CategoryID=3&AreaID=N&SSCID=9 Bradford Bulls Rugby League Club] Department for Children, Schools and Families</ref>
Askaripur is located at {{coord|29.7|N|78.27|E|}}. Askaripur lies in the plains of [[Ganges]] and hence the land is highly fertile. Soil found is mostly [[Alluvial]].


==Future Redevelopments==
== Administration ==


=== Odsal Sporting Village ===
Askaripur lies in the jurisdiction of [[Nurpur]] block.


[[Bradford Bulls]] lodged a planning application to further improve Odsal Stadium and turn the Stadium and the adjacent land into a sporting village. the plans include
== Demographics ==


* The stadium-covered accommodation and additional hospitality facilities for spectators on the side opposite what is the present main stand. This will provide additional seating but will also retain the current amount of standing accommodation on that side of the ground. New club offices and club shop will be built at the Rooley Avenue end within a complex that will also include a small hotel and gymnasium.
Currently askaripur population is approximately 5000.


* The creation of three all-weather pitches, a cricket field with a new pavilion, a floodlit soccer pitch with a covered stand and an athletics track plus additional car parking for over 1,500 vehicles on the landfill site adjacent to and to the south of the stadium.
== Medical Facilities ==


* The removal of the [[Richard Dunn Leisure Centre]] and its replacement by a new indoor sports and leisure facility on the adjacent NHS land will also provide a new access road from Rooley Avenue to this facility and to the car parking and other sporting facilities to the south.


* The construction of a 3,500 person indoor arena.
== Commerce and industry ==


The Phase 1 Redevelopments Stadium have been completed with the Coral Stand been built and renovation of the Tetley's stand and other there is an announcement due in August 2008 with regard to Phase 2 redevelopments.


== Politics ==
==Pitch==


The pitch as Odsal has a distinctive concave contour, with the corners of the pitch behind the try-line noticeably sloping up towards the stands.


== Education & Trivia ==


Askaripur has a Government Inter College which has produced numerous Doctors, Engineers for the country.


== See also ==


==Average attendances 1996-2007==
* [[Chandpur]]

* [[Noorpur]]
*1996 - 10,346
* [[Bijnor]]
*1997 - 15,159
* [[Uttar Pradesh]]
*1998 - 13,022
*1999 - 13,212
*2000 - 14,520
*2003 - 14,939
*2004 - 13,495
*2005 - 12,786
*2006 - 11,406
*2007 - 12,084


==Records==

'''Odsal Record'''
*102,569, [[Halifax RLFC|Halifax]] vs. [[Warrington Wolves|Warrington]], [[5 May]] [[1954]]
'''Bradford Bulls Super League Record'''
*24,020 [[Bradford Bulls]] vs. [[Leeds Rhinos]], [[3 September]] [[1999]]
'''Challenge Cup Record'''

==See also==

*[[Speedway Grand Prix of Great Britain]]


==References==


== References ==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}


== External links ==


==External links==
[[Category:Cities and towns in Uttar Pradesh]]

[[Category:Bijnor]]
*[http://www.odsal.com/ Grattan Stadium Web site]
*[http://www.bisa.co.uk/pages/Odsal/odsal_history01.htm Stadium History]
*[http://www.bobrowski.co.uk/PROJECT%20FILES/Stadia/Bradford.htm Bradford Superdome Images]
*[http://www.grandstands.net/existing/bradfordrugby.htm Grattan Stadium images]
*[http://www.worldstadia.com/stadium/england/grattan_stadium,_odsal/679.php Odsal on Worldstadia.com]
*[http://www.bisa.co.uk/pages/Odsal/halifax_v_leeds_classic_semi_fin.htm Stadium image]
*[http://www.bbc.co.uk/bradford/360/version2_odsal_1.shtml Grattan Stadium Centre Field 360 Degree Image]
*[http://www.bbc.co.uk/bradford/360/version2_odsal_6.shtml Tetleys Main Stand 360 Degree Image]
*[http://www.bbc.co.uk/bradford/360/version2_odsal_4.shtml Coral Stand 360 Degree Image]
*[http://www.bbc.co.uk/bradford/360/version2_odsal_5.shtml The Directors Lounge 360 Degree Image]
*[http://www.bbc.co.uk/bradford/360/version2_odsal.shtml Changing Rooms 360 Degree Image]
*[http://www.bbc.co.uk/bradford/360/version2_odsal_3.shtml Shower Room 360 Degree Image]


{{Bradford Bulls Rugby League}}
{{Super League (Europe) Venues}}

<!-- Coordinates of centre of pitch -->
{{coord|53|45|53.53|N|1|45|25.48|W|type:landmark|display=title}}

[[Category:Rugby league stadiums in England]]
[[Category:Buildings and structures in Bradford]]
[[Category:Defunct football venues in England]]
[[Category:Speedway former venues]]


[[it:Askaripur]]
[[no:Odsal Stadium]]
[[mr:अस्करीपुर]]
[[pl:Askaripur]]
[[vi:Askaripur]]

Revision as of 22:04, 13 October 2008

Grattan Stadium
Map
LocationOdsal, Bradford, England
OwnerBradford Bulls
Capacity
27,491[1]
SurfaceGrass
Opened1933
ClosedOpen
Tenants
Bradford Bulls

Odsal Stadium is a stadium situated in Bradford in West Yorkshire, England. The venue is used for rugby league and has been the home ground of Bradford Bulls since 1934. The official name of the stadium is the Grattan Stadium due to sponsorship from Grattan.

Odsal has also hosted many other sports, including association football, speedway, stock car racing, basketball featuring the Harlem Globetrotters, wrestling, show jumping and kabaddi. The stadium boasts one of the largest attendances of all time for rugby league (102,569) when Halifax played Warrington on the 5 May 1954.[2]

History

The Bradfrord Northern club signed a ten year deal on 20 June 1933 with Bradford Council to make it their home ground. At the time it was just a *tip; the Bradford Director of Cleansing organised a controlled tipping effort that saw 140,000 cart loads of household waste removed from the banking at Odsal. To be able to turf the pitch, and other areas, a turf fund was put into place, the fund raised a total of £900, enough to do the job. A stand was erected at the cost of £2,000, which was paid by the Rugby Football League. The club house and dressing rooms were officially opened before a match against Hull on the 2 February 1935. During the Second World War the lower floor of the club house was also used as an Air Raid Precautions centre, and one of the dressing rooms was the map room.

Odsal is famous for at one time holding the world record for the largest rugby league crowd of 102,569 at the replay of the 1954 Challenge Cup final between Warrington and Halifax on 5 May 1954. However it is thought that many more attended the game, as this figure doesn't include thousands who watched the game from outside the stadium. The official record attendance of 102,569 for a rugby league fixture stood for roughly 45 years before being broken in 1999 following the opening of Stadium Australia.

The ground's clubhouse had to be re-furbished when it was condemned in the mid 1980s. The social facilities were also upgraded at the same time. Following the Valley Parade fire disaster of 1985, Odsal Stadium played host to Bradford City's Division Two Home games until December 1986. Odsal Stadium also held a modern day attendance record for almost 6 years. On 3 September 1999, a then Super League record crowd of 24,020 saw Bradford Bulls defeat Leeds Rhinos by 19 points to 18. On 25 March 2005, Wigan Warriors set a new Super League record crowd when 25,004 supporters packed into the JJB Stadium for the huge local derby against St Helens. The Bradford Dukes rode their last speedway meeting in 1997, winning the league title. Odsal has also hosted the speedway world final. The redevelopment means its now impossible for speedway to return.

The Bradford Bulls moved away from Odsal in 2001 because the ground was due to be improved with a major redevelopment by raising the level of the pitch, rotating it 90 degrees, and adding a retail/hotel/leisure complex on the side. Planning had started in 1996 with the failed Bradford Superdome project which was canned shortly before the latest "super stadium" proposal. Bradford moved from Odsal Stadium to Bradford City's home ground Valley Parade while the building work was supposed to have been done, but for planning issues and the government's intervention, the redevelopment of the stadium failed to get off the ground. The first match played following their return to Odsal was against Yorkshire rivals Wakefield Trinity Wildcats on Sunday, 9 March 2003, which attracted an attendance of 20,283. Bradford Bulls won the game 22-10. During the two years at Valley Parade, the Bulls agreed to take controlling interests of the stadium back from Bradford Council. With redevelopment plans failing to get off the ground the Bulls decided to go ahead with improvements to the main stand and the construction of a new stand which consisted of corporate facilities and media facilities. Further improvements are being planned with an option of building a roof over the uncovered areas of the terracing. The official name of the stadium was changed from Odsal to Grattan Stadium on 20 June 2006, by selling the naming rights to Grattan they would receive £500,000 in a four year deal. This ended rumours regarding a permanent return to Bradford City's Valley Parade.

With the return to Odsal Stadium for 2003 the Bulls highlighted the requirement to create hospitality, conference and banqueting facilities to enable the stadium, and club, to compete with the likes of Wigan Warriors' JJB Stadium, Leeds Rhinos' Headingley Carnegie Stadium and Huddersfield Giants' Galpharm Stadium. It was therefore decided that the existing 'Pits' area of the stadium, used previously for the now defunct speedway club, would be developed into a two-tier structure housing the club's corporate operations. The construction of the corporate facility began in November 2002 and was completed in time for the Bulls biggest game of Super League VIII against Leeds Rhinos on 26 April 2003. The facility includes executive boxes, a restaurant, bar, players' lounge, media facility, directors' lounge and scoreboard, and the imposing structure completes the unique natural bowl of the stadium. In December 2003 Bradford Bulls announced an agreement with regional window and conservatory company Coral, which saw the facility renamed as the Coral Stand.

On 12 July 2006 the stadium played host to an attempt to break the world record for the largest haka; although 1,700 people took part, the record was not broken.[3]

Future Redevelopments

Odsal Sporting Village

Bradford Bulls lodged a planning application to further improve Odsal Stadium and turn the Stadium and the adjacent land into a sporting village. the plans include

  • The stadium-covered accommodation and additional hospitality facilities for spectators on the side opposite what is the present main stand. This will provide additional seating but will also retain the current amount of standing accommodation on that side of the ground. New club offices and club shop will be built at the Rooley Avenue end within a complex that will also include a small hotel and gymnasium.
  • The creation of three all-weather pitches, a cricket field with a new pavilion, a floodlit soccer pitch with a covered stand and an athletics track plus additional car parking for over 1,500 vehicles on the landfill site adjacent to and to the south of the stadium.
  • The removal of the Richard Dunn Leisure Centre and its replacement by a new indoor sports and leisure facility on the adjacent NHS land will also provide a new access road from Rooley Avenue to this facility and to the car parking and other sporting facilities to the south.
  • The construction of a 3,500 person indoor arena.

The Phase 1 Redevelopments Stadium have been completed with the Coral Stand been built and renovation of the Tetley's stand and other there is an announcement due in August 2008 with regard to Phase 2 redevelopments.

Pitch

The pitch as Odsal has a distinctive concave contour, with the corners of the pitch behind the try-line noticeably sloping up towards the stands.



Average attendances 1996-2007

  • 1996 - 10,346
  • 1997 - 15,159
  • 1998 - 13,022
  • 1999 - 13,212
  • 2000 - 14,520
  • 2003 - 14,939
  • 2004 - 13,495
  • 2005 - 12,786
  • 2006 - 11,406
  • 2007 - 12,084


Records

Odsal Record

Bradford Bulls Super League Record

Challenge Cup Record

See also


References

  1. ^ www.worldstadiums.com
  2. ^ GRATTAN STADIUM, ODSAL Bradford Bulls
  3. ^ Bradford Bulls Rugby League Club Department for Children, Schools and Families


External links


53°45′53.53″N 1°45′25.48″W / 53.7648694°N 1.7570778°W / 53.7648694; -1.7570778