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County Ground

Nevil Road, Bristol, England

Ground profile

County Ground,
Nevil Road,
Bishopston,
Bristol, BS7 9EJ
(Phone: 0117-924-5216)

Also or formerly known as The Royal & Sun Alliance County Ground; Ashley Down Ground; Fry's Ground; Phoenix County Ground
Established 1889
Capacity 7000 (15,000 ODIs)
Floodlights Temporary
End names Pavilion End, Ashley Down Road End
Home team(s) Gloucestershire
Current local time 04:12, Mon Jul 07, 2008 (UTC +0100)
External links Weather
Note Bought by WG Grace

Next match
Thu 10 July 2008 Gloucestershire 2nd XI v Somerset 2nd XI, Second Eleven Trophy
11:00 local time
Full list of forthcoming matches

Records and statistics
Statistics Ground records | Statsguru ODIs | Statsguru T20Is
First ODI New Zealand v Sri Lanka - Jun 13, 1983 scorecard
Last ODI England v New Zealand - Jun 21, 2008 scorecard
Only T20I England v Pakistan - Aug 28, 2006 scorecard

 Profile

The County Ground was bought by WG Grace in 1889 (he lived nearby) and although it has had a somewhat troubled existence - more than once the county has considered leaving the ground - it remains the home of Gloucestershire, and is now even host to the occasional ODI. In 1919 the county sold the venue to Fry's, the confectionary firm, who brought in their own groundsman and, for a time, changed the name. In 1933 the county bought it back again. In 1976 they once again sold it, this time to Royal & Sun Alliance, buying it back in 2004.

The venue is not beautiful but it is steeped in cricket history, from the moment spectators enter via the Grace Gates, the role that legends such Gilbert Jessop and Wally Hammond have played is unmistakable. The ground is full of character, fringed by trees, with a solid Edwardian pavillion. The wicket is good, and can favour spinners. Difficult conditions can prevail, as when Gloucestershire played Middlesex here in 1909, when the game was completed in a single day, or when Tom Goddard took 17 wickets in a day here in 1939. In another Gloucestershire-Middlesex game in 1938, Jim Smith made the fastest uncontrived first-class fifty (11 minutes, 6 sixes, 2 fours). Grace scored a triple century here in 1896 against Sussex, a feat matched by Hammond in 1934 v Glamorgan.

The ground now acts as a general sports centre, with squash and tennis courts, and in winter the turf serves as the target for a golf driving range.
Martin Williamson

 Latest Articles

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 Latest Photos

Aug 24, 2007

The sun sets at the County Ground and the lights take effect
The sun sets at the County Ground and the lights take effect
© Getty Images

Jun 10, 2001

A general view of the County Ground
A general view of the County Ground
© Getty Images

View the full list of 2 related images


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