Galle International Stadium

Galle International Stadium
Ground information
Location Galle, Sri Lanka
Coordinates 6°01′54″N 80°12′58″E / 6.0316°N 80.2160°E / 6.0316; 80.2160Coordinates: 6°01′54″N 80°12′58″E / 6.0316°N 80.2160°E / 6.0316; 80.2160
Establishment 1876
Capacity 35,000
Owner Galle Cricket Club
Tenants Sri Lanka Cricket
Galle Cricket Club
End names
City End
Fort End
International information
First Test 3–7 June 1998:
 Sri Lanka v  New Zealand
Last Test 4–8 August 2016:
 Sri Lanka v  Australia
First ODI 25 June 1998:
 Sri Lanka v  India
Last ODI 6 July 2000:
 Sri Lanka v  South Africa
Team information
Galle Cricket Club (1876 present)
As of 4 August 2016
Source: Cricinfo

Galle International Stadium (Sinhalese: ගාල්ල ජාත්යන්තර ක්රිකට් ක්රීඩාංගනය) (Tamil: காலி பன்னாட்டு அரங்கம்) is a cricket stadium in Galle, Sri Lanka, situated near the Galle fort and fringed on two sides by the Indian Ocean. It is considered to be one of the most picturesque cricket grounds in the world. Before being brought up to international cricket standards, it was known as ‘The Esplanade’, and is the home ground of the Galle Cricket Club.

History

The ground was built in 1876 as a race course. There was no permanent pavilion until 1892, when a ‘grand stand’ was built according to a suggestion of Mr. P A Templer, the then Secretary of the Galle Municipal Council. Eventually the racing ceased and the ground was used for cricket matches more than races. In 1927, the ground was officially declared as a cricket stadium.

The ground hosted its first first-class match on 29 February 1984. A turf wicket was introduced to the stadium in 1945 under the guidance of Mr. Dhanapala Lorensu Hewa who was then secretary of the Galle Cricket Ground. The assistance of the Colombo Cricket Club was also taken for this.[1]

The ground was later upgraded to international cricket standards, and became the seventh international cricket stadium in Sri Lanka able to host Test matches. The first test match was played on the ground on 3 June 1998. It was played between Sri Lanka and New Zealand, resulting in a win for Sri Lanka by an innings and 16 runs. The first ODI match was scheduled to be held on 25 June 1998 between India and Sri Lanka, but was abandoned due to the ground being waterlogged from overnight rain and heavy raining in the morning.

On 26 December, the ground was devastated by the tsunami resulting from the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake.[2] Most of the buildings in the stadium were damaged, and the ground was damaged substantially. In the weeks that followed, the stadium became a temporary shelter for hundreds of people displaced from the tsunami. A temporary camp and a helipad were constructed there in order to assist the survivors.

Renovation of the Galle International Stadium began on 8 May 2006. The renovation included several new buildings including a new pavilion and a media centre. The seating capacity was also increased. The re-constructed stadium was opened by His Excellency Mr. Mahinda Rajapakse, the Sri Lankan President on 17 December 2007. After the reopening of the stadium, the first Test match was held between Sri Lanka and England on the same day, which resulted in a draw.

The Galle stadium is also noted for the fact that in 2010 it was the stadium that hosted the last match of arguably one of the best cricketer produced by Sri Lanka, Muttiah Muralitharan. Muralitharan needed eight wickets to reach the 800 mark. His first wicket of the match and 793rd casualty overall was Sachin Tendulkar. He then took a further four wickets in the first innings of that Test match. In the second innings, he captured two wickets quite easily, but had to bowl a long spell to finally get his 800th wicket, which was that of Pragyan Ojha, who was caught by Mahela Jayawardene at first slip.

Ground Information

The ground favours spin bowling, and is considered favourable to the Sri Lankan side which has several good spin bowlers and also a batting line up that is good at playing against spin bowling. This idea is supported by the fact that Sri Lanka has won 12 of the 23 Test matches that have been held at the stadium.[3] The ground is adjacent to a Dutch built fort and is bordered by the sea on two sides.

The ground covers an area of 4.216 hectares, the distance from the wicket to the boundary being 75 yards and blue grass is used on the turf. The stadium includes three indoor practice nets and four outdoor nets. The average first innings score in the Galle international stadium is 340. Mr. Jayananda Warnaweera is the current ground manager.[4]

View of the stadium from the old Dutch Fort, 2013

Mahinda Rajapakse pavilion

This pavilion was a new addition to the stadium during the post-tsunami renovations. It is named after the Sri Lankan president Mahinda Rajapakse who gave the clearance for the reconstruction to begin at a stage when the future of the stadium had been uncertain. This pavilion can provide seating for up to 500 VIP guests. It also contains a media centre that can hold 150 media personnel, and is equipped with two TV control rooms and a radio commentators’ room. The dressing rooms of the two teams are also in this pavilion.[5]

Galle Cricket Club pavilion

The Galle Cricket Club pavilion was formerly the main pavilion of the stadium, and was opened on 18 September 1955. This was constructed with the money collected from a lottery organized by the Galle Cricket Club. The Galle Gymkhana Club also made a significant contribution to the construction of this pavilion.

Problems faced

The reconstruction of the ground had been reconsidered by the Sri Lanka Cricket and the Sri Lankan government mainly due to some restrictions imposed on constructions on the coastline and also some internal problems within the Sri Lanka cricket board. Suggestions had also been made to construct the stadium at a different location.[6] However the final decision was to renovate the existing stadium. The cost of the reconstruction was approximately Rs. 500,000,000. International support was obtained for this, and former cricketers Shane Warne (Australia) and Ian Botham (England) also made notable contributions.[7]

During the renovations, another problem emerged that threatened to stop the construction. One of the new buildings being constructed blocked the view of the adjacent fort, which is a UNESCO world heritage site. The Galle Heritage Foundation and some other organisations expressed concern over this, pointing out that this may result in the fort being removed from the UNESCO world heritage sites. This issue was later resolved and the construction re-continued after some time.[8]

Other Sports

Rugby

In 2013 the SLRFU held the Carlton Rugby 7s tournament at the Galle International Cricket Stadium. The games were held on 27 and 28 July 2013,[9] however there were considerable concerns about potential damage to the central pitches.[10]

Records & Statistics

Summary of Results

Test Match Results[11]
No. of matches Sri Lanka won Visitors won Drawn
251366

Highest Innings

Highest Team Totals in Tests[12]
Rank Team Score Overs Run Rate Innings Opposition Date Test No. Report
1 Bangladesh638196.03.252 Sri Lanka8 March 20132078(scorecard)
2 Pakistan600/8d175.23.422 Sri Lanka21 June 20001501(scorecard)
3 Sri Lanka590/9d202.42.912 West Indies13 November 20011567(scorecard)
4 West Indies580/9d163.23.551 Sri Lanka15 November 20101977(scorecard)
5 Sri Lanka570/4d135.04.221 Bangladesh8 March 20132078(scorecard)

Lowest Innings

Lowest Team Totals in Tests[12]
Rank Team Score Overs Run Rate Innings Opposition Date Test No. Report
1 Zimbabwe7943.31.814 Sri Lanka12 Jan 20021585(scorecard)
2 England8130.52.622 Sri Lanka18 Dec 2007 1854(scorecard)
3 Pakistan10054.31.832 Sri Lanka22 Jun 2012 2046(scorecard)
4 Sri Lanka10550.02.102 Australia31 Aug 20112005(scorecard)
5 Australia10633.23.182 Sri Lanka5 Aug 2016 2213(scorecard)

Images

See also

References

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