Owlerton Stadium

For Sheffield Wednesday F.C.'s home stadium, see Hillsborough Stadium.
Owlerton Stadium
Aerial view of Owlerton Stadium from Shirecliffe to the NE.
Full name Owlerton Stadium
Location Owlerton, Sheffield
Coordinates 53°24′23″N 1°29′33″W / 53.40639°N 1.49250°W / 53.40639; -1.49250Coordinates: 53°24′23″N 1°29′33″W / 53.40639°N 1.49250°W / 53.40639; -1.49250
Owner A&S Leisure Group
Capacity 4,000
Construction
Built 1929
Tenants

Owlerton Stadium, sometimes referred to as Sheffield Sports Stadium, is a greyhound racing track in Owlerton near Hillsborough in Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England. [1] Greyhound Racing takes place on Tuesday, Friday and Saturday evenings and BAGS racing takes place on Monday afternoons and Thursday mornings. There is a modern glass-fronted Panorama Restaurant accommodating up to 300 people, executive suites, fast food facilities and a number of bars.

The stadium is also home to the Sheffield Tigers Speedway team and hosts BriSCA Formula One stock car racing events,.[2] [3] Speedway takes place on a Thursday evening and the stadium has a total capacity for 4,000 spectators.

It is operated by the A & S Leisure Group, the majority shareholder of which is Dave Allen. Allen was previously the chairman of football team Sheffield Wednesday who play at the nearby Hillsborough Stadium, which coincidentally was originally named Owlerton Stadium.

Greyhound racing

Origins and opening

In 1929 construction began on a 20-acre freehold site to build a new greyhound stadium in Owlerton. The site was surrounded by steel works with a steel forge directly on the north side and a cutlery forge directly on the west side. To the south was the Birley Meadow steel forge and Owlerton Bridge Rolling Mills steel works. The only area without steel works was on the east side where allotments and gardens were to be found. The Penistone Road ran alongside the west and where Lowther Road originated it could take you directly to the stadium although today the main car park is on Livesey Street on the south side. With the Darnall Stadium opening in 1927 Owlerton track became the second oval circuit greyhound racing in Sheffield. On 12 January 1932 an official opening night took place in regards to greyhound racing. The venue had initially been used for speedway with a first meeting held on 30 March 1929. The stands were subsequently altered to accommodate the impending greyhound racing with a newly built glass fronted grandstand.[4]

The opening night attracted a crowd of 10,000. The press described the tote as a "mechanical and electrical marvel as it registered bets within fractions of a second as they were placed". Seven races were held and the first race over 525 yards the 'Oxford Stakes' was claimed by 3–1 shot 'Carbrook Ted' winning by two lengths in 33.63 secs. Adding variety to the meeting was a 700-yard race and a hurdle race. The five 525 yard flat race winning times spanned 32.40 to 35.78 secs.[5]

Pre-war history

A third track arrived to the city of Sheffield in the form of Hyde Park which would always remain independent leaving Darnall and Owlerton to licensed racing. Owlerton owned by Sheffield Sports Stadium Ltd became the primary track in Sheffield and the set-up of the track consisted of a 472 yards circumference with distances of 300, 500, 525 and 700 yards. The grandstand and club were situated on the home straight and there was a parade ring to be found behind these which allowed the public to view the greyhounds pre-race. The track had two hares, an 'Inside Sumner' and an 'Outside MS Cable'. The racing kennels were next to the parade ring and there were another 120 resident kennels that replaced the kennels formerly located at Wardsend Farm in a range of stone buildings.[6]

Sam Vintner joined the track in the thirties as Racing Manager and owner/breeder Alf Morton bred and supplied the track with greyhounds using Irish Derby winner Marching Through Georgia as the sire. Morton was responsible for breeding Victor Ben Hur a track champion and record holder over both 500 & 700 yards in 1940. Duffys Arrival was once trained at the track before he went to (Coventry) trainer George McKay and two of the early trainers at the track were Harry Bidwell, who would have a thirty-year association with Owlerton, and Ted Brennan.[7]

Post-war history

Trade during the war was exceptional but there was very little open racing due to travel issues and it was not until 1950 that Ted Brennan started to establish himself as one of the leading northern trainers. The track claimed the 1951 News of the World Intertrack Championship, the greyhound racing equivalent of the F.A. Cup at the time. Ronald James 'Jim' Hookway became a resident trainer in 1953 and joined Brennan in dominating the northern scene. In 1959 Ted Brennan’s brother Jim switched from the Darnall kennels to join Owlerton and Dancing Sheik trained by Ted Brennan became the first Derby finalist for the track.[8]

The sixties saw rival track Darnall close down and Owlerton was bought by the Sheffield Corporation after a £185,000 offer had been accepted. The corporation converted the three private clubs into public bars which helped boost attendance figures and in 1969 they made £30,000 improvements to the Lowther Road grandstand. Hookway was rewarded with the title of Trainer of the Year which he shared with John Bassett in 1965.[9] The accolade had been helped considerably by a greyhound called Clonmannon Flash who had won the Scottish Greyhound Derby & Edinburgh Cup double.

In February 1965 an Irish litter by Crazy Parachute out of Supreme Witch bred by Leo Stack included Tric-Trac, Spectre II, Forward King and Forward Flash. This litter made its way to Hookway and the Brennan brothers kennels and would become one of the greatest litters of all time. At White City on 24 June 1967 Tric-Trac defeated his brother Spectre II by one length in the 1967 English Greyhound Derby final. Hookway received the Trainer of the Year accolade for a second time.[10]

By 1970 Owlerton introduced the Steel City Cup and as the decade progressed Sam Vintner the long serving Racing Manager retired in 1973 to be replaced by Terry Meynell. Ted Brennan retired the following year and his place was taken by Harry Crapper. Jim Brennan would join Leeds a few years later and Jim Hookway also retired after a very successful career. Sheffield replaced the grass circuit with an all-sand surface in 1978.[11]

Terry Corden who held the lease at Derby Stadium added Sheffield to his portfolio by obtaining the lease at the track but the ageing stadium became a problem following the Hillsborough disaster in April 1989 which resulted in ramifications for the track. The Taylor Report and subsequent government actions on stadium safety meant a substantial financial boost was required at many stadia and as a result Corden sold Derby and the local council closed Sheffield until the improvements were completed. Corden, General Manager Jon Carter and Racing Manager Jimmy Nunn were powerless to stop the stadium closing for the first time since it had opened in 1932.[12]

The stadium was to re-open following investment and David Gunson was brought in as Racing Manager but the track suffered a second closure in the spring of 1990 following a mistake with the betting licence. Tennents provided major sponsorship deals[13] until 1991 when A&S Leisure (owners of five casino restaurants) stepped in and purchased the track spending a £3 million on refurbishment. Attendances rose and Dave Baldwin stepped in to take over from Dave Gunson and Barrie Draper became a major trainer.

Former Greyhound Racing Association manager John Gilburn arrived as Managing Director and secured the prestigious trainers' championship for the first time in the track's history in 2009 and then again in 2014. Additionally a second home competition the Three Steps to Victory was inaugurated in 2003.[14]

Competitions

Track records

[15]

Distance Greyhound Time Date
280m Walk the Talk 15.69 6 September 2016
290m Fosse Way 16.728 May 1999
362m Farloe Bubble 20.82 4 October 1997
380m Loughlass Champ 22.09 1987
480m Eden Star 27.39 21 June 2011
500m Boher Paddy 28.27 26 April 2016
650m Desert Pilot 38.80 9 August 1980
660m Billys Bullet 38.29 7 April 2015
715m White Rooms 43.78 1987
720m Ballyard Buddy 42.33 14 August 2012
730m Suncrest Sail 43.64 30 April 1995
800m Hollinwood Poppy 48.25 27 December 2000
915m King Kane 55.58 6 August 2014
934m Roxholme Magic 56.28 26 April 2016
500mH Bomber Bailey 29.23 4 August 2009

Rugby League

The stadium hosted the Sheffield Eagles' first ever game in September 1984; they left five years later following changes to crowd rules, however they returned in 2014 after their previous home the Don Valley Stadium was demolished.

References

  1. "Find A Track". Greyhound Board of Great Britain.
  2. Bamford, R & Jarvis J.(2001). Homes of British Speedway. ISBN 0-7524-2210-3
  3. "About Owlerton Stadium Sheffield". Sheffield Sports Stadium Ltd. Archived from the original on 11 September 2007. Retrieved 3 January 2008.
  4. "Greyhound Racing, Auspicious Opening at Owlerton Wednesday 13 January". Daily Telegraph. 1932.
  5. "Greyhound Racing, Auspicious Opening at Owlerton Wednesday 13 January". Daily Telegraph. 1932.
  6. Tarter, P Howard (1949). Greyhound Racing Encyclopedia. Fleet Publishing Company Ltd. p. 59.
  7. Genders, Roy (1981). The Encyclopedia of Greyhound Racing. Pelham Books Ltd. pp. 58–61. ISBN 07207-1106-1.
  8. Genders, Roy (1981). The Encyclopedia of Greyhound Racing. Pelham Books Ltd. pp. 58–61. ISBN 07207-1106-1.
  9. Genders, Roy (1981). The Encyclopedia of Greyhound Racing. Pelham Books Ltd. pp. 58–61. ISBN 07207-1106-1.
  10. Genders, Roy (1975). The Greyhound and Racing Greyhound. Page Brothers (Norwich). pp. 94–95. ISBN 0-85020-0474.
  11. Genders, Roy (1990). NGRC book of Greyhound Racing. Pelham Books Ltd. pp. 57–58. ISBN 0-7207-1804-X.
  12. Genders, Roy (1990). NGRC book of Greyhound Racing. Pelham Books Ltd. pp. 57–58. ISBN 0-7207-1804-X.
  13. Barnes/Sellers, Julia/John (1992). Ladbrokes Greyhound Fact File. Ringpress Books. pp. 108–110. ISBN 0-948955-22-8.
  14. Hobbs, Jonathan (2007). Greyhound Annual 2008. Raceform. p. 205. ISBN 978-1-905153-53-4.
  15. "Track records". Greyhound Data.
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