Odsal Stadium
Full nameOdsal Stadium
LocationRooley Lane, Odsal, Bradford, West Yorkshire, England
Coordinates53°45′54″N 1°45′25″W / 53.76500°N 1.75694°W / 53.76500; -1.75694
Public transitNational Rail Low Moor
OwnerBradford City Council
OperatorRugby Football League
Capacity26,019[1]
Record attendanceAll Time
102,569 (Warrington vs Halifax, 5 May 1954)
Super League
24,020 (Bradford Bulls vs Leeds, 3 September 1999)
Stock Cars
38,000 Wednesday 26 May 1954
Field size67.79 m × 111.74 m (222.4 ft × 366.6 ft)
SurfaceGrass, Shale Racing Track
ScoreboardManual
Construction
Opened1933
Renovated1964, 1985, 2001–02
Tenants
Rugby League
Bradford Bulls (1934–2000; 2003–2019; 30 May 2021 – present)
Stock Cars
YorStox F1 & F2 Stock Cars (2021 to present)
Football
Bradford City (1985–1986)
Speedway
Bradford Dukes (1945–1960; 1986–1997)

Odsal Stadium in Bradford, West Yorkshire, England, is a multi-purpose stadium currently the home of Bradford Bulls Rugby League team and Yorstox Stock Cars who host regular monthly meetings of BriSCA F1 Stock Cars and BriSCA F2 Stock Cars.[2] It has also been used by the Bradford Dukes speedway team, hosting the 1997 Speedway Grand Prix of Great Britain, and as a temporary groundshare, the football team Bradford City temporarily following the Valley Parade fire. Odsal Stadium has also historically hosted baseball, American Football, basketball, kabbadi, show jumping, tennis, live music concerts, and international Rugby League matches over the years.

The stadium's highest attendance was 102,569 in 1954 for the Warrington-Halifax Challenge Cup Final replay,[3][4] and for a domestic, non-final, Rugby League match, 69,429 at the third round Challenge Cup tie between Bradford Northern and Huddersfield in 1953.[5] The stadium is owned by Bradford City Council, but due to financial problems the Rugby Football League purchased the leasehold in 2012.[6]

The Bulls left Odsal in 2019 because of ongoing financial concerns and rising administration costs in a single-use stadium, playing at Crown Flatt in Dewsbury[7] for two seasons, however due to the return of professional stock car racing as a joint tenancy in a multi-use stadium, they were able to return to Odsal in 2021 initially on a provisional eighteen months lease.[8]

History

1933–1935: Construction and opening

Formed in 1907, the Bradford Northern club had played at a number of venues including the Greenfield Athletic Ground in Dudley Hill and Bowling Old Lane Cricket Club's ground in Birch Lane.[9] By the early 1920s, however, Birch Lane's limitations were clear and Northern began to seek another home. Precarious finances prevented the club being able to take up an offer to develop land off Rooley Lane or to upgrade and move back to Greenfield, but in 1933, Bradford City Council gave them the opportunity to transform land at Odsal Top into their home ground. On 20 June 1933 the club therefore signed a ten-year deal on the site, which was to become the biggest stadium in England outside Wembley.[10]

The site was a former quarry which was then being used as a landfill tip. Ernest Call M.B.E., the Director of Cleansing for Bradford City Council devised a system of controlled tipping that saw 140,000 cart loads of household waste deposited to form the characteristic banking at Odsal. The club were to be responsible for boundary fencing, dressing rooms and seated accommodation.

To be able to turf the pitch, and other areas, a turf fund was put into place which raised a total of £900 to cover the work. A stand was erected at the cost of £2,000, which was paid for by the Rugby Football League. It held 1,500 on a mixture of benches and tip-up seats.

The ground was officially opened by Sir Joseph Taylor, President of Huddersfield on 1 September 1934. His club went on to beat the hosts 31–16, Australian winger Ray Markham scoring four tries in front of an estimated 20,000.[11] The clubhouse and dressing rooms were officially opened before a match against Hull F.C. on 2 February 1935. Contemporary pictures show that as late as August 1935 the banking on the Rooley Avenue side was still being created.[10]

1940–1979: Speedway and Rugby League Internationals

Under the instruction of Bradford Northern RFLC director Harry Hornby and local motorsport promoter Johnnie Hoskins, a sloping oval compacted dirt track was especially designed to surround the rugby pitch to allow professional speedway racing to take place at Odsal in 1945,[12] the initial Bradford team known as the Odsal Boomerangs. In the post-Second World War years, speedway proved extremely popular with crowds of over 20,000 regularly attending meetings at Odsal, with the 1946 average for the first year of the National League after the war. The highest speedway attendance during this period came on 5 July 1947 when 47,050 fans saw England defeat Australia 65–43 in a Test match. This remains the largest-ever speedway crowd for Odsal Stadium.

During the Second World War, the lower floor of the clubhouse was also used as an Air Raid Precautions centre, and one of the dressing rooms was the map room.[13] On 20 December 1947, the largest ever attendance for an international test at Odsal was set when 42,685 saw England defeat New Zealand 25–9. The first floodlit rugby match in the North of England was held at Odsal in 1951.[14] In September 1951, Council Engineer Ernest Wardley drew up a plan for a 92,000 capacity 'European' style stadium, at a cost of £250,000.[15] Eventually £50,000 was spent on terracing the Rooley Avenue end in 1964, before the Wardley plan was officially dropped the following year.[15]

After a disastrous 1960 season, the Panthers (previously the Odsal Boomerangs) left Odsal and in 1961 moved across town to the Greenfield Stadium, better known for greyhound racing. After the Panthers folded in 1962, Motorcycle Speedway would not return to Bradford for another 10 years.

Speedway returned to Odsal when promoters Les Whaley, Mike Parker and Bill Bridgett moved the British League Division Two side Nelson Admirals across the Pennines for the final eleven league meetings of the 1970 season and went on to adopt Bradford Northern as their name and red, black and amber as their colours. Northern would finish second in Division 2 in 1971, but from there results and attendances steadily declined and the team folded after 1973.

The second test of the 1978 Ashes series was played at Odsal, with Great Britain defeating Australia before a crowd of 26,761. The Lions team that day featured what was called a "Dad's Army" front row with Jim Mills, Tony Fisher and Brian Lockwood all being over the age of 30.

1980-1996: Bradford City and the return of Speedway

The ground's clubhouse had to be refurbished when it was condemned in the mid-1980s. The social facilities were also upgraded at the same time.

Speedway returned to Odsal in 1985 after a ten-year absence when it was selected by the FIM to host the 1985 World Final.

Following the Valley Parade fire disaster of 1985, Bradford City played a handful of games at Leeds Road and Elland Road whilst the future of Valley Parade was decided. On 23 September 1985, a Football League delegation visited Odsal to view the stadium to pass it fit to host City's home games. Segregation fences were erected on the old Main Stand side and 1,000 uncovered seats were bolted onto the terracing – it was planned to install 7,000 in the future. Meanwhile, a further £1 million was spent to conform with new safety standards – bringing the total spent on Odsal to £3.5 million. New boundary walls, turnstiles, exit gates, a bus layby in Rooley Avenue and access road were added. Odsal played host to Bradford City's Division Two home games until December 1986. Odsal Stadium also held a modern-day attendance record for almost six years.

Like most British stadia, Odsal had its capacity substantially reduced by the safety measures introduced in the 1990s following the Hillsborough disaster and the findings of the Taylor Report.

1996–2019: Super League & Championship Eras

At the dawn of the Super League era in 1996, Bradford Bulls wanted to attract new sponsors but had poor and outdated hospitality suites. In 2000 they announced plans to build hospitality suites at the South End of the stadium which would mean building on the track around the pitch, effectively ending speedway's association with Bradford. Construction started in 2001 and was completed in 2002 with Bradford Bulls playing two seasons at Valley Parade.

After London won the right to host the 2012 Olympic Games in 2008, plans were put in place for an Olympic Legacy Park at Odsal, which would mean redeveloping the stadium and the Richard Dunn Leisure Centre opposite; these plans never came to fruition and a Legacy Park was built in Sheffield instead.

In 2012, the Bulls got into severe financial difficulties and the RFL stepped in and bought the lease to Odsal. Since being relegated to the Betfred Championship in 2014, their problems intensified. In early 2017 the Bulls were formally liquidated and a new phoenix club was formed by Andrew Chalmers, who announced plans to redevelop Odsal into a venue fit for Super League and international rugby league, however, like previous plans, they were shelved. Nearby football club Bradford Park Avenue whose current location is the Bradford Council-owned football ground Horsfall Stadium had on several occasions discussed relocating to Odsal, most recently in 2018, however they repeatedly decided against such a move, leaving Odsal as a single-rent, single-use stadium.[16]

2019-2021: Bulls Leave Odsal Stadium

Due to the club's ongoing precarious financial situation and increasing running costs at the stadium, including the £72,000 rent payable to the Rugby Football League, the Bradford Bulls made the decision to leave Odsal for a financially prudent ground share with Dewsbury to ensure the club's survival.[17] On 1 September 2019, the club played what was believed to be their last game at Odsal, which had been the team's home ground for 85 years.[18]

2021-Present Day: Return of Stock Cars and the Bulls to Odsal

Talks with the RFL were ongoing during their absence. Two years later in 2021, they agreed a return to the stadium as a co-tenant with stock car promoters YorStox (formerly StarTrax). In 2021, the shale motorsport racing track was restored for the return of regular professional BriSCA F1 and BriSCA F2 stock car meetings, which resulted in the reintroduction of removable pitch corners and a narrowing of the rugby pitch. Despite the resultant changes to the pitch rendering it beneath minimum standards for professional rugby league, the sport's governing body allowed the Bulls to return to their former home.[19]

The Bulls’ acting chief executive, Mark Sawyer, told Rugby League Live: “Staging motorsport events is the first piece in the jigsaw puzzle towards how we’re going to balance the books at Odsal". He also revealed that the Bulls themselves were considering entering their own participants in motorcar racing at Odsal, “We’re going to have stock car racing and a bit of banger racing where Bradford Bulls themselves might enter a team into that", he added, stressing that he believed Bulls supporters were positive about the return of motorsports, quoted as saying “The feedback we get from our Bradford supporter base is that a number of them are interested in watching motorsport.[20]

Current Uses

Rugby League

Rugby League has featured at Odsal Stadium since it opened on the 1st of September 1934 when Huddersfield beat Bradford Northern 31 points to 16, Northern later to be renamed the Bradford Bulls in 1996 at the beginning of Super League. Besides club rugby, Odsal has hosted various international fixtures including test matches, tour games and Rugby League World / European Cup fixtures, some of which involved Bradford teams facing international opposition, the results of which are as follows: -

Test matches

DateWinnersScoreRunners-upCompetitionAttendance
29 January 1938 Wales7–6 England1938 European Rugby League Championship8,637
23 December 1939 Wales16–3 England15,257
18 October 1941 England9–9 Wales4,339
20 December 1947United Kingdom England25–9 New Zealand1947 England vs New Zealand series42,685
29 January 1949 Great Britain23–9 Australia1948–49 Ashes series36,294
6 October 1951 Great Britain21–15 New Zealand1951 Great Britain vs New Zealand series37,475
7 December 1951 New Zealand15–3 Wales8,568
13 December 1952 Australia27–7 Great Britain1952 Ashes series30,509
7 October 1953Other Nationalities30–5 Wales 30–51953–54 European Rugby League Championship14,646
7 November 1953 England7–5 France10,659
12 November 1955 Great Britain27–12 New Zealand1955 Great Britain vs New Zealand series24,443
11 April 1956 Great Britain18–10 France10,453
1 December 1956 Australia22–9 Great Britain1956 Ashes series23,634
24 September 1960 Great Britain23–8 New Zealand1960 Rugby League World Cup20,577
8 October 1960 Great Britain10–3 Australia32,773
21 October 1961 Great Britain23–10 New Zealand1961 Great Britain vs New Zealand series19,980
23 October 1965 Great Britain15–9 New Zealand1965 Great Britain vs New Zealand series15,849
2 March 1968 Great Britain19–8 France14,196
1 November 1970 France17–15 Australia1970 Rugby League World Cup6,654
2 March 1972 Great Britain45–10 France7,313
25 November 1975 England27–12 New Zealand1975 Rugby League World Cup5,507
5 November 1978 Great Britain18–14 Australia1978 Ashes series26,761
2 November 1980 New Zealand12–8 Great Britain1980 Great Britain vs New Zealand series10,946
2 November 2003 England102–0 Russia2003 European Nations Cup1,376

[21]

Tour matches

DateWinnersScoreRunners-upCompetitionAttendance
6 October 1937 Australia8–4Yorkshire Yorkshire1937–38 Kangaroo Tour7,570
27 October 1937 Australia19–6 Bradford Northern5,748
10 November 1948 Australia21–7 Bradford Northern1948–49 Kangaroo Tour13,287
8 October 1952 Australia20–6 Bradford Northern1952–53 Kangaroo Tour29,287
24 October 1956 Australia23–11 Bradford Northern1956–57 Kangaroo Tour2,743
4 November 1959 Australia29–8 Bradford Northern1959–60 Kangaroo Tour4,126
2 December 1967 Australia7–3 Bradford Northern1967–68 Kangaroo Tour14,173
19 November 1972 Australia29–16 Bradford Northern1972 Australian Rugby League World Cup tour2,820
28 October 1973 Australia50–14 Bradford Northern1973 Kangaroo Tour5,667
8 October 1978 Australia21–11 Bradford Northern1978 Kangaroo Tour15,755
14 October 1980 Bradford Northern15–10 New Zealand1980 New Zealand Kiwis tour4,553
7 November 1982 Australia13–6 Bradford Northern1982 Kangaroo Tour10,506
18 November 1986 Australia38–0 Bradford Northern1986 Kangaroo Tour10,663
11 October 1989 New Zealand26–8 Bradford Northern1989 New Zealand Kiwis tour
5 October 1993 Bradford Northern17–10 New Zealand1993 New Zealand Kiwis tour
13 November 1994 Australia40–0 Bradford Northern1994 Kangaroo Tour9,080

Stock Car Racing

Odsal Stadium has hosted professional stock cars events since the sport arrived in England. The sport originated in the early 1950s at the Buffalo Stadium in Paris France, cars based upon the design of early American NASCAR vehicles, the first British meeting taking place on Good Friday 16 April 1954 at New Cross in South East London. After two further meetings at New Cross, Odsal hosted the UK's fourth stock car event featuring V8 engine cars on Wednesday 26 May 1954 with a crowd of 38,000 spectators.[22]

As worded in the Telegraph & Argus newspaper, [23]"The survival of the home of Bradford Northern was dependent on attracting other sports to share the stadium with rugby league", a situation similar to 2021 when the Bradford Bulls (Northern later becoming known as the Bulls) relocated back to Odsal following the return of BriSCA stock car events.

In the Seventies, stock car meetings happened on Saturdays, sometimes taking place 24 hours before a rugby league match on the following Sunday, which meant ground conversions had to be carried out expediently.[24] Concerned about the survival of stock cars at Odsal, co-promoter Barry Gomersall introduced BriSCA Formula Two stock cars which were popular at Southern tracks. In June 1976, to further boost attendance, Gomersall, a former wrestler, added open-air wrestling to the bill, featuring himself and professional wrestler Jackie Pallo.

Originally shale, the Odsal motorsport track was tarmacked over in 1977 by Stuart Bamforth,[25] although shale was to return in 1985 to accommodate the Speedway World Final. The temporary relocation of Bradford City A.F.C. following the Bradford City stadium fire resulted in a pause of stock car racing at Odsal in 1986, however the sport returned the following year. Odsal, along with Belle Vue in Manchester, Coventry, Long Eaton and Northampton were at the time the main national BriSCA tracks.[26] Promoter Steve Rees took over the management of the sport at the stadium in 1996, aiming to boost its status, however a year later in 1997, the RFL chose to cancel the venue's multi-use at the start of Super League, a decision which meant the abandonment of both stock cars and speedway at Odsal, the speedway pits area becoming an executive box block, until the shale track's eventual return in 2021 when Steve Rees successfully renegotiated the return of regular motorsports with the RFL and Bradford Council.

Steve Rees's Lytham St Annes-based Startrax handed over the reins of management to Buxton-based promotions company Yorstox [27] run by Derbyshire-based businessmen Russell Andrew and Graeme Robson [28] who also manage stock car racing facilities at Owlerton Stadium in Sheffield. Motorsports successfully returned to Odsal Stadium on 22 May 2021 for the first time in 23 years, the stadium hosting the national banger Stan Woods Memorial for pre 1975 cars, an event witnessed by 4000 fans. Since September 2021, the stadium has hosted both BriSCA F1 and BriSCA F2 stock car meetings, including the BriSCA F1 World Championships with drivers participating from across Europe,[29] and currently hosts regular monthly stock car meetings and banger racing on its restored flattened shale track.

BriSCA F1 World Championship Results at Odsal Stadium

Year Winner[30] Second Third Venue
1981 Len Wolfenden Brian Powles Mike Close Odsal Stadium, Bradford
1985 Stuart Smith Len Wolfenden Bert Finnikin Odsal Stadium, Bradford
1990 Bert Finnikin Dave Berresford John Lund Odsal Stadium, Bradford
1992 John Lund Bobby Burns Peter Falding Odsal Stadium, Bradford
1994 Andy Smith Kev Smith Dave Berresford Odsal Stadium, Bradford
1997 John Lund Frankie Wainman Junior Peter Falding Odsal Stadium, Bradford
2021 Tom Harris Lee Fairhurst Paul Harrison Odsal Stadium, Bradford

Non-Sporting Activities

Odsal hosts occasional and regular activities outside of the sporting realm, which include live music events and festivals. In 2022, the Bradford Dance Festival featured the DJ and rapper Tom Zanetti.[31] Other events which take place at Odsal include talks, lectures, business conferences, monthly fundraising car boot sales, [32] religious and community events, and annual bonfire / monster truck events,[33] the function suites available for hire. In 2023, Bradford Bulls hosted their first ever Iftar event.[34]

Past Uses

Speedway

Speedway first took place at Odsal Stadium on the 23rd of June 1945. Prior to that, in 1936, two years after the venue opened, the first foundations of motorsport were laid in Bradford when the Bradford and District Motor Club ran a mountain grass track event using the embankment at the north end of the stadium, the turf reported to have been badly cut up afterwards. [35]

The director of the rugby league Club, Harry Hornby collaborated with local event promoter Johnnie Hoskins to bring speedway to the venue, the resultant 390 yards (360 m) oval circuit designed and built around the rugby pitch utilised for both Motorcycle speedway and stock cars racing. In 1948, a pioneering three feet in width concrete starting gate platform was also constructed at Odsal which was believed to have been the first of its kind used in United Kingdom speedway events.[36]

The original Bradford team competing at Odsal were known as the Bradford Boomerangs. After finishing at the bottom of the National League in 1948 and 1949, the Boomerangs folded and were replaced in 1950 by the Odsal Tudors. Despite the name change, fortunes remained the same with the Tudors finishing on the bottom of the NL ladder in 1951. In 1959 the Tudors dropped the Odsal name and were renamed the Bradford Tudors.

In 1960, the Bradford Tudors renamed themselves the Bradford Panthers. After a disastrous 1960 season, the Panthers left Odsal and in 1961 moved across town to the Greenfield Stadium, better known for greyhound racing. After the Panthers folded in 1962, Motorcycle Speedway would not return to Bradford for another 10 years.

Speedway returned to Odsal when promoters Les Whaley, Mike Parker and Bill Bridgett moved the British League Division Two side Nelson Admirals across the Pennines for the final eleven league meetings of the 1970 season. The Admirals adopted the Bradford Northern name and colours, though the move was met with opposition from the nearby Halifax Dukes. Northern would finish second in Division Two in 1971, but from there results and attendances steadily declined and the team folded in 1973.

The following year, Bradford Barons were formed, but they were also short lived and only lasted the years 1974 and 1975. Speedway would once again not return to Bradford for another 10 years.

Speedway returned to Odsal in 1985 when it was selected by the FIM to host the 1985 World Final, the first time the Final in England would not be held at Wembley Stadium. In the three years after the 1981 World Final at Wembley, international speedway's home in Great Britain had been the White City Stadium in London. However, with the closure of White City in 1985 a new home would be needed and the 30,000 capacity Odsal was chosen. A capacity crowd at the 1985 World Final saw a titanic fight between Denmark's defending World Champion Erik Gundersen, his fellow countryman Hans Nielsen, and American rider Sam Ermolenko. The trio all finished the meeting on 13 points each which saw a three-way runoff for the top 3 placings with Gundersen winning from Nielsen and Ermolenko. Just a month prior to the World Final, Odsal also hosted the Overseas Final as part of the World Final qualifications. That meeting saw two riders finish at the top on 14 points, American Shawn Moran and English favourite, Halifax Dukes rider Kenny Carter. Moran would defeat Carter in the runoff for the Overseas title.

In March 1986, Odsal opened its doors to British League action for the first time since the 1950s after the Halifax Dukes were offered a new home track. The new 'Bradford Dukes' team would in later years include World Champions Gary Havelock and Mark Loram, multiple British and Long Track World Champions Simon Wigg and Kelvin Tatum, and dual Australian Champion Glenn Doyle. However, the club suffered the tragic loss of Kenny Carter who died in murder/suicide after shooting his wife and then himself at their home in May 1986.

Odsal Stadium hosted its second World Final in 1990. Swedish rider Per Jonsson won his only World Championship when he defeated Shawn Moran in a runoff after both had finished the meeting on 13 points. Moran was later stripped of his silver medal by the FIM after he had tested positive to a drug test taken three months earlier at the Overseas Final in Coventry. Moran claimed that the drug he took was a pain killer prescribed by a doctor in Sweden, but the FIM stood firm. They also did not upgrade the standings and the official records show no second place rider. Young Australian rider Todd Wiltshire riding in his first World Final surprised many by finishing in third place with 12 points.

From 1987, Bradford speedway then enjoyed its greatest period of success, winning eight trophies until the club's closure in 1997 when despite winning the Elite League, the club folded for the third time.

Odsal Stadium hosted the 1997 Speedway Grand Prix of Great Britain. Danish rider Brian Andersen won the Grand Prix from America's reigning World Champion Billy Hamill, with Swede Jimmy Nilsen finishing third in the Final. Bradford Dukes rider Mark Loram finished 4th in the Final. Loram would later go on to be the 2000 World Champion after winning the Speedway Grand Prix series that year.

Individual World Championship

YearWinnersPoints
1985Denmark Erik Gundersen13+3pts
1990Sweden Per Jonsson13+3pts

World Pairs Championship

YearWinnersPoints
1988Denmark Denmark (Hans Nielsen / Erik Gundersen)45pts

World Team Cup

YearWinnersPoints
1986Denmark Denmark (Erik Gundersen / Hans Nielsen / Tommy Knudsen / Jan O. Pedersen / John Jørgensen)130pts
1989England England (Jeremy Doncaster / Kelvin Tatum / Paul Thorp / Simon Wigg / Simon Cross)48pts

* Odsal hosted the third of 3 rounds in the Final.

Speedway Grand Prix

YearWinners
1997 Speedway Grand Prix of Great BritainDenmark Brian Andersen

American Football

Several American Football games were played at Odsal in 1988 when the Leeds Cougars home ground, McLaren Field in Bramley was being reseeded.[37] Against the Glasgow Lions, the Cougars won 15-12 after a last minute field-goal by Linebacker Glenn Stowe with just twenty seconds to go.[38] In the other Odsal fixture against the Fylde Falcons, the Cougars were narrowly defeated by 17 points to 8.[39]

Following the popularity of these two games, good turnouts reported at the natural bowl of Odsal, the Leeds Cougars made Odsal their home-base for the entire 1989 season.[40] Victories included a 56 - 22 win against the Leicester Panthers, 26-12 against the Nottingham Hoods, a comfortable 63 - 30 win against the Northampton Stormbringers, and a nail-biting 20-14 victory against the conference leaders the Birmingham Bulls. A complete copy of the Budweiser National Division matchday programme vs Birmingham, along with other programmes, has been archived online at the Leeds Cougars History website.[41]

Show Jumping

Equestrian events took place at Odsal Stadium in 1957 and again in 1958.[42]The top prize of £1000 was available to the winner, plus trophies for the winner and runner up. Thirty tonnes of river sand was spread across the pitch to give the horses a softer landing when jumping the fences. Ted Williams was the winner of the Airedale Stakes showjumping competition. An expected 20,000 spectators on the second and final day never materialised, just 6,000 people attending, which resulted in the event making a loss of £1700. Despite this, showjumping returned the following year, before being permanently cancelled by Bradford Northern's directors as unprofitable, the event replaced by a series of miniature car races in 1959.

Baseball

Baseball became popular in the 1930s, played in stadiums throughout Northern England until the outbreak of Second World War, after which it faded. Gambling was permitted on the games, and pools magnate Sir John Moores from Littlewoods sponsored and provided kit to the newly-launched North of England League, baseball providing rugby league and football clubs with off-season summer income. In the inaugural competition hosted in 1935, two years after Odsal Stadium opened, Bradford Northern RLFC entered a baseball team also called Bradford Northern who came second in the league to the champions Oldham Greyhounds with ten wins out of fourteen. Other nearby baseball clubs in Bradford included the City Sox and the Greenfield Giants who were based two miles away at the Greenfield Stadium, Bradford at Dudley Hill. Bradford's baseball history is noted in the book 'British Baseball and the West Ham Club' by Josh Chetwynd and Brian A. Belton, which was published in 2007. A readable excerpt is featured on Google Books which mentions Odsal and the Bradford clubs.[43]

Tennis

In 1939, Odsal Stadium played host to the British Isles and Western Europe tour of our of the leading men's tennis players of the day: Donald Budge, Big Bill Tilden, H. Ellsworth Vines, and Lester Stoefen. A film capturing this event was created by local filmmaker, C. H. Wood which additionally features a rugby league cup semi final which took place at the time at Odsal, and is available to watch online at the Yorkshire and North East Film Archive.[44]

Other Sporting Events

Other sports which have been played at Odsal since opening, include basketball and kabbadi.

Layout

The stadium is unusual for UK stadia - a sunken bowl featuring a grass pitch surrounded by an oval shale motorsports track.

Rooley Avenue End

Capacity- 7,290 (standing)
The Rooley Avenue End is at the northern end of the stadium. It is open terracing and is where the big screen is erected for televised games. The stand has turnstiles that back onto Rooley Avenue.

East Stand

Capacity- 4,890 (seating)
The East Stand is the only part of the ground that is covered and has seating. The stand runs parallel to the pitch and has "BULLS" spelt out on the seats. The stand houses home supporters and most season ticket holders as well as the press and some executive seats. There are also bars and toilets at the top of the stand.

South Bank

Capacity- 620 (seating)
The South Bank is the stadium's commercial hospitality stand and the most recently built structure, having been completed in 2002. It has two levels, each containing a banqueting suite and seats looking out onto the pitch. Speedway was forced to end its association with Odsal after the hospitality building was built.

West Stand

Capacity- 9,309 (standing)
The West Stand is uncovered terracing and houses the players changing rooms and tunnel as well as TV gantry at the top of the stand. The supporters' bar is in the north-west corner of the stand which also houses a manual scoreboard and clock. At the top of the stand, on ground level with Rooley Avenue, is the car park and club shop and ticket office. There are a few hospitality boxes at the top of the stand, but these have not been used since the construction of the South Bank.

Grass Pitch

The pitch at Odsal has a distinctive concave contour, with the corners behind the try-line noticeably sloping up towards the stands, due to the stadium hosting F1 and F2 stock cars, and previously speedway, the corners of the pitch removed to allow full use of the track. When stock cars and speedway departed Odsal, the corners became semi-permanent and were not as pronounced as they once were, however since the successful return of stock cars and banger racing in 2021 and the associated re-addition of a sloping shale track, significant removable sloping corner pieces have returned. The pitch has also been narrowed by several meters to accommodate the motorsports racing track.

Motorsports Track

There has been a specialist oval racing track at Odsal in-place for motorcycle speedway and later, stock cars, since 1945. Implemented by Bradford Northern rugby director Harry Hornby and motorsports promoter Johnnie Hoskins, the original surface surrounding the rugby pitch was an especially designed sloping compacted dirt track.[45] Over the decades, the shape of the track has remained the same, although the surface has alternated between dirt, shale and tarmac, dependent upon the stadium's usage at the time. When speedway ceased in 1977, the shale track was tarmacked over by Stuart Bamforth, [46] stock cars continuing to race on the tarmac surface, shale later returning for the 1985 Speedway World Final.

The track remained shale until motorsports were forced to leave in Odsal in 1997, during which time the Bradford Dukes were crowned Elite Speedway Champions, ending the stadium's long association with car and motorbike racing. Assuming motorsport wouldn't return, in 1990, the shale was relocated to create a new racing track in Somerset. [47]

The remaining track underlay was reduced in width and tarmacked over, expanding the width of the pitch while leaving the track in a state of cracked disrepair until stock car promoter Steve Rees negotiated a change of heart from the RFL who permitted competitive motorsports to return. Although speedway failed to make a comeback as the media suggested may happen, [48] under the management of Rees's Startrax, stock cars and banger racing successfully made a comeback the following year, enabling the Bradford Bulls to return home from exile.[49]

7000 fans attended the F1 World Final in August 2021, however a rain-drenched end of term ‘firework spectacular’ later that year exposed critical drainage problems which required urgent attention. [50]Taking over the reigns from Startrax, the new promotions company assuming management of motorsports at Odsal, YorStox, discovered the drains were not properly connected. Addressing the issue so the problem wouldn't return, they also re-laid a modified surface. “We are putting down a different type of shale, but the main problem was the drainage,” YorStox promoter Russell Andrew told the Telegraph and Argus Newspaper.

Legacy Park

In the run up to the 2012 London Olympics, Bradford City Council bid for an Olympic Legacy Park to be built at Odsal and the Richard Dunn Sport Centre. Bradford's bid was turned down in favour of Sheffield, making the prospect of improvements to Odsal in the near future unlikely.

Sponsorship

For two periods between 2006 and 2017 the ground officially carried the name of the Bradford Bulls' principle sponsor. From 2006 until 2010 it was referred to as the Grattan Stadium, Odsal due to sponsorship from retail company Grattan. From 2013 until 2017 it was referred to as the Provident Stadium, the sponsors being Provident Financial.

Attendance records

  • All time record:
102,569 – 1954 Challenge Cup Final replay Halifax vs. Warrington, 5 May 1954.[51]
    • (World record rugby league attendance, stood until 6 March 1999)
  • Super League record:
24,020 – Bradford vs. Leeds, 3 September 1999.
  • International record:
42,685 – United Kingdom Great Britain vs. New Zealand New Zealand, 20 December 1947
  • World Cup record:
32,773 – United Kingdom Great Britain vs. Australia Australia, 8 October 1960
  • Speedway record:
47,050 – England England vs. Australia Australia, 5 July 1947
  • Stock Cars record:
38,000 Wednesday 26 May 1954

See also

References

  1. "Odsal Stadium". Worldstadia. Retrieved 5 July 2021.
  2. "Yorstox Odsal". 2021.
  3. Delaney 1991, p. 48.
  4. Gate, Robert (1994). There were a lot more than that: Odsal 1954. R.E. Gate. ISBN 9780951119044.
  5. "The Provident Stadium". 2016.
  6. "Odsal Future Secured After the RFL Step In To Buy The World Famous Ground". 2012.
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Bibliography

  • Delaney, Trevor (1991). The Grounds Of Rugby League. Keighley: Trevor R. Delaney. ISBN 0-9509-9822-2.

Odsal Stadium Official Website

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