Sport in Christchurch

Sport in Christchurch has developed from the time of the initial settlement of Canterbury by British migrants, and remains an important part of community life. Cricket and rugby union have been popular team sports since the early years of settlement, with the first cricket club established in the city in 1851, and the first rugby club in 1863. Interest in organised sports has diversified and now includes a wide range of codes. In 2022, the top five sporting codes in Canterbury based on club membership were netball, touch rugby, rugby union, golf and cricket.

There are around 1,200 sports clubs and associations and in 2022, there were 140,000 affiliated members. Most of the sporting codes remain amateur, and rely upon volunteers as administrators and officials. However, there are some professional teams. Notable teams representing Christchurch or the Canterbury region include the Mainland Tactix (netball), Crusaders (rugby) and the Canterbury Kings (cricket).

The city has hosted many international competitions including championship events. A particularly notable international event held in Christchurch was the 1974 Commonwealth Games.

There are many outdoor sportsgrounds and a variety of indoor venues. Christchurch City Council maintains 110 sportsgrounds across Christchurch City and Banks Peninsula. The sports venues Lancaster Park and Queen Elizabeth II Park were damaged beyond repair in the 2011 Christchurch earthquake, and were demolished. New facilities built to replace those damaged in the earthquake include the Ngā Puna Wai sports hub, the Parakiore Recreation and Sport Centre — an aquatic and indoor sports venue scheduled to open in 2025, and a multi–purpose covered stadium Te Kaha seating 30,000 spectators that is expected to be complete by April 2026.

Organisation and participation

Sport in Christchurch is supported by around 1,200 sports clubs and associations.[1] Almost all of these organisations are run by volunteers, although there are now some professional teams.[2]

Surveys carried out by Sport New Zealand indicate that just over one quarter of adults in Canterbury are members of a sport or recreation club (excluding gym or fitness centre memberships).[3] In 2022, the umbrella organisation Sport Canterbury reported in their annual survey results that there were around 140,000 affiliated members of the sporting codes that responded to the survey. Youth aged 12–18 make up 23% of the membership of Canterbury sports clubs.[4] The top five sporting codes in Canterbury based on club membership in 2022 were netball, touch rugby, rugby union, golf and cricket. Although outside the top ten codes, basketball has shown significant growth since 2011, with participation doubling in ten years.[5]

History

Christ's College Rugby Team (1940)
Aerial view of Lancaster Park (2011)

Organised sport was becoming established in Britain at about the same time that British settlers emigrated to New Zealand. In 1851, the anniversary of the founding of the Canterbury settlement was celebrated with an organised sports day in North Hagley Park.[6]

Team and individual sports that were popular in Britain soon became established in Christchurch.[2] A cricket club was formed in June 1851, and cricket was included in the sports day celebration later that year. The cricket oval in South Hagley Park was established by the 1860s.[7] A cricket umpires' pavilion built in 1864 was moved to the oval in 1866 and is recognised as the oldest cricket pavilion in New Zealand. It is listed as a Category 2 Historic Place by Heritage New Zealand.[8]

A form of rugby football was played as early as the 1850s by pupils of Christ's College. The Christchurch Football Club, an amateur rugby union club, was founded in 1863, and is believed to be the oldest rugby club in New Zealand.[9] The Canterbury Rugby Football Union was formed in 1879. Lancaster Park was opened in 1881, and was a major focus of organised sports in the city for 130 years until the stadium and grounds were damaged beyond repair in the 2011 Christchurch earthquake.[6]

The New Zealand Cup is a race for thoroughbred horses that has been held annually at Riccarton Racecourse since 1867. The race was known as the Canterbury Jockey Club Handicap until 1882.[10] The New Zealand Trotting Cup for standardbred horses has been held annually at Addington Raceway since 1904.

Tennis became an established sport from 1881 when a lawn tennis club was formed with courts in Cramner Square. Tennis courts were built across the city, including in Hagley Park and at Lancaster Park, where a Davis Cup match was held in 1911.[11]

New Zealand’s first inter-provincial association football match was played in Christchurch in 1890.[11]

From the 1920s, further venues were established for specific sporting codes, including English Park (association football), Rugby Park (rugby), Wilding Park (tennis), Porritt Park (hockey) and Denton Park (track cycling).[12] Public parks became increasingly used as venues for team sports, including children's sport.[12]

Netball in Christchurch began as "women's basketball", a nine–a–side game introduced to New Zealand in 1906, and played on grass. The first representative match was held in Wellington in 1923, between teams from Wellington and Canterbury. Netball courts were established on a site in South Hagley Park that had originally been granted to the Salvation Army in 1921 for tennis courts. A team representing Canterbury took part in the first national tournament held in Dunedin in 1926. Christchurch hosted the 1929 national tournament.[13]

The 1974 British Commonwealth Games were held in Christchurch from 24 January to 2 February 1974, with the main venue at Queen Elizabeth II Park.[14] The games have been described as the "most important single event in Christchurch’s sporting history".[6] Dick Tayler’s win in the 10,000m race was described in the early 2000s as "the most memorable television moment in New Zealand sports history".[14]

In 2011, several major sports venues were damaged beyond repair in the 2011 Christchurch earthquake, including Lancaster Park and Queen Elizabeth II Park.[15]

Teams in national competitions

SportGenderTeam/AssociationEstablishedNational competitionHome venueNotes
Rugby unionMensCrusaders1996Super RugbyRugby League Park
(known as Apollo Projects Stadium)
Rugby unionMensCanterbury Rugby Football Union1879National Provincial ChampionshipUnder construction: Te Kaha
(also known as Canterbury Multi-Use Arena)
Rugby leagueMensCanterbury Bulls1912NZRL National CompetitionRugby League Park
Association footballMensChristchurch United1970Chatham CupChristchurch Football Centre
Association footballWomensCanterbury United Pride2002New Zealand Women's National LeagueEnglish Park
CricketMensCanterbury Kings1877Super SmashHagley Oval
CricketWomensCanterbury Magicians1932Super SmashHagley Oval
NetballWomensMainland Tactix2007ANZ PremiershipWolfbrook Arena
BasketballMensCanterbury Rams1982National Basketball LeagueCowles Stadium
BasketballWomensMainland PouākaiTauihi Basketball AotearoaCowles Stadium
Field hockeyMensCanterbury CavaliersNational Hockey LeagueNgā Puna Wai
Field hockeyWomensCanterbury CatsNational Hockey LeagueNgā Puna Wai
Ice hockeyMensCanterbury Red Devils2005New Zealand Ice Hockey LeagueAlpine Ice Sports Centre
Ice hockeyWomensCanterbury Inferno2014New Zealand Women's Ice Hockey LeagueAlpine Ice Sports Centre

International championship events hosted

Sports venues

Hagley Park has remained an important venue for sport in Christchurch from the time of the sports day held in 1851 to celebrate the anniversary of the founding of the city. The park has been described as the birthplace of many sporting codes in Christchurch.[16]

Several major sports venues were damaged beyond repair in the 2011 Christchurch earthquake, including Lancaster Park and Queen Elizabeth II Park.[15] The Ngā Puna Wai sports hub was developed on a greenfield site in a reserve in Aidanfield adjacent to the Canterbury Agricultural Park. The new venue replaced international–quality sports facilities lost during the Christchurch earthquakes, including athletics from Queen Elizabeth II Park, rugby league fields from Lancaster Park (AMI Stadium), hockey from Porritt Park, and tennis courts from Wilding Park. The sports hub was developed by the Christchurch City Council with contributions from sporting organisations and philanthropic trusts. The initial commitment was made in March 2015, with the intention of developing the facility in stages over 10—30 years.[17] The athletics track was the first stage of the complex to be opened, with the first meet held in October 2018.[18]

By 1938, there were 38 grass courts being used for netball at South Hagley Park.[19] These courts served as the main venue for netball in the city for around 100 years until the move in 2023 to a new Netball Sports Centre at the Ngā Puna Wai sports hub.[20][21] The new venue is owned by the Christchurch Netball Centre and has a floor area of 10,000 m2 (110,000 sq ft) with 10 courts. The venue can also be used for volleyball, futsal, korfball and gymnastics. Most netball games moved from Hagley Park to the new centre as from winter 2024, and the existing netball centre building at South Hagley Park was sold to the city council.[20]

Further new sports facilities were built as part of the reconstruction following the earthquake, including the Parakiore Recreation and Sport Centre that is scheduled to open in 2025 and will be the largest aquatic and indoor sports venue of its kind in New Zealand.[22] The facility includes a 10–lane, 50 m competition pool with seating for 1000 spectators, a competition diving pool, five hydroslides and several indoor courts for codes including netball and basketball. The main court has retractable seating for 2,500.[23][24] Another major new sports facility is a multi-purpose covered stadium Te Kaha seating 30,000 spectators that is expected to be complete by April 2026.[25]

Most of the sportsgrounds in the city are owned and maintained by Christchurch City Council. As of 2024, the council maintains 110 sportsgrounds across Christchurch City and Banks Peninsula.[26] A Sportsfield Network Plan was adopted by the council in 2024 to upgrade sports fields over the following 10 years. The plan responds to the poor state of many sportsgrounds, with 30% having to be closed during winter 2023 because of wet weather, and more than half of fields assessed as below average or poor quality.[27][28]

List of major venues

Aerial view of Hagley Oval cricket ground: North is the Botanic Gardens end, East is the historic Umpires' Pavilion side, South is the Port Hills end and West is the Christ's College cricket ground end.
NameEstablishedCapacitySportsNotes
Addington Raceway1899Harness racing
Alpine Ice Sports Centre1985Ice sports
Apollo Projects Stadium201118,600Rugby Union, Rugby League, FootballTemporary venue built after Chch earthquake [29]
Christchurch Football Centre20141,000Association football
Cowles Stadium19611,000Basketball, Netball, Volleyball
Denton Park1959Track cyclingEstablished 1959.[30] Rebuilt for 1974 Commonwealth Games.[31]
Euromarque Motorsport Park1963Motor racing
Hagley Oval185120,000Cricket
Hagley ParkCricket, Rugby union, Touch rugby, Football, American football, Gaelic football[32][33]
Kerr's Reach1913Rowing, canoeingRiver course widened 1949-1950[34][35]
Netball Sports Centre
(Ngā Puna Wai)
Netball, Volleyball, Futsal, Korfball, Gymnastics[20]
Ngā Puna WaiAthletics, Hockey, Rugby League, Tennis
Parakiore Recreation and Sport Centre1,000 (pool spectators)
2,500 (main indoor court)
Swimming, Diving, Netball, BasketballUnder construction, due for completion in 2025[23][24][36]
Riccarton Park Racecourse1858Thoroughbred racing
Te Kaha30,000Multi-useUnder construction, scheduled to open April 2026. To be known as One New Zealand Stadium for sponsorship reasons.[25]
Wilding Park1920sTennis
Wolfbrook Arena19987,200Netball, Basketball

Golf courses

Christchurch has more than a dozen golf courses within 12 km (7.5 mi) of the city centre,[37] and has hosted the PGA Tour of Australasia/Nationwide Tour co-sanctioned Clearwater Classic/NZ PGA Championship at Clearwater Resort since 2002.

Former venues

  • Lancaster Park (also known as Jade Stadium & AMI Stadium) was Christchurch's premier outdoor sporting ground. It hosted rugby union in the winter months and cricket in the summer months, and was home to the Crusaders Super Rugby and Canterbury Air New Zealand Cup rugby teams. Lancaster Park was also used by the New Zealand national cricket team and occasionally hosted a New Zealand Warriors rugby league match. It had a capacity of around 40,000 people for sporting fixtures, and around 50,000 for concerts. Damaged during the 2011 February earthquake, the facility was subsequently demolished in 2019 returning it to use as community sports fields.[38][39][40][41]
  • Queen Elizabeth II Park was built for the 1974 British Commonwealth Games, hosted in Christchurch.[42] It was used primarily as an athletics venue, but also included a swimming pool complex. It hosted major concerts from bands such as AC/DC and the Red Hot Chili Peppers. The facility was demolished due to damage sustained in the February 2011 earthquake.[43][44]
  • Porritt Park was an international–standard hockey venue adjacent to Kerr's Reach on the Avon River. It was severely damaged in the February 2011 earthquake and repairs were uneconomic.[45][46]
  • Between 1949 and 2000, Wigram Airfield was used as a temporary venue for the annual Lady Wigram Trophy motor racing event. The annual race was relocated to Ruapuna Park (now the Euromarque Motorsport Park).

Notable people

See also

References

Sources cited