Park Hall (Oswestry) Explained

Park Hall
Location:Oswestry, Shropshire, England
Built:1993
Renovated:2005-2007, 2023
Expanded:2005-2007, 2023
Surface:Artificial pitch
Capacity:3,000 (3,000 seated)[1]
Tenants:Oswestry Town (1993–2003)
The New Saints (2007–present)
FC Oswestry Town (2013–2020)
St Martins (2012–2022)

Park Hall Stadium is a football stadium to the north-east of Oswestry, Shropshire, England. It was opened by Shropshire County Council in 1993, originally as the home of Oswestry Town. In 2003, Oswestry Town merged with Total Network Solutions F.C. (TNS) to form current Cymru Premier team The New Saints. The newly merged club moved to Park Hall from Total Network Solutions' Recreation Ground.

Following a short period of abandonment, the site was purchased from the council by Mike Harris with a view to redevelopment and The New Saints moving back to the ground. The New Saints started to use Park Hall as their home ground again in 2007, and the ground was further improved so that it was able to host matches in the UEFA Champions League and UEFA Europa League. It has since been used to host youth international fixtures for both England and Wales while also hosting Non-League football for community teams in Oswestry.

Park Hall is also the name of the surrounding area, in Whittington civil parish, which has housing and some light industries.[2]

History

Oswestry Town and 2003 merger

The stadium was originally the site of an army ground. Park Hall was built as a stadium in 1993 by Shropshire County Council who owned the land and permitted Oswestry Town to use it as their home ground in the League of Wales after they had sold off their Victoria Road stadium.[3] However, due to the club's financial problems, the ground fell into disrepair.

In 2003, Oswestry Town and Total Network Solutions F.C. (a Welsh club carrying the name of their sponsor, a local computer company) voted to merge. They entered into an agreement whereby the newly merged TNS would split matches between Park Hall and Total Network Solutions' Recreation Ground in Llansantffraid-ym-Mechain, with a view to moving to Park Hall.[4] In the meantime, the majority of matches were played at the Recreation Ground[5] with Park Hall being used only occasionally by TNS' women's, youth and reserve teams.[6]

The move was initially blocked by UEFA because the two teams were in different countries. The two clubs appealed, and UEFA took into account Oswestry Town's historic membership of the Football Association of Wales. TNS director Richard Hann also argued the precedence of Derry City F.C. being based in County Londonderry, Northern Ireland but playing in the Republic of Ireland's League of Ireland and being allowed to represent the Republic of Ireland in UEFA competitions.[7] The decision was overturned, and UEFA stated that they would regard TNS and Park Hall as Welsh for UEFA purposes if they moved to Park Hall.[8] [9] [10]

The New Saints

Following the merger, plans were drawn up to rebuild Park Hall in a project referred to as "Oswald Park".[11] Subsequently in 2005, Park Hall was purchased from the council by Mike Harris. TNS then started to rebuild Park Hall with a view to moving there in 2008[12] because they were unable to improve the Recreation Ground as it was a council-owned recreation ground.[13] Shortly afterwards, Total Network Solutions renamed themselves The New Saints as their sponsorship deal lapsed due to the sponsoring company being bought out by British Telecom.[14] During renovation, Park Hall's pitch was replaced with artificial Ligaturf, as used at the home ground of Red Bull Salzburg. As a result of The New Saints moving to Park Hall and the decreasing number of the team's players who were from Llansantffraid-ym-Mechain, some supporters broke away from The New Saints to form Llansantffraid Village F.C.[15]

In 2007, The New Saints moved into Park Hall permanently.[5] In 2010, The New Saints applied for funding for a new stand, but it was refused by Welsh Grounds Improvement and the team risked losing their licence to compete in the Welsh Premier League. As a result, The New Saints applied to play their home matches at Deva Stadium in Chester and move away from Park Hall.[16] Following the move from the Recreation Ground, between November 2012 and July 2015, The New Saints were unbeaten at Park Hall in all competitions.[17]

Despite the renovations, the ground did not meet UEFA's standards for hosting European football which meant that The New Saints were forced to play their home matches in UEFA competitions away from Park Hall.[18] In 2008, The New Saints hoped to be able to host their UEFA Cup match against FK Sūduva Marijampolė in their first European match at Park Hall, however they missed the UEFA deadline to increase capacity.[19] [20] In 2009, following construction of a new stand, Park Hall was able to be used by The New Saints in UEFA competition as it reached the 1,000 seated capacity requirement.[21] The New Saints still sometimes move their home matches away from Park Hall for capacity and financial reasons.[22]

International and European football

Park Hall has hosted international matches following its renovation. In 2015 it hosted Group 3 of the 2016 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship qualification tournament, where Wales were designated as the host nation and chose Park Hall despite it being in England.[23] Park Hall is used by England schools' football teams as their home ground for selected matches - in April 2016 against the Republic of Ireland,[24] and in March 2024 against Wales.[25]

Park Hall is also used to host European matches for other Welsh Premier League teams whose own grounds do not meet European requirements. Cefn Druids used the ground in 2018 to host a Europa League qualifier,[26] and Bala Town played a Europa Conference League qualifying match at Park Hall on 8 July 2021.[27]

In 2023, The New Saints began a renovation of the venue to increase the capacity from 1,000 to 3,000 seats and reach the UEFA Category 2 grade, which is required to continue to host first and second qualifying rounds of the UEFA club competitions.[28] [29] The New Saints contined to use the venue throughout the construction period.

Community

During the 2000's redevelopment at a cost of more than £3 million, The New Saints were awarded a £445,000 grant from the Football Foundation with the intention of Park Hall housing a leisure development with improved facilities including a ten-pin bowling alley.[30] Park Hall is also used as the home ground of Oswestry Boys Club and Oswestry Town Lions of the Shropshire Alliance.[31]

References

52.8759°N -3.0263°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Park Hall Stadium . https://web.archive.org/web/20160418020148/http://tnsfc.co.uk/ladies/park-hall-stadium/ . dead . 2016-04-18 . TNS . 2014-01-12 . 2016-04-05 .
  2. Web site: Map of Park Hall . 15 December 2022 . Streetmap.co.uk.
  3. Web site: Reminiscences of Oswestry Town . Border Counties Advertizer . 2016-04-05.
  4. Web site: Oswestry-TNS merger approved . BBC Sport . 2003-06-19 . 2016-04-05.
  5. Web site: Saints complete Oswestry switch . BBC Sport . 2007-08-31 . 2016-04-05.
  6. Web site: Plot Thickens As TNS Buy Park Hall . Welsh Premier League . 2004-02-26 . 2016-04-05.
  7. Web site: Uefa ruling rocks TNS . BBC Sport . 2003-08-12 . 2016-04-05.
  8. Web site: Uefa approves TNS appeal . BBC Sport . 2003-08-14 . 2016-04-05.
  9. Web site: UEFA Champions League . UEFA Champions League 2010/11 - History - TNS . UEFA . 2014-07-14 . 2016-04-05.
  10. Web site: Wales . North . Oswestry and TNS merger to go ahead . 15 December 2004 . Daily Post . 2016-04-05.
  11. Web site: Saints Reveal 'Super Stadium' Plans . Thefootballnetwork.net . 2004-02-26 . 2016-04-05.
  12. Web site: Saints go marching across border . BBC News . 2005-09-26 . 2016-04-05.
  13. Web site: New Saints make move over border . BBC News . 2007-08-31 . 2016-04-05.
  14. Web site: TNS convert to saintly new name . BBC Sport . 2006-06-02 . 2016-04-05.
  15. Web site: Village team rivals soccer champs . BBC News . 2007-03-13 . 2016-04-05.
  16. Web site: The New Saints look at moving to Chester's Deva Stadium . BBC Sport . 2010-02-10 . 2016-04-05.
  17. Web site: Fortress Park Hall the key to TNS boss . Shropshire Star . 2015-07-14 . 2016-04-05.
  18. Web site: Saints want Euro ties in Oswestry . BBC Sport . 2008-11-17 . 2016-04-05.
  19. Web site: BBC SPORT | Football | Welsh | Uefa set deadline for New Saints . BBC News . 2008-07-03 . 2016-04-05.
  20. Web site: TNS 0-1 Suduva (agg 0-2) . BBC Sport . 2008-07-31 . 2016-04-05.
  21. Web site: Saints happy with Oswestry debut . BBC Sport . 2009-07-10 . 2016-04-05.
  22. Web site: Large Police Operation In Town For Oswestry v Warsaw Game . Wrexham.com . 2013-07-17 . 2016-04-05.
  23. Web site: Park Hall Host International Football Match . TNS . 2015-09-16 . 2016-04-05.
  24. Web site: Schools out as trio are picked for England . Shropshire Star. 2016-03-01 . 2016-04-05.
  25. Web site: England Schoolgirls’ friendly fixture to be held at The New Saints FC this March . The English Schools' FA . 21 February 2024 . 16 August 2024.
  26. News: Cefn Druids 1-1 Trakai. BBC Sport.
  27. Web site: Pritchard. Tom. 2021-06-15. TNS, Bala and Newtown discover Europa Conference League opponents. 2021-07-08. Y Clwb Pêl-droed - Your home for Welsh football. en-GB.
  28. News: Trigg . Keri . TNS reveal £1m plan for expansion with new pitches at Park Hall stadium . Border Counties Advertizer . 16 February 2023 . 16 August 2024.
  29. News: Phillips . Lauren . The New Saints FC search for new sponsor as stadium undergoes £3m redevelopment . Business Live . 16 June 2023 . 16 August 2024.
  30. Web site: TNS redevelop old Park Hall home . BBC Sport . 2006-06-13 . 2016-04-05.
  31. Web site: Shropshire Alliance Football League . Border Counties Advertizer . 2016-04-05.