Ipswich Stadium was a greyhound racing stadium situated in Ipswich, Suffolk.

Ipswich Stadium
Map
LocationIpswich, Suffolk
Opened1930s
Closed1988

Origins and Opening

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In the early 1930s the site chosen for a new stadium was directly north east of where the River Orwell and River Gipping meet and north of the London Road.[1] It was originally called the Suffolk Stadium and independent racing (unaffiliated to a governing body) had already taken place before an official opening night got underway in 1935.[2]

Promoter Mr Nat Shaw advertised and organised a first meeting described as being under official licensing on Wednesday 11 September 1935, one week after the original plan to open on 4 September.[3] The wording was a public relations exercise because the licensing was that of the County Borough Council and not the National Greyhound Racing Club (NGRC) which was the official organisation to greyhound racing. Nevertheless, the stadium had been re-modelled, covered stands erected in the enclosures and the old kennels replaced. The reconstruction of the track was by Fisk & Co Ltd, the electric trackless hare was installed by H.Blann of London, safety hurdles and track equipment was supplied by Mortimer's of London and finally the wireless was by S.West of Ipswich.[4]

Admission was free on opening night resulting in an attendance of 4,000 to watch the seven races. The first race was a 270-yard race and was won by a greyhound called Comas.[5]

1936-1974

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Ipswich Greyhound Stadium c.1970

Totalisator turnover in the first two years after the war was £863,645 & £417,101.[6] The track continued throughout the 1950s and 1960s with racing held mainly on Wednesday and Saturday evenings at 7.15pm. The race distances were over 300, 500 and 700 yards and amenities included a licensed bar and snack bar and the totalisator was described as the Union Multi-speed wonder tote. The 405 yard circumference circuit had an 'Outside McKee' hare and the all-grass track was served by a spray watering system.[7]

Affiliated racing

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Major change arrived in 1974 when the NGRC offered the chance to independent tracks to race under the NGRC permit scheme,[8] a scheme designed to allow official status at a fraction of the expected cost increases. Ipswich Stadium Ltd under the control of Ernie Wedon took up the offer. Wedon had also been responsible with Len Franklin for Yarmouth Stadium's construction in 1940 and was also Racing Manager at Ipswich. A new stand was built costing £100,000 and a new computerised tote was added. The Suffolk Derby and St Leger became the tracks major events and the first race held under NGRC rules was on 2 February 1974.[9]

Metric changes from yards to metres resulted in race distances of 277, 437 & 647m and during 1977 a new consortium headed by Tom Stanley and Bill Davis took over from Ernie Wedon. Stanley arrived as Director of Racing following the closure of Rayleigh Weir Stadium and Davis was to be the Racing Manager. Further track changes resulted in a new circumference of 375m and race distances of 258, 440, 628 & 810 metres behind an 'Outside Sumner' hare.[10]

Track trainer Tom Lanceman started supplying runners to Southend Stadium in 1979 becoming one of the first dual attachment trainers in the country and Ipswich appointed one of the leading trainers in the country, Joe Cobbold from Cambridge. The Cobbold kennels won the 1980 Scottish Greyhound Derby with Decoy Sovereign, the 1980 TV Trophy with Decoy Boom followed by the Laurels with Echo Spark in 1981.[11][12]

Scurlogue Champ

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Ipswich was connected with the legendary Scurlogue Champ which was trained by local handler Ken Peckham. The greyhound alongside Ballyregan Bob was responsible for a 1980s boom for the entire industry and became a national TV star after winning two BBC Television Trophy competitions in 1985 & 1986.[13]

Closure

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Despite the 1980s boom Ipswich failed to flourish and closed its doors on the 17 February 1988.[14] The last winner was Albert Skelton's Ventry Joe. Owner Bill Davis had been told to vacate the premises by the local council who had been informed by the Department of Environment that Bentray Investments had won an appeal to build warehousing on the site next to their Texas superstore business whose parent company was the Ladbroke Group. Davis a former trainer received a reported £2 million in the deal and the site was built on and today is occupied in the area where the Dunelm and the Range stores stand.[15]

Competitions

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Suffolk Derby

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Year Winner Breeding Trainer Time SP
1974 Bealkiller Diver Sallys Yarn – Bealkilla Queen 27.73
1975 Black Flint Shy Prairie – Clane Flint George Carr (Private) 28.82
1976 Sunmount Lark Monalee Arkle – Oakmont Rover Bowler Mills (Private) 28.44 25-1
1977 Secret Crook Spectre – Brook Doll T Batterbee (Ipswich) 27.07 5-1
1978 Clean Dinner Monalee Arkle – Auburn Kid John Coleman (Wembley) 26.60
1979 Johns Luck Westmead Bounty - Kiltean Fawn John Coleman (Wembley) 27.04 2-1f
1980 Taciad Kudas Honour – Faoide Look 27.78
1981 Bann Merry Ken Peckham (Private) 27.04 3-1
1982 Swift Rapier Lindas Champion – Ballinderry Moth Barney O'Connor (Walthamstow) 26.48 2-5f
1983 Bennys Comrade 27.47
1984 Ballyhea Spirit Ahaveen Spitfire – Back In Action 27.23
1985 Chiltern Sam Glenroe Hiker – Tina Monday Peggy Cope (Milton Keynes) 27.10
1986 Rathbeg Parade Glenroe Blue – Form Book Tony Dennis (Romford) 26.50
1987 Another Mixture Cronins Bar – Roaring Moth 26.92

Track records

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Distance Greyhound Time Date
300y Fishpond 26 June 1965
300y Thunderbird I 16.50 15 July 1967
300y The Whistler 16.50 22 July 1967
500y Fish Pond 04 August 1965
500y Barons Way 27.96 02 September 1967
700y Marcella 39.94 10 October 1964
258m Night Runner 15.15 1987
440m Swift Rapier 26.48 1987
628m Choice Rock 38.39 1987
810m Scurlogue Champ 51.44 19 September 1984

References

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  1. ^ "OS Plan 1952". old-maps.co.uk.
  2. ^ "Grand Opening of Suffolk Stadium, September 12". East Anglian Daily Times. 1935.
  3. ^ "Suffolk Stadium, Grand Opening". Bury Free Press. 31 August 1935. Retrieved 6 December 2024 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  4. ^ "Grand Opening of Suffolk Stadium, September 12". East Anglian Daily Times. 1935.
  5. ^ "Grand Opening of Suffolk Stadium, September 12". East Anglian Daily Times. 1935.
  6. ^ Particulars of Licensed tracks, table 1 Licensed Dog Racecourses. Licensing Authorities. 1947.
  7. ^ Furby, R (1968). Independent Greyhound Racing. New Dominion House. p. 59.
  8. ^ "Remember When - June 1974". Greyhound Star. 24 June 2018.
  9. ^ Barnes, Julia (1988). Daily Mirror Greyhound Fact File. Ringpress Books. pp. 66–67. ISBN 0-948955-15-5.
  10. ^ Barnes, Julia (1988). Daily Mirror Greyhound Fact File. Ringpress Books. pp. 66–67. ISBN 0-948955-15-5.
  11. ^ Barnes, Julia (1988). Daily Mirror Greyhound Fact File. Ringpress Books. pp. 34–97. ISBN 0-948955-15-5.
  12. ^ Hobbs, Jonathan (2007). Greyhound Annual 2008. Raceform. pp. 117–178. ISBN 978-1-905153-53-4.
  13. ^ Barnes, Julia (1988). Daily Mirror Greyhound Fact File. Ringpress Books. pp. 399–401. ISBN 0-948955-15-5.
  14. ^ "Stadium closure shock for greyhounds fans, Friday 19 February 1988". East Anglian Times. 1988.
  15. ^ Betts, Bob (1992). The Sporting Life Greyhound Annual. The Sporting Life. ISBN 0-948955-22-8.

52°03′36″N 1°08′10″E / 52.06000°N 1.13600°E / 52.06000; 1.13600