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Mourneview Park

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Owner
  
Glenavon Football Club

Opened
  
1895 (1895)

Surface
  
Grass

Capacity
  
4,160

Mourneview Park

Location
  
Mourneview Ave, Lurgan, County Armagh, Northern Ireland

Address
  
Mourneview Ave, Lurgan, Craigavon BT66 8EW, UK

Hours
  
Open today · 9AM–5PMMonday9AM–5PMTuesday9AM–5PMWednesday9AM–5PMThursday9AM–5PMFriday9AM–5PMSaturdayClosedSundayClosed

Similar
  
Shamrock Park, Stang Park, Solitude, Windsor Park, The Oval

Black saturday at mourneview park


Mourneview Park is a football stadium in Lurgan, and is the home ground of NIFL Premiership club Glenavon. The stadium holds 4,160 and was originally built in 1895. The 2008–09 Irish League Cup and 2010–11 Irish League Cup finals were held at the stadium in the first League Cup finals to be held outside Belfast.

Contents

Glenavon 1 cliftonville 0 mourneview park 21 09 13 mcgrory goal


History

Between 1992 and 2005, Mourneview Park underwent a number of significant renovations, including the building of three new seated stands. Mourneview Park has been used by the Irish Football Association to host neutral matches in the past. In 2003, the Irish Football Association removed Mourneview Park as a potential semi-final host for the Irish Cup because of rioting between fans of Glentoran and Portadown. Mourneview Park has previously been attacked by arsonists, including in 2005 when a petrol bomb was thrown into a supporters club bar which destroyed it, leading to Glenavon considering closing Mourneview Park because of the continuous damage. In 2009, it was selected to host the 2009 Irish League Cup final because neither of Belfast's Big Two made it to the final and it would have been harder for fans of finalists Newry City and Portadown to get to a Belfast venue. This was the same case for the 2011 Irish League Cup Final, with Mourneview Park being chosen because the finalists were Lisburn Distillery and Portadown, 2 of the closest Premiership clubs to Mourneview Park at that time.

In 2014, Mourneview Park was nominated by Belfast club Linfield to be their designated home ground for their home matches in the UEFA Europa League after their normal home ground, Windsor Park was undergoing redevelopment.

Mourneview Park was chosen as the venue for the 2015 Irish Cup semi-final between Glentoran and Crusaders due to the unavailability of Windsor Park ahead of a Northern Ireland international fixture.

International football

Mourneview Park has been used to host Northern Ireland national under-21 football team matches as well as matches involving the Northern Ireland women's national football team.

Other uses

Mourneview Park has also been used for purposes outside of football. in 2014 it hosted a Christian evangelical event hosted by former Northern Ireland national football team player turned minister, Stuart Elliott.

References

Mourneview Park Wikipedia