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By Editor in Cricket on 20th Nov 2009 6:00

The Bay Oval is in New Zealand Cricket's sights as a potential World Cup venue - but time is running out to get the new purpose-built facility up to international standard in time for the tournament in 2015.
Picture: Joel Ford: NZ cricket turf manager Jared Carter (left), BOP Cricket Trust general manager Kelvin Jones and BOP Cricket general manager David Johnston inspect the Bay Oval pitch.
Jared Carter, New Zealand Cricket's turf manager, was in Tauranga yesterday looking at the Oval ahead of the ground hosting three games in January in the expanded national domestic Twenty20 competition.  Bay of Plenty Cricket, or its associated trust which has been set up to look after the ground, has an international-class pitch and outfield, but progress continues to be stymied by the $4-5 million pavilion project struggling to get backing.

"We've watched the project evolve over the last couple of years with a great deal of interest and I'd say once the facilities and infrastructure is fully in place then the sky's the limit as far as games it might host," Carter said.  "It would be great to have the Oval fully operational so it becomes a consideration for the 2015 World Cup. Obviously, where it sits right now, there's plenty of work still to be done."  Carter said it wasn't just a matter of finding the funding and building a pavilion for the World Cup dream to become reality.  "It would need ICC approval, which would mean it needs to be finished at least 12 months before the World Cup so the ICC can test it and approve it.

Then it would be up to NZ Cricket in terms of scheduling.

"The ground takes another step forward over summer and is definitely on the horizon as an international venue, probably in the shorter forms of the game right now given (Hamilton's) Seddon Park is part of the same association." Bay Oval is one of 10 cricket-specific first-class grounds in New Zealand, with NZ Cricket launching the HRV Cup domestic Twenty20 competition at Mount Maunganui on January 2 when the Knights take on the Auckland Aces.

Kelvin Jones, who has left Bay Cricket, where he was operations manager, to become general manager of Bay of Plenty Cricket Trust, said the search was continuing for financial backing for the Bay Oval pavilion project. The Perry Foundation had recently granted $200,000 for power, water and sewage, sightscreens and a permanent curator's shed.

With 7500 active players Bay of Plenty is by far the biggest minor association in New Zealand, not far behind Otago which is one of six major associations.

Source & More: www.bayofplentytimes.co.nz
by Kelly Exelby

Read more articles in Cricket, by Editor or from November 2009.



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