Manor Ground (Oxford)
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Manor_Ground_(Oxford) an entity of type: Thing
The Manor Ground was a football stadium in Oxford, England, the home of Oxford United (previously known as Headington United) between 1925 and 2001. It hosted United's record crowd of 22,750 against Preston North End in an FA Cup 6th Round match on 29 February 1964. The main seating stand was the Beech Road stand (on the west), the 'home' terracing was the London Road stand (south), the 'away' terracing was Cuckoo Lane (north) and on the fourth side was the Osler Road stand (east). In 1966, with the demolition of Sandfield College, a new entrance to the ground was created onto London Road.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Manor Ground (Oxford)
rdf:langString
Manor Ground
xsd:float
51.76043701171875
xsd:float
-1.215341687202454
xsd:integer
4060338
xsd:integer
1113443620
xsd:integer
2001
rdf:langString
left
xsd:integer
1925
xsd:integer
9500
rdf:langString
London Road terrace
rdf:langString
The Beech Road stand
rdf:langString
The Cuckoo Lane end
rdf:langString
center
xsd:integer
2001
rdf:langString
horizontal
rdf:langString
left
rdf:langString
center
rdf:langString
Beech Road stand at the Manor Ground.jpg
rdf:langString
Cuckoo Lane end at the Manor.jpg
xsd:integer
250
rdf:langString
London Road, Headington, Oxford, England
xsd:integer
1925
rdf:langString
Manor Ground
rdf:langString
Grass
rdf:langString
Oxford United F.C. 1925–2001
xsd:integer
200
230
xsd:string
51.76043611111111 -1.2153416666666668
xsd:integer
1946
rdf:langString
The Manor Ground was a football stadium in Oxford, England, the home of Oxford United (previously known as Headington United) between 1925 and 2001. It hosted United's record crowd of 22,750 against Preston North End in an FA Cup 6th Round match on 29 February 1964. The main seating stand was the Beech Road stand (on the west), the 'home' terracing was the London Road stand (south), the 'away' terracing was Cuckoo Lane (north) and on the fourth side was the Osler Road stand (east). In 1966, with the demolition of Sandfield College, a new entrance to the ground was created onto London Road. With the advent of the 1990s and the Taylor Report, the Manor Ground's terracing was rapidly becoming antiquated, and it gained a reputation amongst fans as one of the more dilapidated stadiums in English professional football. The location of the Manor Ground was unsuitable for conversion into an all-seater stadium, so the club decided to move to a purpose-built all-seater stadium (later to be named the Kassam Stadium) on the outskirts of the city, on land near the Blackbird Leys housing estate. Construction work began in the early part of 1997, but was suspended later that year because of the club's financial problems. Construction of the new stadium resumed in 1999 following a takeover deal and Oxford moved there in 2001. The last league match at the Manor, on 1 May 2001, was a 1–1 draw with Port Vale. Andy Scott opened the scoring after 82 minutes as the Us looked set for a final home victory, but a minute from the end Tony Naylor equalised. Oxford's final season at the Manor Ground was one of the worst in their history: the club finished bottom of Division Two with 27 points and were relegated to Division Three, their lowest standing in 35 years. The stadium was later demolished and is now the site of The Manor Hospital, a private hospital owned and operated by Nuffield Health.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
5647
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
9500
<Geometry>
POINT(-1.2153416872025 51.760437011719)