Oh dear I think they have fallen below my local team of Chorley! I wonder what is to happen to the stadium that old bloke built Reynolds, a bit of a white elephant, like the most of the olympic buildings around the world
The Darlington Arena The Darlington Arena Full name The Northern Echo Darlington Arena Location Darlington, England Opened 2003 Owner Darlington F.C. Operator Darlington F.C. Surface Grass Capacity 25,000[1](restricted to 10,000 by local planning regulations)[2] Field dimensions 110 × 74 yards The Darlington Arena (known as The Northern Echo Darlington Arena for sponsorship reasons) is a football stadium in England that hosts Darlington Football Club's home fixtures. Contents *[hide]* 1 History 2 Other uses 3 Names 4 References [edit]History The ground showing the words "Come on Darlo". The exterior of the ground. Prior to moving to the ground in 2003, Darlington had been playing at Feethams, located near to the town centre. The current stadium is built on a greenfield site next to Darlington's A66 bypass. Upon completion the arena was originally called the Reynolds Arena, after the club's then-owner, George Reynolds. However, following Reynolds' bankruptcy and arrest on charges of money laundering, the name was changed to The New Stadium in April 2004. Since then the club have sold the naming rights for the stadium to sponsors, firstly as the Williamson Motors Stadium then as the 96.6 TFM Darlington Arena between November 2005 and September 2007, and then as the Balfour Webnet Darlington Arena between September 2007 and February 2009. The ground took its current name in February 2009 when The Northern Echo began sponsorship. It is the largest Blue Square Premier venue with a capacity of 25,000,[1] although attendances are restricted to 10,000 by local planning laws.[2] A crowd of 11,600 watched the first game in the new stadium for a 2–0 defeat to Kidderminster Harriers.[3] Since then the ground has averaged a gate of around 1,500 to 2,000 supporters, although certain fixtures such as derby match against local rivals Hartlepool United in March 2007 (10,121 spectators), have pulled in a significantly larger turnout. The capacity of the stadium is currently capped at 10,000 for football matches due to poor access roads around the stadium, although the club are allowed to apply for an exception for certain occasions. The Darlington Arena consists of four equally sided stands. The West Stand, which is located just behind the goal, is generally the more vocal of the two sides used by home supporters. Attendances at the stadium were particularly low in the 2009-10, when a terrible season in League Two saw the club relegated to the Football Conference for the second time in just over 20 years. Their average attendance for the season was the second lowest in the whole Football League at just under 2,000. Their highest crowd of the season was 2,744 and their lowest was a mere 1,296. They went into the 2010–11 season with the largest capacity ground ever seen in the Football Conference.[4] [edit]Other uses Darlington plan to use the stadium for musical concerts to increase club revenue. The first set of concerts, called Pitch Invasion, were due to take place in June 2007 but were cancelled by the club just three months before.[5] However, Elton John was the first act to play at the stadium, on 5 July 2008.[6] The Arena also played host to first ever professional rugby league match in the history of County Durham, when the Gateshead Thunder used the ground for their fifth round 2009 Challenge Cup game against the Oldham Roughyeds due to a fixture clash.[7] [edit]Names Reynolds Arena New Stadium Williamson Motors Stadium Darlington Arena 96.6 TFM Darlington Arena Balfour Webnet Darlington Arena Northern Echo Darlington Arena [edit]References ^ a b "Darlington". The Football League. Retrieved 2010-04-13. ^ a b Ward Hadaway for Darlington Football Club (May 2007). "Planning Statement" (PDF). Darlington Borough Council. p.*18. Retrieved 2010-04-13. ^ "Darlington 0-2 Kidderminster". BBC Sport. 2003-08-15. Retrieved 2008-08-13. ^ [1] ^ "Football club puts plans for pop concerts on hold". The Northern Echo. 2007-04-13. Retrieved 2008-04-01. ^ Hardwick, Viv (2007-11-01). "Elton John in concert coup for Darlington". The Northern Echo. Retrieved 2008-04-13. ^ "Thunder go to Darlo". therfl.co.uk. Retrieved 2012-01-07. [show] v t e Darlington Football Club [show] v t e Football Conference Coordinates: 54°30′30.33″N 1°32′3.82″W
quite ridiculous really when you realise that a ground was built that can hold 25,000 that has been subsequently restricted to 10,000 because of poor access roads. er, did the planning department not think of that before it was built???
Yep terrible 'planning' from the planning department! I bet it's a pretty depressing place to watch football, even more so that the 'Well has been recently!
They may as well knock the fooker down as darlo won't be playing in it,goundsharing with shildon next season.
I bet it's just cause Darlo are a 'small club' and Pompey are a 'big club'. FA should give them both a similar punishment, not just cause of a club's perceived size.