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Prenton Park

Prenton Park
Kop and mainstand.jpg
View of the Kop and Main Stands
Location Birkenhead, Wirral, England
Coordinates 53°22′25″N 3°01′57″W / 53.37361°N 3.03250°W / 53.37361; -3.03250Coordinates: 53°22′25″N 3°01′57″W / 53.37361°N 3.03250°W / 53.37361; -3.03250
Capacity 16,587
Record attendance 24,424
Field size 112 by 71 yards (102.4 m × 64.9 m)
Surface Grass
Construction
Opened 9 March 1912 (1912-03-09)
Renovated 1995
Tenants
Tranmere Rovers F.C.
Liverpool F.C. Reserves
Website
www.tranmererovers.co.uk

Prenton Park is an association football stadium in Birkenhead, England. It is the home ground of the non-league Tranmere Rovers F.C. and Liverpool F.C. Reserves. The club moved to the current Prenton Park in 1912. The ground has had several rebuilds, with the most recent occurring in 1995 in response to the requirement of the Taylor Report to become all-seater. Today's stadium holds 16,567 in four stands: the Kop, the Johnny King Stand, the Main Stand and the Cowshed (for away supporters).

Attendances at the ground have fluctuated over its hundred-year history. Its largest-ever crowd was 24,424 for a 1972 FA Cup match between Tranmere and Stoke City. In 2010, an average of 5,000 fans attended each home game.

Tranmere Rovers F.C. were formed in 1884; they played their first matches at Steeles Field in Birkenhead but, in 1887, they bought a new site from Tranmere Rugby Club. The ground was variously referred to as the "Borough Road Enclosure", "Ravenshaw's Field" and "South Road". The name "Prenton Park" was adopted in 1895 as a result of a suggestion in the letters page of the Football Echo. Not strictly within Prenton, it is likely that the name was chosen as the area was regarded as more upmarket than nearby Tranmere.

Because the land was required for housing and a school, Tranmere were forced to move and the name went with them. The present Prenton Park was opened by the Mayor of Birkenhead, Councillor George Proudman, on 9 March 1912. Their first match was played against Lancaster Town in the Lancashire Combination. There were stands (also known as bleachers) on both sides of the pitch, a paddock and three open terraces, the general format which remained until 1994.


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