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Football Park, known commercially as AAMI Stadium, was an Australian rules football stadium located in West Lakes, a western suburb of Adelaide, the state capital of South Australia, Australia. It was built in 1973 by the South Australian National Football League (SANFL) and opened in 1974.
Today, West Lakes is home to the Westfield West Lakes shopping centre, Woodlake Shopping Centre on Frederick Road, the West Lakes Golf Club, and the Adelaide Football Club training grounds (formerly AAMI Stadium/Football Park). West Lakes has an irregular shape and shares borders with Port Adelaide, Queenstown, Royal Park, Seaton and Grange.
Adelaide thus earned a week's rest before a Preliminary Final re-match against West Coast, this time to be played at AAMI Stadium. The Crows regained McLeod and Burton and started well, leading by 22 points at half-time, despite losing ruckman Rhett Biglands to a serious knee injury in the first quarter.
1300 Smiles Stadium – Townsville (Formerly known as Stockland Stadium & Dairy Farmers Stadium) AAMI Park – Melbourne (known non-commercially as Melbourne Rectangular Stadium) ANZ Stadium – Sydney (formerly Stadium Australia and Telstra Stadium) Hunter Stadium – Newcastle (formerly Marathon Stadium, EnergyAustralia Stadium & Ausgrid Stadium)
The stadium's first match was the 2010 Anzac Test between the Australian and New Zealand rugby league teams on 7 May 2010, [1] with the stadium formally opened by then Victorian premier John Brumby. The stadium was referred to as Melbourne Rectangular Stadium, Swan Street Stadium or the Bubble Dome [8] [9] during its early construction. The ...
The AAMI stadium surface was wet and slippery after heavy rain during the morning of the game which made for difficult conditions. Adelaide handled the ball far better than the Tigers, kicking 7.2 to 0.1 in the second term to lead by an even 9 goals at half-time.
The following table shows a list of all of grounds that are currently regularly used in the Australian Football League, as of the 2024 AFL season.The table includes grounds where teams have commercial deals in place to transfer home games to these grounds each season but are not full-time tenants of those grounds; in these cases, the club is shown in italics in the current tenants column.
Port Adelaide 1.2.6 (27) AAMI Stadium (crowd: 18,202) Report: Friday, 11 February 9:25 pm Adelaide 0.6.4 (40) def. Port Adelaide 0.1.2 (8) AAMI Stadium (crowd: 18,202) Report: Port Adelaide lost both matches in Round 1 of the NAB Cup, and were knocked out of the competition.