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The Frankton Golf Centre is a 9-hole golf course at the south of the Queenstown Events Centre. The course has a par of 30 with 6 par 3s ranging from 73 metres to 185 metres and 3 par 4s ranging from 280 metres to 310 metres. The current record for the course is 26. The course also has a driving range, a footgolf course, and a pro shop. [7]
Also hosted Women's ODI, Youth Test, Youth ODI and State League matches. Eden Park: Auckland: 1913–14: 233: 114: 6: Hosted Test, ODI and Twenty20 International games for men's, women's and Youth cricket. North Harbour Stadium/QBE Stadium: Albany: 2002–03: 2002–03: 1: 2: 0: Hosted the 2002–03 State Shield final. Also hosted Youth ODI and ...
Queenstown AFC is an amateur association football club in Queenstown, New Zealand, they are currently playing in the ODT Southern Men's Premier League. Their home games are played at the Frankton Events Centre. Queenstown are five-times winners of the Donald Gray Memorial Cup, the premier tournament in football in Southland, New Zealand.
The following is a list of indoor arenas in Canada with a capacity of at least 1,000 for sporting events. The arenas in the table are ranked by capacity; the arenas with the highest capacities are listed first.
Queenstown (28 km/45 minutes) Panorama of the Remarkables and surroundings from their northern end. The Remarkables mountain range, autumn 2015 This is the view toward Double Cone peak at The Remarkables when hiking towards Lake Alta, the glacier lake.
Queenstown from Bob's Peak. Queenstown Central had a population of 2,502 at the 2018 New Zealand census, an increase of 318 people (14.6%) since the 2013 census, and an increase of 297 people (13.5%) since the 2006 census. There were 651 households, comprising 1,281 males and 1,215 females, giving a sex ratio of 1.05 males per female, with 156 ...
Queenstown is a major winter destination, lying close to several of the southern hemisphere's major ski fields, among them The Remarkables, Cardrona, and Coronet Peak. During the 1970s, locals began organising a winter festival close to the beginning of each ski season, starting with a 1975 event organised by musician Peter Doyle and Laurie ...
The CAA Centre (formerly the Brampton Centre for Sports & Entertainment and the Powerade Centre) [1] is a 5,000-seat multi-purpose arena in Brampton, Ontario, Canada. It was built in 1998, and officially opened the same year on October 7. In 2023, the arena became home to the Brampton Honey Badgers of the Canadian Elite Basketball League. [2]