6-508: Glebe Park may refer to: Glebe Park, Brechin , a football stadium in Brechin, Scotland Glebe Park, Canberra , a public park in Canberra, Australia See also [ edit ] Glebe , area of land within a manor and parish Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with
12-650: A Football Trust grant of £210,000 financed the construction of a 1,228 seat stand at the Trinity Road end of the ground. This stand had double the capacity of Brechin City's average attendance, which attracted criticism from non-league clubs in England, who believed that the Football Trust should fund their developments instead. Unusually, the largest stand in the ground was built behind the goal, rather than
18-645: The "Carnegie Fuels Stadium at Glebe Park" for sponsorship reasons) is a football stadium in Brechin , Scotland , which is the home ground of Brechin City . Glebe Park opened in 1919. The ground had just one portable stand, which had been used at the Perth agricultural show. Brechin City joined the Scottish Football League in 1929 , when a pavilion was added and the Cemetery End terrace
24-565: The side opposite the Main Stand. This was because that side is constrained by a terrace and the Glebe Park hedge, which runs past more than half of the pitch. The hedge was threatened in 2009 because Glebe Park's pitch dimensions were too small for it to meet UEFA requirements, at just 67 yards wide. A fine was suspended by the SFA because Brechin City carried out some work to resolve
30-536: The title Glebe Park . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Glebe_Park&oldid=571931274 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Glebe Park, Brechin Glebe Park (known as
36-516: Was covered. The biggest ever attendance was 8,123, against Aberdeen in a Scottish Cup tie played on 3 February 1973. This attendance was greater than the population of Brechin. Floodlights were installed and used for the first time in 1977, in a match against Hibernian . The old stand was replaced by a new Main Stand, with 290 seats, in 1981. Sponsorship by the Stewart Milne group and
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