Brisbane Stadium (Lang Park),[8][9] currently known as Suncorp Stadium for sponsorship reasons, is a multi-purpose stadium in the suburb of Milton, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. Nicknamed The Cauldron, it is a three-tiered rectangular sporting stadium with a capacity of 52,500.[6] The traditional home of rugby league in Brisbane, the modern stadium is also now used for rugby union and soccer and has a rectangular playing field of 136 by 82 metres (446 by 269 ft). The stadium's major tenants are the Brisbane Broncos, the Dolphins, the Queensland Maroons and the Queensland Reds.

Brisbane Stadium (Lang Park)
Suncorp Stadium
Stadiums Queensland Rating:
[1]
Map
Former namesLang Park
Suncorp-Metway Stadium
Address40 Castlemaine Street
Milton
Brisbane
Queensland 4064
Australia
Coordinates27°27′53″S 153°0′34″E / 27.46472°S 153.00944°E / -27.46472; 153.00944
OwnerStadiums Queensland (2003–present)[2][3]
OperatorASM Global
Capacity52,500[6][7]
Record attendance59,185 (2022/23 Ed Sheeran)
Field size136 x 82 m
Field shapeRectangular
SurfaceGrass (Strathayr turf)[4]
Construction
Broke ground1911; 113 years ago (1911)
Opened1914; 110 years ago (1914)
Construction costA$280 million (redevelopment)
ArchitectHOK Sport & PDT Architects in Association
Structural engineerOve Arup & Partners
Tenants
Rugby league

Brisbane Broncos (NRL) (1988–1992; 2003–present)
Dolphins (NRL) (2023–present)[5]
Queensland rugby league team (1980–2000; 2003–present)
Brisbane Broncos Women (NRLW; selected matches)
Australia national rugby league team (selected matches)

Rugby union

Queensland Reds (Super Rugby) (2005–present)
Australia national rugby union team (selected matches)

Association football
Brisbane Roar (A-League Men) (2005–2020; 2022–present)
Brisbane Roar Women (A-League Women; selected matches)
Australia men's soccer team (selected matches)
Australia women's soccer team (selected matches)
Website
www.suncorpstadium.com.au

Lang Park was established in 1914, on the site of the former North Brisbane Cemetery; in its early days it was home to a number of different sports, including cycling, athletics and soccer. The lease of the park was taken over by the Brisbane Rugby League in 1957, before it became the home of the game in Queensland (remaining so to this day). It has also been the home ground of major rugby union and soccer matches in Queensland since its modern redevelopment, including the Queensland Reds and the Brisbane Roar, as well as some Wallabies, Matildas and Socceroos matches. It hosted the 2008 and 2017 Rugby League World Cup finals, besides the 2021 NRL Grand Final. In addition to this, the ground hosted Rugby World Cup quarter finals and two Super Rugby grand finals, with the Queensland Reds winning on both occasions.[10] The venue hosted several matches for the 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup including the third-place match, and will host the soccer tournament at the 2032 Summer Olympics, including the gold medal matches in both the men's and women's events. It will also be the main venue for both the Olympics and Paralympics, hosting the opening and closing ceremonies.[11][12]

History

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Origins

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The site of Lang Park was originally the North Brisbane Cemetery, and until 1875 was Brisbane's primary cemetery. By 1911, the area was heavily populated, so the Paddington Cemeteries Act (1911) was introduced, and the site was redeveloped as a recreational site. In 1914, it was fenced off and named Lang Park after John Dunmore Lang.[13][14]

 
1937 soccer match at Lang Park Milton (looking towards Milton Road) – teams not known

The ground was leased by the Queensland Amateur Athletics Association (QAAA) in the 1920s. In 1935, the Queensland Soccer Council (QSC) became a sub-tenant of the QAAA, with a view to using it as the home ground for Brisbane soccer fixtures (leaving its former home, the Brisbane Cricket Ground).[15] The Latrobe Soccer Club, in turn, became a sub-tenant of the QSC, using the ground for its home games (see image below).[citation needed]

However, by 1937, the QSC was considering sub-leasing Lang Park to "another code of football" (most likely Western Suburbs Rugby League) as it "was not satisfied with the financial returns ... under the sub-lease to the Latrobe-Milton club".[16] Latrobe in turn responded that "'If no action Is taken to introduce the Ipswich clubs into the Brisbane competition this' season ... the Latrobe-Milton Club cannot accept an increase in rental for Lang Park. Give us competition play with Ipswich and my club will hold the ground as headquarters for the code."[17]

On 11 February 1950, the official opening of the Lang Park Police Citizens Youth Club took place and youth activities commenced because of the concerns with the increase of juvenile delinquency. Activities such as boxing, wrestling, basketball and gymnastics all occur at these premises to this day. Contemporaneous records are scant, but it appears the QSC did not renew the lease the ground after the intervening World War II. In 1953 the Brisbane Rugby League (BRL) amalgamated with the Queensland Rugby League (QRL). QRL secretary Ron McAullife negotiated a 21-year lease of Lang Park from the Brisbane City Council in order to give the QRL a financially viable base of operations. The park had only the most basic facilities, and the QRL contributed £17,000 to its development. Lang Park hosted its first game of first grade rugby league during the 1930s, with regular BRL games commencing there in 1955. In 1958, it hosted its first Brisbane rugby league grand final in which Brothers defeated Valleys 22 points to 7.[18] A record crowd of 19,824 saw Northern Suburbs defeat Fortitude Valley at Lang Park in the BRL grand final in September 1961.[19]

In the 1960s, Fonda Metassa famously burst from the back of an ambulance to return to the field after being carted off injured in a match for Norths against Redcliffe. As the ground was used increasingly by the QRL, it became no longer viable for use as a public recreation facility due to spoilage of the running track.[20] In 1962, the Lang Park Trust was created under an act of Parliament. This allowed for the construction of the Frank Burke Stand (1962), Ron McAuliffe Stand (1975), and the Western Grandstand (1994). The Trust had on its board one member from the Queensland Government, one member from the Brisbane City Council, two members from the Queensland Rugby League and one member from the Brisbane Rugby League.[21]

From the 1960s, Lang Park hosted interstate and international rugby league, including the inaugural State of Origin match. Up until 1972, it was the home ground of the Western Suburbs Panthers.[citation needed]

NSWRL/ARL years

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In 1988, the Brisbane Broncos entered the NSWRL Premiership along with the Gold Coast Chargers and the Newcastle Knights. The Broncos played out of Lang Park from 1988 until 1992, when they moved to the 60,000 capacity ANZ Stadium, the stadium for the 1982 Commonwealth Games. The move occurred due to a dispute over the Broncos sponsor, Power's Brewery, being a competitor of the QRL's sponsor XXXX.[citation needed]

In 1994, the stadium's name was changed to Suncorp Stadium, when naming sponsorship was attained by Queensland financial institution, Suncorp. The venue is currently managed by AEG Ogden. On 25 May 1997, the 1996/1997 National Soccer League Grand final was played in front of then a capacity crowd of 40,446, where the Brisbane Strikers FC defeated Sydney United FC 2–0.[citation needed]

Redevelopment

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The stadium in March 2019

Lang Park was heavily redeveloped in the early 2000s into a 52,500 all-seater state of the art rectangular stadium.[22]

 
Suncorp Stadium before the Australia vs Paraguay soccer international in October 2006.

Lang Park suffered significant damage during the 2010–2011 Queensland floods with the entire playing field being covered by flood water.[23] An electrical fire started in a transformer room due to water ingress, however there was no major damage from the fire.[24]

Today

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View of playing field from southern end, 13 July 2022.
 
Suncorp Stadium southern entrance, 13 July 2022

Although the stadium has been the traditional home of rugby league in Queensland, it has also become the state's premier venue for soccer, as well as rugby union. The re-developed stadium first hosted rugby union games at the 2003 Rugby World Cup and in 2005, the stadium became the new home of the Queensland Reds Super Rugby team when they moved from their former home at Ballymore Stadium.[1] This move caused some disquiet amongst rugby traditionalists, however was accepted by Queensland Rugby Union CEO Theo Psaros, who said that "our hearts may be at Ballymore but our heads say it's time to move.".[25] The year before the Reds' move, the newly established football team Queensland Roar of the A-League also elected to play their home games at Suncorp Stadium.[citation needed]

New Zealand rugby journalist Wynne Gray called Suncorp Stadium perhaps the best rugby stadium in the world. "It is so intimate you can hear the smack of bodies, the boot on leather, you feel the power and rhythm of the games."[26]

The stadium has also been favourably compared to Cardiff's Millennium Stadium and London's Twickenham Stadium.[27]

On 29 July 2006, the Bledisloe Cup clash between the Wallabies and the All Blacks returned to Brisbane for the first time in over a decade for the 2006 Tri Nations Series. Though Australia narrowly lost the match, the game saw a new ground record set.[citation needed]

 
Inside Suncorp Stadium during an NRL game

A month later on 7 October the stadium hosted a 1–1 friendly soccer game between Australia and Paraguay in which Tony Vidmar, Stan Lazaridis, Zeljko Kalac and goal scorer Tony Popovic all retired from international soccer.[citation needed]

On 8 November 2006, a crowd of 44,358 saw the Great Britain national rugby league team play against Australia for the last time.

On Wednesday 13 and Thursday 14 December, the stadium hosted its first music concert since the 1980s and the stadium's redevelopment when Robbie Williams performed in front of two 52,413 sell-out crowds during his "Close Encounters" tour of Australia, and was the venue for the U2 360 tour in December 2010. That same month the stadium hosted Bon Jovi as part of The Circle Tour.[citation needed]

The Stadium was also the site of the 2011 A-League Grand Final, drawing a crowd of over 50,000. The match was one of the most dramatic in A-League history, with the Brisbane Roar scoring two goals in the last five minutes to level the scores with the Central Coast Mariners after several hundred home supporters had left the stadium early, many returning after hearing the stadium erupt while waiting for the train. The Roar went on to win 4–2 in the penalty shootout, making for an incredible victory.[citation needed]

The stadium is also home to the Lang Park Police Citizens Youth Club.[citation needed]

American Singer-Songwriter Taylor Swift played at Suncorp Stadium for her Red Tour on 7 December 2013.[citation needed]

In September 2016, it was announced that the video screens, originally installed in 2003, would be replaced.[28] Construction started on the new video screens in March 2017 and was finished in early May 2017 in time for an NRL double header.[citation needed]

In 2019, the stadium hosted the NRL's inaugural Magic Round, in which all eight matches in a single round are played at the one venue.[29]

In 2020, the Melbourne Storm played their "home" finals at the venue, as it was not possible for the team to play them at its regular home ground, AAMI Park, due to the state of Victoria being locked down during the state's second wave of coronavirus infections.[30]

On 26 June 2021, the Queensland Maroons played at home against the New South Wales Blues in the State of Origin series. Queensland lost the game 26–0, and henceforth the series.[31]

Due to a COVID-19 lockdown in New South Wales, which began on 26 June 2021 and was still in effect into October, the stadium hosted twenty one extra games on top of its normal commitments to the Brisbane Broncos as well as Magic Round, including the 2021 NRL Grand Final on 3 October 2021.[32][33] This was the second time that a rugby league premiership Grand Final was played outside of Sydney, following the 1997 Super League Grand Final.[34]

In 2023, the stadium hosted several matches of the 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup.[citation needed]

On February 15, 2025, All Elite Wrestling will make its Australian debut with AEW Grand Slam Australia at the stadium.[35]

Average attendance per team

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2022 State of Origin rugby league, Queensland Maroons v NSW Blues
Team Sport Average Season
Queensland Maroons Rugby league 52,433 (only one game) 2023
Brisbane Broncos Rugby league 41,612 2023
Dolphins (NRL) Rugby league 29,516 2023
Queensland Reds Rugby union 19,118 2021
Brisbane Roar Association football 18,556 2007–08
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Wally Lewis statue outside Suncorp Stadium (Lang Park), Brisbane (2022)

In the 1980s, Brisbane rugby league icon Wally Lewis became known as The Emperor of Lang Park after his performances in State of Origin matches played at the ground. Brisbane-based beer XXXX, which is brewed at the nearby Castlemaine Brewery, ran a television advertisement celebrating this title in song:

Here's to Wally Lewis for lacing on a boot
Sometimes he plays it rugged, sometimes he plays it cute
He slices through a backline like a Stradbroke Island shark
There's glue on all his fingers, he's the Emperor of Lang Park
— Castlemaine Perkins XXXX advertisement[21]

In 2006, Queensland Minister for Sport, Tom Barton introduced the Stadium's Sports Media Hall of Fame which honours the achievements of media representatives who have covered the two major football codes (Rugby league and Rugby union) played at this historic ground over the past 40 years.[36] So far, there are five inductees: rugby league commentator George Lovejoy, rugby league journalists Jack Reardon and Steve Ricketts, Gerry Collins and Frank O'Callaghan.[citation needed]

Statues

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There are bronze statues outside the stadium. So far, all of them are of rugby players.[37] There have been suggestions to include a statue of Clare Polkinghorne.[38]

Awards

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In 2009, as part of the Q150 celebrations, Suncorp Stadium (Lang Park) was announced as one of the Q150 Icons of Queensland for its role as a "structure and engineering feat".[44]

Concerts

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Date Performer(s) Attendance Notes
13–14 December 2006 Robbie Williams 52,411 (13th)

52,471 (14th)

104,992 (total)

[45]
22 January 2008 The Police 25,391 [46]
3–4 December 2008 André Rieu 24,236 (3rd)

22,599 (4th)

46,835 (total)

[47]
8–9 December 2010 U2 44,352 (8th)

39,659 (9th)

84,011 (total)

[48]
14 December 2010 Bon Jovi 40,520 [49]
21 November 2012 Coldplay 52,497 [50]
13 July 2013 Queensland Music Festival's 'World's Biggest Orchestra' 9,680 [51]
7 December 2013 Taylor Swift 37,342 [52]
17 December 2013 Bon Jovi 41,376 [53]
20 February 2014 Eminem 43,339 [54]
11 February 2015 One Direction 32,889 [55]
24 February 2015 Foo Fighters 39,851 [56]
28 November 2015 Ed Sheeran 46,135 [57]
5 December 2015 Taylor Swift 46,139 [58]
6 December 2016 Coldplay 51,059 [59]
13 March 2017 Justin Bieber 40,102 [60]
9 December 2017 Paul McCartney 40,150 [61]
25 January 2018 Foo Fighters 39,190 [62]
20 & 21 March 2018 Ed Sheeran 53,127 (20th)

53,272 (21st)

106,399 (total)

[63]
6 December 2018 Bon Jovi 32,652 [64]
19 January 2019 Phil Collins 36,308 [65]
12 November 2019 U2 45,810 [66]
13 February 2020 Queen + Adam Lambert 39,756 [67]
22 November 2022 Guns N' Roses
29 January 2023 Red Hot Chili Peppers 46,835
17–19 February 2023 Ed Sheeran 57,900 (17th)

59,185 (18th)

58,853 (19th)

175,938 (total)

All three events broke the record for attendance[68]
1 November 2023 Paul McCartney
12 December 2023 Foo Fighters
20 & 21 December 2023 The Weeknd Cancelled
16 & 17 February 2024

17 March 2024

Pink 46,541

47,283 46,791

[69]
26 October 2024 Travis Scott 46,773
24 & 25 January 2025 Luke Combs Upcoming [70]
12 November 2025 Metallica Upcoming

Accessibility

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Controversially, the redevelopment was the first major sporting facility in Australia with no car parking, primarily due to concerns with traffic congestion in the surrounding residential neighbourhood. Instead, the stadium's is surrounded by pubs, restaurants, cafes, bars and the XXXX brewery. This together with dedicated pedestrian links to Milton railway station and Brisbane CBD adds to the match day experience and is seen as a model for new stadiums and large entertainment venues. The stadium redevelopment has been the catalyst for the Barracks urban renewal development at Petrie Terrace midway along the dedicated pedestrian link to the CBD.[citation needed]

Walking Pedestrian access
  • Suncorp Stadium is within walking distance of the CBD area of Brisbane.
Ferry CityCat
  • Suncorp Stadium is within walking distance of the Milton CityCat stop, which opened in January 2015.
Bus Bus access
  • Suncorp Stadium is close to bus-stops for the
  • 375 City bus. The bus route is Bardon (outbound) – Stafford (via city – inbound).
  • 385 CityXpress "BUZ" bus. The bus route is The Gap (outbound) – City (inbound).
The BUZ bus runs every 10–15 minutes, 6am to 11pm, 7 days a week.
  • Frequent shuttle bus services are provided by Transport for Brisbane on match days and for special events, typically from the CBD, Chermside, Carindale and Eight Mile Plains to the bus station under the stadium concourse.
Train Train access
  • Ticket holders are granted free transport on match days: with additional trains scheduled to Milton before and after all major events.
Car There is no public parking at the Stadium. However, paid parking stations are available within 10-minute walking distance in the CBD.

Facts

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Record crowd 52,540 – Rugby league, 12 July 2017[citation needed]
Queensland vs New South Wales
2017 State of Origin series
Video screen Yes (x2)
Lights Yes
Sports played Rugby league, Rugby union, Soccer
Annual events State of Origin series, Bledisloe Cup (Rugby Union), NRL Magic Round
Historic events 1968 Rugby League World Cup
1975 Rugby League World Cup
1977 Rugby League World Cup
1980 State of Origin game
1993 FIFA World Youth Championship*
* The first golden goal since the 1993 rule change by FIFA was in March 1993 by Australia against Uruguay in a quarterfinal match at the FIFA World Youth Championships at Suncorp Stadium, Qld, Australia
1997 NSL Grand Final (record NSL grand final attendance held until 2000)
2003 Rugby World Cup
2008 Rugby League World Cup (plus the Final)
2011 Super Rugby Final
2011 A-League Grand Final
2012 A-League Grand Final
2015 AFC Asian Cup
Manny Pacquiao vs. Jeff Horn
2017 Rugby League World Cup
2021 NRL Grand Final
2023 FIFA Women's World Cup

2015 AFC Asian Cup

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Date Time (UTC+10) Team #1 Result Team #2 Round Attendance
10 January 2015 19:00   Saudi Arabia 0–1   China Group B 12,557
12 January 2015 19:00   Jordan 0–1   Iraq Group D 6,840
14 January 2015 19:00   China 2–1   Uzbekistan Group B 13,674
16 January 2015 19:00   Iraq 0–1   Japan Group D 22,941
17 January 2015 19:00   Australia 0–1   South Korea Group A 48,513
19 January 2015 19:00   Iran 1–0   United Arab Emirates Group C 11,394
22 January 2015 21:30   China 0–2   Australia Quarter-finals 46,067

2023 FIFA Women's World Cup

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Date Time (UTC+10) Team #1 Result Team #2 Round Attendance
22 July 2023 19:30   England 1–0   Haiti Group D 44,369
27 July 2023 20:00   Australia 2–3   Nigeria Group B 49,156
29 July 2023 20:00   France 2–1   Brazil Group F 49,378
31 July 2023 19:00   Republic of Ireland 0–0   Nigeria Group B 24,884
3 August 2023 20:00   South Korea 1–1   Germany Group H 38,945
7 August 2023 17:30   England 0–0 (4–2 pen.)   Nigeria Round of 16 49,461
12 August 2023 17:00   Australia 0–0 (7–6 pen.)   France Quarter-final 49,461
19 August 2023 18:00   Sweden 2–0   Australia Third place play-off 49,461

Controversies

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On Saturday, 16 June 2011, The Weekend Australian revealed that Suncorp Stadium was in danger of either losing the hosting rights to all Queensland based NRL finals matches to Sydney, or having its capacity limited to 25,000 seats, due to a condition included in the legislation regarding the Stadium's redevelopment that only 24 'special events' (i.e. with attendance in excess of 25,000) a year can hosted at the venue. This number of special events was reached when the Brisbane Broncos faced the Manly Warringah Sea Eagles in Round 26 of the 2011 NRL Telstra Premiership Season. On 6 September 2011, legislation was passed to lift the crowd capacity limit to 35,000 for those 24 events, enabling the Broncos to host finals matches should they progress that far.[71]

The stadium's grass quality was criticised by coaches and players during the 2015 AFC Asian Cup.[72]

Rugby league test matches

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The venue has hosted forty-two Australia internationals. The results were as follows;[73]

Game # Date Opponents Result Attendance Part of
1 30 July 1962   Great Britain 10–17 34,766 1962 Ashes series
2 22 June 1963   New Zealand 13–16 30,748 1963 Trans-Tasman Test series
3 20 July 1963   South Africa 34–6 10,210
4 4 July 1964   France 27–2 20,076
4 16 July 1966   Great Britain 6–4 45,057 1966 Ashes series and pre redevelopment attendance record
5 1 July 1967   New Zealand 35–22 30,122 1967 Trans-Tasman Test series
6 1 June 1968 31–12 23,608 1968 World Cup
7 8 June 1968   France 37–4 32,664 1968 World Cup
8 6 June 1970   Great Britain 37–15 42,807 1970 Ashes series
9 15 July 1972   New Zealand 31–7 20,847 1972 Trans-Tasman Test series
10 1 June 1975 36–8 12,000 1975 World Cup
11 22 June 1975   France 26–6 9,000 1975 World Cup
12 18 June 1977   Great Britain 15–5 27,000 1977 World Cup
13 15 July 1978   New Zealand 38–7 14,000 1978 Trans-Tasman Test series
14 16 July 1979   Great Britain 35–0 23,051 1979 Ashes series
15 18 July 1981   France 17–2 14,000
16 3 July 1982   New Zealand 11–8 11,400 1982 Trans-Tasman Test series
17 9 July 1983 12–19 15,000 1983 Trans-Tasman Test series
18 26 June 1984   Great Britain 18–6 26,534 1984 Ashes series
19 18 June 1985   New Zealand 26–20 22,000 1985 Trans-Tasman Test series
20 29 July 1986 32–12 22,811 1985–88 World Cup and 1986 Trans-Tasman Test series
21 21 July 1987 6–13 16,500
22 28 June 1988   Great Britain 34–14 27,130 1988 Ashes series
23 31 July 1991   New Zealand 40–12 29,139 1989–92 World Cup and 1991 Trans-Tasman Test series
24 3 July 1992   Great Britain 16–10 32,313 1989–92 World Cup and 1992 Ashes series
25 30 June 1993   New Zealand 16–4 32,000 1993 Trans-Tasman Test series
26 23 June 1995 26–8 25,309 1995 Trans-Tasman Test series
27 14 July 1995 46–10 20,803 1995 Trans-Tasman Test series
28 11 July 1997   Rest of the World 28–8 14,927 Only test match played for the ARL test team for 1997
29 9 October 1998   New Zealand 30–12 18,501
30 22 October 1999   Great Britain 42–6 12,511 1999 Tri-Nations
31 25 April 2005   New Zealand 32–16 40,317 2005 Anzac Test
32 5 May 2006 50–16 44,191 2006 Anzac Test
33 18 November 2006   Great Britain 33–10 44,358 2006 Tri-Nations
34 20 April 2007   New Zealand 30–6 35,241 2007 Anzac Test
35 23 November 2008 20–34 50,599 2008 World Cup final. Record Test attendance at Lang Park
36 8 May 2009 38–10 37,152 2009 Anzac Test
37 13 November 2010 12–16 36,299 2010 Four Nations Final
38 25 October 2014 12–30 47,813* 2014 Four Nations
39 3 May 2015 12–26 32,681 2015 Anzac Test
40 23 Nov 2017   Fiji 54–6 22,073 2017 Rugby League World Cup Semi-Final
41 2 Dec 2017   England 6–0 40,033 2017 Rugby League World Cup final
42 18 Oct 2024   Tonga 18–0 33,196 2024 Pacific Championships

It also hosted three non Australia matches. Incidentally, they were all England matches. The first was a 1975 Rugby League World Cup match against Wales on 10 June 1975 with 6,000 in attendance and lost 12 – 7. The second was a 2008 Rugby League World Cup match against New Zealand on 15 November 2008 with 26,659 in attendance and lost 32 – 22. The third and final to date was a 2014 Four Nations match between against Samoa with 47,813 in attendance and was a double header which was followed by the Australia New Zealand match. England won 32 – 26.

Suncorp Stadium hosted two matches of the 2017 Rugby League World Cup. The venue played host to the first semi-final on 24 November and the tournament final on 2 December.

Rugby union internationals

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Game # Date Competition Home team Away team Attendance
1 27 July 1996 1996 Tri Nations Series   Australia 25   New Zealand 32 40,167
2 2 August 1997 1997 Tri Nations Series   Australia 32   South Africa 20 34,416
3 6 June 1998 1998 Cook Cup   Australia 76   England 0 26,691
4 8 August 2003 2003 Tri Nations Series   Australia 29   South Africa 9 51,188
5 11 October 2003 2003 Rugby World Cup Pool B   France 61   Fiji 18 46,795
6 15 October 2003 2003 Rugby World Cup Pool B   Fiji 19   United States 18 30,990
7 18 October 2003 2003 Rugby World Cup Pool A   Australia 90   Romania 8 48,778
8 20 October 2003 2003 Rugby World Cup Pool B   Scotland 39   United States 15 46,796
9 24 October 2003 2003 Rugby World Cup Pool D   New Zealand 91   Tonga 7 47,588
10 8 November 2003 2003 Rugby World Cup Quarter-final 1   Australia 33   Scotland 16 45,412
11 9 November 2003 2003 Rugby World Cup Quarter-final 4   England 28   Wales 17 45,252
12 26 June 2004 2004 Cook Cup   Australia 51   England 15 52,492
13 2 July 2005 2005 Trophée des Bicentenaires   Australia 37   France 31 50,826
14 15 July 2006 2006 Tri Nations Series   Australia 49   South Africa 0 41,578
15 29 July 2006 2006 Tri Nations Series / Bledisloe Cup   Australia 9   New Zealand 13 52,498
16 2 June 2007 2007 James Bevan Trophy   Australia 31   Wales 0 41,622
17 5 July 2008 2008 Trophée des Bicentenaires   Australia 40   France 10 49,542
18 13 September 2008 2008 Tri Nations Series / Bledisloe Cup   Australia 24   New Zealand 28 52,328
19 5 September 2009 2009 Tri Nations Series / Mandela Challenge Plate   Australia 21   South Africa 6 47,481
20 26 June 2010 2010 Lansdowne Cup   Australia 22   Ireland 15 45,498
21 24 July 2010 2010 Tri Nations Series / Mandela Challenge Plate   Australia 30   South Africa 13 44,284
22 27 August 2011 2011 Tri Nations Series / Bledisloe Cup   Australia 25   New Zealand 20 51,858
23 27 August 2011 2012 Bledisloe Cup   Australia 18   New Zealand 18 51,888
24 9 June 2012 2012 James Bevan Trophy   Australia 27   Wales 19 43,000
25 22 June 2013 2013 Tom Richards Trophy   Australia 21 British & Irish Lions 23 52,499
26 7 September 2013 2013 Rugby Championship / Mandela Challenge Plate   Australia 12   South Africa 38 43,715
27 7 June 2014 2014 Trophée des Bicentenaires   Australia 50   France 23 33,718
28 18 October 2014 2014 Bledisloe Cup   Australia 28   New Zealand 29 45,186
29 18 July 2015 2015 Rugby Championship / Mandela Challenge Plate   Australia 24   South Africa 20 37,633
30 11 June 2016 2016 Cook Cup   Australia 28   England 39 48,735
31 10 September 2016 2016 Rugby Championship / Mandela Challenge Plate   Australia 23   South Africa 17 30,327
32 24 June 2017 2017 Italy Tour   Australia 40   Italy 27 21,849
33 21 October 2017 2017 Bledisloe Cup   Australia 23   New Zealand 18 45,107
34 9 June 2018 2018 Ireland rugby union tour of Australia   Australia 18   Ireland 9 46,273
35 27 July 2019 2019 Rugby Championship   Australia 16   Argentina 10 31,599
36 7 November 2020 2020 Tri Nations Series   Australia 24   New Zealand 22 36,000
37 7 July 2021 2021 France rugby union tour of Australia   Australia 23   France 21 17,890
38 17 July 2021 2021 France rugby union tour of Australia   Australia 33   France 30 34,170
39 18 September 2021 2021 Rugby Championship / Mandela Challenge Plate   Australia 30   South Africa 17 40,789
40 18 September 2021 2021 Rugby Championship   Argentina 13   New Zealand 36 38,215
41 9 July 2022 2022 Ella-Mobbs Trophy   Australia 17   England 25 46,536
42 10 August 2024 2024 Mandela Challenge Plate   Australia 7   South Africa 33 52,019

Men's soccer internationals

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Game # Date Competition Home team Result Away team Attendance
1 11 November 1971 Friendly   Australia 2–2   Israel 5040
2 15 June 1983 Friendly   Australia 0–0   England 16,000
3 27 September 1985 Friendly   Australia 3–0   China 4823
4 8 February 1995 Friendly   Australia 0–0   Colombia 13,212
5 25 February 1996 Friendly   Australia 0–2   Sweden 10,081
6 21 January 1997 Friendly   New Zealand 0–3   Norway 15,161
7 21 January 1997 Friendly   Australia 2–1   South Korea 15,161
8 25 September 1998 OFC Nations Cup 1998 Group A   New Zealand 0–1   Tahiti 900
9 25 September 1998 OFC Nations Cup 1998 Group B   Australia 3–0   Fiji 900
10 28 September 1998 OFC Nations Cup 1998 Group A   New Zealand 8–1   Vanuatu 500
11 28 September 1998 OFC Nations Cup 1998 Group B   Australia 16–0   Cook Islands 600
12 30 September 1998 OFC Nations Cup 1998 Group A   Tahiti 5–1   Vanuatu 400
13 30 September 1998 OFC Nations Cup 1998 Group B   Fiji 3–0   Cook Islands 500
14 2 October 1998 OFC Nations Cup 1998 Semi Final   New Zealand 1–0   Fiji 1200
15 2 October 1998 OFC Nations Cup 1998 Semi Final   Australia 4–2   Tahiti 1200
16 4 October 1998 OFC Nations Cup 1998 Third-place playoff   Fiji 1–0   Tahiti 2000
17 4 October 1998 OFC Nations Cup 1998 Final   Australia 0–1   New Zealand 12,000
18 7 October 2006 Friendly   Australia 1–1   Paraguay 47,609
19 1 June 2008 2010 FIFA World Cup qualifier   Australia 1–0   Iraq 48,678
20 15 October 2008 2010 FIFA World Cup qualifier   Australia 4–0   Qatar 34,230
21 3 March 2010 2011 AFC Asian Cup qualifier   Australia 1–0   Indonesia 20,422
22 2 September 2011 2014 FIFA World Cup qualifier   Australia 2–1   Thailand 24,540
23 12 June 2012 2014 FIFA World Cup qualifier   Australia 1–1   Japan 40,189
24 10 January 2015 2015 AFC Asian Cup Group B   Saudi Arabia 0–1   China 12,557
25 12 January 2015 2015 AFC Asian Cup Group D   Jordan 0–1   Iraq 6840
26 14 January 2015 2015 AFC Asian Cup Group B   China 2–1   Uzbekistan 13,674
27 16 January 2015 2015 AFC Asian Cup Group D   Iraq 1–0   Japan 22,941
28 17 January 2015 2015 AFC Asian Cup Group A   Australia 0–1   South Korea 48,513
29 19 January 2015 2015 AFC Asian Cup Group C   Iran 1–0   United Arab Emirates 11,394
30 22 January 2015 2015 AFC Asian Cup Quarter Final   China 0–2   Australia 46,067
31 17 November 2018 Friendly   Australia 1–1   South Korea 32,922
32 22 September 2022 Friendly   Australia 1–0   New Zealand 25,392

Women's soccer internationals

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Game # Date Competition Home team Result Away team Attendance
1 3 March 2019 Friendly   Argentina 0–2   New Zealand 5716
2 3 March 2019 Friendly   Australia 4–1   South Korea 10,520
3 3 September 2022 Friendly   Australia 0–1   Canada 25,016
4 28 November 2024 Friendly   Australia   Brazil

Boxing

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Suncorp Stadium was the host of the Manny Pacquiao vs. Jeff Horn fight for the WBO welterweight championship with 51,052 people in attendance.[74]

Professional wrestling

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Suncorp Stadium is set to host All Elite Wrestling's Grand Slam Australia event on 15 February 2025, marking the first professional wrestling event to be held in the stadium, as well as AEW's first ever event to take place in Australia.[75]

See also

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References

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Preceded by Rugby league World Cup
Final venue

2008
Succeeded by