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Bellerive and Oval
Cricket Australia proposed that the 2010 – 11 series consist of six Tests, with the additional game to be played at Bellerive Oval in Hobart.
Bellerive Oval
The Tasmanian Tigers cricket team plays its home games at the Bellerive Oval on the Eastern Shore.
The two players in yellow are the batsmen and those in blue are the fielding team. A day match at Bellerive Oval
In the Second Test at Bellerive Oval, Taylor scored 123 in the second innings to set up a winning total.
When Tasmania played Western Australia at Bellerive Oval on 4 November 1994, Ponting scored 211.
Ten days after the double century, Ponting was named in the Australian XI to take on England at Bellerive Oval — in a match that was used as practice before the upcoming series in the West Indies.
Ponting started the 1999 – 2000 season poorly, with ducks in his first three Test innings in the series against Pakistan, including a pair on his home ground Bellerive Oval.
After scoring 4, 0 and 0 in his previous Test outings at Bellerive Oval, Ponting broke through with a man-of-the-match performance of 157 not out in the Second Test, before further rain resulted in another draw.
Ponting scored the first ever double-century ( 209 ) at his home ground Bellerive Oval ( pictured ) in the Third Test against Pakistan.
The City of Clarence is administered by the Clarence City Council, and is home to both the Hobart International Airport and Bellerive Oval.
Bellerive Oval, also known by its sponsored name Blundstone Arena, is primarily a cricket and Australian Rules Football ground located in Bellerive, City of Clarence, on the eastern shore of Hobart, Tasmania, Australia.
Bellerive Oval underwent a $ 16 million re-development at very start of the 21st century and that was completed at the end of 2002.
Football and cricket first started being played in the area where Bellerive Oval is now in the mid-to-late 19th century.
Bellerive Oval was chosen ahead of KGV Oval and North Hobart Oval.
Front Gate Bellerive Oval
Bellerive Oval with lights on
As well as being the home of domestic and international cricket and the Clarence Football Club in the now Tasmanian State League, Bellerive Oval served in 2003 as a home to the Tasmanian Devils in the VFL.
In 2010, talk of Melbourne-based Australian Football League ( AFL ) clubs shifting home games to Bellerive Oval surfaced.
On 7 June 2011, the North Melbourne Football Club announced a new three year deal in partnership with transport company TT-Line Company, who announced its intent to sponsor North Melbourne home games in Hobart, at Bellerive Oval.
The record attendance for Bellerive Oval is 16, 719 for a One Day International between Australia and England on 14 January 2003.

Bellerive and has
Is it also a popular sailing area, home to Bellerive Yacht Club and has a marina located at Bellerive Quay.
The area around Bellerive Quay and the boardwalk has a quaint village feel, with many historical homes and buildings in the area, some of which date from the early 19th century.

Bellerive and ground
1 year later, the new Bellerive recreation ground was ready for use.
Bellerive Oval is Tasmania's current home ground.
The decision was made to move both the offices of the Tasmanian Cricket Association, and the official home ground to Bellerive Oval in Clarence.
Bellerive is best known as the home of international cricket ground Bellerive Oval.

Bellerive and world
His body was conveyed to Switzerland where members of the diplomatic corps, government officials and close friends were invited to pay their last respects at the Chateau de Bellerive, and sign books of condolence at various locations around the world.

Bellerive and cricket
This was the first international day-night cricket match played at Bellerive Oval.
On 14 January 2007, Bond took a hat-trick in the last over against Australia in a One Day International at the Bellerive Oval, dismissing Cameron White, Andrew Symonds and Nathan Bracken in successive deliveries, becoming just the second New Zealand player to take a hat-trick in limited-overs international cricket, although the game was still lost by 105 runs.

Bellerive and Australia
The first Test match in Tasmania was played at Bellerive from the 16th-20 December 1989, between Australia and Sri Lanka.
Bellerive is a suburb of the City of Clarence, part of the greater Hobart area, Tasmania, Australia.
In November 1999 at Bellerive Oval in Hobart, he shared a match-winning 238-run partnership with Adam Gilchrist to rescue Australia from 126 / 5 chasing a victory target of 369 against Pakistan.
He became the highest run-scorer for Western Australia in 4-day matches, after passing Tom Moody's old record of 8853 runs on 5 December 2007 against the Tasmanian Tigers at Bellerive Oval.
* Bellerive, Tasmania, Australia, a suburb of the City of Clarence, part of the greater Hobart area

Bellerive and .
** The PGA golf tour cancelled the World Golf Championships at the Bellerive Country Club in St. Louis, Missouri.
Belle Rive got its name from Louis St. Ange de Bellerive, who surrendered Illinois to the British in 1765.
Louisiana Governor Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne, Sieur de Bienville next appointed Louis Groston de Saint-Ange de Bellerive to command Poste Vincennes.
Bel-Ridge is part of the Normandy School System and borders the affluent villages of Bel-Nor and Bellerive.
Bellerive is a northern suburban village in St. Louis County, Missouri, United States.
Bellerive is located at ( 38. 713301 ,-90. 314315 ).
The University of Missouri-St. Louis is partially located in Bellerive.
In 1960, the Normandy School District approved a bond issue to buy the Bellerive Country Club to form a junior college.
The city is a suburb of St. Louis and is home to Bellerive Country Club, which hosted the 1992 PGA Championship and 1965 US Open.
Villiers departed for New Orleans in June 1764 with 80 families, and he transferred temporary control to his subordinate, Louis St. Ange de Bellerive, who was given responsibility to monitor the remaining settlers in Illinois.
After graduating, his father sent him to Bellerive, a school near the Swiss village of Vevey.
The Prince's interest in ecological issues led him to establish the Bellerive Foundation in the late 1970s, and he was a knowledgeable and respected collector of Islamic art.
In 1977, Prince Sadruddin, together with Denis de Rougemont and a few other friends, established a Geneva-based think-tank, Groupe de Bellerive ( named after Bellerive, the municipality where he lived in Geneva ), and a non-profit organisation, the Bellerive Foundation.

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