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‘Ring of Champions’ to honor sporting greats

The NSW government has found an elegant solution to end the wrangling over whom the grandstands at the new Allianz Stadium will be named after: nobody.

Instead, five Sydney sporting greats – Nicholas Shehadie, Betty Cuthbert, Johnny Warren, Arthur Beetson and Ron Coote – will be honored inside the stadium on a “Ring of Champions” that lines the concourse of the $828 million venue, which will open to the public for the first time this weekend.

Betty Cuthbert's twin sister, Marie Johnston, was at the new Allianz Stadium on Thursday as the venue's 'Ring of Champions' was unveiled.

Betty Cuthbert’s twin sister, Marie Johnston, was at the new Allianz Stadium on Thursday as the venue’s ‘Ring of Champions’ was unveiled.Credits:Dean Sewell

In the coming years, up to five more names and possibly more will be added to the ring, which represents a shift away from the age-old tradition of naming individual stands after legendary figures, like at the adjacent SCG – and recognition of the fact that the new Allianz doesn’t actually have separate stands but an all-encompassing bowl of seating designed for spectator comfort, which will thus go nameless.

As an example, Shehadie – the former Wallaby, Australian Rugby Union president and Sydney lord mayor – has his name in gold lettering above one of the bars on the eastern side of the 45,000-seat stadium, with career statistics, facts and figures to be put up alongside it.

Cuthbert, the four-time Olympic athletics champion, Socceroos icon Warren and rugby league greats Beetson and Coote have their names scattered elsewhere around the concourse, with enough space in between to add more as and when deemed necessary by the powers that be and the SCG Heritage Committee which picked the five greats, whose names were announced on Thursday.

Venues NSW chairman Tony Shepherd called it a “modern solution for a modern stadium” that will reflect the changing nature of the sports that will be played at Allianz Stadium and, in particular, the rise of elite women’s team sport.

Stadium executives believe putting their names in closer proximity to the rank and file is a much better way to honor these sporting figures, and are hopeful each name will become its own “meeting place” for people catching up with friends at the new Allianz.

The other clear benefit is that it keeps more people happy.