Newcastle
A Totally pointless question to Newcastle United fans about the New stadium
Newcastle United fans discussing the respective merits of redeveloping St James’ Park, or building a brand new stadium on a different site.
Asking Newcastle United fans, whether they would rather stay at St James’ Park or move to a brand new stadium, is a totally pointless question.
It only makes any sense whatsoever, if you are giving supporters some semblance of a proper question to answer.
If the alternative to redeveloping St James’ Park was say a brand new stadium 100 or two yards away at Leazes Park/Castle Leazes, then that is a very different question to say a brand new stadium on an industrial estate in Gateshead, or indeed anywhere outside walking distance of Newcastle Upon Tyne city centre.
You then of course have the question of what potentially the respective new capacities could/would be.
For example, if the choice was an expanded 60,000 St James’ Park or a 65,000 new stadium, that would be very different to say asking Newcastle United fans if they would be in favour of a 57,000 redeveloped SJP or an 80,000 brand new state of the are stadium.
For this article, I want you to imagine that the Newcastle United owners decide on the brand new state of the art 80,000 capacity new stadium, to be built on Leazes Park/Castle Leazes and that any obstacles/objections can be overcome to make this site and 80k stadium possible.
Could that size of stadium be filled?
This is my very strong belief…
Newcastle United fans could fill an 80,000 capacity new stadium – Have a look at this:
These are the average Premier League attendances from 1992/93, the first year following the rebranding (all stats via World Football):
As you can see, not anything like what we see in the Premier League in the modern day, they were different times. Man U were redeveloping Old Trafford back then, which partly explains why they were averaging 35k. However, reality is that this wasn’t a million miles away from their norm back then, as the previous two seasons (before the redevelopment work), they had averaged 43k and then 44k.
This first Premier League season of course saw Newcastle United still in the second tier, their fifth year in a row in that division. Despite that, Newcastle United averaged 29,048 in the second tier that season, filling St James’ Park ever week. That average would have been far higher but SJP was also getting redeveloped that season.
Despite that, only four Premier League sides had a bigger average than Newcastle United that 1992/93 season.
After promotion and Newcastle United adding over 4,000 more seats to their capacity, these were the average Premier League attendances in 1993/94:
As you can see, Newcastle United fans easily filling the new increased SJP capacity and despite the limitations of that roughly 33k capacity, NUFC had the fourth highest attendances.
For anybody naive enough to believe that Chelsea have ever been a ‘big’ club, maybe you should note that this season, which was the norm for Chelsea, they had lower attendances than BOTH Sheffield clubs. Yet in this twisted distorted new world, where Chelsea still average less than 40,000 crowds in the modern day, we are all supposed to believe/pretend that the West London pretenders are this huge well supported club…
Everton fans are always quick to claim that their inferior crowds compared to Newcastle United and others, are simply because they have been restricted by their capacity, yet their average PL attendance of 22.868 in the 1993/94 season doesn’t exactly prop this misleading scouse mackem claim up.
Moving on to 2005/06 and this is how the Premier League average attendances looked:
Newcastle United fans as in all the Premier League seasons previously, filling a far bigger capacity, only Man U higher.
Going back 18 years, only four other PL clubs average 40,000+ fans, that included Chelsea! Their disgraced Russian sugar daddy had arrived by then, buying the West London club trophies and fans! This 2005/06 season they won the Premier League for a second season in a row.
Now I want to take you forward all the way through to the most recent table of average Premier League attendances in the 2023/24 season:
As you can see, by this point, Newcastle still filling their 52k capacity St James’ Park every home match.
However, time and football have moved on by now. A wasted decade and a half of Mike Ashley had seen Newcastle United fail to progress in any aspect, standing still, though in reality going rapidly backwards. As all the other major Premier League clubs have ridden the Premier League tiger that brought ever increasing riches via commercial revenue, TV revenue and indeed matchday revenue.
Eleven Premier League clubs that were in the top tier last season, were also in the 2005/06 Premier League campaign.
In 18 years, the Newcastle United average attendance increased by 121, when comparing 2005/06 and 2023/24.