What's new
The Front Row Forums

Register a free account today to become a member of the world's largest Rugby League discussion forum! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

Parramatta Eels Centre of Excellence Build

Delboy

First Grade
Messages
8,167
Do we assume that the Jersey Flegg match next Saturday at 1pm is the first official match at The Stanley “Plunket” Jurd Centre of Excellence in Kellyville ?
Depends on definition of official

The junior league played at least 2 Division 1 Match of the Rounds at the COE yesterday, televised on ParraEels Facebook.
Official NRL related club games , yes I would think.
 

Johnny88

Juniors
Messages
1,457

A first look inside the world’s biggest rugby league facility. And it’s here in Sydney​

What is the most important section in the world’s largest rugby league facility?
Is it the dedicated aquatic rehabilitation space, complete with sauna and ice baths? Is it the gym with an enormous, extendable wrestling mat? Is it five full-sized rugby league fields, an enormous auditorium or lockers with customisable plates that include a player’s representative honours?

1747892841486.png

Parramatta Eels chief executive Jim Sarantinos had to pause for a moment to think about it when asked that question at the launch of his club’s new $70 million Centre of Excellence.
“It’s the overall size of the facility that is most important. We have gone from having 1800 square metres in our previous building to, across the two facilities here, over 6000 square metres.”

“We go from having one locker room onsite previously, to now having four large locker rooms, which complement the field space we have now. Having one locker room meant it was almost impossible to run your programs.”
The centre, which officially opens on Thursday, is also the first gender-equal rugby league facility in Australia, and was funded by the NSW and federal governments, The Hills Shire Council and Parramatta Leagues Club.

First look at the Centre of Excellence​

1747892870868.png

A snaking maze of a facility, it includes a steep auditorium any tech start-up would be proud of, video and analysis rooms and a raft of player facilities, as well as a museum, shop and cafe.
A community facility is also part of the opening, featuring an international standard match venue with a 1500-seat grandstand as well as multipurpose function and education rooms.


The centre will service the men’s team, the women’s team and the club’s Pathways programs, with the intention to bring them all under one roof, and integrated into one club culture.
During a tour of the facility, Sarantinos emphasises the building’s many references to the club’s storied history, from murals to American-style champion banners, and a wall featuring the names of every single player who has ever debuted for the team.
“We tried to bring our nostalgia to life, and to celebrate our history and pay respect to everyone that’s played a role in the club before this building was delivered.”
And while there isn’t a corner of the facility that isn’t draped in blue and gold in some way, it is controversially located in Kellyville, nearly half an hour from Parramatta, deep in Sydney’s north-west.

But Sarantinos dismissed any suggestions the move meant the club was leaving Parramatta behind.
“If you look at pretty much all the largest sporting organisations around the world, very few of them have state-of-the-art training facilities in the heart of the city. It’s always 30 to 40 minutes out. And the reality is that, whilst we wanted to stay in Parramatta, we would never have ended up with all this green space.
“We are the biggest sporting brand in western Sydney, the third-largest city in the country. So it is only fitting we have a facility of this size.”
The Sydney Morning Herald has opened its bureau in the heart of Parramatta. Email [email protected] with news tips.
 

Johnny88

Juniors
Messages
1,457
Parramatta have officially opened the biggest oasis in rugby league history, inspired by English football giants Liverpool and the NFL's Dallas Cowboys.
The Eels' centre of excellence is built on 11 hectares of land in the northwestern Sydney suburb of Kellyville, boasting five footy fields at a cost a hefty $70 million tipped in by three levels of government and the Parramatta Leagues Club.
Inside, there's a 1000 sqm state-of-the-art gymnasium, a 60-seat theatre, an aquatic recovery centre with saunas - added at the players' request - and even a podcast studio.

1747892984644.png

It's a far cry from the Old Saleyards Reserve in North Parramatta, the public park where the Eels trained when Jim Sarantinos first became chief executive.
Sarantinos remembers walking into the team meeting room for the first time in 2016.
"The chairs that were in there were plastic chairs from Bunnings and it was so tight that players were kind of falling off and stumbling off the chairs," he said ahead of Friday's clash with Manly.
"Credit to them, the coaches and the players never used it as an excuse for performance, but at some point it does have an impact."


As the Eels began dreaming of a new home, Sarantinos travelled far and wide to visit similar facilities at elite sporting clubs.

1747893010158.png

NRL rivals North Queensland had been building their centre of excellence about the same time the Eels were finalising their plans, so they became a sounding board for Parramatta.
Sarantinos also dropped into Premier League facilities in England - including those of his favourite team Liverpool - and the Dallas Cowboys' centre, which opened in 2016 at the staggering cost of $US1.5 billion.

Two things became clear on his travels. First, the Eels' major challenge would be creating a similar sanctuary on a smaller budget.
"It is about picking up things, different ideas that can be applied in our context," Sarantinos said.
One such touch was to include American sports-style premiership banners in the gymnasium to commemorate the club's four grand-final wins.

1747893053147.png

Secondly, it was important to pay homage to the club's history in this kind of building.
"That was a pretty common theme for a lot of the facilities that we visited. Each organisation has done it in their own different way," Sarantinos said.
For the Eels, the centre of excellence features a wall that displays the name of every player to represent the club at either NRL and NRLW level.

Eels champion Peter Sterling spent about half an hour making his way across it on his visit to the club, and was one of a number of club legends to donate historic gear to display at the centre.
The centre's theatre has been christened "Jack's Bus" - a reference to three-time premiership-winning coach Jack Gibson, who used to gather his team for meetings on a decommissioned bus during his tenure in charge.

The Eels are also looking to the future.
Sarantinos's hope is NRLW games could be held at the centre from 2026, with a 1500-seat grandstand helping the club host more than 3000 fans if required.
"Obviously we'd love for the NRLW to grow where facilities like this are too small to accommodate NRLW games, but while we're still going on that growth trajectory ... there's no reason why our facility wouldn't be able to accommodate games," Sarantinos said.

 

Johnny88

Juniors
Messages
1,457

Parramatta Eels’ Centre of Excellence opens at Kellyville​

From rickety chairs and outdoor ice baths to the world’s largest rugby league training facility, the Eels’ swish new footy and admin precinct is unrecognisable from its old stomping ground. Take a look.
Joanne Vella

@Parramatta_News


3 min read
May 22, 2025 - 6:00AM
Parramatta Advertiser

The Eels have consigned the days of outdoor ice baths and gyms in demountables to the history books now players and staff have settled into a $70m performance centre that is the largest rugby league training facility in the world.
The Parramatta Eels Centre of Excellence, which has five full-sized football fields, a 1500-seat grandstand, administration offices, a theatre, media rooms, a world-class gym, aquatic rehabilitation facilities and a cafe for the NRL and NRLW teams, is officially open.
The Eels, Parramatta Leagues Club, the state and federal governments, and Hills Shire Council funded the cavernous 11-hectare Kellyville Park showpiece.
It also includes multipurpose function rooms for the public, four large locker rooms, change rooms and kiosks in a facility that takes care of players’ needs from caffeine to cardio and card games.
When it’s time to heal bruised and battered muscles, there’s a 17m swimming pool, infra-red saunas, plunge pools and rows of massage beds to aid the recovery process.

1747893146061.png

It’s a parallel universe to the Eels’ former training base at the Old Saleyards Reserve in North Parramatta.
Chief executive Jim Sarantinos recalls in 2016 the gym was spread across demountables, ice baths were on the balcony and the plastic chairs from Bunnings were so tight players stumbled off them.

1747893177532.png

“Credit to them, the players never used it as an excuse for performance but at some point it has an impact. It impacts the experience, it impacts the ability to retain and recruit players so it was a real challenge,’’ Mr Sarantinos said.
“It was incredibly underwhelming. It just wasn’t fitting for what an NRL club should have and to think that now we’re probably in the best training facility across the game … it’s incredible but it’s also where the club should be.’’
The club announced its controversial exit from Parramatta in 2019, the year the $300m stadium opened.
Its first preference was to remain in the heartland but a Parramatta Council blunder led to the city losing its best asset – the NRL team.

1747893207866.png

1747893221445.png

In 2014 the council approved plans for a $26m high-performance training and administration at the Old Saleyards but fast forward five years, the project failed to come to fruition with the council asleep at the wheel.
The Hills Shire Council, with the support of the state and federal government, pounced and made an offer too good to refuse so the club relocated to the country’s fastest growing region.
“If you look at pretty much all the largest global sporting organisations, very few of them have their state-of-the-art training facilities which require the size and scale in the heart of the city in which they play in,’’ Mr Sarantinos said.
“And the reality is whilst we wanted to stay in Parramatta – and that was the initial preference – we’re incredibly blessed to be out here and we never would have ended up with the amount of green space and the ability to combine our men’s, women’s and our pathways programs in the one location.’’

1747893249603.png
The precinct will be used for NRLW and NSW Cup trial matches and junior representative games, while 700 athletes and staff will use the facility, which includes 6000sq m of indoor space, weekly.
“We’re obviously the primary beneficiary of this but this has been very deliberately set up in a way where other junior sports, community sports will in due course be able to access the space,’’ Mr Sarantinos said.

1747893277176.png

“I think it’s a great symbol of the size and scale we have as a club and the region that we represent.
“Western Sydney broadly is the third largest city in the country and we’re the biggest sporting brand in western Sydney so for me I think it’s fitting for us to have a facility of this size and scale.’’
1747893310719.png


1747893327742.png

The club drew inspiration from visits to Tottenham FC, the Dallas Cowboys’ $1.5bn facility, along with the Cowboys’ base in Townsville and the Brisbane Broncos’ headquarters.
Coach Jason Ryles has named the theatre Jack’s Bus, a nostalgic nod to legendary ‘80s coach Jack Gibson who bought a bus to use for team meetings when Parramatta Stadium was under construction and players would train at Granville Park.
The presence of the club’s premiership blitz in the 1980s is evident throughout the building with memorabilia, some of it donated by legends such as Peter Sterling and Peter Wynn.
The players have also endorsed their new stomping ground.
“They’re incredibly appreciative of what they’ve got and I think they bounce into the place every day. Having a cafe on site is really helpful as well,’’ Mr Sarantinos said.
“Everyone in the past, if you wanted to grab a coffee or a bite to eat, you either needed to make it yourself or go off site … it may not seem like a big thing but it is.’’

 

Latest posts

Top