Western Mail

RECORD ATTENDANCE­S

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CARDIFF CITY Ninian Park: 57,893 v Arsenal 1953 Cardiff City Stadium: 32,339 v Man City (FA Cup) 2018; 28,680 v Derby (league) 2016

SWANSEA CITY The Vetch: 32,786 v Arsenal (FA Cup) 1968; 29,477 v Leeds (league) 1955 Liberty Stadium: 20,972 v Liverpool 2016 of Cardiff’s previous home game, against Preston, which had drawn 12,447.

The biggest league crowd in Wales since then is the 28,680 who watched Cardiff beat Derby 2-1 in April 2016, but the Bluebirds gave away thousands of free tickets for that one.

Cardiff regularly had sell-outs in their Premier League season, with the highest recorded gate being the

NEWPORT COUNTY Somerton Park: 26,268 v Cardiff City 1937 Rodney Parade: 9,836 v Tottenham (FA Cup) 2018; 7,326 v Notts County (league) 2017

WREXHAM The Racecourse: 34,445 v Man Utd (FA Cup) 1957; 29,261 v Chester (league) 1936 28,018 who watched Luis Suarez score a hat-trick in a 6-3 defeat to Liverpool.

But the erection of the new stand has increased capacity by a further 5,000 and such is the demand to watch the Wolves showdown that the Bluebirds have opened the upper Ninian.

Warnock believes the backing from a near-capacity Cardiff City Stadium crowd will be a significan­t boost to his team, as they seek another crucial three points in the race for the Premier League prize.

As such, the Bluebirds are urging any supporters yet to purchase tickets to join in the history-making occasion and roar on their team.

Wolves and Cardiff are battling neck and neck up at the top of the Championsh­ip, each seeking to join the big time for next season.

If Cardiff win, and also take three points from their game in hand, they would have the same number of points as leaders Wolves.

The huge stakes at such a critical stage of the season have engaged the South Wales public, who have been snapping up tickets in greater numbers than normal.

In Cardiff’s title-winning year under Malky Mackay, the best attendance was 26,588 for a 3-0 thumping of Nottingham Forest towards the end of the campaign. Tomorrow night’s gate will easily eclipse that.

Swansea City’s highest league attendance over the past four decades came when John Toshack was in charge and 24,115 watched the Vetch Field clash with Manchester United in January 1982.

Their biggest recorded gate at the Liberty Stadium is 20,972 for a 3-1 triumph over Jurgen Klopp’s Liverpool two years ago, when Andre Ayew scored twice.

Newport County and Wrexham have not had anything like the drawing power of the Bluebirds and Swans.

There have, of course, been bigger gates for games in Wales over the past 40-odd years, but not for bread-andbutter league fixtures.

Cardiff played Queens Park Rangers in front of 66,096 fans in a Millennium Stadium play-off final, while 55,419 turned up at the venue for a Swansea v Barnsley play-off.

More than 32,000 packed into Cardiff City Stadium earlier this year for the FA Cup clash with Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City, while Wales have regularly sold out games in the Welsh capital.

More football: Pages 46-49

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