One of the first significant events taking place was the Westmorland Cup; this was a competition for hurdlers from the Stanley track with the winner taking part in Northern Zone final. The first two in turn would then participate in the Champion Hurdle (or the
Grand National as it is known today) at
White City in London against the Southern zone qualifiers. The first season of racing ended in October 1927 and the track went into the winter break with plans to reopen during Easter 1928. However, during the break the GRA sold the stadium to the Electric Hare Company. The directors were Jimmy Shand, Tom Wilson and John Bilsland and they moved their entire greyhound operation from the
Southend Kursaal in
Southend-on-Sea (greyhounds included) by train to take over Stanley after leaving Southend due to high rent demands. Speedway in Liverpool began in the summer of 1928, when a track was constructed inside the greyhound track. The sport which had recently been introduced to the United Kingdom from Australia, attracted an audience to the first practice on 21 August 1928, with a full race meeting held a few days later on 25 August. The Stanley track boomed resulting in the syndicate taking control of another track in Liverpool called Seaforth which they planned to open in the near future. Wilson opted out of the company and his shares were purchased by the other two. Affiliation to a governing body came in the form of the British Greyhound Tracks Control Society (BGTCS); this organisation was much smaller than the
National Greyhound Racing Society (NGRS). By 1930 Bilsland bought out Shand for £400,000 leaving the Electric Hare Company under the control of Bilsland. With the money gained from the buyout Shand had plans of a grand nature, a super track just one mile from Stanley and it would be called
White City Stadium (Liverpool) and it was opened in 1932. Seaforth Stadium became the fourth Liverpool greyhound stadium when it was opened by Bilsland on 25 February 1933. The decision to open Seaforth by the Electric Hare Company Ltd would be an extremely successful one because despite its location away from the centre it would become the most frequented. Despite the fierce competition all four tracks actually made good profits, probably based on the fact that there was a very keen population willing to spend money on the racing. Stanley suffered legal problems just like Breck Park due to the totalisator and gambling issues that ended up in court. The
Liverpool Stanley rugby league club arrived in 1934 and the venue was also used a second time for speedway as the
Liverpool Merseysiders rode there from 1936 to 1937. The war arrived and severely disrupted racing during the duration. The Stanley Greyhound Track also hosted a World featherweight Title fight between Liverpool boxer
Nel Tarleton when he challenged
Freddie Miller for the NBA and The
Ring world title on 12th June 1935. == Post War history ==