Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The following Sunday, the stadium hosted its first ever club football match, a Serie A game between SS Lazio and Juventus FC, won by Juventus 1–0 with a goal from Pasquale Vivolo. [33] The next matchday, AS Roma debuted in the stadium, with a draw 0–0 against SPAL. [34] In 1954, Italy hosted the fifth Rugby Union European Cup.
The New AS Roma Stadium is a football stadium to be built in Rome, Italy for use by AS Roma, which is expected to succeed their current stadium, Stadio Olimpico, from 2027. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The 55,000-seat stadium is planned to be built in the Pietralata area, which is served by Roma Tiburtina for high-speed rail and Quintiliani on Line B on the ...
The new stadium, Stadio della Roma, will have a capacity of 52,500 spectators. [84] On 2 February 2017, the Region of Lazio and the mayor of Rome rejected the proposal to build a new stadium. [85] However, it was later approved on 24 February after final review of the stadium's design adjustments. [86]
AS Roma and Lazio: 1937: 1953, 1987–1990: UEFA Category 4 stadium: 3: Stadio San Nicola: 58,270: Bari ... Stadium Capacity Location Region Home Team Construction ...
Since the inception of the Serie A, Italy's highest level of association football annual league tournament, 84 football stadiums have been used to host matches. The inaugural round of Serie A matches took place on 6 October 1929 with 18 clubs hosting the opening fixtures.
Early on, the Fascist movement saw the potential of using sports to promote its political and economic ideologies. [5] Immediately after the March on Rome, the Fascist regime invested in large-scale sports arenas, buildings, and institutions, such as the Stadio dei Marmi, which made sports accessible to all classes of society. [6]
The Stadio Flaminio is a stadium in Rome. It lies along the Via Flaminia, three kilometres northwest of the city centre, 300 metres away from the Parco di Villa Glori.. The interior spaces include a covered swimming pool, rooms for fencing, amateur wrestling, weightlifting, boxing and gymnastics.
Stadium Image Club Location Opened Closed Current capacity † Refs Alfredo di Stéfano: Real Madrid: Madrid: 2006: 6,000 [2]Altabix: Elche: Elche: 1926: 1976: 15,000