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In December 2011, the newspaper ended its 13 year sponsorship, and the arena was renamed Manchester Arena in January 2012. [12] In July 2013, the arena was renamed Phones 4u Arena after the mobile phone company Phones 4u, [13] but this deal ended in January 2015 after Phones 4u went out of business, renaming the arena back to Manchester Arena. [14]
Stadium Capacity Location Country Tenants Sport Image 1: Wembley Stadium: 90,000 [1]: London: England: England national football team: Association football, Rugby league, Rugby union, Gaelic Football & Hurling, American football, Boxing, Professional wrestling
Only stadiums with a capacity of 40,000 or more are included in this list. Stadiums that are defunct or closed, or those that no longer serve as competitive sports venues (such as Great Strahov Stadium , which was the largest in the world and held around 250,000 spectators), are not included.
Thompson–Boling Arena: 21,678 Knoxville, Tennessee United States SKA Arena: 21,542 Saint Petersburg Russia: Wells Fargo Center: 21,318 Philadelphia United States Tacoma Dome: 21,000 Tacoma, Washington United States: Manchester Arena: 21,000 [6] Manchester United Kingdom United Center: 20,917 Chicago United States Amerant Bank Arena: 20,737 ...
They are ordered by their seating capacity, that is the maximum number of spectators that the stadium can accommodate in seated areas. Football stadiums with a capacity of 40,000 or more are included. That is the minimum capacity required for a stadium to host FIFA World Cup finals matches. Note that most sports venues with a capacity of at ...
O2 Victoria Warehouse, Manchester – 3,500 Swansea Arena , Swansea – 3,500 The Halls Wolverhampton – 3,404 (Civic Hall); 1,289 (Wulfrun Hall); 550 (Slade Rooms)
City/town Arena Date built Date closed Capacity Image Aberdeen: BHGE Arena: 1985 2019 8,500 [46]: London: Harringay Arena: 1936 1958 13,500 London Arena: 1989
The inaugural round of Premier League matches took place on 15 August 1992 with eleven clubs hosting the opening fixtures. [1] Following the Hillsborough Disaster in 1989, the Taylor Report recommended the abolition of standing terraces by the start of the 1994–95 season, to be replaced by all-seater stadiums . [ 2 ]