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The 20,000-capacity New Clark City Athletics Stadium. The 20,000-capacity Philippine Sports Stadium in Ciudad de Victoria. The 12,873-capacity Rizal Memorial Stadium, which opened in 1934, is the home of the Philippines national football team. The 6,000-capacity stadium at the Cauayan City Sports Complex. The 2,000-capacity McKinley Hill Stadium. #
The City of Imus Grandstand and Track Oval (CIGTO) is a multi-purpose stadium, used mostly for football and athletics, in Imus, Cavite, Philippines. It was inaugurated on October 12, 2018 [1] [2] and is situated beside the Ospital ng Imus. [3] The stadium was among the venues for men's football at the 2019 Southeast Asian Games. [4]
Since the first season of the Philippines Football League, league matches have been played in 11 stadiums from as far north as Bantay in Ilocos Sur and as far south as Tagum in Davao del Norte. While matches of the original United Football League were only played in Metro Manila due to the status of the league, the establishment of the PFL in ...
[2] [9] The facility will host a cube scoreboard. [10] The King Dome will be part of the Kingdom Global City Commercial Complex, a mixed-used development registered as a Tourism Enterprise Zone (TEZ). [6] The complex will house a condominium, a hotel, a museum, a hangar, a water park, a commercial center, and an administration complex. [1]
Arena City Capacity Year opened Remarks SM Mall of Asia Arena: Pasay: 20,000 2012 [1]: Part of the SM Mall of Asia Complex. Hosted the majority of the games in the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship and 2023 FIBA Basketball World Cup as one of the three venues in the Philippines.
The Joaquin F. Enriquez Memorial Stadium is a multi-use stadium located inside the Joaquin F. Enriquez Memorial Sports Complex in Zamboanga City, Philippines. The stadium has the capacity of 10,000 people. [2] Construction of the sports complex started November 1991 and was completed in time for the 1992 Palarong Pambansa.
The Philippines hosted the 2013 FIBA Asia Championship on August 1–11, 2013. The SM Mall of Asia Arena served as the main venue with the Ninoy Aquino Stadium as the second venue for the tournament. It recorded an attendance of 19,989 during the final game between the host Philippines and Iran. [34]
The Biñan Football Stadium is a track and field and football venue in Biñan, Laguna, Philippines.. On October 28, 2015, the Biñan city government and the Philippine Football Federation signed a memorandum of understanding agreeing that the stadium shall be the home stadium of the Philippines women's national football team as well as the national youth teams at least until 2019. [2]