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The stadium's official name at the time was Estadio Real Madrid Club de Fútbol, although it continued to be known among fans as Nuevo Estadio Chamartín (English: New Chamartín Stadium) or simply Chamartín. The stadium had an initial capacity of 75,145 spectators, 27,645 of which had seats (7,125 covered) and 47,500 for standing fans.
n° Image Stadium Capacity City Autonomous community Team Inaugurated Notes 1: Vilatenim: 9,472: Figueres Catalonia UE Figueres: 1986 2: El Alcoraz: 9,100: Huesca Catalonia SD Huesca
El Alcoraz was the latest stadium to host its first La Liga match, ... Estadio de la Cerámica Formerly El Madrigal: ... Santiago de Compostela: 1993: 12,000 [72] San ...
Estadio Chamartín was a multi-use stadium in Madrid, Spain. It was initially used as the stadium of Real Madrid matches before the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium opened in 1947. The stadium held 22,500 people [1] and was built in 1924. The stadium was inaugurated on 17 May 1924, with a 3–2 victory for Real Madrid against Newcastle United. [2]
Robert Lewandowski scored twice and Lamine Yamal piled on to ruin Kylian Mbappé’s first clasico as Barcelona routed Real Madrid 4-0 on Saturday. The lopsided victory in Spain's capital ended ...
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The club clinched its 16th League title with a massive 12 points gap above runners-up Real Zaragoza catching the first spot early since round 6 of the tournament. After collapsing to the 8th place last season, changes came to the team in the summer: replacing interim coach Luis Molowny [1] arrived new head coach former Yugoslavia side manager Miljan Miljanić, [2] 1974 FIFA World Cup winner ...
Santiago Bernabéu may refer to: Santiago Bernabéu (footballer) (1895–1978), former Real Madrid footballer and president Santiago Bernabéu Stadium, the football stadium in Madrid of Real Madrid CF named after the above; Trofeo Santiago Bernabéu, a Spanish football summer trophy named after the above