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  2. Santiago Bernabéu Stadium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santiago_Bernabéu_Stadium

    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.

  3. List of stadiums in Spain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_stadiums_in_Spain

    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

  4. List of La Liga stadiums - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_La_Liga_stadiums

    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 ...

  5. Estadio Chamartín - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Estadio_Chamartín

    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]

  6. Lewandowski and Yamal spoil Mbappé’s first clasico as ...

    www.aol.com/lewandowski-yamal-spoil-mbapp-first...

    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 ...

  7. Nuevo Estadio Chamartín - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/?title=Nuevo_Estadio_Chamartín...

    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Nuevo_Estadio_Chamartín&oldid=1011063962"

  8. 1974–75 Real Madrid CF season - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1974–75_Real_Madrid_CF...

    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 ...

  9. Santiago Bernabéu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santiago_Bernabéu

    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