Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Camp Nou (Catalan pronunciation: [ˌkamˈnɔw]), meaning New Field and often referred to in English as the Nou Camp, is a stadium in Barcelona and the home of La Liga club Barcelona since its opening in 1957.
The Estadi Municipal de Reus, also known as Estadi Camp Nou Municipal, is a multi-use stadium located in Reus, Catalonia, Spain. It is currently used for football matches and home games of the Barcelona Dragons in the European League of Football .
It is used mostly for football matches and is the home stadium of Barcelona since the 2023–24 season, due to the renovation of their regular ground, the Camp Nou. The stadium is named after Lluís Companys, the first minister of the Catalonia autonomous region during the Spanish Civil War.
n° Image Stadium Capacity City Autonomous community Team Inaugurated Notes 1: Camp Nou: 99,354 [1]: Barcelona Catalonia F.C. Barcelona: 1957: UEFA Category 4 stadium
Camp Nou: 100,000 (expected) Barcelona Spain: FC Barcelona, Spain national football team UEFA Euro 1964 venue, 1982 FIFA World Cup venue 1992 Summer Olympics venue 1989 and 1999 UEFA Champions League finals venue: 1957: 4 [2] [3] 2 Wembley Stadium: 90,652 [4] [5] London England: England national football team 2011, 2013 and 2024 UEFA Champions ...
The capital city of Madrid (Bernabéu and Metropolitano), Seville (Pizjuán, Villamarín and La Cartuja), Valencia (Mestalla and Orriols) and Barcelona (Camp Nou and Montjuïc), are the four Spanish cities that have hosted more than 15 national team matches, while also being home to the largest stadiums in the country.
Miniestadi (Catalan pronunciation: [ˈmini əsˈtaði], meaning in English "Mini Stadium"), officially named "Miniestadi", [1] was a football stadium in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The 15,276-seat stadium was situated across from Camp Nou, the home stadium of FC Barcelona.
The knockout stage of the 1998–99 UEFA Champions League began on 3 March 1999, and ended with the final at the Camp Nou in Barcelona, Spain, on 26 May 1999. The six group winners in the group stage, as well as the two best runners-up, competed in the knockout stage. For the quarter-finals, two group winners were randomly drawn against the two ...