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Estadio Ciudad de los Deportes (English: Sports City Stadium) is a 34,253-seat [2] multi-purpose stadium located in Ciudad de los Deportes, Mexico City. The facility is used for association football matches and for American football as well.
In recent years these two sports venues have hosted several important events. Estadio Ciudad de los Deportes was the home stadium of Cruz Azul, one of the most popular football clubs in Mexico, until its departure in 2018. [6] The stadium currently houses another professional football team, Atlante, since 2020. [7]
Rank Stadium Capacity City State Type Tenant Estimated Cost Status Inauguration 1: Nuevo Estadio Tigres: 65,000: San Nicolás de los Garza: Nuevo León: Football
They briefly left in 1996 for the Estadio Azul, where they played until 2018. The team returned to the Azteca in 2018, where they won their ninth league title in 2021. [112] The Estadio Azul, located in Mexico City's Colonia Nápoles, served as Cruz Azul's home from 1996 to 2018. Despite never winning a league title there, it was an iconic ...
The building that would replace the present Estadio Azul exists on paper, though it has yet to be started. It will have four levels of underground parking, (first to be constructed), and two levels for commercial enterprises, besides a ceiling that would cover the divided launching slips high and general generally low.
The Tazón México III was held on April 22, 2018, at 4:00 p.m. at the Estadio Azul in Mexico City, with a record attendance for the LFA of 15,000 fans present. Mexicas defeated Raptors 17–0 in a defensive game.
The second match was held in the Estadio Azul; the game ended in a 3–2 victory for Cruz Azul, where once again controversy occurred, when Cruz Azul scored its first goal that was a clear offside. Cruz Azul advanced and eventually made it to the final, which they lost to Monterrey. And so it came to an end, with Puebla having qualified to 2 ...
In the fifties, Necaxa were tenants and played in the Federal District of Mexico City in present-day Estadio Azul (1950–55). In the late sixties, Necaxa played football in Estadio Azteca in Mexico City. A modern lighting system in Estadio Azteca was inaugurated on 5 June 1966 with the first night game between Valencia CF and Necaxa.