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View of the Estadio Jalisco. Estadio Jalisco was the home ground of Guadalajara, one of the oldest football teams in Mexico, until 2010. It remains the home stadium of Atlas in the Liga MX and Club Universidad de Guadalajara in the Liga de Expansión MX. Several football preliminary matches took place for the 1968 Summer Olympics. [3]
Stadium Capacity City State Team(s) Surface Year Opened Owner League (tier) Image 1: Azteca: 81,070: Tlalpan: Mexico City: América, Cruz Azul, Mexico: Grass: 1966 ...
When the Charros de Jalisco baseball club was established in 1946, the Estadio Municipal hosted the team's home games. The stadium could seat 15,000 spectators. [4] The stadium was demolished in 1950 to build Guadalajara's central bus station. [2] [5]
The Estadio Panamericano de Béisbol, formerly known as Estadio Telmex de Atletismo and popularly known as Estadio de Béisbol Charros de Jalisco, is a baseball and athletics stadium located in Zapopan, near Guadalajara, Mexico. It was built for the 2011 Pan American Games at substantial cost.
The University of Guadalajara has a large sports infrastructure for individual and group disciplines. The university is co-owner of the Jalisco Stadium and also holds a significant quantity of university teams and sports areas distributed across its campuses and high schools. Olympic Swimming Pool at the University Sports Complex
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
Wind measurement at the Olympic Stadium along with the 2,245 m (7,365 ft) altitude were factors in the number of world records set there. The International Association of Athletics Federations (then International Amateur Athletic Federation (IAAF)) has rules to where the maximum allowed wind speed is 2.0 m/s (4.5 mph). [ 20 ]
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