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  2. Rudolf-Kalweit-Stadion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rudolf-Kalweit-Stadion

    During the Second World War, the stadium was hit by three aerial bombs and was therefore unavailable for Arminia in the early post-war days. [2] In 2005, the stadium was renamed to its current name, in honour of long-term Arminia member Rudolf Kalweit. [2] With over 8,000 spectators, Germany's home game against the Netherlands at the stadium in ...

  3. Aggborough Stadium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aggborough_Stadium

    In 1935 a new 460-seat grandstand was built, and by World War II covered areas had been created on the east and southern sides of the ground. [1] After the war the running track was replaced by a cycle track. On 27 November 1948, the ground's record attendance of 9,155 was set for an FA Cup first round replay against Hereford United.

  4. Kredmash Stadium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kredmash_Stadium

    In 1960 Stadium was transferred to the Kremenchuk plant of road machinery (Kredmash). It was renamed into Dnipro in honor of the newly created football club Dnipro who that year won the Poltava Oblast Cup. In 2013 the city of Kremenchuk became owner of the stadium. On 4 April 2017 the city-owned football club Kremin became operator of the ...

  5. David Booth Kansas Memorial Stadium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Booth_Kansas...

    The stadium is at the center of all seven war memorials—adjacent to the stadium, further up the hill is a Korean War memorial honoring Kansas students who served, just a few hundred feet south of the stadium stands the University of Kansas World War II Memorial, the Kansas Memorial Campanile and Carillon, [4] the University of Kansas Vietnam ...

  6. Stagg Field - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stagg_Field

    The University of Chicago discontinued its football program after 1939 and left the Big Ten Conference in 1946. The stadium was demolished in 1957, [6] and much of the stadium site was used as the site of Regenstein Library. Stagg Field (then called Marshall Field) c.1900 before the construction of the permanent stadium seating.

  7. History of Aston Villa F.C. (1874–1961) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Aston_Villa_F.C...

    For the remainder of the inter-war years though, Villa were on a slow decline that would lead to them being relegated to the Second Division in 1936 for the first time in their history. They returned to the top-tier of English football by the outbreak of the Second World War. As with many clubs, the war brought much change to Villa Park and ...

  8. Philips Stadion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philips_Stadion

    After completion, the capacity rose to 18,000. During World War II, the ground was claimed by German occupants and used for military purposes. The final days of World War II witnessed great destruction in the city of Eindhoven and also to the stadium itself. Repairs were duly made. [13] René van de Kerkhof scores for PSV in 1979. The height ...

  9. Deutsches Stadion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deutsches_Stadion

    Adolf Hitler and Albert Speer visiting a test construction site near Nuremberg The party rally grounds in the year 1940, the Deutsches Stadion in the centre, left.. According to Speer himself, it was inspired not by the Circus Maximus in Rome but by the Panathenaic Stadium of Athens, which had impressed him greatly when he had visited it in 1935. [1]