Estadio Centenario

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Estadio Centenario
Location Montevideo, Flag of Uruguay Uruguay
Built 1930
Opened 1930
Owner Municipal
Tenants Uruguay national football team
Capacity 100,000 (previous)
65,000 to 76,000 (current)

Estadio Centenario is a stadium in Montevideo, Uruguay, used primarily for football. Built with a capacity of 100,000 not only to host several matches in the inaugural 1930 FIFA World Cup, including the final which was won by the host team, but also as a celebration of Uruguay's 100 years of its first constitution. It is listed by FIFA as one of the world's classic football venues along with Maracanã, Wembley Stadium, San Siro, and Santiago Bernabéu Stadium.[citation needed] The ground now has a capacity of over 76,000, with 65,000 seats.

The Uruguay national football team is always a threat when playing in their home stadium, consistently beating top teams. Even the top ranked Brazil national football team has only managed 2 wins in 20 opportunities, neither in official matches. Because of the Centenario's location next to other smaller stadiums, when Central Español and Miramar Misiones play home matches simultaneously, one can watch all three games from the top of the Amsterdam stand.[1]


[edit] The 1930 FIFA World Cup

Main article: 1930 FIFA World Cup

During the 1930 FIFA World Cup, the stadium hosted 10 matches (7 group matches, 2 semi-finals & final match):

Group C match

July 18, 1930
14:30
Flag of Uruguay Uruguay 1–0 Flag of Peru Peru Montevideo, Centenario
Attendance: +85000
Referee: Jean Langenus (Belgium)
Héctor Castro 65'  

Group A match

July 19, 1930
12:50
Flag of France France 0–1 Flag of Chile Chile Montevideo, Centenario
Attendance: ~50000
Referee: Tejada (Uruguay)
  Guillermo Subiabre Astorga 67'

Group A match

July 19, 1930
15:00
Flag of Mexico Mexico 3–6 Flag of Argentina Argentina Montevideo, Centenario
Attendance: ~50000
Referee: Saucedo (Bolivia)
Manuel Rosas Sánchez 42' pen, 65'
Roberto Gayón Marquéz 75'
Guillermo Stábile 8', 17', 80'
Adolfo Bernabé Zumelzú 12', 55'
Francisco Antonio Varallo 53'

Group B match

July 20, 1930
13:00
Flag of Brazil Brazil 4–0 Flag of Bolivia Bolivia Montevideo, Centenario
Attendance: ~12000
Referee: Balway (France)
Moderato Visintainer 37', 73'
João Coelho Neto "Preguinho" 67', 83'
 

Group D match

July 20, 1930
15:00
Flag of Paraguay Paraguay 1–0 Flag of Belgium Belgium Montevideo, Centenario
Attendance: ~12000
Referee: Vallarino (Uruguay)
Delfín Benítez Cáceres 40'  

Group C match

July 21, 1930
14:50
Flag of Uruguay Uruguay 4–0 Flag of Romania Romania Montevideo, Centenario
Attendance: ~80000
Referee: Rege (Brazil)
Pablo Dorado 7'
Héctor Pedro Scarone 28'
Juan Pelegrino Anselmo 31'
José Pédro Cea 80
 

Group A match

July 22, 1930
14:45
Flag of Argentina Argentina 3–1 Flag of Chile Chile Montevideo, Centenario
Attendance: ~35000
Referee: Jean Langenus (Belgium)
Guillermo Stábile 12', 13'
Marino Evaristo 51'
Guillermo Arellano Moraga 15'

Semi-final match

July 26, 1930
14:45
Flag of Argentina Argentina 6–1 Flag of the United States USA Montevideo, Centenario
Attendance: +60000
Referee: Jean Langenus (Belgium)
Luis Monti 20'
Alejandro Scopelli Casanova 56'
Guillermo Stábile 69', 87'
Carlos Desiderio Peucelle 80', 85'
James Brown 89'

Semi-final match

July 27, 1930
14:45
Flag of Uruguay Uruguay 6–1 Flag of Yugoslavia Yugoslavia Montevideo, Centenario
Attendance: +80000
Referee: Rege (Brazil)
José Pédro Cea 19', 66', 72'
Juan Pelegrino Anselmo 21', 23'
Victoriano Santos Iriarte 63'
Djordje Vujadinović 4'

Final match

July 30, 1930
15:30
Flag of Uruguay Uruguay 4–2 Flag of Argentina Argentina Montevideo, Centenario
Attendance: ~80000
Referee: Jean Langenus (Belgium)
Pablo Dorado 12'
José Pédro Cea 58'
Victoriano Santos Iriarte 68'
Héctor Castro 89'
Carlos Desiderio Peucelle 20'
Guillermo Stábile 38'

[edit] References

Coordinates: 34°53′40.38″S, 56°9′10.08″W

Preceded by
none
FIFA World Cup
Final Venue

1930
Succeeded by
Stadio del PNF
Rome
Preceded by
Estadio Nacional de Chile
Santiago
South American Championship
Final Venue

1942
Succeeded by
Estadio Nacional de Chile
Santiago
Preceded by
Estadio Monumental Isidro Romero Carbo
Guayaquil
Copa América
Final Venue

1995
Succeeded by
Estadio Hernando Siles
La Paz