Vicente Calderón Stadium
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Vicente Calderón | |
|---|---|
| Full name | Estadio Vicente Calderón |
| Location | Madrid, Spain |
| Built | 1966 |
| Opened | 2 October 1966 |
| Renovated | 1982 (FIFA World Cup) |
| Owner | Atlético Madrid |
| Operator | Atlético Madrid |
| Surface | Grass |
| Architect | Javier Barroso Miguel Ángel García Lomas |
| Former names | Estadio Manzanares (1966-1971) |
| Tenants |
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| Capacity |
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| Field dimensions |
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The Vicente Calderón Stadium (Spanish: Estadio Vicente Calderón) in Madrid, is the home stadium of Atlético Madrid football club. It is located in the heart of Madrid by the banks of the River Manzanares. The stadium was originally called Estadio Manzanares, but was later changed to Vicente Calderón after the famous Atlético club president.
The Vicente Calderón Stadium regularly holds international matches of the Spanish national team. It has a capacity of 54,851 and was given the UEFA 5 star stadium rating in 2003. The Vicente Calderón is also used as a concert venue.
Atlético could be moving away from the Vicente Calderón to a renovated stadium, La Peineta, in 2012. [1]
[edit] World Cup 1982 matches at the Calderón
The stadium hosted three games in the 1982 FIFA World Cup (All Round 2, Group D):
- France 1 - Austria 0
- Austria 2 - Northern Ireland 2
- Northern Ireland 1 - France 4
[edit] External links
- Club Atlético de Madrid - stadium page on official website
- Vicente Calderón Stadium at Google Maps
- Vicente Calderon Stadium photos (ENG)

