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Stade de Genève: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 46°10′40.25″N 6°7′38.75″E / 46.1778472°N 6.1274306°E / 46.1778472; 6.1274306
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==Overview==
==Overview==
[[File:Stade de Genève 57.JPG|250px|thumb|Portugal vs Croatia, 10 June 2013]]
[[File:Stade de Genève 57.JPG|250px|thumb|Portugal vs Croatia, 10 June 2013]]
The stadium was completed in 2003 by [[Implenia|Zschokke Construction S.A.]]<ref>{{citation|url=http://en.structurae.de/structures/data/index.cfm?ID=s0008232|title=Geneva Stadium|work=Structurae|accessdate=2012-11-30}}</ref> after nearly three years of construction. Normally the home venue of Geneva's [[Servette FC]], a Swiss [[football (soccer)|football]] team, the stadium hosted [[friendly match|international friendlies]] between [[Argentina national football team|Argentina]] and [[England national football team|England]] on 12 November 2005, which England won [[Argentina v England (2005)|3-2]] and between New Zealand and Brazil on 4 June 2006, which Brazil won 4-0. The venue played host to three group-stage matches for [[UEFA Euro 2008 Group A|Group A]] during [[UEFA Euro 2008]].{{fact}}
The stadium was completed in 2003 by [[Implenia|Zschokke Construction S.A.]]<ref>{{citation|url=http://en.structurae.de/structures/data/index.cfm?ID=s0008232|title=Geneva Stadium|work=Structurae|accessdate=2012-11-30}}</ref> after nearly three years of construction. Normally the home venue of Geneva's [[Servette FC]], a Swiss [[football (soccer)|football]] team, the stadium hosted [[friendly match|international friendlies]] between [[Argentina national football team|Argentina]] and [[England national football team|England]] on 12 November 2005, which England won [[Argentina v England (2005)|3-2]] and between New Zealand and Brazil on 4 June 2006, which Brazil won 4-0. The venue played host to three group-stage matches for [[UEFA Euro 2008 Group A|Group A]] during [[UEFA Euro 2008]].{{fact|date=April 2020}}


A memorable match [[UEFA Euro 2008 Group A#Turkey vs Czech Republic|Turkey-Czech Republic]] was played in this stadium. The stadium was also used for [[rugby union]], with a [[2006-07 Heineken Cup]] clash between [[CS Bourgoin-Jallieu|Bourgoin]] and [[Munster Rugby|Munster]] being moved from [[Stade Pierre Rajon|Bourgoin's home ground]].{{fact}}
A memorable match [[UEFA Euro 2008 Group A#Turkey vs Czech Republic|Turkey-Czech Republic]] was played in this stadium. The stadium was also used for [[rugby union]], with a [[2006-07 Heineken Cup]] clash between [[CS Bourgoin-Jallieu|Bourgoin]] and [[Munster Rugby|Munster]] being moved from [[Stade Pierre Rajon|Bourgoin's home ground]].{{fact|date=April 2020}}


In the summer of 2016 the stadium was equipped with heated hybrid turf, Mixto Hybrid Grass by Limonta Sport to cater the needs of football and rugby clubs of Servette.<ref>{{cite news|last1=Visentini|first1=Daniel|title=Le Stade de Genève dispose de la Rolls-Royce des pelouses|url=http://www.tdg.ch/sports/sfc/Le-Stade-de-Geneve-dispose-de-la-RollsRoyce-des-pelouses/story/15282147|accessdate=1 August 2016|publisher=Tribune de Genève|date=25 July 2016|language=fr}}</ref> Installation of the new turf prevented Servette FC from playing home on the first three rounds of the [[2016–17 Swiss Challenge League]].<ref>{{cite news|last1=Visentini|first1=Daniel|title=Braizat et la défaite: «Je n’en ai pas dormi pendant deux jours|url=http://www.tdg.ch/sports/sfc/braizat-defaite-dormi-deux-jours/story/14613572|accessdate=1 August 2016|publisher=Tribune de Genène|date=28 July 2016|language=fr}}</ref>
In the summer of 2016 the stadium was equipped with heated hybrid turf, Mixto Hybrid Grass by Limonta Sport to cater the needs of football and rugby clubs of Servette.<ref>{{cite news|last1=Visentini|first1=Daniel|title=Le Stade de Genève dispose de la Rolls-Royce des pelouses|url=http://www.tdg.ch/sports/sfc/Le-Stade-de-Geneve-dispose-de-la-RollsRoyce-des-pelouses/story/15282147|accessdate=1 August 2016|publisher=Tribune de Genève|date=25 July 2016|language=fr}}</ref> Installation of the new turf prevented Servette FC from playing home on the first three rounds of the [[2016–17 Swiss Challenge League]].<ref>{{cite news|last1=Visentini|first1=Daniel|title=Braizat et la défaite: «Je n’en ai pas dormi pendant deux jours|url=http://www.tdg.ch/sports/sfc/braizat-defaite-dormi-deux-jours/story/14613572|accessdate=1 August 2016|publisher=Tribune de Genène|date=28 July 2016|language=fr}}</ref>

Revision as of 18:53, 18 April 2020

Stade de Genève
Switzerland-Albania play in 2003 at the Stade de Genève
Map
Location16, Route des Jeunes,[1] Geneva, Switzerland
Coordinates46°10′40.25″N 6°7′38.75″E / 46.1778472°N 6.1274306°E / 46.1778472; 6.1274306
OwnerFondation du Stade de Genève
Capacity30,084
SurfaceMixto Hybrid Grass[2]
Construction
Built2001-2003
Opened30 April 2003
Construction costCHF 240 million (2003)[3]
General contractorZschokke Construction S.A.
Tenants
Servette FC

Stade de Genève, also called Stade de la Praille, is a stadium in Geneva. It has a capacity of 30,084.[4]

Overview

Portugal vs Croatia, 10 June 2013

The stadium was completed in 2003 by Zschokke Construction S.A.[5] after nearly three years of construction. Normally the home venue of Geneva's Servette FC, a Swiss football team, the stadium hosted international friendlies between Argentina and England on 12 November 2005, which England won 3-2 and between New Zealand and Brazil on 4 June 2006, which Brazil won 4-0. The venue played host to three group-stage matches for Group A during UEFA Euro 2008.[citation needed]

A memorable match Turkey-Czech Republic was played in this stadium. The stadium was also used for rugby union, with a 2006-07 Heineken Cup clash between Bourgoin and Munster being moved from Bourgoin's home ground.[citation needed]

In the summer of 2016 the stadium was equipped with heated hybrid turf, Mixto Hybrid Grass by Limonta Sport to cater the needs of football and rugby clubs of Servette.[6] Installation of the new turf prevented Servette FC from playing home on the first three rounds of the 2016–17 Swiss Challenge League.[7]

NLA Winter Classic

On 11 January 2014, the National League A played its second Winter Classic (the first one was held on 14 January 2007 at the Stade de Suisse, Wankdorf). The game featured Genève-Servette HC and Lausanne HC and was played in front of a sellout crowd of 29,400 (the capacity being reduced to 29,400 for security and visibility concerns).

Matches

2008 UEFA Euro 2008

The stadium was one of the venues for the 2008 UEFA Euro.

The following games were played at the stadium during the 2008 UEFA Euro:

Date Time (CEST) Team #1 Res. Team #2 Round Spectators
7 June 2008 20:45 Portugal Portugal 2–0 Turkey Turkey Group A 29,016
11 June 2008 18:00 Czech Republic Czech Republic 1–3 Portugal Portugal Group A 29,016
15 June 2008 20:45 Turkey Turkey 3–2 Czech Republic Czech Republic Group A 29,016

International matches

Date Result Competition
30 March 2003 Switzerland  1–2  Italy Friendly
11 June 2003 Switzerland  3–2  Albania UEFA Euro 2004 qualifying
20 August 2003 Switzerland  0–2  France Friendly
28 April 2004 Switzerland  2–1  Slovenia Friendly
12 November 2005 England  3–2  Argentina Friendly
16 November 2005 Italy  1–1  Ivory Coast Friendly
31 May 2006 Switzerland  1–1  Italy Friendly
4 June 2006 Brazil  4–0  New Zealand Friendly
7 June 2006 Spain  2–1  Croatia Friendly
2 September 2006 Austria  2–2  Costa Rica Friendly
6 September 2006 Switzerland  2–0  Costa Rica Friendly
22 August 2007 Switzerland  2–1  Netherlands Friendly
20 August 2008 Switzerland  4–1  Cyprus Friendly
11 February 2009 Switzerland  1–1  Bulgaria Friendly
1 April 2009 Switzerland  2–0  Moldova 2010 World Cup Qualification
14 November 2009 Switzerland  0–1  Norway Friendly
5 June 2010 Switzerland  1–1  Italy Friendly
17 November 2010 Switzerland  2–2  Ukraine Friendly
9 February 2011 Argentina  2–1  Portugal Friendly
10 August 2011 Ivory Coast  4–3  Israel Friendly
14 November 2012 Albania  0–0  Cameroon Friendly
21 March 2013 Italy  2–2  Brazil Friendly
8 June 2013 Switzerland  1–0  Cyprus 2014 World Cup Qualification
10 June 2013 Croatia  0–1  Portugal Friendly
10 September 2013 Spain  2–2  Chile Friendly
25 May 2014 Kosovo  1–3  Senegal Friendly
4 June 2014 Algeria  2–1  Romania Friendly
16 June 2015 Italy  0–1  Portugal Friendly
28 May 2016 Switzerland  1–2  Belgium Friendly
25 March 2017 Switzerland  1–0  Latvia 2018 World Cup Qualification
26 March 2018 Portugal  0–3  Netherlands Friendly
31 May 2018 Morocco  0–0  Ukraine Friendly
1 June 2018 Tunisia  2–2  Turkey Friendly
4 June 2018 Morocco  2–1  Slovakia Friendly
15 October 2019 Switzerland  2–0  Republic of Ireland UEFA Euro 2020 qualification
Stade de Genève

See also

References

  1. ^ http://www.stade.ch/
  2. ^ Visentini, Daniel (25 July 2016). "Le Stade de Genève dispose de la Rolls-Royce des pelouses" (in French). Tribune de Genève. Retrieved 1 August 2016.
  3. ^ Le Stade de Genève (PDF), Schneider Electric, retrieved 30 November 2012
  4. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 16 December 2013. Retrieved 16 December 2013.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. ^ "Geneva Stadium", Structurae, retrieved 30 November 2012
  6. ^ Visentini, Daniel (25 July 2016). "Le Stade de Genève dispose de la Rolls-Royce des pelouses" (in French). Tribune de Genève. Retrieved 1 August 2016.
  7. ^ Visentini, Daniel (28 July 2016). "Braizat et la défaite: «Je n'en ai pas dormi pendant deux jours" (in French). Tribune de Genène. Retrieved 1 August 2016.