Английская Википедия:Estadio Presidente Juan Domingo Perón

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Infobox venue The Estadio Presidente Juan Domingo Perón, popularly known as El Cilindro de Avellaneda (English: The Cylinder of Avellaneda), is an association football stadium located in the Avellaneda district of Greater Buenos Aires, Argentina. The stadium is the home venue of Racing Club.[1]

The stadium was designed by German engineers, some of them with experience in the reconstruction of cities destroyed in the World War II.[2] It has a capacity of 41,900 spectators.

Racing venue was the first stadium to have roof grandstands, after refurbishment made in the 1990s.[3]

The "Presidente Perón" replaced Estadio Alsina y Colón, which was closed in 1947.

History

The first project to build this stadium started in 1944, with the purpose of improving club's facilities. A special committee was created to acquire 30,000 m² that were owned by railway companies (British-owned by then). It is clear that President of Argentina, Juan Domingo Perón (well-known Racing Club supporter) suggested to build the stadium in Retiro neighborhood, near de Buenos Aires downtown. Nevertheless, the club executives decided to stay in Avellaneda to keep their place of belonging.[4]

Works began in 1946. The National Government lent Racing Club the money to finance the construction. As gratitude for that, the club executives named Juan Perón honorary president of Racing and his wife Eva Perón honorary member, among some ministers of his cabinet. President of Racing Club, Carlos Pailot, stated that the stadium would be named "Presidente Juan D. Perón" in his honor.

Файл:Estadio Presidente Perón.jpg
The stadium in 1950

On 1 December 1946, Racing played its last match in the old stadium, vs Rosario Central (a 4–6 defeat). The old stadium was demolished while the new venue was inaugurated on 3 September 1950, when Racing beat Vélez Sársfield 1–0. Llamil Simes scored the only goal.

In 1951 the Presidente Perón stadium was one of the venues for the Pan American Games held in Argentina that year. All the football matches of the competition were held there. In 1966, the club placed light towers. To celebrate that, the club invited FC Bayern Munich (that brought Argentina some of its most notable players such as Franz Beckenbauer, Gerd Muller and Sepp Maier) to play a match in the stadium, which was won by Racing 3–2.[5]

At international club level, Racing Club played significant matches in Estadio Presidente Perón, such as the 1967 Copa Libertadores final v Club Nacional de Football and the 1967 Intercontinental Cup final v European champion Celtic FC. At domestic competitions level, Racing was the venue for the 1969 Argentine Primera División final between Chacarita Juniors and River Plate, and the 1976 final where Boca Juniors beat River Plate 1–0 with the "ghost goal" by Rubén Suñé.[6]

In 1993, the Municipality of Avellaneda gave its approval to change the name of Cuyo, one of the streets that surround the stadium. The name changed to Oreste Corbatta to honour a player who is regarded as the greatest idol in the history of Racing.[7][8] It also resembles an American cookie cutter stadium from the 60s and 70s

Файл:Panoramica Cilindro.jpg
Panoramic view of the stadium during a football match, August 2019

Concerts

The stadium has hosted some national and international concerts since the late 1990s. Some of the artists to have played at the stadium are Patricio Rey y sus Redonditos de Ricota (1998, with a record attendance of 45,000),[9][10] Rammstein (on 27 November 2010, att: 40,000),[11] Judas Priest and Whitesnake together (18 Sep 2011, att: 35,000),[12] Viejas Locas (14 Jul 2012),[13] and La Renga (6 Jan 2024).[9]

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:Commons category

Шаблон:Racing Club de Avellaneda Шаблон:Primera División de Argentina venues Шаблон:Coord

  1. Шаблон:Cite web
  2. EL CILINDRO DE AVELLANEDA CUMPLE 65 AÑOS Шаблон:In lang. DXTV. 3 Sep 2015 (archived).
  3. Estadio en la página oficial del club
  4. ¿QUÉ SON 66 AÑOS, CILINDRO? on Racing Club website
  5. Cilindo iluminado, El Gráfico,
  6. El de Suñé a River, un gol "fantasma" by Pablo Lisotto on La Nación, 22 Dec 2016
  7. Corbatta, el dueño de la raya by Damián Didonato on Un Caño
  8. https://racinghoy.com/efemerides-a-66-anos-del-debut-de-oreste-corbatta/ A 66 años del debut de Oreste Corbatta
  9. 9,0 9,1 Las bandas que tocaron en el estadio de Racing on Avellaneda Hoy, 6 Jan 2024
  10. Los Redondos se mostraron en Racing on La Nación, 19 Dec 1998
  11. Y Rammstein incendió Racing on Diario 26
  12. Cobertura: Judas Priest & Whitesnake by Kurt de So-Metal-It-Hurts on Metal Argento
  13. Viejas Locas copó Racing, El Día, 15 Jul 2012