Estádio Algarve

The Estádio Algarve is an association football stadium located between Faro and Loulé, in Portugal. It was the former home of Farense and Louletano, having received some Olhanense and Portimonense matches during their respective stadiums' works of renovation. From 2004 to 2013, Louletano shared the stadium with Sporting Clube Farense.

Estádio Algarve
LocationSão João da Venda, Algarve, Portugal
Capacity30,305
SurfaceGrass
ScoreboardPhilips
Construction
Opened2004
ArchitectPopulous[1]
(formerly HOK Sport Venue Event)
Tenants
Farense (formerly)
Louletano (formerly)
Gibraltar national football team (2013-2017) (temporary)
Portugal national football team (selected matches)
Algarve United (disbanded)

The Estádio Algarve was also the temporary home ground of the Gibraltar national football team[2] and it also hosts the final match of the Algarve Cup, a major annual international tournament in women's football.

The stadium has a capacity of 30,305 and was built for the Euro 2004 tournament. Aside from football, it has also hosted music festivals and concerts, and was temporarily converted into a super special stage during the 2007 Rally Portugal (part of the 2007 World Rally Championship season).

The Estádio Algarve was designed in the summer of 2000 to UEFA and FIFA standards by Populous. The design team included WS Atkins engineers and local partners including Marobal. The design is regional in nature, alluding to the maritime traditions of Portugal and harmonising with the distinctive local landscape. The stadium is considered a model small/regional flexible use stadium for European football and cultural events, being one of the most used stadiums in Portugal, compared to others used for matches in the main Portuguese Football League.

The stadium hosted the inaugural Algarve Challenge Cup tournament on 22 and 24 July 2008 that saw Cardiff City, Celtic, Middlesbrough, and Vitória de Guimarães in action. Cardiff City were the eventual winners of the tournament with victories over Celtic and Vitória.

Euro 2004 Matches

DateResultRound
12 June 2004 Spain1–0 RussiaGroup A
20 June 2004 Russia2–1 GreeceGroup A
26 June 2004 Sweden0–0 (4–5 p) NetherlandsQuarter-finals

Portugal national football team

The following national team matches were held in the stadium.[3]

#DateScoreOpponentCompetition
1.18 February 20041–1 EnglandFriendly
2.3 September 20056–0 Luxembourg2006 World Cup qualification
3.11 February 20091–0 FinlandFriendly
4.10 August 20115–0 LuxembourgFriendly
5.15 August 20122–0 PanamaFriendly
6.14 August 20131–1 NetherlandsFriendly
7.14 November 20141–0 ArmeniaEuro 2016 qualifying
8.13 November 20164–1 Latvia2018 World Cup qualification
9.6 September 20181–1 CroatiaFriendly

Gibraltar national football team

The following national team matches were held in the stadium.[4]

#DateScoreOpponentCompetition
1.19 November 20130–0 SlovakiaFriendly
2.4 June 20141–0 MaltaFriendly
3.7 September 20140–7 PolandUEFA Euro 2016 Qualifier
4.14 October 20140–3 GeorgiaUEFA Euro 2016 Qualifier
5.13 June 20150–7 GermanyUEFA Euro 2016 Qualifier
6.4 September 20150–4 Republic of IrelandUEFA Euro 2016 Qualifier
7.11 October 20150–6 ScotlandUEFA Euro 2016 Qualifier
8.6 September 20161–4 Greece2018 FIFA World Cup qualification
9.10 October 20160–6 Belgium2018 FIFA World Cup qualification
10.9 June 20171–2 Cyprus2018 FIFA World Cup qualification
11.3 September 20170–4 Bosnia and Herzegovina2018 FIFA World Cup qualification
12.7 October 20170–6 Estonia2018 FIFA World Cup qualification
gollark: also a headphone jack.
gollark: My cheap 1.5-year-or-so-old *£80* phone has USB-C.
gollark: The only port on iPhones is the stupid proprietary "Lightning" connector.
gollark: Oh yes, terrible IO.
gollark: Also, the whole thing with glass backs and the screen design (digitizer and glass fused to LCD or something) is actively antidurability.

See also

References

  1. Estádio Algarve Archived 2011-10-08 at the Wayback Machine architect: Populous
  2. "Gibraltar: Can Uefa's newest football nation rock Europe?". BBC. Retrieved 19 November 2013.
  3. "Seleção A". Portuguese Football Federation. Retrieved 22 March 2017.
  4. "Gibraltar - List of International Matches". RSSSF. Retrieved 22 March 2017.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.