Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán Stadium

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Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán
Nervión
Estadio Ramon Sanchez Pizjuan, October 2015.jpg
UEFA
LocationSeville, Andalusia, Spain
Coordinates37°23′02″N 5°58′14″W / 37.3840°N 5.9705°W / 37.3840; -5.9705Coordinates: 37°23′02″N 5°58′14″W / 37.3840°N 5.9705°W / 37.3840; -5.9705
OwnerSevilla FC
OperatorSevilla FC
Capacity43,883[1]
Field size105 m × 68 m (344 ft × 223 ft)
SurfaceGrass
Construction
Built1955
Opened7 September 1958
Renovated1996, 2017
ArchitectJames Cox / Manuel Muñoz Monasterio
Tenants
Sevilla FC (1958–present)
Spain national football team (selected matches)

The Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán Stadium (Spanish: Estadio Ramón Sánchez-Pizjuán; [esˈtaðjo raˈmon ˈsantʃeθ piθˈxwan]) is a football stadium in Seville, Spain. It is the home stadium of Sevilla Fútbol Club, and is named after the club's former president, Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán.[2]

It was the venue for the 1986 European Cup Final between Steaua București and Barcelona and the 1982 World Cup semi-final game between West Germany and France.

With a capacity of 43,883 seats, Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán is the ninth-largest stadium in Spain and the third-largest in Andalusia.

Historical background[]

The President of Sevilla at the time, El Barón de Gracia Real, Juan Domínguez Osborne, had the responsibility to surround himself with a group of people who would help him succeed his future mandates. Within this group was Ramón Sánchez-Pizjuán himself and the effective Juan López García, who was presiding over the Seville club at a time when it had to overcome several important problems. Without a doubt, his main goal was achieved when he provided the club with land that would later be historic for the entity. Due to an urban imposition, Sevilla was forced to leave the ‘Campo de la Victoria’, after which the president, in an important management decision, acquired a plot of land from the real estate Nervión that was also owned by his friend Pablo Armero (Marqués del Nervión ). Juan Domínguez, knowing that the club was not in economic conditions to assume said acquisition, did not hesitate to pay out of his pocket. He would later recover the money thanks to the income that the Club earned after the celebration of the matches. From the outset, the Baron indicated to his board secretary Ramón Sánchez-Pizjuán that once the matches were over, field staff, players and coaching staff would be paid. Of the surplus, he took a certain percentage, leaving the same to reserve for unforeseen events that might have arisen. This way he reduced the debt, but slowly, when his term ended in 1932, Ramon Sanchez-Pizjuan felt that the payment strategy would not vary and that the amortization of the payments for the land and stadium would not vary one iota. Juan Domínguez married Doña María Manjón and the Domínguez Manjón marriage was so heavily influenced by Sevilla that when the Baron died prematurely at the age of 53, they considered the debt that the Club still owed them forgiven, with the argument that her husband would’ve wanted it that way. Another one of the challenges for Barón de Gracia Real was to get his club to play in the First Division. Luck was elusive and despite the fact that each year the team gained new and important players, the long-awaited promotion did not arrive until a season later. In the first directive he had various companions that included Luis Ibarra, Eladio Rodríguez de la Borbolla, M. Amores, Luís Nieves, Juan Reimana, Eduardo Silvestre and Federico Maquedano who acted as treasurer.

During his time as president of Sevilla, he had numerous directors on his staff. Bernardo de los Ríos, Armando Soto el Illana, José Luís Isern Rivera, Nicolás Carretero, Joaquín García de Tejada, Manuel Gayan, José Luís Buiza, Federico Flores, José Manuel Puelles de los Santos, Ramón López Romero and mainly Ramón Sánchez-Pizjuán, the only one that missed the season 1928–1929, during a time in which the once great president of Seville, held the position of President of the South Regional Federation. Eugenio Eizaguirre Pozzi, Francisco Toledo, Álvarez Rementería, Juan López García (Juanito Balompedico) Manuel Ríos Sarmiento, Carlos Piñar and Pickman, Antonio Calderón Hernández, Francisco Cárdenas, Antonio Alonso, Eduardo de la Matta, José Romero and even the incombustible Antonio Sánchez Ramos, the popular "uncle of the cigar". During his tenure, players such as: Guillermo Campanal, Ventolrá, Padrón, Deva, Abad, Adelantado, Arroyo, the Canarian Castro, Gual or the Huelva-born Bracero were signed. The Barón left a long descendant, almost all of them lived in the city and maintained a loyalty to the colors that their ancestors defended. A few years later his stepbrother D. Jerónimo Domínguez y Pérez de Vargas (Marqués de Contadero) also became president of Sevilla. After the death of Ramón Sánchez-Pizjuán, who purchased the currently-rented land for the future stadium in 1937, it was his successor Ramón de Carranza, who laid the first stone of the same on December 2, 1956, replacing the ancient Nervión Stadium.

It was inaugurated on September 7, 1958, with a friendly match Sevilla – Jaén (3-3). However, it was not until 1974, when Eugenio Montes Cabeza was president, that the works were concluded, reaching its maximum historical capacity with more than 77,000 spectators.

Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán was opened in 1958 as an all-stand stadium with a capacity of 70,329 spectators, replacing the Estadio de Nervión. Its capacity was reduced to 68,110 for the 1982 FIFA World Cup. It was further reduced to its current capacity of 42,714 seats when it was refurbished and transformed into an all-seater stadium during the mid-1990s.

The stadium is nicknamed "La Bombonera" (pronounced [la βomboˈneɾa]; more commonly used to refer to Estadio Alberto J. Armando, the home stadium of Boca Juniors) or "La Bombonera de Nervión" [la βomboˈneɾa ðe neɾˈβjon] due to the Nervión neighbourhood where the stadium is situated.

This stadium contains a singular legend: the Spanish national team has never lost a game against an international team in this stadium. In European competition, Sevilla has lost only seven times at home; to AZ Alkmaar in the 2006–07 UEFA Cup, to CSKA Moscow in the 2009–10 UEFA Champions League, to Real Betis in the 2013–14 UEFA Europa League , to Manchester City in the 2015–16 UEFA Champions League and to Bayern Munich in the 2017–18 UEFA Champions League. Also against Chelsea and Borussia Dortmund in the 2020-21 UEFA Champions League

In May 2018, the club announced launching an expansion project for the stadium that will eventually increase its seating capacity up to 47,000.[3]

1982 FIFA World Cup[]

The stadium was one of the venues of the 1982 FIFA World Cup, and held the following matches:

Date Team #1 Res. Team #2 Round Attendance
14 June 1982  Brazil 2–1  Soviet Union Group stage 68,000
8 July 1982  West Germany 3–3 (5–4 p)  France Semi-finals 70,000

Gallery[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Sevilla Fútbol Club - La entidad". Sevilla FC. Retrieved 10 April 2016.
  2. ^ "Ten things you may not know about the Ramón Sánchez-Pizjuán". La Liga. 21 July 2015. Retrieved 28 February 2021.
  3. ^ "EXPANSION OF THE EAST STAND NOW UNDERWAY | Sevilla F.C." www.sevillafc.es.

External links[]

Preceded by European Cup
Final venue

1986
Succeeded by
Preceded by UEFA Europa League
Final venue

2022
Succeeded by
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