Stade Olympique de Sousse

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Stade Olympique de Sousse
Cemetery of the invaders
Stade olympique de Sousse.jpg
LocationSousse, Tunisia
Coordinates35°49′24″N 10°36′46″E / 35.82333°N 10.61278°E / 35.82333; 10.61278Coordinates: 35°49′24″N 10°36′46″E / 35.82333°N 10.61278°E / 35.82333; 10.61278
OwnerGovernment of Tunisia
Capacity28,000[1]
Record attendance28,000
Field size105 m × 65 m
SurfaceGrass
Construction
Opened1973
Renovated1994
2019–2021
Expanded1999
Tenants
Étoile du Sahel

The Stade Olympique de Sousse is a multi-purpose stadium in Sousse, Tunisia. It is used by the football team Étoile du Sahel, and was used for the 2004 African Cup of Nations. The stadium holds 28,000 people. It hosts within it the meetings played by the football team of the city: Étoile sportive du Sahel (ESS).

It hosted 1977 FIFA U-20 World Cup, 1994 African Cup of Nations, 2001 Mediterranean Games and 2004 African Cup of Nations.

History[]

For many decades, Sousse footballers knew only the clay surfaces and knew the turf surfaces only when the stadium was inaugurated with an initial capacity of 10,000 places. It passes over the years to 15,000 seats and is then expanded again on the occasion of the 1994 African Cup of Nations with 6,000 additional seats to reach a capacity of 21,000 seats; A luminous panel is installed at the same time. The last expansion was carried out in 1999 to bring the capacity of the stadium to 28,000 seats for the 2001 Mediterranean Games, a reorganization of the gallery of honor was carried out, from a capacity of 70 to 217 places. The stadium has yet to be expanded to reach the capacity of 49,000 seats after the announcement the president of the club Moez Driss in May 2008.

The Olympic Stadium of Sousse also hosted some of the Libyan national team’s matches due to the Libyan war, such as Libya and Rwanda in the 2018 World Cup qualification.

Renovation[]

In November 2017, on a visit to the President of the Republic, Beji Caid Essebsi, to Sousse, he gave an indication of the beginning of the expansion of the stadium and thus in March 2019, the inauguration ceremony of the beginning of works of the Stadium was attended by the Minister of Youth and Sports, Sonia Ben Cheikh, in order to be able to accommodate 45,000 spectators instead of the current capacity.

The cost of completing the total works was estimated at 32 million dinars, including 4 million dinars as a contribution from the Municipality of Sousse and 2 million dinars from the contribution of the team and coastal and is expected to include the expansion of the stadium, which will extend for 27 months, especially covered runways and open runways in the east and north and south will also include works. The rehabilitation of the wardrooms, the rehabilitation of the health units for the public, the creation of 22 cells and the complete restoration of electricity networks.

Tunisia national football team[]

Sousse Stadium exterior.

The following national team matches were held in the stadium.

# Date Score Opponent Competition
1. 23 March 1983 1–0  Morocco Friendly
2. 2 January 1995 2–0  Egypt Friendly
3. 6 October 1996 2–0  Sierra Leone 1998 Africa Cup of Nations qualification
4. 2 May 1998 1–1  Georgia Friendly
5. 12 August 2009 0–0  Ivory Coast Friendly
6. 29 May 2011 3–0  Central African Republic Friendly
7. 3 June 2011 5–0  Chad 2012 Africa Cup of Nations qualification
8. 14 November 2012 1–2   Switzerland Friendly
9. 6 July 2013 0–1  Morocco 2014 African Nations Championship qualification

Major tournaments[]

1977 FIFA U-20 World Cup[]

Stade Olympique de Sousse served as a venue for the tournament. It hosted all the matches of Group C. The games were:

Date Time Team #1 Res. Team #2 Round
27 June 1977 12:00  Italy 1–1  Ivory Coast Group C
27 June 1977 16:00  Brazil 5–1  Iran Group C
30 June 1977 12:00  Iran 0–0  Italy Group C
30 June 1977 16:00  Ivory Coast 1–1  Brazil Group C
3 July 1977 12:00  Iran 3–0  Ivory Coast Group C
3 July 1977 16:00  Brazil 2–0  Italy Group C

1994 Africa Cup of Nations[]

Stade Olympique de Sousse served as a venue for the tournament. It hosted six matches of the group stage, and two matches of quarter-finals. The games were:

Date Team #1 Res. Team #2 Round Attendance
27 March 1994  Ivory Coast 4–0  Sierra Leone Group C 10,000
27 March 1994  Ghana 1–0  Guinea Group D 10,000
29 March 1994  Zambia 0–0  Sierra Leone Group C 6,000
29 March 1994  Senegal 2–1  Guinea Group D 6,000
31 March 1994  Zambia 1–0  Ivory Coast Group C 6,000
31 March 1994  Ghana 1–0  Senegal Group D 6,000
3 April 1994  Zambia 1–0  Senegal Quarter-finals 8,000
3 April 1994  Ghana 1–2  Ivory Coast Quarter-finals 8,000

2001 Mediterranean Games[]

Stade Olympique de Sousse served as a venue for the tournament. It hosted all the matches of Group B. The games were:

Date Team #1 Res. Team #2 Round
5 September 2001  Greece 1–2  Turkey Group B
9 September 2001  Turkey 1–1  Libya Group B
11 September 2001  Greece 1–0  Libya Group B

2004 Africa Cup of Nations[]

Stade Olympique de Sousse served as a venue for the tournament. It hosted four matches of the group stage, and one match of semi-finals. The games were:

Date Time Team #1 Res. Team #2 Round Attendance
25 January 2004 19:00  Cameroon 1–1  Algeria Group C 20,000
29 January 2004 19:00  Algeria 2–1  Egypt Group D 15,000
3 February 2004 14:00  Algeria 1–2  Zimbabwe Group C 10,000
4 February 2004 18:00  Morocco 1–1  South Africa Group D 6,000
11 February 2004 19:00  Morocco 4–0  Mali Semi-finals 15,000

References[]

  1. ^ "Stade Olympique de Sousse – StadiumDB.com".

External links[]

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