Stade Vélodrome

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Stade Vélodrome
Stade Vélodrome.png
Stade Vélodrome (20150405).jpg
Full nameStade Vélodrome
Location3, Boulevard Michelet
13008 Marseille, Bouches-du-Rhône, France
Public transitMarseille métro M2.svg Rond-point du Prado – Sainte-Marguerite - Dromel
OwnerCity of Marseille
OperatorOlympique de Marseille[1]
Capacity67,394
Record attendance65,421 (Olympique de Marseille vs Olympique Lyonnais, 10 November 2019)
Field size105 × 68 metres (344 ft × 223 ft)
SurfaceAirFibr hybrid grass
Construction
Built1935
Opened13 June 1937
Renovated1984, 1998, 2014
ArchitectHenri Ploquin
Tenants
Olympique de Marseille (1937–present)
RC Toulon (occasional matches)
France national football team (some matches)
France national rugby union team (some matches)
Website
Official Website

The Stade Vélodrome (French pronunciation: ​[stad velɔdʁom]; Provençal: Estadi Velodròm, pronounced [esˈtadi veluˈdɾɔm]), known as the Orange Vélodrome for sponsorship reasons, is a multi-purpose stadium in Marseille, France. It is home to the Olympique de Marseille football club of Ligue 1 since it opened in 1937, and was a venue in the 1998 FIFA World Cup, the 2007 Rugby World Cup and the UEFA Euro 2016. It occasionally hosts RC Toulon rugby club of the Top 14. It is the largest club football ground in France, with a capacity of 67,394 spectators. The stadium is also used regularly by the France national rugby union team.

The record attendance for a club game before renovation at the Stade Vélodrome was 58,897 (for a UEFA Cup semi-final against Newcastle United in 2004). Since expansion to 67,394, the record attendance at the ground now stands at 65,421 for the match against rivals Lyon that occurred on 10 November 2019. The stadium was also featured as a FIFA World Cup venue when the 1938 finals were held in France. The first-ever match to be played was between Marseille and Torino in 1937.

The French rugby union team began an impressive run of victories at the stadium in the early 2000s. They defeated New Zealand 42–33 in November 2000, and in 2001 defeated Australia by one point. They beat South Africa in 2002, followed by a win over England in 2003. However, their run of luck was broken in 2004 when they lost 14–24 to Argentina. The venue was used by France for a game against New Zealand in November 2009.[2] In 2018, the stadium hosted its first Six Nations match with France hosting Italy.

France is not the only rugby team to have used the Vélodrome in recent years. On 18 April 2009, Toulon took their home fixture in the Top 14 against Toulouse to the Vélodrome, drawing 57,039 spectators[3] to see a 14–6 Toulon win which played a key role in the Toulonnais' successful fight against relegation in the 2008–09 season. Toulon has taken two home matches to the Vélodrome in each of the succeeding two seasons. The Vélodrome was also the venue for both semi-finals in the 2010–11 Top 14 season, and was used for the Toulon v Munster semi-final of the 2013–14 Heineken Cup.

History[]

The Vélodrome in 1937.

In 1935, the architectural firm Pollack Ploquin was chosen to build a stadium in Marseille. Henri Ploquin (who designed in 1932 with Charles Bouhana the Stade Municipal Louis Darragon)[4] designed the stadium. For economic reasons, only the Stade Vélodrome was built. On 28 April 1935, the foundation stone was laid for the Vélodrome by Marseille Mayor Ribot, on a site between downtown and the suburban areas of St. Giniez and Sainte-Marguerite on military grounds belonging to the city. The Stade Vélodrome opened on 13 June 1937, when a friendly match was played between Olympique Marseille and Italian of Torino FC (which ended 2-1 to Olympique Marseille). On 29 August 1937 (the second day of the French national football championship) a match took place between OM and Cannes. This was the first official match at the stadium.

The entrance to the Stade Vélodrome, the only legacy of the 1937 enclosure until its destruction in 2013.

As its name suggests, Stade Vélodrome was used for cycling competitions but as these races became less common, seating replaced the track which circled the stadium. The Vélodrome remained famous for fans of OM (Olympique Marseille) since the sloped track which was under the extended seating acted as a slide to invade the pitch at the end of matches.

Olympique de Marseille was long hostile to the Stade Vélodrome, calling it the "stadium of the City Council". For fans of the Olympians between the wars, the real home of OM was Stade de l'Huveaune, owned by Olympique de Marseille and partly financed by fans in the early 1920s. After World War II, however, Marseille no longer owned the Stadium Huveaune. Seeking support from the city, Chairman Marcel Leclerc had OM play at Huveaune from 1945 to 1960. The City Council then relented, and Olympique de Marseille moved to the Vélodrome. During the 1970s, OM shared the Stade with the Marseille XIII Rugby League.

First renovations[]

1970 marked the first modifications to the Vélodrome, with the replacement of the floodlights on the Ganay and Jean-Bouin tribunes by four 60 meter towers for nighttime events. In March 1971, the capacity of the stadium was increased by nearly 6000 seats, with the reduction of the cycling track and the removal of the cinder running track. This brought the total capacity of the stadium to 55,000 people, including the standing area.

Olympique returned to the Stade de l'Huveaune for the 1982–1983 season as Stade Vélodrome was under construction in preparation for the UEFA Euro 1984. The playing surface was completely replaced during this time. The semifinal between France and Portugal had set a record for attendance at an international match with 54,848 spectators. The capacity of the stadium was later reduced to 42,000 with the construction of lodges.

The cycling track was removed altogether once Bernard Tapie was appointed president of OM in 1985. He chose to remove it and rearrange the corners of the stadium, bringing the capacity up to 48,000. This renovation marked the end of the era of Vélodrome as a multi-use facility. The area around the stadium was also transformed with the creation of the second line of the metro which served the stadium from two stations and with the construction of the Palais des Sports nearby.

1998 World Cup and beyond[]

The Stade Vélodrome in its 1998-2011 configuration.

The Stade Vélodrome was completely renovated for the 1998 World Cup; its capacity increased from 42,000 to 60,031 seats (equivalent to 51 km or 32 mi of seats). The Vélodrome hosted the final draw, which took place on 4 December 1997 (the first time the final draw was held in an outdoor venue) and seven matches, including France's first match against South Africa, the quarterfinal between Argentina and the Netherlands and the semifinal between Brazil and the Netherlands. As of 2011, the record attendance for a football game (58,897 spectators) was the Newcastle United UEFA Cup semifinal on 6 May 2004 (2–0). During the 2007 Rugby World Cup the Vélodrome hosted six games, including two quarter-finals: Australia versus England (which holds the overall attendance record with 59,120 spectators) and South Africa versus Fiji. On 16 July 2009, during preparations for a Madonna concert, one of four winches used to hoist the structure failed; the 60-ton roof fell (leaving two dead, eight wounded and crushing a crane).

Widely criticized and unloved by the Marseillais for its architecture (no roof, exposure to strong mistral winds and poor acoustics), the Stade Vélodrome has since 2003 been the subject of several projects to modernize and enlarge it. In July 2009, following an extraordinary council of the City of Marseille concerning the City Hall renovation project, a motion was passed launching a public-private partnership (PPP). On 21 June 2010, following France's winning bid for UEFA Euro 2016, Marseille announced that the stadium would receive another renovation (a roof and an increase in capacity from 60,031 to 67,000), making it a UEFA Elite Stadium. Works began in the spring of 2011 and were completed in summer 2014.

Attendance[]

In 2002, Division 1 was renamed Ligue 1. Olympique de Marseille's average attendance for each season since 2000–01 is listed below:[5]

Season Average Division
2000–01 50,755

Division 1

2001–02 50,030
2002–03 48,233

Ligue 1

2003–04 47,203
2004–05 49,970
2005–06 42,753
2006–07 47,715
2007–08 48,784
2008–09 50,134
2009–10 48,912
2010–11 50,500
2011–12 35,937
2012–13 29,383
2013–14 44,375
2014–15 53,733
2015–16 37,682
2016–17 41,650
2017–18 42,733
2018–19 43,458

Tournament results[]

1938 FIFA World Cup matches[]

Date Time (WEST) Team #1 Result Team #2 Round Spectators
5 June 1938 17:00  Italy 2–1 (a.e.t.)  Norway First round 18,000
16 June 1938 18:00 2–1  Brazil Semi-finals 30,000

1960 European Nations' Cup[]

Date Time (CET) Team #1 Result Team #2 Round Spectators
6 July 1960 21:30  Czechoslovakia 0–3  Soviet Union Semi-finals 25,184
9 July 1960 18:00 2–0  France Third place match 9,438

UEFA Euro 1984[]

Date Time (CEST) Team #1 Result Team #2 Round Spectators
17 June 1984 20:30  Portugal 1–1  Spain Group B 24,364
23 June 1984 20:00  France 3–2 (a.e.t.)  Portugal Semi-finals 54,848

1998 FIFA World Cup[]

Date Time (CEST) Team #1 Result Team #2 Round Attendance
12 June 1998 21:00  France 3–0  South Africa Group C 55,077
15 June 1998 14:30  England 2–0  Tunisia Group G 54,587
20 June 1998 21:00  Netherlands 5–0  South Korea Group E 55,000
23 June 1998 21:00  Brazil 1–2  Norway Group A 55,000
27 June 1998 16:00  Italy 1–0  Norway Round of 16 55,000
4 July 1998 16:00  Netherlands 2–1  Argentina Quarter-finals 55,000
7 July 1998 21:00  Brazil 1–1 (a.e.t.)
(pen. 4–2)
 Netherlands Semi-finals 55,000

2007 Rugby World Cup matches[]

The Vélodrome hosted 6 games of the 2007 Rugby World Cup which was hosted by France including two quarter-final games.

Date Competition Home team Away team Attendance
8 September 2007 2007 Rugby World Cup Pool C  New Zealand 76  Italy 14 58,612
12 September 2007  Italy 24  Romania 18 44,241
22 September 2007 2007 Rugby World Cup Pool D  Argentina 63  Namibia 3 55,067
30 September 2007  France 64  Georgia 7 58,695
6 October 2007 2007 Rugby World Cup Quarter-finals  Australia 10  England 12 59,102
7 October 2007  South Africa 37  Fiji 20 55,943

UEFA Euro 2016 matches[]

The Vélodrome hosted six games at UEFA Euro 2016, including a semi-final. In 2016, the stadium became the first in Europe to have hosted three European Championship semi-finals after France's previous hosting of the tournament in 1960 and 1984.

Date Time (CEST) Team #1 Result Team #2 Round Attendance
11 June 2016 21:00  England 1–1  Russia Group B 62,343
15 June 2016 21:00  France 2–0  Albania Group A 63,670
18 June 2016 18:00  Iceland 1–1  Hungary Group F 60,842
21 June 2016 21:00  Ukraine 0–1  Poland Group C 58,874
30 June 2016 21:00  Poland 1–1 (a.e.t.)
(3–5 pen.)
 Portugal Quarter-finals 62,940
7 July 2016 21:00  Germany 0–2  France Semi-finals 64,078

2023 Rugby World Cup matches[]

Date Time (CEST) Team #1 Result Team #2 Round Attendance
9 September 2023 TBD  England  Argentina Pool D
10 September 2023 TBD  South Africa  Scotland Pool B
21 September 2023 TBD  France Africa 1 Pool A
1 October 2023 TBD  South Africa Asia/Pacific 1 Pool B
14 October 2023 TBD Winner of Pool C Runner-up of Pool D Quarter-finals
15 October 2023 TBD Winner of Pool D Runner-up of Pool C

Structure[]

1 Tribune Jean-Bouin
2 Virage Sud Chevalier Roze
3 Tribune Ganay
4 Virage Nord De Peretti
5 Disabled seating (258 seats)
6 Press gallery
7 Loges
8 Rostrum
9 VIP hall
10 Projectors
11 Local
12 Closets
13 Offices
14 TV studio
15 Big screens

The four stands in the stadium are named after athletes (runner Jean Bouin and 1920s cyclist Gustave Ganay), a historical figure of the 1720 plague epidemic (Chevalier Roze) and a popular Olympique de Marseille supporter (Patrice De Peretti, nicknamed "Depe", who died suddenly in July 2000).

Rugby League[]

Other than the Rugby League World Cup games in 1954, 1972 and 1975, 14 other test matches were played at the stadium between 1938 and 1985. The French national team played in 16 of the internationals played at Stade Vélodrome.

Rugby League World Cup[]

Over three separate tournaments, the Vélodrome also hosted games of the Rugby League World Cup.

Date Competition Home team Away team Attendance
7 November 1954 1954 Rugby League World Cup group stage  Australia 34  New Zealand 15 20,000
28 October 1972 1972 Rugby League World Cup group stage  France 20  New Zealand 9 20,748
17 October 1975 1975 Rugby League World Cup group stage  France 12  New Zealand 12 10,000

Rugby League Test matches[]

List of rugby league test matches played at Stade Vélodrome.[6]

Test# Date Result Attendance Notes
1 16 January 1938  Australia def.  France 16–11 23,100 France vs Australia series
2 18 January 1947  France def.  Wales 14–5 24,500 1946–47 European Rugby League Championship
3 11 April 1948  England def.  France 25–10 32,000 1947–48 European Rugby League Championship
4 9 January 1949  Australia def.  France 29–10 15,796 France vs Australia series
5 10 April 1949  France def.  Wales 11–0 30,000 1948–49 European Rugby League Championship
6 15 January 1950  France def. Other Nationalities 8–3 30,000 1949–50 European Rugby League Championship
7 15 April 1950  France def.  Wales 28–13 16,860 1950–51 European Rugby League Championship
8 25 November 1951  France def.  England 42–13 31,810 1951–52 European Rugby League Championship
9 23 November 1952  France def. Other Nationalities 29–10 17,611 1949–50 European Rugby League Championship
10 13 December 1953  France def.  Wales 23–22 25,000 1953–54 European Rugby League Championship
11 15 November 1965  France def.  New Zealand 14–3 30,431 France vs New Zealand series
12 17 December 1967  France drew with  Australia 7–7 5,193 1967–68 France vs Australia series
13 20 December 1981  France def.  Great Britain 19–2 6,500
14 24 November 1985  New Zealand def.  France 22–0 1,492 France vs New Zealand series

Situation and accessibility[]

The stadium is four kilometres from the Old Port of Marseille, in the neighbourhoods of Sainte-Marguerite and Saint-Giniez in the southern part of Marseille. It is bound to the south by the Huveaune river and to the north by the Parc Chanot and the headquarters of regional public TV station, France 3 Méditerranée. To its west runs the Boulevard Michelet and to the east the Marseille Palais des Sports and the Delort stadium.

The Vélodrome is serviced by the bus and metro networks of the Régie des transports de Marseille. Besides several bus services operating in the area, two stations of the Marseille Metro line 2 are close to the stadium. Supporters wishing to reach the Ganay or North stands must alight at the Sainte-Marguerite Dromel station whereas the Rond-Point du Prado station caters for the South stand and the Jean-Bouin stand. This line, which also serves the Marseille Saint-Charles train station, has additional trains on matchdays.

Marseille Provence Airport is thirty kilometres from the Vélodrome.

Current situation[]

The Stade Vélodrome has increased its seating capacity in 2014 (in prevision of the UEFA Euro 2016 hosted by France), and continues to host games for Olympique de Marseille. Previously it held 60,031 spectators; following its renovation, it is now able to hold 67,000, including 7,000 VIP seats. The cost of the project was €267 million.[7] The expansion and modernization of equipment was part of the French bid to organize Euro 2016. Marseille mayor Jean-Claude Gaudin's bid also provided for the creation of a new district.

Construction[]

Marseille has increased the stadium's capacity and installed a roof, as required by UEFA standards. The project also includes multiple reception areas and media space, better access for the disabled and better seating. The new stadium has been officially inaugurated on 16 October 2014.

Approaches[]

The esplanade Ganay has been preserved and refurbished. The RTM car park has been replaced with office towers and housing. RTM users benefit from a larger underground car park. Trees and wind turbines contribute to a new-neighbourhood HQE (high environmental quality).

Cost[]

The total project estimate is €267 million, with €150M for the stadium and the remnant for the surrounding shopping mall, hotel and housing, the private sector to cover two-thirds of the investment; the remainder will be shared by the region, the department of Bouches-du-Rhône, MPM and the city of Marseille for 20m euros. The French government contributed to upgrade the area's infrastructure. After several studies, the mayor selected the contract of partnership arrangements included in a PPP (public-private partnership).

Olympique de Marseille[]

"Olympique de Marseille will be closely associated with the project", said Jean-Claude Gaudin. The club remains a tenant of the stadium. Elected officials want ticket prices to be controlled.

Naming rights[]

The naming rights for the stadium were bought by French telecommunications multinational Orange S.A. The 10-year-deal was announced on 3 June 2016 by the Mayor of Marseille. The price is undisclosed.

Gallery[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Football : l'OM arrache les clés du Stade-Vélodrome". Le Monde (in French). 12 July 2018. Retrieved 19 November 2019.
  2. ^ "France v New Zealand All Blacks". ticketsrugby.com. Retrieved 13 May 2009.
  3. ^ "Top 14 : Toulon-Toulouse, retour sur dix ans de Vélodrome". L'Équipe (in French). 6 April 2019. Retrieved 19 November 2019.
  4. ^ "Fonds Bétons armés Hennebique (BAH). Subdiv. 06 : Auvergne – Á partir de 1931 et n.d." ArchiWebture. Cité de l'Architecture et du Patrimoine. Retrieved 24 May 2018.
  5. ^ "OM : les supporters". footmarseille.com. Retrieved 25 September 2019.
  6. ^ "Stade Vélodrome". rugbyleagueproject.org. Retrieved 19 November 2019.
  7. ^ "Nouveau stade Vélodrome: les dessous du financement". La Provence (in French). 22 September 2010. Retrieved 19 November 2019.

External links[]

Preceded by
Lugi Ganna Velodrome
Varese
UCI Track Cycling World Championships
Venue

1972
Succeeded by
Velódromo de Anoeta
San Sebastián
Retrieved from ""