Estádio José Alvalade

Estádio José Alvalade (Portuguese pronunciation: ; is a football stadium in Lisbon, Portugal, home of Sporting Clube de Portugal.

It was built adjacent to the site of the older stadium. The stadium is named after José Alvalade (1885–1918), the founder and first club member of Sporting CP in the early twentieth century.

Estádio José Alvalade
Estádio José Alvalade
Full nameEstádio José Alvalade
LocationLisbon, Portugal
Coordinates38°45′40″N 9°9′39″W / 38.76111°N 9.16083°W / 38.76111; -9.16083
Public transitLisbon Metro  Verde   Amarela  at Campo Grande
OwnerSporting Clube de Portugal
Capacity50,095
Record attendance50,046 vs Real Madrid
(22 November 2016)
Field size105 x 68 m
SurfaceGrass
Construction
Broke ground15 January 2001
Opened6 August 2003
Construction cost€105 million
ArchitectTomás Taveira
Tenants
Sporting Clube de Portugal (2003–present)
Portugal national football team (selected matches)

Origin

The previous José Alvalade Stadium was opened on 10 June 1956. Plans by Sporting CP to modernize the club in the late 1990s coincided with the decision to award Portugal the right to host UEFA Euro 2004, and the decision was made to build a new stadium, with construction beginning on 15 January 2001. The club's statutes dictated that the stadium would be called Estádio José Alvalade. It would be the club's seventh stadium.

History

The stadium is the center of a complex called Alvalade XXI, designed by Portuguese architect Tomás Taveira, which includes a mall called Alvaláxia with a 12-screen movie theater, a health club, the club's museum, a sports pavilion, a clinic, and an office building. The complex cost a total of €162 million, with the stadium accounting with almost €120 million. On the exterior, the stadium featured multicoloured tiles which were later removed. In 2021, Sporting CP, headed by club president Frederico Varandas, announced that it would change the colour of the seats in the multicoloured stands of Estádio José Alvalade to green (the main colour of the sports club). The colour change was completed in 2022. Originally the seats were arranged in a random-looking mosaic of mixed colours, however during its second decade of use these were all gradually changed to dark green, with the roof support towers and access stairways, initially bright yellow, also repainted green.

Although it eventually received a fifth star becoming a UEFA 5-star stadium, it was initially classified by UEFA as a 4-star stadium. The stadium – originally projected to hold only 40,000 spectators at any given time – has a capacity of 50,095 and was acoustically engineered as a venue for major concerts. The stadium has also a total of 1,315 underground parking spaces, including 30 for disabled spectators.

Estádio José Alvalade 
Estádio José Alvalade, Lisbon.

The new stadium official opening was on 6 August 2003 when Sporting played and beat Manchester United 3–1. Luís Filipe scored the first-ever goal at the new Estádio José Alvalade in that friendly win against Manchester United playing alongside Sporting Portugal's teammate Cristiano Ronaldo, then aged 18, who made his last appearance for the Portuguese club on that same day.

The stadium hosted five matches of UEFA Euro 2004, one of them being the semi-final between Portugal and the Netherlands, which Portugal won 2–1. In May 2005, the stadium was upgraded to 5-star stadium status by UEFA, the same month it hosted the 2005 UEFA Cup Final between Sporting and CSKA Moscow, which CSKA Moscow won 3–1.

It hosted quarter-finals and semi-finals matches during the 2019–20 UEFA Champions League. The stadium is one of the potential venues for the 2030 FIFA World Cup which Portugal will co-host along with Morocco and Spain.

UEFA Euro 2004

Team #1 Score Team #2 Date Attendance Round
Sweden Estádio José Alvalade  5–0 Estádio José Alvalade  Bulgaria 14 June 2004 31,652 Group stage
Spain Estádio José Alvalade  0–1 Estádio José Alvalade  Portugal 20 June 2004 47,491 Group stage
Germany Estádio José Alvalade  1–2 Estádio José Alvalade  Czech Republic 23 June 2004 46,849 Group stage
France Estádio José Alvalade  0–1 Estádio José Alvalade  Greece 25 June 2004 45,390 Quarter-finals
Portugal Estádio José Alvalade  2–1 Estádio José Alvalade  Netherlands 30 June 2004 46,679 Semi-finals

Notable matches

First match

Team #1 Score Team #2 Date
Sporting CP Estádio José Alvalade  3–1 Estádio José Alvalade  Manchester United 6 August 2003

2005 UEFA Cup Final

Team #1 Score Team #2 Date Attendance
Sporting CP Estádio José Alvalade  1–3 Estádio José Alvalade  CSKA Moscow 18 May 2005 47,085

International matches

Team #1 Team #2 Date Attendance Competition Notes
Portugal Estádio José Alvalade  7–1 Estádio José Alvalade  Russia 13 October 2004 44,258 2006 World Cup qualification Russia's biggest ever defeat
Portugal Estádio José Alvalade  4–0 Estádio José Alvalade  Belgium 24 March 2007 48,009 UEFA Euro 2008 qualifying First ever competitive win over Belgium
Portugal Estádio José Alvalade  1–1 Estádio José Alvalade  Serbia 12 September 2007 47,000 UEFA Euro 2008 qualifying
Portugal Estádio José Alvalade  2–3 Estádio José Alvalade  Denmark 10 September 2008 33,406 2010 World Cup qualification First ever competitive loss against Denmark
Portugal Estádio José Alvalade  1–1 Estádio José Alvalade  Israel 11 October 2013 48,317 2014 World Cup qualification
Portugal Estádio José Alvalade  0–1 Estádio José Alvalade  France 4 September 2015 39,853 Friendly
Portugal Estádio José Alvalade  3–0 Estádio José Alvalade  Luxembourg 12 October 2019 47,308 UEFA Euro 2020 qualifying
Portugal Estádio José Alvalade  0–0 Estádio José Alvalade  Spain 7 October 2020 2,500* Friendly First match played in Portugal with fans in the stands, during the COVID-19 pandemic
Portugal Estádio José Alvalade  3–0 Estádio José Alvalade  Sweden 14 October 2020 5,000* 2020–21 UEFA Nations League Second match played in Portugal with fans in the stands, during the COVID-19 pandemic
Portugal Estádio José Alvalade  4–0 Estádio José Alvalade  Israel 9 June 2021 0 Friendly Played behind closed doors due to the COVID-19 pandemic
Portugal Estádio José Alvalade  4–0 Estádio José Alvalade  Switzerland 5 June 2022 42,325 2022–23 UEFA Nations League
Portugal Estádio José Alvalade  2–0 Estádio José Alvalade  Czech Republic 9 June 2022 44,100 2022–23 UEFA Nations League
Portugal Estádio José Alvalade  4–0 Estádio José Alvalade  Nigeria 17 November 2022 43,621 Friendly
Portugal Estádio José Alvalade  4–0 Estádio José Alvalade  Liechtenstein 23 March 2023 45,378 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying

Seating distribution

  • Disabled Seats – 50
  • Skybox Seats – 1,542
  • VIP and Business Seats – 1,968
  • Tribune Seats – 100
  • Public Seats (Level A) – 24,261
  • Public Seats (Level B) – 21,970
  • Press Seats – 204

Transport

The Stadium is served by the Campo Grande station of the Lisbon Metro and a bus terminal served by several companies. The Segunda Circular, a major ring road of Lisbon, runs close by and the stadium can be reached via the exit Estádio de Alvalade. There are several car parks around the stadium.

It is a relatively short distance (3 km) from the Estádio da Luz, homeground of rivals S.L. Benfica.

References

Preceded by UEFA Cup
Final venue

2005
Succeeded by

Tags:

Estádio José Alvalade OriginEstádio José Alvalade HistoryEstádio José Alvalade UEFA Euro 2004Estádio José Alvalade Notable matchesEstádio José Alvalade International matchesEstádio José Alvalade Seating distributionEstádio José Alvalade TransportEstádio José AlvaladeEstádio José Alvalade (1956)Football (soccer)Help:IPA/PortugueseJosé AlvaladeLisbonSporting Clube de Portugal

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