Karađorđe Stadium

Stadion Karađorđe

Stadion Karađorđe hosting the 2009 European Athletics Junior Championships.
Full name Stadion Karađorđe
Location Novi Sad, Vojvodina, Serbia
Coordinates 45°14′48″N 19°50′32″E / 45.24667°N 19.84222°E / 45.24667; 19.84222
Owner FK Vojvodina
Operator FK Vojvodina
Executive suites 150
Capacity 15,000[1]
Field size 105 × 68 m (115 × 75 yd)
Surface Grass
Scoreboard LED (Philips brand)
Construction
Opened June 28, 1924 (on the Serbian holiday Vidovdan)
Renovated 1967, 2004, 2009, 2011,2013
Expanded 1931, 1991
Tenants
FK Vojvodina (1928–present)
Serbia national under-21 football team

Karađorđe Stadium (Serbian: Стадион Карађорђе, Stadion Karađorđe) is a multi-purpose stadium in Novi Sad, Vojvodina, Serbia. It is currently used mostly for football matches and is the home ground of FK Vojvodina. The stadium is one of the most modern stadiums in Serbia and has one of the best pitches in the country. The stadium has a total of 15,000 seats after new renovations were made in 2013. The stadium is also the home ground for the Serbian U-21 football team.

History

In late May 2007, the stadium was the site of Siniša Mihajlović's testimonial match. In 2009, the stadium was given a new athletic track, the southeast stand and a modern Philips scoreboard. After the reconstruction in 2009, it was the venue of the 2009 European Athletics Junior Championships and the 2011 UEFA European Under-17 Football Championship.In 2011, FK Vojvodina installed floodlights with strength of 1,400 lux. The largest attendance was on 1 March 1967 when Vojvodina played against Scottish side Celtic in the 1966–67 European Cup quarter-final.[2] There was about 30,000 spectators.[2]

Formerly, it was known as the Vojvodina Stadium (Serbian: Стадион Војводине, Stadion Vojvodine) or City Stadium (Serbian: Градски стадион, Gradski stadion). In 2007, the stadium was renamed to Karađorđe Stadium after Karađorđe "Black George", the leader of the First Serbian uprising. However, Karađorđe Stadium was in fact the older and original name of the stadium that was used from its foundation in 1924 until the end of the Second World War.[3]

Recent upgrades and developments

In early 2012, the executive board announced further reconstructions of the Karađorđe stadium. Original plans included the construction of a new south stand, the reconstruction of the eastern and southwest stand. Finally, in May 2013, as a result of UEFA requirements for obtaining a license for UEFA Europa League participation, the city of Novi Sad agreed to an upgrade of the stadium that will take place through June 2013 in time for FK Vojvodina to host Europa League qualifying matches.[4]

Notable events

International football matches

Date Result Competition
21 April 1971  Yugoslavia 01  Romania Friendly
14 November 1979  Yugoslavia 50  Cyprus Euro 80 qualifying
21 November 1981  Yugoslavia 50  Luxembourg 1982 World Cup qualifying
20 September 1989  Yugoslavia 30  Greece Friendly
11 September 2012  Serbia 61  Wales 2014 World Cup qualifying[2]
26 March 2013  Serbia 20  Scotland 2014 World Cup qualifying[2]
11 October 2013  Serbia 20  Japan Friendly
4 September 2015  Serbia 20  Armenia UEFA Euro 2016 qualifying
31 May 2016  Serbia 31  Israel Friendly

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Ticket rush as Scotland play Serbia in Novi Sad". sport.scotsman.com. Johnston Publishing. 5 January 2013. Retrieved 6 January 2013.
  2. FK Vojvodina: Stadion detaljno (Serbian)
  3. Dnevnik (Serbian): МОНДО: Пао договор, Воша гради стадион 23 May 2013
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/13/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.