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The Guangdong Provincial People's Stadium (Chinese: 广东省人民体育场) is a multi-purpose stadium in Guangzhou, China. It is currently used mostly for football matches. The stadium holds 15,000 people. The stadium is best reached by taking Guangzhou Metro Line 1 to Martyrs' Park Station.[1]
Former names | Guangzhou Public Stadium |
---|---|
Location | Guangzhou, People's Republic of China |
Public transit | Martyrs' Park 1 |
Owner | Guangzhou Government |
Capacity | 15,000 |
Surface | Grass |
Construction | |
Opened | 1932 |
Renovated | 1946 1950s–60s 1990 |
Tenants | |
Guangdong Sunray Cave (2010–2014) Guangzhou Evergrande (1998–2000) |
History
editFormerly known as the 東較場 (Cantonese: dung1gaau3coeng2; English: "Eastern Parade Ground"), the site was first used as a sporting venue in 1906 when it hosted Guangdong's (and China's) first provincial-level athletics competition. Sun Yat-sen ordered the construction of a stadium on the site in 1922; however, it wasn't finished until 1932.[2]
It was used as a Japanese transport and supplies depot during the occupation of Guangzhou and was bombed when Guangzhou was liberated.
The construction of Yuexiushan meant that the People's Stadium didn't hold many high-profile sporting or civic events from the mid-1950s onwards;[3] however, it did host many games in the Guangdong-Hong Kong Cup as well as games in the inaugural Women's World Cup.[2]
1991 FIFA Women's World Cup matches
editDate | Competition | Team | Res | Team | Crowd |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
19 November 1991 | Group A | Norway | 4–0 | New Zealand | 12,000 |
19 November 1991 | Group A | China | 2–2 | Denmark | 27,000 |
27 November 1991 | Semi-finals | Germany | 2–5 | United States | 15,000 |
29 November 1991 | Third Place | Sweden | 4–0 | Germany | 20,000 |
Recent use
editFor the 2017 Chinese Super League Season, Guangzhou R&F F.C. used the stadium as their temporary home for their first two matches whilst Yuexiushan was being refurbished.[4]
References
edit- ^ 广东省人民体育场 at guangzhou.alltrip.cn Retrieved 2014-09-01
- ^ a b "From the Qing dynasty, to collapsing roofs and the CSL: a history of Guangzhou R&F's temporary home". Wild East Football. 2017-03-10. Retrieved 2017-04-05.
- ^ "Yuexiushan: The cradle of Cantonese football, part one". Wild East Football. 2016-09-13. Retrieved 2017-04-05.
- ^ "Alexandre Pato the villain as Tianjin Quanjian lose CSL opener to Guangzhou R&F". Wild East Football. 2017-03-04. Retrieved 2017-04-05.
External links
edit- Guangdong Provincial People's Stadium at Sports.qq.com