Estádio José Alvalade (1956)

{{Short description|Demolished stadium in Lisbon, Portugal}}

{{for|the current stadium belonging to Sporting CP|Estádio José Alvalade}}

{{Infobox venue

| stadium_name = Estádio José Alvalade

| nickname =

| logo_image =

| image = Antigo Estádio José Alvalade.jpg

| image_size = 260px

| fullname = Estádio José Alvalade

| location = Lisbon, Portugal

| built = 1956

| opened = 10 June 1956

| renovated =

| closed = 2003

| demolished = 2003

| owner = Sporting Clube de Portugal

| operator =

| surface = Grass

| construction_cost =

| architect =

| former_names =

| tenants = Sporting Clube de Portugal

| seating_capacity = 52,411

| dimensions =

}}

Estádio José Alvalade was a multi-purpose stadium in Lisbon, Portugal. The stadium was able to hold 75,000 people at a time but later its capacity was shortened to 52,411 people. It was inaugurated on 10 June 1956. Home venue of the football team of Sporting Clube de Portugal (Sporting CP) for 47 years, it was mostly used for football matches, but was also used for athletics and cycling. It was the first stadium in Portugal to be equipped with a lighting system that allowed for night-time activities. Designed by architects António Augusto Sá da Costa and Anselmo Fernandez, it was named after Sporting CP's founder José Alfredo Holtreman Roquette, known as José Alvalade. The stadium was closed in 2003, when the new Estádio José Alvalade designed by Tomás Taveira opened.{{Cite web |title=Estádios de Lisboa |url=https://gulbenkian.pt/biblioteca-arte/read-watch-listen/estadios-de-lisboa/ |access-date=2023-10-07 |website=Biblioteca de Arte Gulbenkian |language=pt-pt}}

Concerts

During the 1990s, the Estádio José Alvalade was one of the most prominent venues for rock concerts in Portugal,{{Cite web |title=Ritmos e Blues: Historial |url=https://ritmoseblues.pt/historial |access-date=2023-10-08 |website=ritmoseblues.pt}} hosting tour dates of many high-profile international artists, including among others, rock band Bon Jovi, Depeche Mode, U2, R.E.M., David Bowie, Dire Straits, Elton John, Phil Collins, Pink Floyd, Bryan Adams and Genesis. This era was inaugurated on June 29, 1989 with a concert by The Cure, during their Prayer Tour promoting the album Disintegration. Tina Turner performed on September 29, 1990 and September 22, 1996. Dire Straits performed on May 16, 1992, on the On Every Street Tour. Michael Jackson performed on September 26, 1992, to a sold-out crowd of 55,000 people. Guns N' Roses performed on July 2, 1992, again to a sold-out crowd. Bruce Springsteen played to an overpacked stadium of 60,000 People in 1993. That is still the stadium's record for attendance.{{Cite web |title=O último concerto de Alvalade |url=https://www.record.pt/futebol/futebol-nacional/liga-betclic/sporting/detalhe/o-ultimo-concerto-de-alvalade |access-date=2023-10-07 |website=www.record.pt |language=pt-PT}}

Portugal national football team

The national team first played in the stadium in 1957 and had its last game in 2002.

class="wikitable collapsible collapsed" style="font-size:85%"

! # !! Date !! Score !! Opponent !! Competition

style="background: #FFFFCC"

| 1.

16 January 19571–1{{fb|Northern Ireland}}World Cup 1958 qualification
style="background: #FFB6C1"

| 2.

24 March 19570–1{{fb|France}}Friendly
style="background: #90EE90"

| 3.

3 June 19591–0{{fb|Scotland}}Friendly
style="background: #FFB6C1"

| 4.

17 May 19621–2{{fb|Belgium}}Friendly
style="background: #FFB6C1"

| 5.

16 April 19690–2{{fb|Switzerland}}World Cup 1970 qualification
style="background: #FFFFCC"

| 6.

14 November 19731–1{{fb|Northern Ireland}}World Cup 1974 qualification
style="background: #FFFFCC"

| 7.

19 November 19751–1{{fb|England}}Euro 1976 qualifying
style="background: #90EE90"

| 8.

22 December 19762–1{{fb|Italy}}Friendly
style="background: #FFFFCC"

| 9.

11 October 19781–1{{fb|Belgium}}Euro 1980 qualifying
style="background: #90EE90"

| 10.

23 September 19812–0{{fb|Poland}}Friendly
style="background: #90EE90"

| 11.

21 September 19835–0{{fb|Finland}}Euro 1984 qualifying
style="background: #FFB6C1"

| 12.

14 November 19841–3{{fb|Sweden}}World Cup 1986 qualification
style="background: #FFB6C1"

| 13.

30 January 19852–3{{fb|Romania}}Friendly
style="background: #90EE90"

| 14.

29 March 19896–0{{fb|Angola}}Friendly
style="background: #90EE90"

| 15.

13 November 19941–0{{fb|Austria}}Euro 1996 qualifying
style="background: #90EE90"

| 16.

5 June 19991–0{{fb|Slovakia}}Euro 2000 qualifying
style="background: #90EE90"

| 17.

6 June 20016–0{{fb|Cyprus}}World Cup 2002 qualification
style="background: #90EE90"

| 18.

14 November 20015–1Portugal was 5-1 up at 68 minutes, but then one of the Angola players was injured. All the team's 7 substitutions have been used by then and 4 Angola's players had already been sent-off. Hence the game was abandoned at that time with the said scoreline, due to Angola not being allowed to play with 6 players on the field.{{fb|Angola}}Friendly
style="background: #FFFFCC"

| 19.

17 April 20021–1{{fb|Brazil}}Friendly

References