Estadio Alberto Gallardo

Estadio Alberto Gallardo
Full name Estadio Alberto Gallardo
Location Lima, Peru
Owner Instituto Peruano del Deporte
Operator Sporting Cristal
Capacity 18,000[1]
Surface Grass
Construction
Built 1960s
Renovated 1995
Tenants
Sporting Cristal

Estadio Alberto Gallardo is a football stadium in the Rimac District of Lima, Peru, current home ground of the football club Sporting Cristal. The stadium was built in the 1960s along the Rímac River for local football use and originally named Estadio San Martín de Porres. Many clubs playing in the Primera División, Segunda División, and district leagues of San Martín de Porres were among the many tenants the stadium had. In 1995, Sporting Cristal—one of the regular first division tenants of the stadium—decided to lease the venue from the Instituto Peruano del Deporte. The club recently signed a new lease contract for 10 years and will expire in 2022. The stadium itself has hosted few high-risk matches due to the limited access to the stadium and the low capacity of 18,000.

History

The stadium was built in the 1960s for the practice of football in Lima. The venue was regularly used for matches in the Segunda División and the district leagues of Lima. In 1979, Sporting Cristal began to host its home matches in the San Martín de Porres and again in 1983. In the middle of 1995, Sporting Cristal signed an agreement with the Instituto Peruano de Deportes which would lease the stadium to the club. The club then invested $200 thousand in the stadium for renovations which included grass imported from the Netherlands. On 24 September 1995, the stadium re-opened its doors to a first division match between Sporting Cristal and Cienciano, where Cristal defeated Cienciano 6–0.

The stadium had a total capacity of 16,000 spectators in its four stands. However, the southern stand overlooks the cliff of the Rímac River. This stand is never open to the public and in practice the stadium's capacity is 15,000 spectators. The restriction of this stand has prevented high-risk matches from being hosted in recent times, notably against rivals Alianza Lima and Universitario de Deportes which are customarily played in the Estadio Nacional. In 2010, Sporting Cristal took advantage of the ongoing renovation of the Estadio Nacional to play rivals Alianza and Universitario in their home stadium. In May 2012, Sporting Cristal was able to legally change the name of the stadium from Estadio San Martín de Porres to Estadio Alberto Gallardo, which is the name of an iconic former player of the club following the signing of the new ten-year lease.

International Matches

Official International Games

Date Match Tournament
07/03/2000 Peru Sporting Cristal 3 - 0 Atlético Colegiales Paraguay 2000 Copa Libertadores
19/04/2000 Peru Sporting Cristal 0 - 2 América de Cali Colombia 2000 Copa Libertadores
10/08/2000 Peru Sporting Cristal 2-2 Emelec Ecuador 2000 Copa Merconorte
30/08/2000 Peru Sporting Cristal 2-1 C.F. Pachuca Mexico 2000 Copa Merconorte
14/09/2000 Peru Sporting Cristal 5-1 Oriente Petrolero Bolivia 2000 Copa Merconorte
01/03/2001 Peru Sporting Cristal 0-1 Club Sport Emelec Ecuador 2001 Copa Libertadores
18/04/2001 Peru Sporting Cristal 3-2 Club Olimpia Paraguay 2001 Copa Libertadores
12/09/2001 Peru Sporting Cristal 2-1 Sporting Kansas City United States 2001 Copa Merconorte
23/10/2001 Peru Sporting Cristal 2-1 Club Santos Laguna Mexico 2001 Copa Merconorte
22/11/2001 Peru Sporting Cristal 2-2 Barcelona Ecuador 2001 Copa Merconorte
11/04/2002 Peru Sporting Cristal 0- 1 Monarcas Morelia Mexico 2002 Copa Libertadores
08/03/2006 Peru Sporting Cristal 2-1 Bolivar Bolivia Copa Libertadores
29/01/2009 Peru Sporting Cristal 2-1 Estudiantes de La Plata Argentina Copa Libertadores
24/03/2011 Peru Peru 0-3 France France Friendly Sub-20

References

Coordinates: 12°02′17″S 77°02′42″W / 12.038°S 77.045°W / -12.038; -77.045

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/17/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.