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San Siro

Coordinates: 45°28′41″N 9°7′26″E / 45.47806°N 9.12389°E / 45.47806; 9.12389
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(Redirected from Stadio Giuseppe Meazza)

45°28′41″N 9°7′26″E / 45.47806°N 9.12389°E / 45.47806; 9.12389

San Siro
Stadio Giuseppe Meazza
Map
Former namesStadio Comunale di San Siro
AddressPiazzale Angelo Moratti, 20151
LocationMilan, Italy
Public transit
OwnerAC Milan (1926–1935)
Municipality of Milan (1935–present)
OperatorM-I Stadio s.r.l.
TypeStadium
Executive suites30
Capacity75,817[1] (limited capacity)
80,018[2] (maximum)
Field size105 m × 68 m
SurfaceGrassMaster hybrid grass
ScoreboardTecnovision
Construction
Broke groundDecember 1925; 99 years ago (1925-12)
Opened19 September 1926; 98 years ago (1926-09-19)
Renovated1935, 1955, 1987–1990, 2015–2016
Architect
  • Cugini, Stacchini (1925)
  • Perlasca, Bertera (1935)
  • Ronca, Calzolari (1955)
  • Ragazzi, Hoffer, Finzi (1990)
Tenants
AC Milan (1926–1941, 1945–present)
Internazionale (1947–present)
Italy national football team (selected matches)

San Siro is a football stadium in the San Siro district of Milan, Italy. It has a seating capacity of 80,018, making it the largest stadium in Italy and one of the largest stadiums in Europe. It is the home stadium of the city's principal professional football clubs, AC Milan and Inter Milan, who share an intense rivalry.

On 3 March 1980 the stadium was named in honour of Giuseppe Meazza, the two-time World Cup winner (1934, 1938) who played for Inter and briefly for Milan in the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s,[3] and served two stints as Inter's manager.

The San Siro is a UEFA category four stadium. It hosted three games at the 1934 FIFA World Cup, the opening ceremony and six games at the 1990 FIFA World Cup, three games at the UEFA Euro 1980 and four European Cup finals, in 1965, 1970, 2001 and 2016.[4] The stadium will also host the opening ceremony of the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan and Cortina. It is one of the potential venues for the UEFA Euro 2032.

History

[edit]
Aerial view of San Siro
The choreography of AC Milan's fans during a Derby della Madonnina
View of the stadium at night
The choreography of Inter Milan's fans during a match against AC Siena in Serie A.

Construction of the stadium commenced in 1925 in the district of Milan named San Siro, with the new stadium originally named Nuovo Stadio Calcistico San Siro (San Siro New Football Stadium).[5] The idea to build a stadium in the same district as the horse racing track belonged to the president of AC Milan at the time, Piero Pirelli. The architects designed a private stadium only for football, without athletics tracks which characterized Italian stadiums built with public funds.[6] The inauguration was on 19 September 1926, when 35,000 spectators saw Inter defeat Milan 6–3. Originally, the ground was home and property of Milan. Finally, in 1947, Inter, who used to play in the Arena Civica downtown,[7] became tenants and the two have shared the ground ever since.

From 1948 to 1955 engineers Armando Ronca and Ferruccio Calzolari developed the project for the second extension of the stadium, which was meant to increase the capacity from 50,000 to 150,000 visitors. Calzolari and Ronca proposed three additional, vertically arranged, rings of spectator rows. Nineteen spiralling ramps – each 200 metres long – gave access to the upper tiers. During construction, the realisation of the highest of the three rings was abandoned and the number of visitors limited to 100,000.[8] Then for security reasons, the capacity was reduced to 60,000 seats and 25,000 standing.

On 2 March 1980 the stadium was named for Giuseppe Meazza (1910–1979), one of the most famous Milanese footballers. For a time, Inter fans called the stadium Stadio Meazza due to Meazza's stronger connections with Inter (14 years as a player, three stints as manager). However, in recent years both Inter and Milan fans have called the stadium simply San Siro.

The last major renovation for the San Siro, which cost $60 million, was in of 1987–1990, for the 1990 FIFA World Cup. It was decided to modernize the stadium by increasing its capacity to 85,000 spectators and building a cover. The Municipality of Milan entrusted the work to the architects Giancarlo Ragazzi and Enrico Hoffer, and to the engineer Leo Finzi. To increase capacity, a third ring was built (only in the two curves and in the west grandstand) which rests on eleven support towers surrounded by helical ramps that allow access to the public. Four of these eleven concrete towers were located at the corners to support a new roof, which has distinctive protruding red girders.

In 1996, a museum was opened inside the stadium charting Milan and Internazionale's history, with historical shirts, cups and trophies, shoes, art objects and souvenirs of all kinds on display to visitors.

Three Milan derby Champions League knockout ties have taken place at the San Siro, in 2003, 2005 and 2023 with Milan winning the first of two ties with the latter being won by Inter Milan.[9] The reaction of Inter's fans to impending defeat in the 2005 match (throwing flares and other objects at Milan players and forcing the match to be abandoned)[10] earned the club a large fine and a four-game ban on spectators attending European fixtures there the following season.[11][12][13]

Apart from being used by Milan and Inter, the Italy national team occasionally plays matches there.[14] It has also been used for the European Cup finals of 1965 (won by Inter), 1970 (won by Feyenoord), and the UEFA Champions League finals of 2001 (won by Bayern Munich) and 2016 (won by Real Madrid).[4][15]

The stadium was also used for the home leg of three UEFA Cup finals in which Inter was competing (1991, 1994, 1997) when these were played over two legs. It was also used by Juventus for their 'home' leg in 1995 as they decided against playing their biggest matches at their own Stadio delle Alpi at the time.[16][17][18] On each occasion, apart from 1991, the second leg was played at the San Siro and the winners lifted the trophy there. However, the stadium has not yet been selected as the host stadium since the competition changed to a single-match final format in 1997–98.

The San Siro has never hosted a final of the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, but was the host stadium for the 1951 Latin Cup, a four-team event won by Milan. The city was also the venue for the 1956 edition of the Latin Cup (also won by Milan), but those matches were played at Arena Civica.

Amid the COVID-19 pandemic in Italy on 25 March, the Associated Press dubbed the UEFA Champions League match between Bergamo club Atalanta and Spanish club Valencia at the San Siro on 19 February as "Game Zero". The match was the first time Atalanta has progressed to a Champions League round of 16 match, and had an attendance of over 40,000 people – about one third of Bergamo's population. By 24 March, almost 7,000 people in the province of Bergamo had tested positive for COVID-19, and more than 1,000 people had died from the virus—making Bergamo the most hard-hit province in all of Italy during the pandemic.[19]

Potential replacement

[edit]

Milan and Internazionale announced their intention in June 2019 to build a new stadium to replace the San Siro. The new 60,000 capacity stadium, which would be constructed next to the San Siro, was initially anticipated to cost US$800 million and be ready for the 2022–23 season,[20] although this did not come to pass.

Giuseppe Sala, the current Mayor of Milan, and the comune of Milan asked for time and stressed that the San Siro would be kept until at least the 2026 Winter Olympics and Winter Paralympics to be held in Milan and Cortina d'Ampezzo.[21][22] The proposed project was also met with some skepticism and opposition by several fans of both teams.[23]

On 26 September 2019, Milan and Internazionale released two potential designs for the new stadium next to the original ground, tentatively named the Nuovo Stadio Milano, designed by Populous and MANICA, respectively.[24][25] On 22 May 2020, Italy's heritage authority raised no objections to demolishing the San Siro.[26] On 21 December 2021, the Populous project was chosen.[27]

On 27 September 2023, Milan chairman Paolo Scaroni announced the club had filed a proposal to build a new 70,000-seater stadium, alongside the club headquarters and museum in the comune of San Donato Milanese, a suburb south of Milan.[28]

International football matches

[edit]

Italy national team

[edit]
Date Opponent Score Attendance Competition
20 February 1927  Czechoslovakia 2–2 28,000 Friendly
2 December 1928  Netherlands 3–2 19,000
1 December 1929  Portugal 6–1 25,000
22 February 1931  Austria 2–1 45,000 1931–32 Central European International Cup
27 November 1932  Hungary 4–2 32,000 Friendly
25 March 1934  Greece 4–0 20,000 1934 FIFA World Cup qualification Group 3
3 June 1934  Austria 1–0 35,000 1934 FIFA World Cup Semi-final
9 December 1934  Hungary 4–2 45,000 Friendly
25 October 1936   Switzerland 4–2 40,000 1936–38 Central European International Cup
15 May 1938  Belgium 6–1 25,000 Friendly
13 May 1939  England 2–2 60,000
5 May 1940  Germany 3–2 65,000
19 April 1942  Spain 4–0 55,000
1 December 1946  Austria 3–2 53,000
6 May 1951  Yugoslavia 0–0 50,000
24 January 1954  Egypt 5–1 40,000 1954 FIFA World Cup qualification Group 9
25 April 1956  Brazil 3–0 80,000 Friendly
22 December 1957  Portugal 3–0 50,000 1958 FIFA World Cup qualification Group 8
12 May 1963  Brazil 3–0 72,000 Friendly
18 June 1966  Austria 1–0 40,000
1 November 1966  Soviet Union 1–0 55,000
9 October 1971  Sweden 3–0 65,582 UEFA Euro 1972 qualifying Group 6
29 April 1972  Belgium 0–0 63,549 UEFA Euro 1972 qualifying quarter-finals
1 November 1973  Sweden 2–0 65,454 Friendly
5 June 1976  Romania 4–2 30,329
24 February 1979  Netherlands 3–0 70,000
15 March 1980  Uruguay 1–0 35,000
12 June 1980  Spain 0–0 46,816 UEFA Euro 1980 Group B
13 November 1982  Czechoslovakia 2–2 72,386 UEFA Euro 1984 qualifying Group 5
26 September 1984  Sweden 1–0 25,000 Friendly
15 November 1986   Switzerland 3–2 67,422 UEFA Euro 1988 qualifying Group 2
5 December 1987  Portugal 3–0 13,524
17 November 1993 1–0 71,513 1994 FIFA World Cup qualification Group 1
7 October 2000  Romania 3–0 54,297 2002 FIFA World Cup qualification Group 8
17 April 2002  Uruguay 1–1 16,767 Friendly
6 September 2003  Wales 4–0 68,000 UEFA Euro 2004 qualifying Group 7
26 March 2005  Scotland 2–0 40,745 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification Group 5
8 September 2007  France 0–0 81,200 UEFA Euro 2008 qualifying Group B
16 October 2012  Denmark 3–1 37,027 2014 FIFA World Cup qualification Group B
15 November 2013  Germany 1–1 40,000 Friendly
16 November 2014  Croatia 1–1 63,222 UEFA Euro 2016 qualifying Group H
15 November 2016  Germany 0–0 48,600 Friendly
13 November 2017  Sweden 0–0 72,696 2018 FIFA World Cup qualification Second round
17 November 2018  Portugal 73,000 2018–19 UEFA Nations League
Group A3
6 October 2021  Spain 1–2 33,524 2021 UEFA Nations League Finals
Nations League SF
23 September 2022  England 1–0 50,640 2022–23 UEFA Nations League A
12 September 2023  Ukraine 2–1 58,386 UEFA Euro 2024 qualifying Group C
17 November 2024  France 1–3 68,158 2024–25 UEFA Nations League A

1934 FIFA World Cup

[edit]

The stadium was one of the biggest venues of the 1934 FIFA World Cup and held three matches.

Date Team No. 1 Result Team No. 2 Round
27 May 1934   Switzerland 3–2  Netherlands
Round of 16
31 May 1934  Germany 2–1  Sweden
Quarter-finals
3 June 1934  Italy 1–0  Austria
Semi-finals

UEFA Euro 1980

[edit]

The stadium was one of the four selected to host the matches during the UEFA Euro 1980.

Date Team No. 1 Result Team No. 2 Round
12 June 1980  Spain 0–0  Italy
15 June 1980  Belgium 2–1  Spain
17 June 1980  Netherlands 1–1  Czechoslovakia

1990 FIFA World Cup

[edit]

The stadium was one of the venues of the 1990 FIFA World Cup and held six matches.

Date Team No. 1 Result Team No. 2 Round
8 June 1990  Argentina 0–1  Cameroon Group B (opening match)
10 June 1990  West Germany 4–1  Yugoslavia Group D
15 June 1990 5–1  United Arab Emirates
19 June 1990 1–1  Colombia
24 June 1990 2–1  Netherlands Round of 16
1 July 1990  Czechoslovakia 0–1  West Germany Quarter-finals

2021 UEFA Nations League Finals

[edit]

The stadium was one of two selected to host the 2021 UEFA Nations League Finals matches.

Date Team No. 1 Result Team No. 2 Round
6 October 2021  Italy 1–2  Spain
Semi-finals (opening match)
10 October 2021  Spain 1–2  France

Other sports

[edit]

2026 Winter Olympics

[edit]

Opening ceremony of the 2026 Winter Olympics (Milano Cortina) will be held at San Siro on 6 February 2026.

Boxing

[edit]

San Siro was the venue for the boxing match between Duilio Loi vs. Carlos Ortiz for the Junior Welterweight title in 1960.

Rugby union

[edit]

The first and only top level rugby union match to be played at San Siro was a test match between Italy and New Zealand in November 2009. A crowd of 80,000 watched the event, a record for Italian rugby.

Year Date Match Country Score Country Attendance
2009 14 November Test match Italy  6–20 New Zealand  80,000

Concerts

[edit]

Since the 1980s, the stadium has hosted concerts by several major international artists. The first ever to perform there was Bob Marley on 27 June 1980, during the Uprising Tour.[29] Afterwards it had the opportunity to host Bob Dylan and Santana in 1984, Bruce Springsteen in 1985, Genesis, Duran Duran and David Bowie in 1987, Michael Jackson in 1997, and in more recent times, the Red Hot Chili Peppers in 2004, U2 in 2005 and 2009, The Rolling Stones in 2006 and 2022, Madonna in 2009, Depeche Mode in 2009, 2013, 2017 and 2023, Muse in 2010, 2019, and 2023, Bon Jovi in 2013, Pearl Jam in 2014, Beyoncé in 2016, Coldplay in 2017 and 2023, Ed Sheeran in 2019, and Elton John in 2022 and Taylor Swift in 2024.

Edoardo Bennato was the first Italian artist to perform and sell out the stadium in July 1980.[30] In 2007, Laura Pausini became the first female artist to perform at the stadium and also held two consecutive concerts on 4 and 5 June 2016.[31]

Vasco Rossi, is the artist who holds the record for largest number of performances on the stadium, with 29 concerts between 1990 and 2019,[32] followed by Luciano Ligabue with 13 concerts. Vasco Rossi also holds the record for consecutive concerts with six shows between 1 and 12 June 2019.[33][34]

The international artist with the most performances at San Siro is Bruce Springsteen, with seven concerts as of 2024.[35]

Concert of Vasco Rossi in 2007
Date Performer(s) Opening act(s) Tour/Event Attendance Notes
27 June 1980 Bob Marley & The Wailers Pino Daniele Uprising Tour
15 July 1980 Various artists La Carovana del Mediterraneo
19 July 1980 Edoardo Bennato Sono Solo Canzonette
29 June 1984 Bob Dylan Santana
Pino Daniele
Bob Dylan 1984 European Tour
21 June 1985 Bruce Springsteen Born in the U.S.A. Tour 65,000
13 July 1986 Various artists Milano Suono Festival 1986
16 July 1986
17 July 1986
18 July 1986
19 July 1986
20 June 1986
15 May 1987 Genesis Paul Young Invisible Touch Tour
5 June 1987 Duran Duran Strange Behaviour Tour
10 June 1987 David Bowie Glass Spider Tour 70,000
10 July 1990 Vasco Rossi Ladri di Biciclette
Casino Royale
Fronte del Palco Tour 1990
28 May 1992 Antonello Venditti Alta marea Tour
4 July 1994 Al Bano
Romina Power
7 July 1995 Vasco Rossi Rock Sotto Assedio
8 July 1995
15 June 1996 Nessun Pericolo Per Te Tour
18 June 1997 Michael Jackson B-Nario
Paola e Chiara
HIStory World Tour 65,000
28 June 1997 Ligabue Gang
Negrita
Il Bar Mario è Aperto
29 June 1997
22 May 1998 Eros Ramazzotti Eros World Tour
9 July 1998 Claudio Baglioni Da me a te
5 July 2002 Ligabue Fuori Come Va Tour
6 July 2002
10 June 2003 The Rolling Stones The Cranberries Licks Tour
28 June 2003 Bruce Springsteen The Rising Tour
1 July 2003 Claudio Baglioni Tutto in un abbraccio
4 July 2003 Vasco Rossi Articolo 31 Vasco @ S.Siro 03
5 July 2003 Irene Grandi
8 July 2003 Anouk
29 May 2004 Renato Zero Cattura il sogno
8 June 2004 Red Hot Chili Peppers The Roots Roll on the Red Tour
12 June 2004 Vasco Rossi Simone Tomassini Buoni o Cattivi Tour 2004
13 June 2004
20 July 2005 U2 Ash
Feeder
Vertigo Tour 137,427 Parts of the concerts were filmed and recorded for the group's live album and concert film U2.COMmunication and Vertigo 05: Live from Milan respectively.
21 July 2005
27 May 2006 Ligabue Nome e Cognome Tour
11 July 2006 The Rolling Stones Bo Diddley
Feeder
A Bigger Bang 56,175
22 July 2006 Robbie Williams Close Encounters Tour
2 June 2007 Laura Pausini Io Canto Tour
9 June 2007 Renato Zero MpZero
21 June 2007 Vasco Rossi Vasco Live 2007
22 June 2007
30 June 2007 Biagio Antonacci Nomadi Vicky Love Tour
31 May 2008 Negramaro La Finestra Tour
6 June 2008 Vasco Rossi Il Mondo Che Vorrei Live Tour 2008
7 June 2008
14 June 2008 Zucchero All the Best
25 June 2008 Bruce Springsteen Magic Tour 59,821
4 July 2008 Ligabue Elle-Elle Live 2008
5 July 2008
18 June 2009 Depeche Mode Dolcenera
M83
Tour of the Universe 57,544 The concert was recorded for the group's live album project Recording the Universe.
21 June 2009 Various artists Amiche per l'Abruzzo
7 July 2009 U2 Snow Patrol U2 360° Tour 153,806
8 July 2009 The performances of Breathe and Electrical Storm were recorded for the group's live album From the Ground Up: Edge's Picks from U2360°.
14 July 2009 Madonna Sticky & Sweet Tour 55,338
8 June 2010 Muse Calibro 35
Friendly Fires
Kasabian
The Resistance Tour 60,000
16 July 2010 Ligabue Margot Arrivederci Mostro
17 July 2010
16 June 2011 Vasco Rossi Vasco Live Kom '011
17 June 2011
21 June 2011
22 June 2011
12 July 2011 Take That Pet Shop Boys Progress Live
7 June 2012 Bruce Springsteen Wrecking Ball World Tour 57,149
14 June 2012 Madonna Martin Solveig The MDNA Tour 53,244
3 June 2013 Bruce Springsteen Wrecking Ball World Tour 56,670
19 June 2013 Jovanotti Backup Tour
20 June 2013
29 June 2013 Bon Jovi Because We Can 51,531
13 July 2013 Negramaro Una storia semplice Tour 2013
18 July 2013 Depeche Mode Motel Connection
Chvrches
The Delta Machine Tour 57,919
31 July 2013 Robbie Williams Olly Murs Take The Crown Stadium Tour
31 May 2014 Biagio Antonacci Palco Antonacci 2014
6 June 2014 Ligabue Mondovisione Tour: Stadi 2014
7 June 2014
20 June 2014 Pearl Jam Lightning Bolt Tour
28 June 2014 One Direction 5 Seconds of Summer Where We Are Tour 115,931 The concerts were recorded for the group's concert film One Direction: Where We Are - The Concert Film.
29 June 2014
4 July 2014 Vasco Rossi Vasco Live Kom '014
5 July 2014
9 July 2014
10 July 2014
19 July 2014 Modà Stadi Tour 2014
17 June 2015 Vasco Rossi Vasco Live Kom '015
18 June 2015
25 June 2015 Jovanotti Lorenzo Negli Stadi 2015
26 June 2015
27 June 2015
4 July 2015 Tiziano Ferro Lo stadio Tour 2015
5 July 2015
4 June 2016 Laura Pausini Simili Tour 100,388
5 June 2016
10 June 2016 Pooh L'ultima notte insieme
11 June 2016
18 June 2016 Modà Passione Maledetta Tour 2016
19 June 2016
3 July 2016 Bruce Springsteen The River Tour 2016 104,646
5 July 2016
13 July 2016 Rihanna Big Sean
DJ Mustard
Anti World Tour
18 July 2016 Beyoncé Chloe x Halle
Sophie Beem
The Formation World Tour 54,313[36]
9 June 2017 Davide Van De Sfroos
16 June 2017 Tiziano Ferro Il Mestiere della Vita Tour
17 June 2017
19 June 2017
27 June 2017 Depeche Mode Algiers Global Spirit Tour 54,488
3 July 2017 Coldplay Lyves, Tove Lo A Head Full of Dreams Tour 117,307
4 July 2017 Tove Lo
1 June 2018 J-Ax & Fedez La Finale 79,500
20 June 2018 Cesare Cremonini Cremonini Stadi 2018 56,963
27 June 2018 Negramaro Amore Che Torni Tour Stadi 2018
6 July 2018 Beyoncé
Jay-Z
On the Run II Tour 49,051[37]
1 June 2019 Vasco Rossi Vasco Non Stop Tour 2019
2 June 2019
6 June 2019
7 June 2019
11 June 2019
12 June 2019
19 June 2019 Ed Sheeran ÷ Tour 54,892
28 June 2019 Luciano Ligabue Start Tour
4 July 2019 Laura Pausini e Biagio Antonacci Laura Biagio Stadi Tour 2019
5 July 2019
12 July 2019 Muse Mini Mansions, The Amazons Simulation Theory World Tour 89,619
13 July 2019 Mini Mansions, Nic Cester
4 June 2022 Elton John Farewell Yellow Brick Road 48,885
21 June 2022 The Rolling Stones Ghost Hounds Sixty 57,204
6 July 2022 Salmo Flop Tour 2022
10 July 2022 Guns N' Roses Gary Clark Jr. We're F'N' Back! Tour 53,623
15 July 2022 Max Pezzali SanSiro canta Max
16 July 2022
15 June 2023 Tiziano Ferro[38] Il mondo è nostro Tour
17 June 2023
18 June 2023
25 June 2023 Coldplay CHVRCHES
Mara Sattei
Music of the Spheres World Tour 249,560
26 June 2023
28 June 2023
29 June 2023
5 July 2023 Ligabue Stadi 2023
6 July 2023 Pooh Amici per sempre live 2023
8 July 2023 Marco Mengoni Marco in the stadiums 2023
11 July 2023 Pinguini Tattici Nucleari
12 July 2023
14 July 2023 Depeche Mode Memento Mori World Tour 54,948
17 July 2023 Ultimo Ultimo Stadi 2023 - La favola continua...
18 July 2023
20 July 2023 Blanco Innamorato stadi
22 July 2023 Muse Royal Blood Will of the People World Tour
24 July 2023 Måneskin Loud Kids Tour Gets Louder
25 July 2023
7 June 2024 Vasco Rossi Vasco Live 2024
8 June 2024
11 June 2024
12 June 2024
15 June 2024
19 June 2024
20 June 2024
22 June 2024 Negramaro Da sud a nord: Stadi 2024
24 June 2024 Sfera Ebbasta
25 June 2024
28 June 2024 Club Dogo
30 June 2024 Max Pezzali Max Forever Hits Only
1 July 2024
2 July 2024
4 July 2024 Zucchero Fornaciari Overdose d'amore World Tour
13 July 2024 Taylor Swift Paramore The Eras Tour
14 July 2024
10 June 2025 Pinguini Tattici Nucleari
11 June 2025
28 June 2025 Gabry Ponte
30 June 2025 Bruce Springsteen Springsteen and E Street Band 2023 Tour
3 July 2025

Transport connections

[edit]

The stadium is located in the northwestern part of Milan and can be reached by underground via the dedicated San Siro subway station (at the end of line M5), located just in front of the stadium,[39] or by tram, with line 16 ending right in front of the building. The Lotto subway station (line M1 and line M5) is about 15 minutes walk away from San Siro.

Metro station San Siro Stadio

Stations nearby:

Service Station Line
Milan Metro San Siro Stadio Disabled access
San Siro Ippodromo Disabled access
Lotto Disabled access
Tram Piazza Axum (Stadio) 16
Panorama of the stadium.
Panorama of the stadium

Average attendances

[edit]
Tenants Serie A season Home games Average attendance[40]
AC Milan 2023-24 19 72,008
Internazionale 2023-24 19 72,838
AC Milan 2022-23 19 71,828
Internazionale 2022-23 19 72,630

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Structure". sansirostadium.com. Archived from the original on 7 December 2022. Retrieved 8 April 2023.
  2. ^ "San Siro, per le vibrazioni al terzo anello chiusi sei settori: "Nessun problema di sicurezza, ma così si evita il panico"". La Reppublica (in Italian). 1 August 2019. Archived from the original on 29 July 2021. Retrieved 12 July 2021.
  3. ^ "The history of the San Siro stadium". AC Milan.com. Archived from the original on 14 October 2013. Retrieved 18 October 2011.
  4. ^ a b "Milan to host 2016 UEFA Champions League final". UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 18 September 2014. Archived from the original on 20 September 2014. Retrieved 23 July 2015.
  5. ^ Almanacco Illustrato del Milan, Panini, Modena (it.)
  6. ^ The architectural structure of San Siro was shared in Italy with Marassi which, due to being the private home ground of Genoa, also had no athletics track.
  7. ^ Gianni, Santucci (16 September 2006). "San Siro and football, eighty years of show". Corriere della Sera – Archive (in Italian). Archived from the original on 19 October 2010. Retrieved 4 May 2022.
  8. ^ Werner, Feiersinger (2017). Armando Ronca Architektur der Moderne in Südtirol 1935–1970. Kunst Meran, Kunst, Kofler, Andreas, Schmidt, Magdalene, Stabenow, Jörg, Kofler, Andreas, Martignoni, Massimo. Zürich. ISBN 9783038600619. OCLC 988179618.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  9. ^ #TBT: 5 European clashes against Italian sides Archived 23 May 2019 at the Wayback Machine, Milan, 30 November 2017
  10. ^ "Milan move into last four". UEFA. 13 April 2005. Archived from the original on 2 January 2015. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  11. ^ "Inter handed stadium ban and fine". BBC Sport. 15 April 2005. Archived from the original on 23 November 2018. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  12. ^ "Pari senza emozioni nello stadio vuoto ma l'Inter conquista la Champions" [Passionless draw in the empty stadium but Inter achieves the Champions] (in Italian). La Repubblica. 24 August 2005. Archived from the original on 7 November 2017. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  13. ^ "Inter 1—0 Rangers". BBC Sport. 28 September 2005. Archived from the original on 7 February 2007. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  14. ^ "Italy 2—0 Scotland". BBC News. 26 March 2005. Archived from the original on 7 September 2017. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  15. ^ "San Siro's previous four European Cup finals". UEFA. 20 January 2016. Archived from the original on 7 November 2017. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  16. ^ Hughes, Rob (5 April 1995). "Will a Spoonful of Sugar Make a Bad Boy Nice?". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 7 November 2017. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  17. ^ "Il passato e' oggi: a San Siro Juventus-Borussia" [Today in the past: Juventus-Borussia at San Siro] (in Italian). Mediaset. 4 April 2010. Archived from the original on 7 November 2017. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  18. ^ Juventus: A History in Black and White, Adam Digby, 2015, 9781783016914
  19. ^ Dampf, Andrew; Azzoni, Tales (25 March 2020). "Game Zero: Spread of virus linked to Champions League match". Associated Press. Archived from the original on 2 May 2020. Retrieved 26 March 2020.
  20. ^ The Legendary San Siro Stadium Is Getting Demolished Archived 24 June 2019 at the Wayback Machine. Sport Bible. Published 24 June 2019.
  21. ^ Inter e Milan insieme per un nuovo stadio, ma Sala frena: "San Siro non si tocca" Archived 26 June 2019 at the Wayback Machine. Gazzetta del Sud (in Italian). Published 24 June 2019.
  22. ^ Sala: "San Siro? Sarà funzionante nel 2026. Fine della storia" Archived 25 June 2019 at the Wayback Machine. La Gazzetta dello Sport (in Italian). Published 24 June 2019.
  23. ^ Demolizione di San Siro, 'no' bipartisan a Milan e Inter Archived 26 June 2019 at the Wayback Machine. Il Giorno (in Italian). Published 25 June 2019.
  24. ^ "A New Stadium for Milano". nuovostadiomilano.com. Archived from the original on 27 June 2021. Retrieved 12 July 2021.
  25. ^ "AC Milan & Inter Milan reveal new stadium plans". BBC Sport. 26 September 2019. Archived from the original on 4 March 2022. Retrieved 22 May 2020.
  26. ^ "AC Milan and Inter Milan's San Siro 'can be demolished' for new 60,000 stadium, says Italy's heritage authority". BBC Sport. 22 May 2020. Archived from the original on 23 May 2020. Retrieved 22 May 2020.
  27. ^ "Nuovo San Siro, Inter e Milan scelgono la Cattedrale – Sport – TGR Lombardia". Rainews.it. 21 December 2021. Archived from the original on 3 March 2022. Retrieved 8 March 2022.
  28. ^ "AC Milan take 'first step' in new stadium project". ESPN.com. 27 September 2023. Retrieved 28 September 2023.
  29. ^ "Concerti a San Siro a quota 101: da Bob Marley a Beyoncé". Il Giorno.it (in Italian). 13 January 2017.
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[edit]
Preceded by European Cup
Final venue

1965
Succeeded by
Preceded by European Cup
Final venue

1970
Succeeded by
Preceded by FIFA World Cup
Opening venue

1990
Succeeded by
Preceded by UEFA Champions League
Final venue

2001
Succeeded by
Preceded by UEFA Champions League
Final venue

2016
Succeeded by
Preceded by UEFA Nations League
Finals venue

2021
with Juventus Stadium
Succeeded by
Preceded by Winter Olympic Games
Opening ceremony (Olympic Stadium)

2026
Succeeded by
TBA

45°28′41″N 9°7′26″E / 45.47806°N 9.12389°E / 45.47806; 9.12389