Estádio Independência

Estádio Raimundo Sampaio
Independência
Location Belo Horizonte, MG, Brazil
Built 1947-1950
Opened June 25, 1950
Owner América Mineiro
Surface Grass
Capacity 25,000[1]
Field dimensions 110 x 70 m

The Estádio Raimundo Sampaio, usually known as Estádio Independência, is in the neighborhood of Horto in Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais, Brazil and was opened in 1950 for the FIFA World Cup held in Brazil that year. Initially with capacity for 30,000 people, currently has capacity for 25,000 people.[1] It belonged to the defunct Sete de Setembro Futebol Clube, which is why the stadium is called Independence (the name of the team, September 7, is Brazil's Independence Day). It is currently leased by América Futebol Clube, who play their games at this stadium. Estádio Independência is the second most important stadium in Belo Horizonte, only behind Mineirão. Its formal name honors Raimundo Sampaio, a former chairman of Sete de Setembro.

Contents

History

The stadium construction started in 1947, in preparation for the 1950 FIFA World Cup. The stadium inaugural match was the World Cup match between Yugoslavia and Switzerland, won by the former by 3-0, and played on June 25, 1950. The first stadium goal was scored by Tomasevic. One of the most famous upsets in FIFA World Cup history was played here, the 1-0 upset by the United States over England at that 1950 World Cup.

After the construction of Mineirão, ownership of the stadium was transferred by the Minas Gerais government to Sete de Setembro. The Estádio Independência has been managed by América Mineiro since 1989.

Originally the stadium belonged to the Government of Minas Gerais, but with the inauguration of Mineirão in 1965, became the property of the club Sete de Setembro (reason the stadium is popularly known as Independence, according to the historical date), but with the demise of this club, in 1989 América rented the stadium, keeping it under their administration for a period of 30 years, in a system of leasing. At this stage América won Campeonato Brasileiro Série B in 1997 in the confrontation against Vila Nova-GO and in a match against Náutico the final phase of 18,900 paying fans attended. The América also won at that stage, the Brazilian Championship Series C in 2009.

Bleachers on game day America. In 1999, In partnership with Atlético, América built a metal structure grandstand, increasing the stadium capacity to about 30,000 people, plus an electronic scoreboard. But for lack of security, such grandstand was deactivated shortly thereafter. The end of the partnership also resulted in the removal of the score. Independência already served as a venue for music festivals, such as Pop Rock Brazil and the Axé Brazil.

The attendance record is 32,721 spectators, set in the match between Minas Gerais and Guanabara (Carioca), won by Minas Gerais 1-0, and played on January 27, 1963, it was the first final match of the 1962 Campeonato Brasileiro de Seleções Estaduais, played by state teams.

Renovation

In 2010, Independência was demolished apart from its dressing rooms,[2] and a brand new stadium is being built in its place to host the games of Atlético Mineiro, Cruzeiro and América Mineiro while Mineirão undergoes renovations to host the 2014 World Cup. During the stadium's renovation, all three Belo Horizonte teams play in the Arena do Jacaré, located in nearby city Sete Lagoas.[3] The estimated delivery date is December 2011.[4]

References

  1. ^ a b "Cadastro Nacional de Estádios de Futebol" (in Portuguese) (PDF). CBF. http://cbf.com.br/cnef/cnef.pdf. Retrieved October 23, 2010. 
  2. ^ ROCHA, Pedro Franco. Em vez da bola, máquinas Estado de Minas
  3. ^ ASTONI, Marco Antônio. Novo estádio Independência ficará pronto até o mês de junho de 2011 Globoesporte.com (25/11/2010)
  4. ^ Após atrasos, reformas do estádio Independência seguem a todo vapor Globoesporte.com (07/04/2011)

External links