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Estadio Campos de Sports de Ñuñoa

Coordinates: 33°27′26″S 70°36′34″W / 33.457288°S 70.609445°W / -33.457288; -70.609445
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33°27′26″S 70°36′34″W / 33.457288°S 70.609445°W / -33.457288; -70.609445

Estadio Campos de Sports de Ñuñoa
Map
Full nameEstadio Campos de Sports de Ñuñoa
LocationSantiago, Chile
OwnerPUC (1927-1938)[1]
Universidad Católica (1927-1934)[2]
Universidad Católica (1937-1938)[3]
Capacity20,000
Closed1938
Tenants
Universidad Católica
Chile national football team

Estadio Campos de Sports de Ñuñoa was a multi-use stadium in Santiago, Chile. It was the home ground of the Chile national football team until the current Estadio Nacional de Chile opened in 1938. The stadium held 20,000 spectators. It hosted the Copa America tournament in 1926. Campos de Sports de Ñuñoa was the second of four stadiums that have been owned by the chilean club Universidad Católica.[3]

History

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In 1918, the land where the facility operated was donated to the State by José Domingo Cañas. Its objective was the recreation of the popular education charitable societies that the philanthropist supported. The construction of the sports complex included the creation of soccer fields, tennis courts, a playground, among other facilities. The land was located between the current José Domingo Cañas streets and Campos de Deportes.

On November 11, 1927, the Ñuñoa Sports Fields became property of the Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile and Club Deportivo Universidad Católica (in the club's amateur stage),[2] and, by extension, of the current club Universidad Católica, from its final foundation on April 21, 1937, due to the partnership between the university and the CDUC.[1]

In 1938 it was demolished, being replaced by the National Stadium Sports Complex, currently National Stadium Park, located nearby.

Bibliography

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  • David Goldblatt; World Soccer Yearbook; 2002 ISBN 0-7894-8943-0

References

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  1. ^ a b "Los Campos de Sports de Ñuñoa pasaron a poder de la Universidad Católica" (PDF). La Nación. Santiago. 12 November 1927. Retrieved 16 June 2024.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. ^ a b "Arrasó Colo Colo con el equipo campeón de Valparaíso" (PDF). La Nación. Santiago. 12 November 1934. Retrieved 23 June 2024.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  3. ^ a b "Estadio" (in Spanish). Cruzados. Retrieved 27 March 2024.