The Bari stadium has an athletics track, but still they decided the fans weren’t far away enough from the pitch, so built the stands at a considerable distance from even just the outer edge of the athletics track
Mané Garrincha has hosted some Serie A matches, mostly regional derbies involving clubs from Rio in the last few years for numerous reasons. In 2022, due to some repairs at Maracanã, Flamengo moved 3 matches to the capital stadium. It also became a sort of backup stadium for all top flight Rio clubs as it's the closest venue outside the city with such a large capacity available nearly all year long and they're pretty much the only teams that can draw crowds to fill most of the seats
Teams in Minas Gerais use it too. Cruzeiro hosted 1 match there last year, this year at least one match for the Campeonato Mineiro will be played there also. Still, very low number of matches in a year.
11:17 The Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California near Los Angeles is a single tier bowl stadium holding 90,000. The beautiful venue hosted the 1994 World Cup final and was the original home of LA Galaxy. The seating tier is on a gentle slope and yes, a seat at the top of the bowl is an incredible distance from the playing surface.
@@MastinoNapoletano420 crama shi&load of people, but by god it is one helluva misedrable place during bad weather >.< There's a trade off with not having any sort of roof
@@jannisschmidt3681 We don't have any well-established minor leagues for the NFL. So college football is the de facto minor league. Cities without an NFL team naturally support their college team, and even some cities with an NFL team prefer the college team.
In Portugal we have the Estádio Dr. Magalhães Pessoa, built for the Euro 2004 in the city of Leiria (60 876 inhabitants), with a capacity of 24 000 people and an athletics track. The stadium's owner is the Leiria municipal council and the club playing there is União Desportiva de Leiria, currently playing in the 3rd division, but they used to play in the Primeira Liga some years ago before getting relegated. Fun fact: União Desportiva de Leiria was the club were Mourinho was after being sacked by Benfica and before being hired by FC Porto and winning the 2003 UEFA cup.
Also the Estádio Municipal de Aveiro, which hosts Beira Mar currently in the 4th tier or thereabouts. And the Estádio do Algarve has no tenants at all. Both can hold 30.000 spectators.
Same with Aveiro and Coimbra (Beira-Mar in the 4th tier and Académica in the 3rd). Algarve will host Gibraltar games once again next year due to their stadium having to go through renovations
Santa Cruz fan here, really glad to see my team in a international channel. We were playing in the top flight in 2016 but since then we got into financial problems and now we are here in the last national tier. Hope the future is bright for us, great video 🙏💪
Regarding Estádio do Arruda (Santa Cruz FC), in addition to the D series, the team competes in the Pernambuco (state) championship against the great rivals Náutico and Sport, relegated last year to series C (third has) and in series B (second has) respectively. Brasilia is a strange city, created in 1960 in the middle of nowhere, in an attempt to internalize the Brazilian occupation, has its population coming mainly from the Northeast and Southeast of Brazil, which is represented by the fans. Flamengo, Vasco and Corinthians played a few times, filling the venue. I would say that the biggest absurd among Brazilian stadiums is in the North Region, where Manaus (Amazonas State Capital) received a new stadium despite the biggest football center being Belém (Pará State Capital), which has two teams that are in lower divisions, Paysandu and Remo, but in the local Derby they place (Re-Pa) more than 40 thousand people to watch.
@@samegemba1741 unfortunately I'm not from Pernambuco, and I wouldn't know how to tell you. I just found It is important to emphasize the state championship because it is a typically Brazilian tournament whose importance can go unnoticed by a foreigner. By the way, Santa Cruz going to play against Náutico today.
Bari stadium also hosted 1991 European Cup final between Red Star Belgrade and Olympique Marseille and definitely has a special place in hearts of many Red star fans including me. I really appreciate and love your work and humour and just keep up the good work
I always get quite happy with Alfie's pronunciation of Brazilian Portuguese. Sure it's not perfect, but some Europeans don't even try to say things the correct way, or just butch it and say "I don't speak Spanish" (which is a wild statement in itself). Thanks as always, Alfie!
If you want to pronounce s as sh and zh after vowels, I can tell you we say it as zh at the end of words, and sh for everything else. It isn't necessary given in Brazil, mostly only coastal dialects in Santa Catarina, Rio de Janeiro and some northeastern states have that. In Portugal most have this characteristic, but I'm glad you do it like that for names in Brazil sometimes, since where I live we speak like that.
a documentary on the afc Wimbledon on the nine promotions in eleven years, how they’re a fan own club and how they have a stadium in plough lane now. The story of they lost the club, how the F A allowed that and won’t allow that anymore. How they were very close to moving to ireland How they went up the English football leagues. It would be a good documentary video if you can do this. #thepeopleschannel
USL side Indy Eleven host their games in Lucas Oil Stadium, a 67,000 capacity stadium while I was living in the city of Indianapolis, Indiana (sharing their pitch with an American football side). They've been trying to build something more fitting for a second division side (even as they were trying to get/buy into the first division), but the city have been getting in the way for years.
Loved this video! I know you spent a lot talking about the San Nicola, but I think mentioning that it hosted the 1991 European Cup final would've added to the ridiculousness of that stadium's history
I'm from Recife, Pernambuco. Santa Cruz FC's home city. Although i am a Sport Recife (the biggest and most successful team in Pernambuco and in the whole north-northeast regions of Brazil) fan, i can give more depth into Santinha's current situation. Santa Cruz has been relegated two separate times to the Série D. On the first one, in 2011 (they were struggling in the 4th division for about 3 years) they got promoted and after some more promotions, they were in 2016's brazilian Série A. But then, they got relegated. In 2018 they were already at the 3rd division, and in 2021, they got relegated to the 4th division for a second time. But even then, they always fill up the stands when it's a game against it's rivals (Sport Recife and Náutico) in the Campeonato Pernambucano (a state pre-season tournament) and in the Copa do Nordeste, or when it's a important game in the 4th division. Even though i am a fan of a rival of them, i want them to get promoted, it isn't even fun making fun of them, it's like kicking a dead horse. If everything goes right this year, Sport will be in Série A in 2024, Náutico in Série B and Santa in C.
I live in Alicante, and our team, Hércules CF, plays in a 30.000+ capacity stadium while being in the fourth division, and for a moment this season we were almost getting relegated to the fifth
For the Chinese stadium, i think it also is important that a lot of chinese team don't own their stadium, but instead they are government properties. And they might also host other competition such as the national games or just province-level games, (and concerts and other non-sports events of course)
OK that makes sense, as long as the other events can cover the cost of build and maintenance. Some of those 'under-used' stadiums do look fantastic. But I wonder if some were built as speculation that they could host Olympics football, but lost out to other grounds.
China is filled with gigantic white elephant stadiums. I went to several games in several different stadium while living there and I can attest that 1. They are all absolutely gigantic and 2. They are never more than 30% full. A clear symbol of the gigantomania of authoritarian states.
i mean, they have more than 1 billion people and dont have a strong football tradition yet, so i dont think its a bad idea to build things like stadiums in a way that seems oversized now that the country still doesnt have a tradition, but 20 years from now that 1.4 billion people might enter a football crave and the stadiums would then be properly sized
@@james2529 yeah, just like when people in the west laughed and said this exact same thing about the metro stations built in the middle of nowhere, because how stupid and megalomaniac can a government be to build a metro line with enormous stations in the countryside? but then today those metro lines and stations are being used by millions everyday because the city came to where they were built, and not the other way around as it usually is
Malmö stadion has 26 500 which is home of IFK Malmö which plays in the division 2 västra götaland which is the 4:th teir of swedish football/soccer. Malmö FF who plays in allsvenskan which is swedish soccer/football top teir plays on the smaller Eleda stadion which has capacity of just 22 500. These stadiums are extremely close to each other.
Man, King Abdullah stadium (the stadium that is mentioned when he excluded stadiums with multiple occupants) was the first stadium that came to my mind and you shot that down quickly 😂
Wow! I'm Sheffield Wednesday fan and I thought Hillsborough might make this list. I didn't realise just how big The Stadium of Light is and it's astonishing that that one doesn't even make the list!
I know? Considering we are one of the oldest clubs in the world and we are from where football was born! Among the founding fathers. People seem to forget that weve hosted big competitions like the world cup etc. Our stadium was once used by our national team before the old Wembley was built also. Our stadium was considerd one of the biggest in the country at one time and it's still up there considering we've been fighting in the lower leagues for over 20 years without any development like most of the clubs are now having in the prem. On that note I dont expect the younger generations to know of us considering we havent been in the prem for some time, But it's always funny but nice to see their faces and reactions when the witness Hillsborough, A big beautiful old ground 😎
As far as I can tell, The Arruda is the largest that is owned by the club who plays there. The others are publicly owned. With regards to Brasilia, it seems to happen quite a lot that when other teams get stadium bans, their home games conveniently get moved to Brasilia. I remember Flamengo having some ‘home’ games there that attracted sell out crowds, so it has hosted top flight football just not involving local teams. Brasiliense has been in the top flight although I think it was before the stadium got built.
Always wanted to visit the Stadio San Nicola. I think back then World Cups were meant to cover the whole nation, with Bari representing the east of Italy, rather than having all the stadia in the big cities Turin, Milan, Rome, Naples etc. I seem to remember England's group playing in Sicily and Sardinia. Another absurdity is Stadio delle Alpi, designed for Italia 90, only lasted 26 years before being demolished for a new stadium with capacity for 28k less fans
Yes - I remember hearing about that being knocked down and wondering why such an elegant looking stadium should go. To my mind the San Siro is still relatively 'new' so again, it's a shame to lose it. Italy has done a great job of preserving its beautiful ancient buildings, why can't they save modern ones?
All England games were in Sardinia in the hope of containing English hooligans on one island. I don’t know what the tournament organisers thought the Sardinians had done to deserve it, but England ended up playing all over the place anyway as they progressed.
I wrote an entire academic thesis about Brasília National Stadium to graduate in University of Brasília. It's not a white elephant, it's used as a festival ground and is profitable. Also it has a gastronomic complex and lot of party isles in the outside of the stadium, and in the parking (it's an enormous parking and they make concerts there). It exists a lot of wrong information about that, even to Brazilian people in general. And Brasilia is the 3rd biggest city in the country, the capital and richest city per capita, so a lot of people will always go there every time something good is available to do in the stadium.
11:17 The largest single tier stadium that I am aware of currently in the world, in terms of seating capacity, is Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor, Michigan. It is home to the University of Michigan (American) football team and, to my knowledge, has never hosted a major soccer match. The venue seats just over 109,000 and is regularly filled to capacity for Michigan Wolverine home games. That is only somewhat less impressive when you consider the team has, at most, eight home games a season.
And the city only has a population of 120k which means that you could sit almost everyone inside the stadium. I don't know much about American sports so I might be missing the context here.
@@soundscape26 The MichiganWolverines are like Man United or Liverpool in American collegiate sports, especially in the gridiron. D1 (Division 1) College football stadiums in America often tend to have stadiums with insane capacities.
Came here to say this…however having looked again at Michigan Stadium (and the rose bowl), both have executive box tiers on at least one side, which would technically mean they’re not single tiered 😬
Woops, I was way wrong. Big house has hosted multiple exhibition matches before, with some different top flight European clubs. None like I mentioned although Real Madrid and Barcelona have both been here on separate occasions. ~~The big house has hosted an exhibition match, I believe it was around a decade ago they shipped a certain two laliga clubs over and had a little bit of an el clasico in it... Definitely not a regular soccer stadium though 😜~~
Would also be interesting to see the 7 most empty stadiums in the world (lowest average % filled). It may take a lot more research though, so may be more possible if only including professional european stadiums
I wrote an entire academic thesis about Brasília National Stadium to graduate in University of Brasília. It's not a white elephant, it's used as a festival ground and is profitable. Also it has a gastronomic complex and lot of party isles in the outside of the stadium, and in the parking (it's an enormous parking and they make concerts there). It exists a lot of wrong information about that, even to Brazilian people in general. And Brasilia is the 3rd biggest city in the country, the capital and richest city per capita, so a lot if people will always go there every time something good is available to do in the stadium.
11:17 The Rose Bowl is a 92k+ capacity single tier bowl stadium. Its debatable if Europeans would call it a football stadium but it did host the 1994 World Cup Final, was home to the LA Galaxy for about 7 years, and regularly hosts friendlies in the summer for both clubs and National Teams.
I guess it did not make the list because it was primarily built as a American football stadium, which is still its primary identity. Not as a association football/soccer stadium.
This is a really interesting topic, especially when you consider there are teams like Fatih Karagumruk who play in the Turkish Super Lig in a 75000 seater stadium, but got 700 spectators last week. Does anyone know the reason for this?
The stadium they play in is Olimpiyat Stadyumu because their home venue is under construction. They also don't have much supporters since they are based in Istanbul and there are major clubs in the city.
Also I think politics is also a big reason. Massive inflation, Turkey's government playing both sides with being friends and not so friends with Russia AND having their own as of yet little but still wars like Syria
@@nettlecider And potentially because the overall decline of the league recently has reduced the attendances of all the Super Lig clubs with the exception of Galatasaray and Fenerbahce, and technically Istanbul Basaksehir
11:21 American college football teams have a number of massive single bowl stadiums; the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum used to hold over 90,000 before it was reduced to 77,000, the Rose Bowl (home of the 1994 World Cup final and former home of LA Galaxy) holds 92,000, and Michigan Stadium holds up to 115,000 (109,000 for Real Madrid and Manchester United). There are also a handful of other single bowl stadiums that seat between 60,000 and 80,000, and all but one or two of them were built before the Great Depression.
Santa Cruz fan here. Santa Cruz, yet playing in the 4th tier of brazilian football, they still managed to achieve one of the best attendance average in their home games in all the four tiers last year. Not only that, but they also have the 20th biggest number of fans in Brazil, counting with 1kk+ fans or so; numbers bigger than several first and second tier teams
@tinyloonavebaby They played at the National Stadium until 2020 when they sold the lease to the Scottish FA with a plan to redevelop Little Hampden to be their main stadium. They have moved between ground shares since, including Ochilview Park in Stenhousemuir.
Love a video about the Save Tolka Park campaign by Shelbourne fans. Dublin City Council (DCC) came up with a plan to redevelop Dalymount Park (Bohemians home) and sell off Tolka Park to developers to fund it. The new Dalymount would be the home for both Shelbourne and Bohemians. This went down like a lead balloon with Shelbourne fans that lead to upheaval against their own board for agreeing to the proposal. Many parallels were drawn to the KRAM campaign (Keep Rovers At Milltown) by Shamrock Rovers fans when Glenmalure Park was sold to property developers. Rovers ended up jumping from home ground to home ground for 22 years before (after a legal battle with the GAA, I could go on all day about how they try to fuck up football in Ireland) settling in Tallaght Stadium in south west Dublin. Eventually a new Shelbourne board backed out of the deal and with some outside investment, bought Tolka Park from DCC. The latest strategic plan from DCC showed Tolka as being kept for sporting and recreational purposes. The Shelbourne womens team (current champions) had a big part to play in the campaign since many Ireland internationals and Heather O'Reilly, US WNT legend, backed the campaign. Thankfully Tolka Park has been saved and a redevelopment plan will slowly improve different parts of the ground.
Just a correction about the thumbnail: Brazil doesn't have a 5th Division. The lower tier is the 4th Division, Série D. To qualify to it, you must do well in state championships.
The largest stadium in the world is in Chile, in the town of El Salvador at 2,800 meters above sea level, it had capacity for 20,000 people, now it has been 10,000, but the mining camp has 5,000 inhabitants, it belongs to Club Cobresal
Until recently, Sunderland could have been there. The Stadium of Light can seat almost 50,000 people, that is more than several stadia of League One (the league they played in until recently) teams combined.
From 2018 to 2020, Indy Eleven of the USL Championship played at Lucas Oil Stadium, home of the Indianapolis Colts NFL team. 67,000 is the capacity there.
Choctaw Stadium in Arlington, TX is an interesting one in the United States. Capacity is slightly over 48,000 and it hosts MLS Next Pro side North Texas SC. It used to be the home of Major League Baseball's Texas Rangers from 1994-2019 before they moved to Globe Life Field in 2020. The stadium also hosts the XFL's Dallas/Arlington Renegades and Major League Rugby's Dallas Jackals.
I wouldn't reduce Kerala as just a state though since they have their own native language and writing system which is different than the majority of the nation and Kerala is about the size of netherlands while having twice it's population. I look at Indian states like the countries in Europe and India like as if its a continent like Europe.
An addition. Brasilia's Stadium does receive important club games sometimes. it hosts some important games from Serie A teams at times, usually smaller clubs tend to sell their field assignments to Brasília because the stadium is so big and has no fixed use. in addition, the final of the "Supercopa do Brasil" is usually hosted there. and some Serie A teams usually play there when their stadiums or where they play are closed for some time. like the case of Flamengo
For ages Queens Park, an amateur team, owned and played at Hampden. Only moved out the last couple years, selling it to the scottish football association and redeveloping Lesser Hampden right beside it
The viewers who go digging into the "Trigger's broom" reference are in for a treat!! Tbf you did have a picture, Alfie, so what more proof could we want 🤣
Bordeaux's brand new 5 star, 42,000 seats stadium was built for Euro 2016 and is one of the most beautiful in France,. It will now host AMATEUR football after the club, once a Ligue 1 powerhouse, was demoted to 3rd tier due to financial issues.
On a ratio of stadium size to how far down the leagues the occupants are, The DCBL or The Halton Stadium always comes to mind, not massive at a 13,350 capacity, it is the home to Widnes FC in the 8th tier of English football, and they're currently bottom of that division. My understanding is the council own the stadium and it was built for the Widnes Vikings, a once top flight rugby league team, as Widnes ultimately is a rugby league town
Just a small add-on to the Mane Garrincha part. Gama and Brasiliense, are the biggest clubs in Brasília, but they play their home games in their own cities. Gama has Bezerrao and Brasiliense has Serejao. They only use it for neutral ground finals or something. I'm a Gama supporter and we hate to play at Mant Garrincha.
in my country (Poland) Lechia Gdańsk will relegate after this season so they count and they have one of the most beautyful stadions in country (plus arena builded for Euro 12) 41620 people capacity
2:25 - That "soon" might take a while since there is a lot of resistance to the idea of demolishing the San Siro. The San Nicola Stadium is quite interesting despite its location and general absurdity.
There is a club in the second division of Colombia called Cúcuta Deportivo who play their home matches at a 43000 seater stadium. Seems unusual but it was quite a popular club in its heyday.
6:57 thanks for highlighting the stupid league names in English football. When I tell people I support Portsmouth, if they arent aware of the structure of the English game, I always have to quantify it as 'League One, which is actually the third tier.' It's also stupid as League 1 is the name of the top flight in France!
I just realized that there are 2 clubs from our country that will play at Liga 2, which is a lower division of the Indonesian football behind Liga 1 and are currently abandoned after the official statement by PSSI due to the Kanjuruhan tragedy. To the surprise, Persipura Jayapura and Sriwijaya FC Palembang both had their home grounds with a big capacity. Persipura played in the new Lukas Enembe Stadium, which is a main venue for the 2020 Indonesian Olympic (Pekan Olahraga Nasional). The Papua club had officially appointed this as a replacement to old Mandala Stadium before they suffered a shock relegation at the end of 2021-22 Liga 1 season, which was played in centralized venue and behind closed doors due to the pandemic. Sriwijaya had played at Jakabaring Stadium, which is the venue for 2018 Asian Games and the upcoming U-20 World Cup this year.
i worked in the Hefei stadium for a few years, there isn't really football there sure, but it gets a lot of usage for music concerts and there are offices and schools and things inside
Great work. But the picture of the stadium you showed as the home ground of Kerala Blasters is the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium in New Delhi. No blame attached to you, as there are as many as 4 stadiums in Margao (Goa) ― which is also called Fatorda Stadium locally, New Delhi, Kochi (Kerala), and Chennai (Tamil Nadu) also called Marina Arena with the same name. All four of them have been, and 3 are currently, homes of Top flight clubs in India. The one in New Delhi used to be the home of dissolved Club Delhi Dynamos! If you're confused, don't worry, even we are in India😢
Having played a lot of Football Manager, one of the hardest parts of being a small club that gets promoted to the big boys league is your stadium being half the size of everyone else's and thus you can't generate match-day revenues like they can. Having a huge stadium in a lower league, if you can still mostly fill it, must be a huge financial advantage, or if you can't fill it, a huge financial weight around your neck.
The Rose Bowl, home of the 1994 World Cup Final is a single tier bowl holding 91,000. U of Michigan, which hosted a friendly (Barca v ManU? I forget) that set the USA soccer attendance record, is a 100,000+ seat bowl, although it now has luxury boxes, but not a proper 2nd tier.
11:18 The Big House, Michigan University stadium is an american football stadium and has a single tier and is the 3rd largest stadium in the world and the largest outside of asia
The president of CONMEBOL Alejandro Dominguez said that the Mané Garrincha stadium will be used as the final of the Copa Sudamericana in 2023 (originally in 2022 but this was postponed due to the elections here in Brazil), and the champions of the Copa do Brasil Flamengo and Champion Brasileiro Palmeiras will play in the stadium on January 28 in the Supercopa do Brasil, the two teams already played at the stadium in 2021 in the pandemic.
I think it would be cool if the Final match of Copa do Brasil was intended to be played there. It's our most "inclusive" competition and Brasília is at the center of the country. Sure bigger teams would have an advantage (but they always have). The situation is harder when we consider the Arena da Amazônia... Because it's really far to go for most of the Brazilian population (even for the people that live in the North).
@@phzitos_ (eu sou brazuca) Seria mt bom se a Final da Copa do Brasil fosse jogo único apenas em Brasília, porém diferente na Europa pra chegar em Brasília demora mais do q na Alemanha, França, Itália, etc. E tbm a Supercopa do Brasil ser jogado nos estádios q já foram palco da Copa do Mundo aqui no Brasil.
I miss Great Strahov Stadium on here. Capacity 250 000 (second largest sports venue ever built). It's in such a bad state it would probably collapse though lol. It is home stadium for Sparta Prague B team (they play 2nd level of football in the country). I think it would be eligible.
If you want bigger single tiered stadiums that Munich's Olympic Stadium, look at American Football. Both Michigan Stadium and The Rose Bowl are single tier stadiums larger than 70,000 seats of capacity. Michigan Stadium is over 110,000.
@@olivenlp6610 let's be abundantly clear, anyone who unironically uses the term "actual football" is extremely ignorant of the history of the term "football" and if they're referring to association football as the one and only "actual football" are extremely ignorant of the history of other codes of football. Soccer isn't even the oldest code of football played competitively on the British Islands. But the points about the stadium, had you actually watched the video, you'd know I was simply responding to the comment made about what the largest single tier stadiums are, nothing else.
When it comes to capacity versus league standing, how about Wakefield AFC on 10th tier English football NCEL D1 playing at Wakefield Trinity Rugby league stadium capacity just under 9000.
The Bari stadium has an athletics track, but still they decided the fans weren’t far away enough from the pitch, so built the stands at a considerable distance from even just the outer edge of the athletics track
And even a small and useless moat.
They also host weddings in there during the rest of the week
It's great. It means the fans can light as many flares as they like and the players and pitch will never be in danger. Happy days !
Don't complain, us fans love the San Nicola, and we can't do anything to change it, it's owned by the City.
@@bigboydownstairs9651 The city does, we don't own the stadium
Mané Garrincha has hosted some Serie A matches, mostly regional derbies involving clubs from Rio in the last few years for numerous reasons. In 2022, due to some repairs at Maracanã, Flamengo moved 3 matches to the capital stadium. It also became a sort of backup stadium for all top flight Rio clubs as it's the closest venue outside the city with such a large capacity available nearly all year long and they're pretty much the only teams that can draw crowds to fill most of the seats
Teams in Minas Gerais use it too. Cruzeiro hosted 1 match there last year, this year at least one match for the Campeonato Mineiro will be played there also. Still, very low number of matches in a year.
I would say that it is also the closest we get to a “National Stadium”
@@DudaWeizenmann yeah, like our version of Wembley
@@Jadanbr Funny that a Brit couldn't understand that lol
11:17 The Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California near Los Angeles is a single tier bowl stadium holding 90,000. The beautiful venue hosted the 1994 World Cup final and was the original home of LA Galaxy. The seating tier is on a gentle slope and yes, a seat at the top of the bowl is an incredible distance from the playing surface.
The Big House of University of Michigan is even larger and has also got a single bowl shape
@@Legendazdubce Go blue! You are correct. I think the Big House is the 3nd largest stadium in the world by capacity.
@@MastinoNapoletano420 crama shi&load of people, but by god it is one helluva misedrable place during bad weather >.< There's a trade off with not having any sort of roof
@@LegendazdubceWhy are college stadiums even that big? I mean those aren't even professionals. So they are basically amateur level teams.
@@jannisschmidt3681 We don't have any well-established minor leagues for the NFL. So college football is the de facto minor league. Cities without an NFL team naturally support their college team, and even some cities with an NFL team prefer the college team.
In Portugal we have the Estádio Dr. Magalhães Pessoa, built for the Euro 2004 in the city of Leiria (60 876 inhabitants), with a capacity of 24 000 people and an athletics track. The stadium's owner is the Leiria municipal council and the club playing there is União Desportiva de Leiria, currently playing in the 3rd division, but they used to play in the Primeira Liga some years ago before getting relegated.
Fun fact: União Desportiva de Leiria was the club were Mourinho was after being sacked by Benfica and before being hired by FC Porto and winning the 2003 UEFA cup.
Also the Estádio Municipal de Aveiro, which hosts Beira Mar currently in the 4th tier or thereabouts. And the Estádio do Algarve has no tenants at all. Both can hold 30.000 spectators.
Same with Aveiro and Coimbra (Beira-Mar in the 4th tier and Académica in the 3rd). Algarve will host Gibraltar games once again next year due to their stadium having to go through renovations
@@marcobeauvue @soundscape26 I completely forgot about Académica and Beira-Mar. God bless them. hahaha
@@soundscape26 Estádio do Algarve currently hosts Louletano, from the first regional division of the Algarve
@@TheDinisPT I wasn't aware of that, thanks. 👍
Santa Cruz fan here, really glad to see my team in a international channel. We were playing in the top flight in 2016 but since then we got into financial problems and now we are here in the last national tier. Hope the future is bright for us, great video 🙏💪
Regarding Estádio do Arruda (Santa Cruz FC), in addition to the D series, the team competes in the Pernambuco (state) championship against the great rivals Náutico and Sport, relegated last year to series C (third has) and in series B (second has) respectively.
Brasilia is a strange city, created in 1960 in the middle of nowhere, in an attempt to internalize the Brazilian occupation, has its population coming mainly from the Northeast and Southeast of Brazil, which is represented by the fans.
Flamengo, Vasco and Corinthians played a few times, filling the venue.
I would say that the biggest absurd among Brazilian stadiums is in the North Region, where Manaus (Amazonas State Capital) received a new stadium despite the biggest football center being Belém (Pará State Capital), which has two teams that are in lower divisions, Paysandu and Remo, but in the local Derby they place (Re-Pa) more than 40 thousand people to watch.
Why did a football club's supporters build an athletics track brick by brick?
@@samegemba1741 unfortunately I'm not from Pernambuco, and I wouldn't know how to tell you.
I just found It is important to emphasize the state championship because it is a typically Brazilian tournament whose importance can go unnoticed by a foreigner.
By the way, Santa Cruz going to play against Náutico today.
@@samegemba1741 to have a run around, inbetween shifts of assembling.
I would say that in 2014 the Arena Pantanal was even dumber. They got lucky Cuiaba became a decent team.
No one cares
Bari stadium also hosted 1991 European Cup final between Red Star Belgrade and Olympique Marseille and definitely has a special place in hearts of many Red star fans including me. I really appreciate and love your work and humour and just keep up the good work
To make things better, this was the first big success for the deceased Serbian legend Sinisa Mihajlovic. RIP.
I always get quite happy with Alfie's pronunciation of Brazilian Portuguese. Sure it's not perfect, but some Europeans don't even try to say things the correct way, or just butch it and say "I don't speak Spanish" (which is a wild statement in itself).
Thanks as always, Alfie!
Thanks! I do my best. Invariably I still get it horribly wrong, but glad you noticed the effort!
I mean yeah I don't speak Spanish
If you want to pronounce s as sh and zh after vowels, I can tell you we say it as zh at the end of words, and sh for everything else.
It isn't necessary given in Brazil, mostly only coastal dialects in Santa Catarina, Rio de Janeiro and some northeastern states have that. In Portugal most have this characteristic, but I'm glad you do it like that for names in Brazil sometimes, since where I live we speak like that.
Great video as always!!! I watched it 15 Times already
Must have done it simultaneously on multiple devices 🤣
a documentary on the afc Wimbledon on the nine promotions in eleven years, how they’re a fan own club and how they have a stadium in plough lane now.
The story of they lost the club, how the F A allowed that and won’t allow that anymore.
How they were very close to moving to ireland
How they went up the English football leagues.
It would be a good documentary video if you can do this. #thepeopleschannel
USL side Indy Eleven host their games in Lucas Oil Stadium, a 67,000 capacity stadium while I was living in the city of Indianapolis, Indiana (sharing their pitch with an American football side). They've been trying to build something more fitting for a second division side (even as they were trying to get/buy into the first division), but the city have been getting in the way for years.
I was thinking that if I looked hard enough I could probably find a USL side's home ground that would have made this list.
Loved this video! I know you spent a lot talking about the San Nicola, but I think mentioning that it hosted the 1991 European Cup final would've added to the ridiculousness of that stadium's history
It was actually the champions league final
@@Mrroach45same thing
I'm from Recife, Pernambuco. Santa Cruz FC's home city. Although i am a Sport Recife (the biggest and most successful team in Pernambuco and in the whole north-northeast regions of Brazil) fan, i can give more depth into Santinha's current situation. Santa Cruz has been relegated two separate times to the Série D. On the first one, in 2011 (they were struggling in the 4th division for about 3 years) they got promoted and after some more promotions, they were in 2016's brazilian Série A. But then, they got relegated. In 2018 they were already at the 3rd division, and in 2021, they got relegated to the 4th division for a second time. But even then, they always fill up the stands when it's a game against it's rivals (Sport Recife and Náutico) in the Campeonato Pernambucano (a state pre-season tournament) and in the Copa do Nordeste, or when it's a important game in the 4th division. Even though i am a fan of a rival of them, i want them to get promoted, it isn't even fun making fun of them, it's like kicking a dead horse. If everything goes right this year, Sport will be in Série A in 2024, Náutico in Série B and Santa in C.
Wow, what a roller coaster haha
kkkkkkkkkkkkk sport na série a
Meu Ituano vai estragar sua promoção 🤑🤙🏼
@@gabrielmarques8943 tá rindo agora? kkkkk o popoti tá jogando pra krl filho
I live in Alicante, and our team, Hércules CF, plays in a 30.000+ capacity stadium while being in the fourth division, and for a moment this season we were almost getting relegated to the fifth
For the Chinese stadium, i think it also is important that a lot of chinese team don't own their stadium, but instead they are government properties. And they might also host other competition such as the national games or just province-level games, (and concerts and other non-sports events of course)
OK that makes sense, as long as the other events can cover the cost of build and maintenance. Some of those 'under-used' stadiums do look fantastic. But I wonder if some were built as speculation that they could host Olympics football, but lost out to other grounds.
You can say that about all the stadiums on this list
Oh no...
China is filled with gigantic white elephant stadiums. I went to several games in several different stadium while living there and I can attest that 1. They are all absolutely gigantic and 2. They are never more than 30% full. A clear symbol of the gigantomania of authoritarian states.
Were you supporting a particular club and going to away games or just travelling around?
@@andreatommasi3287I wasn't supporting a particular team. I lived in a few cities and went to stadiums in a number of them.
i mean, they have more than 1 billion people and dont have a strong football tradition yet, so i dont think its a bad idea to build things like stadiums in a way that seems oversized now that the country still doesnt have a tradition, but 20 years from now that 1.4 billion people might enter a football crave and the stadiums would then be properly sized
@@vcostaval no mate, they just build them cos they look cool and it helps the government officials who built them look good and then get promoted.
@@james2529 yeah, just like when people in the west laughed and said this exact same thing about the metro stations built in the middle of nowhere, because how stupid and megalomaniac can a government be to build a metro line with enormous stations in the countryside? but then today those metro lines and stations are being used by millions everyday because the city came to where they were built, and not the other way around as it usually is
And I thought MK Dons stadium was way too big for its league… these are way worse
Love from Kerala, India. Hitc❤️
Malmö stadion has 26 500 which is home of IFK Malmö which plays in the division 2 västra götaland which is the 4:th teir of swedish football/soccer. Malmö FF who plays in allsvenskan which is swedish soccer/football top teir plays on the smaller Eleda stadion which has capacity of just 22 500. These stadiums are extremely close to each other.
Oh shit, Bari made it to an HITC 7 vid
Man, King Abdullah stadium (the stadium that is mentioned when he excluded stadiums with multiple occupants) was the first stadium that came to my mind and you shot that down quickly 😂
Killing hopes and dreams is what Alfie does best...
King Abullah does host top flight though, one of the teams they host plast in the Saudi Super League.
Wow! I'm Sheffield Wednesday fan and I thought Hillsborough might make this list. I didn't realise just how big The Stadium of Light is and it's astonishing that that one doesn't even make the list!
I know? Considering we are one of the oldest clubs in the world and we are from where football was born!
Among the founding fathers.
People seem to forget that weve hosted big competitions like the world cup etc.
Our stadium was once used by our national team before the old Wembley was built also.
Our stadium was considerd one of the biggest in the country at one time and it's still up there considering we've been fighting in the lower leagues for over 20 years without any development like most of the clubs are now having in the prem.
On that note I dont expect the younger generations to know of us considering we havent been in the prem for some time, But it's always funny but nice to see their faces and reactions when the witness Hillsborough, A big beautiful old ground 😎
As far as I can tell, The Arruda is the largest that is owned by the club who plays there. The others are publicly owned.
With regards to Brasilia, it seems to happen quite a lot that when other teams get stadium bans, their home games conveniently get moved to Brasilia. I remember Flamengo having some ‘home’ games there that attracted sell out crowds, so it has hosted top flight football just not involving local teams. Brasiliense has been in the top flight although I think it was before the stadium got built.
Always wanted to visit the Stadio San Nicola. I think back then World Cups were meant to cover the whole nation, with Bari representing the east of Italy, rather than having all the stadia in the big cities Turin, Milan, Rome, Naples etc. I seem to remember England's group playing in Sicily and Sardinia. Another absurdity is Stadio delle Alpi, designed for Italia 90, only lasted 26 years before being demolished for a new stadium with capacity for 28k less fans
Yes - I remember hearing about that being knocked down and wondering why such an elegant looking stadium should go. To my mind the San Siro is still relatively 'new' so again, it's a shame to lose it. Italy has done a great job of preserving its beautiful ancient buildings, why can't they save modern ones?
All England games were in Sardinia in the hope of containing English hooligans on one island. I don’t know what the tournament organisers thought the Sardinians had done to deserve it, but England ended up playing all over the place anyway as they progressed.
I wrote an entire academic thesis about Brasília National Stadium to graduate in University of Brasília. It's not a white elephant, it's used as a festival ground and is profitable. Also it has a gastronomic complex and lot of party isles in the outside of the stadium, and in the parking (it's an enormous parking and they make concerts there). It exists a lot of wrong information about that, even to Brazilian people in general. And Brasilia is the 3rd biggest city in the country, the capital and richest city per capita, so a lot of people will always go there every time something good is available to do in the stadium.
11:17 The largest single tier stadium that I am aware of currently in the world, in terms of seating capacity, is Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor, Michigan. It is home to the University of Michigan (American) football team and, to my knowledge, has never hosted a major soccer match. The venue seats just over 109,000 and is regularly filled to capacity for Michigan Wolverine home games. That is only somewhat less impressive when you consider the team has, at most, eight home games a season.
And the city only has a population of 120k which means that you could sit almost everyone inside the stadium. I don't know much about American sports so I might be missing the context here.
@@soundscape26 The MichiganWolverines are like Man United or Liverpool in American collegiate sports, especially in the gridiron. D1 (Division 1) College football stadiums in America often tend to have stadiums with insane capacities.
@@notacelticsfan Oh nice. Thanks for the context.
Came here to say this…however having looked again at Michigan Stadium (and the rose bowl), both have executive box tiers on at least one side, which would technically mean they’re not single tiered 😬
Woops, I was way wrong. Big house has hosted multiple exhibition matches before, with some different top flight European clubs. None like I mentioned although Real Madrid and Barcelona have both been here on separate occasions.
~~The big house has hosted an exhibition match, I believe it was around a decade ago they shipped a certain two laliga clubs over and had a little bit of an el clasico in it... Definitely not a regular soccer stadium though 😜~~
I want to see Neverton join this list
It won't be that big.
My local Club in Arkansas. Little Rock Rangers a USL2 (3rd Tier) plays in 54,120 War Memorial Stadium.
Would also be interesting to see the 7 most empty stadiums in the world (lowest average % filled). It may take a lot more research though, so may be more possible if only including professional european stadiums
The Garrincha stadium looks absolutely amazing. Really sad that it's not being used what it was built for after the world cup.
It is used, but mainly by teams from the southeast. Flamengo played some matches there last season, happens here and there, just not enough I guess.
That's what you get when you host World Cups in 3rd world shitholes, like Brazil.
I don't understand why they don't just found one team from the city to play there exclusively.
I wrote an entire academic thesis about Brasília National Stadium to graduate in University of Brasília. It's not a white elephant, it's used as a festival ground and is profitable. Also it has a gastronomic complex and lot of party isles in the outside of the stadium, and in the parking (it's an enormous parking and they make concerts there). It exists a lot of wrong information about that, even to Brazilian people in general. And Brasilia is the 3rd biggest city in the country, the capital and richest city per capita, so a lot if people will always go there every time something good is available to do in the stadium.
@@GabaMart9598 opa, tem como passar o link? achei interessante e queria dar uma olhada
11:17 The Rose Bowl is a 92k+ capacity single tier bowl stadium. Its debatable if Europeans would call it a football stadium but it did host the 1994 World Cup Final, was home to the LA Galaxy for about 7 years, and regularly hosts friendlies in the summer for both clubs and National Teams.
I guess it did not make the list because it was primarily built as a American football stadium, which is still its primary identity. Not as a association football/soccer stadium.
This is a really interesting topic, especially when you consider there are teams like Fatih Karagumruk who play in the Turkish Super Lig in a 75000 seater stadium, but got 700 spectators last week. Does anyone know the reason for this?
It's so that the boys from Galatasaray don't hurt their feet on division 5 stadium ...
The stadium they play in is Olimpiyat Stadyumu because their home venue is under construction. They also don't have much supporters since they are based in Istanbul and there are major clubs in the city.
@@halitniyazcam3347 Thank you, makes sense.
Also I think politics is also a big reason. Massive inflation, Turkey's government playing both sides with being friends and not so friends with Russia AND having their own as of yet little but still wars like Syria
@@nettlecider And potentially because the overall decline of the league recently has reduced the attendances of all the Super Lig clubs with the exception of Galatasaray and Fenerbahce, and technically Istanbul Basaksehir
11:21 American college football teams have a number of massive single bowl stadiums; the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum used to hold over 90,000 before it was reduced to 77,000, the Rose Bowl (home of the 1994 World Cup final and former home of LA Galaxy) holds 92,000, and Michigan Stadium holds up to 115,000 (109,000 for Real Madrid and Manchester United). There are also a handful of other single bowl stadiums that seat between 60,000 and 80,000, and all but one or two of them were built before the Great Depression.
Large stadiums built in countries where the gdp per capita is not that high, tells you something about politics/corruption, rather than football.
Oooo, every time Genoa is mentioned I get a shiver. We lost the Anglo Italian cup final to them back in '96 lol
so excited and happy to see ISL featuring on the world-famous HITC Sevens channel😃
Hertha playing 2 german league in the 70.000 seat Olympiastadion where the Euro 2024 will play the Final.
I know, but we still were in the 1. Bundesliga at the time this video was made.
Gokulam Kerala Women play in the IWL, the top tier of women's football in India
Santa Cruz fan here. Santa Cruz, yet playing in the 4th tier of brazilian football, they still managed to achieve one of the best attendance average in their home games in all the four tiers last year. Not only that, but they also have the 20th biggest number of fans in Brazil, counting with 1kk+ fans or so; numbers bigger than several first and second tier teams
Queen's Park playing at Hampden Park for a century was remarkable.
Yet they are in danger of suddenly being in the Scottish Prem!
@@derekmarshall6332 Good for them although bad timing!
@tinyloonavebaby They played at the National Stadium until 2020 when they sold the lease to the Scottish FA with a plan to redevelop Little Hampden to be their main stadium. They have moved between ground shares since, including Ochilview Park in Stenhousemuir.
Lol at Alfie pronouncing Kerala as Karala, he tried his best though.
I don't even mind his pronunciation anymore. The z in "Cruzeiro" is spoken like in "Brazil".
But he said "Crujeiro" 🫠
Love a video about the Save Tolka Park campaign by Shelbourne fans.
Dublin City Council (DCC) came up with a plan to redevelop Dalymount Park (Bohemians home) and sell off Tolka Park to developers to fund it. The new Dalymount would be the home for both Shelbourne and Bohemians. This went down like a lead balloon with Shelbourne fans that lead to upheaval against their own board for agreeing to the proposal. Many parallels were drawn to the KRAM campaign (Keep Rovers At Milltown) by Shamrock Rovers fans when Glenmalure Park was sold to property developers. Rovers ended up jumping from home ground to home ground for 22 years before (after a legal battle with the GAA, I could go on all day about how they try to fuck up football in Ireland) settling in Tallaght Stadium in south west Dublin.
Eventually a new Shelbourne board backed out of the deal and with some outside investment, bought Tolka Park from DCC. The latest strategic plan from DCC showed Tolka as being kept for sporting and recreational purposes. The Shelbourne womens team (current champions) had a big part to play in the campaign since many Ireland internationals and Heather O'Reilly, US WNT legend, backed the campaign.
Thankfully Tolka Park has been saved and a redevelopment plan will slowly improve different parts of the ground.
I still believe "7 clubs who need smaller stadia" would be a great video idea.
New England Revolution & New York City FC would be ideal candidates.
Off the top of my head, I want to say that the Revolution are trying to build a new stadium for themselves
Nah. they just need bigger crowds :)
Their Mum: "It's not too big; you'll grow into it."
Hertha Berlin
Just a correction about the thumbnail: Brazil doesn't have a 5th Division. The lower tier is the 4th Division, Série D. To qualify to it, you must do well in state championships.
As someone who's home team is in fact Gokulam Kerala FC, I can confirm you mispronounced every single name in that part of the video.
The largest stadium in the world is in Chile, in the town of El Salvador at 2,800 meters above sea level, it had capacity for 20,000 people, now it has been 10,000, but the mining camp has 5,000 inhabitants, it belongs to Club Cobresal
Do Queens Park still play at Hampden ?
How about 7 national stadiums that host very small cubs
Until recently, Sunderland could have been there. The Stadium of Light can seat almost 50,000 people, that is more than several stadia of League One (the league they played in until recently) teams combined.
From 2018 to 2020, Indy Eleven of the USL Championship played at Lucas Oil Stadium, home of the Indianapolis Colts NFL team. 67,000 is the capacity there.
You know it’s a top tier video when HSV is being mentioned despite not even being featured on the list
Can always rely on Alfie for well presented uploads, informative with good humour
Choctaw Stadium in Arlington, TX is an interesting one in the United States. Capacity is slightly over 48,000 and it hosts MLS Next Pro side North Texas SC.
It used to be the home of Major League Baseball's Texas Rangers from 1994-2019 before they moved to Globe Life Field in 2020. The stadium also hosts the XFL's Dallas/Arlington Renegades and Major League Rugby's Dallas Jackals.
Bramley Moore Dock will have a capacity of 52,888 so it might be on this list once it's completed
I wouldn't reduce Kerala as just a state though since they have their own native language and writing system which is different than the majority of the nation and Kerala is about the size of netherlands while having twice it's population. I look at Indian states like the countries in Europe and India like as if its a continent like Europe.
An addition. Brasilia's Stadium does receive important club games sometimes. it hosts some important games from Serie A teams at times, usually smaller clubs tend to sell their field assignments to Brasília because the stadium is so big and has no fixed use. in addition, the final of the "Supercopa do Brasil" is usually hosted there. and some Serie A teams usually play there when their stadiums or where they play are closed for some time. like the case of Flamengo
Picture at 1:28
«Russian press 1905» on the book rootlet
«Temporary press rules» on the kettle bell
«17th of October» on the paper below
For ages Queens Park, an amateur team, owned and played at Hampden. Only moved out the last couple years, selling it to the scottish football association and redeveloping Lesser Hampden right beside it
The viewers who go digging into the "Trigger's broom" reference are in for a treat!!
Tbf you did have a picture, Alfie, so what more proof could we want 🤣
Bordeaux's brand new 5 star, 42,000 seats stadium was built for Euro 2016 and is one of the most beautiful in France,.
It will now host AMATEUR football after the club, once a Ligue 1 powerhouse, was demoted to 3rd tier due to financial issues.
On a ratio of stadium size to how far down the leagues the occupants are, The DCBL or The Halton Stadium always comes to mind, not massive at a 13,350 capacity, it is the home to Widnes FC in the 8th tier of English football, and they're currently bottom of that division. My understanding is the council own the stadium and it was built for the Widnes Vikings, a once top flight rugby league team, as Widnes ultimately is a rugby league town
Just a small add-on to the Mane Garrincha part. Gama and Brasiliense, are the biggest clubs in Brasília, but they play their home games in their own cities. Gama has Bezerrao and Brasiliense has Serejao. They only use it for neutral ground finals or something. I'm a Gama supporter and we hate to play at Mant Garrincha.
never forget the European Cup final in 1991 which was played in Bari. Red Star forever
in my country (Poland) Lechia Gdańsk will relegate after this season so they count and they have one of the most beautyful stadions in country (plus arena builded for Euro 12) 41620 people capacity
2:25 - That "soon" might take a while since there is a lot of resistance to the idea of demolishing the San Siro.
The San Nicola Stadium is quite interesting despite its location and general absurdity.
As an outsider, it makes more sense to demolish San Nicola than San Siro.
@@phzitos_ Yes, but whilst in Milan there's money to spend on such projects, Bari is located in southern Italy so the financial muscle isn't there.
There is a club in the second division of Colombia called Cúcuta Deportivo who play their home matches at a 43000 seater stadium. Seems unusual but it was quite a popular club in its heyday.
It should be noted that there is, or at least until last season, no relegation from K-League 2. There is only promotion to the first division
I really liked the architecture of the Kerala stadium tbf! There's too much steel and glass around.
6:57 thanks for highlighting the stupid league names in English football. When I tell people I support Portsmouth, if they arent aware of the structure of the English game, I always have to quantify it as 'League One, which is actually the third tier.'
It's also stupid as League 1 is the name of the top flight in France!
I just realized that there are 2 clubs from our country that will play at Liga 2, which is a lower division of the Indonesian football behind Liga 1 and are currently abandoned after the official statement by PSSI due to the Kanjuruhan tragedy. To the surprise, Persipura Jayapura and Sriwijaya FC Palembang both had their home grounds with a big capacity. Persipura played in the new Lukas Enembe Stadium, which is a main venue for the 2020 Indonesian Olympic (Pekan Olahraga Nasional). The Papua club had officially appointed this as a replacement to old Mandala Stadium before they suffered a shock relegation at the end of 2021-22 Liga 1 season, which was played in centralized venue and behind closed doors due to the pandemic. Sriwijaya had played at Jakabaring Stadium, which is the venue for 2018 Asian Games and the upcoming U-20 World Cup this year.
i worked in the Hefei stadium for a few years, there isn't really football there sure, but it gets a lot of usage for music concerts and there are offices and schools and things inside
Thank you for mentioning Kerala
A documentary on Mitrovic would be good, and how particularly Parker nearly ruined his career in that year in the Prem, but he Bounced Back etc.
Great work. But the picture of the stadium you showed as the home ground of Kerala Blasters is the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium in New Delhi. No blame attached to you, as there are as many as 4 stadiums in Margao (Goa) ― which is also called Fatorda Stadium locally, New Delhi, Kochi (Kerala), and Chennai (Tamil Nadu) also called Marina Arena with the same name. All four of them have been, and 3 are currently, homes of Top flight clubs in India. The one in New Delhi used to be the home of dissolved Club Delhi Dynamos! If you're confused, don't worry, even we are in India😢
Remember Queens Park playing at Hampden which at one point held 100,000+ in front of 200 people.
Day 380: Indonesia XI If All Eligible Players Had Declared For Them.
Keep dreaming bocah
Would be a decent squad but most people wont even know half of them
Having played a lot of Football Manager, one of the hardest parts of being a small club that gets promoted to the big boys league is your stadium being half the size of everyone else's and thus you can't generate match-day revenues like they can. Having a huge stadium in a lower league, if you can still mostly fill it, must be a huge financial advantage, or if you can't fill it, a huge financial weight around your neck.
You should make a 7 best post fergie man united signing
The Rose Bowl, home of the 1994 World Cup Final is a single tier bowl holding 91,000. U of Michigan, which hosted a friendly (Barca v ManU? I forget) that set the USA soccer attendance record, is a 100,000+ seat bowl, although it now has luxury boxes, but not a proper 2nd tier.
11:18 The Big House, Michigan University stadium is an american football stadium and has a single tier and is the 3rd largest stadium in the world and the largest outside of asia
For 11:14 the Rose Bowl in LA is another example of that type of stadium.
Santa Cruz of Recife in Brazil. Plays in Serie D and home stadium has a capacity of 60000
Does anyone know why Alfie can use so many images without getting a copyright strike? Is putting a Getty Images logo in the bottom left enough?
Some people talk about the Ship of Theseus but I like to talk about the Mané Garrincha.
Karabukspor has a stadium with the capacity being higher than some of the PL teams while playing in the amateur divisions
The president of CONMEBOL Alejandro Dominguez said that the Mané Garrincha stadium will be used as the final of the Copa Sudamericana in 2023 (originally in 2022 but this was postponed due to the elections here in Brazil), and the champions of the Copa do Brasil Flamengo and Champion Brasileiro Palmeiras will play in the stadium on January 28 in the Supercopa do Brasil, the two teams already played at the stadium in 2021 in the pandemic.
I think it would be cool if the Final match of Copa do Brasil was intended to be played there. It's our most "inclusive" competition and Brasília is at the center of the country. Sure bigger teams would have an advantage (but they always have).
The situation is harder when we consider the Arena da Amazônia... Because it's really far to go for most of the Brazilian population (even for the people that live in the North).
@@phzitos_ (eu sou brazuca) Seria mt bom se a Final da Copa do Brasil fosse jogo único apenas em Brasília, porém diferente na Europa pra chegar em Brasília demora mais do q na Alemanha, França, Itália, etc. E tbm a Supercopa do Brasil ser jogado nos estádios q já foram palco da Copa do Mundo aqui no Brasil.
up until recently Queens Park playing at Hampdon Park when they used be in fourth tier of scotland would of been a big addition to this video
Some of these modern stadia are works of art. 👍
It's kinda funny that Bari's stadium is called the St. Nicholas Stadium and their colors are red and white like Christmas...
I miss Great Strahov Stadium on here. Capacity 250 000 (second largest sports venue ever built). It's in such a bad state it would probably collapse though lol. It is home stadium for Sparta Prague B team (they play 2nd level of football in the country). I think it would be eligible.
Average attendance in Bari is actually 27k and not 17k and there even was full house 26th december vs Genoa
Can you revisit your video ranking best/worst run PL clubs? Or make a updated version?
If you want bigger single tiered stadiums that Munich's Olympic Stadium, look at American Football. Both Michigan Stadium and The Rose Bowl are single tier stadiums larger than 70,000 seats of capacity. Michigan Stadium is over 110,000.
zhey play in the 1st division, don‘t they? And michigan stadium hosts american football, not actual football
@@olivenlp6610 let's be abundantly clear, anyone who unironically uses the term "actual football" is extremely ignorant of the history of the term "football" and if they're referring to association football as the one and only "actual football" are extremely ignorant of the history of other codes of football. Soccer isn't even the oldest code of football played competitively on the British Islands.
But the points about the stadium, had you actually watched the video, you'd know I was simply responding to the comment made about what the largest single tier stadiums are, nothing else.
The last one seems to be on the lower end of the capacity range given, but at least it's being put to use with those shops
Bari’s stadium looking like that from the outside and being so far from the city centre makes it feel like an American stadium
You seriously tied in Triggers Broom!! You are a genius mate!😂
why coloccini in the transition at 5:17 ?
Scratched my head on that one too... don't get the reference.
When it comes to capacity versus league standing, how about Wakefield AFC on 10th tier English football NCEL D1 playing at Wakefield Trinity Rugby league stadium capacity just under 9000.
8:12 is this not where the Sealand national team plays?
Can you do who is the best clubs in London