Estádio do Maracanã
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Full name
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Estádio Jornalista Mário Filho
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Location
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Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
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Coordinates
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22°54′43.80″S 43°13′48.59″W / 22.9121667°S 43.2301639°W
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Broke ground
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August 2, 1948
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Opened
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June 16, 1950
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Renovated
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2000, 2006, 2013
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Owner
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State of Rio de Janeiro
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Operator
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Complexo Maracanã Entretenimento S.A. (Odebrecht, IMX, AEG)
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Surface
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Grass
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Capacity
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78,838
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Record
attendance
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199,854 (Brazil–Uruguay, July 16, 1950)
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Dimensions
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105 m × 68 m (344 ft × 223 ft)
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Tenants
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1950 FIFA World Cup
2007 Pan American Games
2013 FIFA Confederations Cup
2014 FIFA World Cup
2016 Summer Olympics
2016 Summer Paralympics
Flamengo
Fluminense
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The Estádio do
Maracanã (English: Maracanã Stadium, standard Brazilian Portuguese: [esˈtad͡ʒju
du maɾakɐˈnɐ̃], local pronunciation: [iʃˈtad͡ʒu du mɐˌɾakɐˈnɐ̃]), officially
Estádio Jornalista Mário Filho (IPA: [iʃˈtad͡ʒu ʒoɦnaˈliʃtɐ ˈmaɾju ˈfiʎu]), is
an open-air stadium in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Owned by the Rio de Janeiro state government, it is,
as is the Maracanã neighbourhood where it is located, named after the Rio
Maracanã, a now canalized river in Rio de Janeiro. It was opened in 1950 to
host the FIFA World Cup, in which Brazil were beaten 2–1 by Uruguay in the
deciding game.
Since then, it has mainly been used for football
matches between the major football clubs in Rio de Janeiro, including Botafogo,
Flamengo, Fluminense, and Vasco de Gama. It has also hosted a number of
concerts and other sporting events.
Although the paid attendance at the final game of the
1950 FIFA World Cup was 199,854 (being the world's largest stadium by capacity,
when it was inaugurated), the stadium currently seats 78,838 spectators, making
it the largest stadium in Brazil and in South America. It was the main venue of
the 2007 Pan American Games, hosting the football tournament and the opening
and closing ceremonies.
The Maracanã was partially rebuilt in preparation for
the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup, the 2014 World Cup, which will be the first
one held in Brazil since 1950, and also the opening and closing ceremonies of
the 2016 Summer Olympics and Paralympics. It will be the host site for the
championship match of the 2014 World Cup.
The stadium held a test game on April 27, 2013, with
teams led by Ronaldo and Bebeto. The first official match was on June 2, 2013,
when Brazil drew 2–2 with England in a friendly match.
Name
The official name
of the stadium, Mário Filho, was given in honor of an old Carioca journalist,
(the brother of Nelson Rodrigues), who was a strong vocal supporter of the
construction of Maracanã.
The stadium's popular name is derived from the
Maracanã River, whose point of origin is in the jungle covered hills to the
west, crossing various bairros (neighborhoods) of Rio's Zona Norte (North Zone)
such as Tijuca and São Cristóvão via a canal which features sloping sides
constructed of concrete. Upon flowing into the Canal do Mangue, it empties into
Guanabara Bay. The name Maracanã derives from the indigenous Tupi–Guarani word
for a type of parrot which inhabited the region. The stadium construction was
prior to the formation of the Maracanã neighborhood that was once part of
Tijuca.
History
Construction
After winning the right to
host the 1950 FIFA World Cup, the Brazilian government sought to build a new
stadium for the tournament. The plans for the stadium were drawn up by seven
Brazilian architects, Miguel Feldman, Waldir Ramos, Raphael Galvão, Oscar Valdetaro,
Orlando Azevedo, Antônio Dias Carneiro and Pedro Paulo Bernardes Bastos. The
first stone was laid at the site of the stadium on August 2, 1948. With the
first World Cup game scheduled to be played on June 24, 1950, this left a
little under two years to finish construction. However, work quickly fell
behind schedule, prompting FIFA to send Dr. Ottorino Barassi, the head of the
Italian FA, who had organized the 1934 World Cup to help in Rio de Janeiro.
The construction of Maracanã was criticized by Carlos
Lacerda, then Congressman and political enemy of the mayor of the city, general
Ângelo Mendes de Morais, for the expense and for the chosen location for the
stadium, arguing that it should be built in the West Zone neighborhood of
Jacarepaguá. Still it was supported by journalist Mário Rodrigues Filho, Mendes
de Morais was able to move the project forward. At the time, a horse racing
arena stood in the chosen area. The competition for the work was opened by
municipality of Rio de Janeiro in 1947, with the construction contract awarded
by engineer Humberto Menescal, and architectural contract awarded by Michael
Feldman, Waldir Ramos, Raphael Galvão, Oscar Valdetaro, Orlando Azevedo, Pedro
Paulo Bernardes Bastos, and Antônio Dias Carneiro. The works initiated on
August 2, 1948, with the laying of the cornerstone. 1,500 workers constructed
the stadium, with an additional two thousand working in the final months.
Despite having come into use in 1950, the works were only completed in 1965.
Opening and World
Cup 1950
·
The opening match of the stadium
took place on June 16, 1950. Rio de Janeiro All-Stars beat São Paulo All-Stars
3–1; Didi became the player to score the first ever goal at the stadium.
Despite hosting a match, the stadium was still unfinished. It lacked toilet
facilities and a press stand, and still looked like a building site. It was
said that the stadium could house 200,000 standing spectators, overtaking
Hampden Park as the largest stadium in the world.[citation needed] Despite the
stadium's unfinished state, FIFA allowed matches to be played at the venue, and
on June 24, 1950, the first World Cup match took place. Brazil beat Mexico with
a final score 4–0, with Ademir becoming the first scorer of a competitive goal
at the stadium with his 30th minute strike. 81,000 spectators attended the
game.
·
Built for the 1950 World Cup, the
Maracanã's first official match was in that competition on June 24, 1950. The
game saw Brazil defeat Mexico 4–0, with two goals from Ademir and one each from
Baltasar and Jair. The match was refereed by Englishman George Reader. Five of
Brazil's six games at the tournament were played at the Maracanã (the exception
being their 2–2 draw with Switzerland).
The
Maracanazo
Eventually,
Brazil progressed to the final round, facing Uruguay in the final match of the
tournament on July 16, 1950. Brazil only needed a draw to finish top of the
group, but Uruguay won the game 2–1, shocking and silencing the massive crowd.
This defeat on home soil is a significant event in Brazilian history, being
known popularly as the Maracanazo. The official attendance of the game was
199,854, with the actual attendance estimated to be about 210,000.
On March 21, 1954 a new
official attendance record was set in the game between Brazil and Paraguay,
after 183,513 spectators entered the stadium with a ticket and 194,603 (177,656
p.) in Fla-Flu (1963). In 1963, stadium authorities replaced the square goal
posts with round ones, but it was still two years before the stadium would be
fully completed. In 1965, 17 years after construction began, the stadium was
finally finished.
Since the World Cup left Brazil in 1950, the Maracanã Stadium has mainly
been used for club games involving four major football clubs in Rio— Vasco,
Botafogo, Flamengo and Fluminense. The stadium has also hosted numerous
domestic football cup finals, most notably the Copa do Brasil and the
Campeonato Carioca.
In September 1966, Mário Rodrigues Filho, a Brazilian journalist,
columnist and sports figure, died, leading to the administrators of the stadium
renaming the stadium after him to Estádio Jornalista Mário Rodrigues Filho.
However, the nickname of Maracanã continued to be used. Mario Rodrigues Filho
was a prominent campaigner who was largely responsible for the stadium
originally being built. In 1969, Pelé scored the 1,000th goal of his career at
the Maracanã against Vasco in front of 65,157 spectators. In 1989, Zico scored
his final goal for Flamengo at the Maracanã, taking his goal tally at the
stadium to 333, a record that still stands as of 2011.
1990s and 2000s
An upper stand in the stadium collapsed on July 19, 1992,
leading to the death of three supporters and 50 more being injured. Following
the disaster, the stadium's capacity was greatly reduced as it was converted to
an all-seated stadium in the late 1990s. Despite this, the ground was
classified as national landmark in 1998, meaning that it could not be
demolished. The stadium hosted the first ever FIFA Club World Cup final match
between Vasco de Gama and Corinthians, which Corinthians won on penalties.
Following its 50th anniversary in 2000, the stadium underwent
renovations which would increase its full capacity to around 103,000. After
years of planning and nine months of closure between 2005 and 2006, the stadium
was reopened in January 2007 with an all-seated capacity of 82,238.
The stadium is part of a complex that includes an arena known by the
name of Maracanãzinho, which means "the Little Maracanã" in
Portuguese.
Rebuilding for the World Cup 2014 and
the 2016 Olympic and Paralympic Games
For the 2014 World Cup and 2016 Olympics and Paralympics, a major
reconstruction project was accomplished. The original seating bowl, with a
two-tier configuration, was demolished, giving way to a new one-tier seating
bowl. The new seats are coloured yellow, blue and white forming along with the
green of the match field, the Brazilian national colours. In addition, the greyish
tone returns as the main façade colour of the Maracana stadium or estádio do
Maracanã.
The original stadium's roof in concrete was demolished and substituted
with a fiber glass tensioned membrane coated with Teflon. The new roof will
cover 95% of the seats inside the stadium, unlike the former design, where
protection was given to some seats in the upper ring and also from the seats of
the bleachers above the gate access of each sector. The old boxes levels, which
were installed above the stands for the 2000 FIFA Club World Cup, were
dismantled in the reconstruction process.
On May 30,
2013, a friendly game between Brazil and England scheduled for June 2 was
called off by the local justice due to safety concerns related to the stadium.
The government of Rio de Janeiro appealed against the decision with the game
going ahead as originally planned, the final score being a 2−2 draw.
2013
FIFA Confederations Cup
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Date
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Time
(UTC-03)
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Team
#1
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Res.
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Team
#2
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Round
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Attendance
|
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June
16, 2013
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16:00
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Mexico
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1-2
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Italy
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Group
A
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73,123
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June
20, 2013
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16:00
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Spain
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10–0
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Tahiti
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Group
B
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71,806
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June
30, 2013
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19:00
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Brazil
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3-0
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Spain
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Final
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73,531
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2014 FIFA World Cup
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Date
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Time (UTC-03)
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Team #1
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Res.
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Team #2
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Round
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June
15, 2014
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19:00
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Argentina
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Match
11
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Bosnia
and Herzegovina
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Group
F
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June
18, 2014
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16:00
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Spain
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Match
19
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Chile
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Group
B
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June
22, 2014
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13:00
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Belgium
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Match
31
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Russia
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Group
H
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June
25, 2014
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17:00
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Ecuador
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Match
41
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France
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Group
E
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June
28, 2014
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17:00
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Winner
Group C
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Match
50
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Runner-up
Group D
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Round
of 16
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July
4, 2014
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13:00
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Winner
Match 53
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Match
58
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Winner
Match 54
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Quarter-final
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July
13, 2014
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16:00
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Winner
Match 61
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Match
64
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Winner Match 62
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Final
|
Non-Footballing
Events
·
The stadium in the 2007 Pan
American Games Opening Ceremony.
International
sports competitions
·
In 1980 and 1983, volleyball
matches between Brazil and the USSR played at the ground.
·
The stadium hosted the opening and
closing ceremonies of the XV Pan American Games.
·
The stadium will host the opening
and closing ceremonies of the 2016 Summer Olympics and 2016 Summer Paralympics.
Music
·
To celebrate the 30th anniversary
of the stadium, on January 16, 1980, Frank Sinatra performed to a crowd of
180,000.
·
Both Tina Turner and Paul McCartney
made the Guinness Book of World Records with performances at the stadium. Both
concerts, in 1988 (Break Every Rule Tour) and April 1990 (The Paul McCartney
World Tour), respectively, attracted crowds of over 180,000 people.
·
On June 18, 1983, KISS performed
for 137,000 fans at the stadium, which marks the record attendance for the
band. This and two other stadium shows in Brazil would be the last time KISS
would perform in their signature makeup until the reunion of the original line up
at their Alive/Worldwide Tour in 1996.
·
Show of the TV host and singer Xuxa
in 1988, the show was broadcast live by TV Globo.
·
From January 18–27, 1991, the
stadium hosted the second edition of Rock in Rio, with Prince, Guns N' Roses,
George Michael, INXS, a-ha and New Kids on the Block as headliners. During the
festival, a-ha drew the largest audience of 198,000. This feat earned a-ha a
Guinness World Record for largest paying audience at a musical event.
·
The January 1995 edition of the
Hollywood Rock festival consisted of two successive concerts by The Rolling
Stones at the stadium.
·
Sting and Madonna are the only
international pop stars to have played dates at Maracanã on different
occasions. Sting opened his ...Nothing Like the Sun world tour at the stadium
on November 20, 1987. Approximately 20 years later, on December 8, 2007, he
performed there again with The Police. Madonna played the venue on November 6,
1993, with the Girlie Show in front of 120,000 people, and then again 15 years
later on December 14 and 15, 2008, as part of the Sticky & Sweet Tour,
selling over 107,000 tickets.
·
Rush and Backstreet Boys also
played the venue. Rush's concert in 2002 is documented on their live album and
DVD Rush in Rio. Brazilian artists also played at the stadium, like Ivete
Sangalo, Sandy & Junior, Diante do Trono and, most recently, Roberto
Carlos.
Miscellaneous
·
Pope John Paul II celebrated masses
at the stadium.
·
The stadium of the Red Star
Belgrade is also popularly called Maracana (in the honour of the Brazilian
stadium of the same name).

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