Estadio Antonio Aranda

Estadio Antonio Aranda, known until 2013 as Estadio Tte. Cnel. Antonio Oddone Sarubbi,[1] is a football stadium in the city of Ciudad del Este, Paraguay. It is the home venue of Club Atlético 3 de Febrero and is named after Antonio Aranda Encina, a former club executive who contributed to the stadium's construction through his enterprise Eventos y Construcciones, and also to 3 de Febrero's first promotion to the first division in 2004.

Estadio Antonio Aranda
Estadio del "3"
Full nameEstadio Antonio Aranda
LocationCiudad del Este, Paraguay
OwnerClub Atlético 3 de Febrero
Capacity23,500
Field size100 x 66 m
SurfaceGrass
Construction
Built1972
Opened1973, 1999 (after renovation)
ArchitectTonino Cascio
Tenants
Club Atlético 3 de Febrero
Paraguay national football team (selected matches)

History

The stadium is located next to Ciudad del Este's bus terminal. The stadium is on the Avenue General Bernardino Caballero, and was opened in 1973.[2] The capacity of the stadium, is 28,000. It has a grass surface and was renovated in 1999, for which it was utilized as one of the venues of the 1999 Copa América, hosting games by Brazil, Mexico, Argentina and Chile national teams. Fixtures of the 2004 South American U-16 Championship and the 2007 South American U-20 Championship were also disputed at the stadium. The stadium is Paraguay's third largest, according to its seating capacity.[3]

The stadium was the venue which saw Paraguayan footballers, Roque Santa Cruz score his first international goal for the Albirroja on 17 June 1999 in a friendly match against Uruguay, and Nelson Haedo score his first international goal for the Albirroja on 17 August 2005 in a friendly match against El Salvador.

See also

References

  1. "Estadio 3 de Febrero cambia nomenclatura" (in Spanish). Hoy. 16 November 2013.
  2. "Paraguay - CA 3 de Febrero - Results, fixtures, squad, statistics, photos, videos and news - Soccerway". int.soccerway.com. Retrieved 23 September 2018.
  3. "World Stadiums - Stadiums in Paraguay". www.worldstadiums.com. Retrieved 23 September 2018.

25°31′37″S 54°36′43″W


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