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Stade de la Meinau

Stade de la Meinau
La Meinau
External view of La Meinau
Location 12, rue de l'Extenwoerth
Strasbourg,
France
Coordinates Coordinates: 48°33′36.23″N 7°45′17.89″E / 48.5600639°N 7.7549694°E / 48.5600639; 7.7549694
Owner Town of Strasbourg
Operator RC Strasbourg
Capacity 27,500
Field size 110 x 68 m
Surface Grass
Construction
Broke ground 1906
Opened 1914
Renovated 2001
Expanded 1921, 1931, 1951, 1979–1984
Tenants
RC Strasbourg (1914–present)

The Stade de la Meinau (French pronunciation: ​[stad də la mɛno]), commonly known as "La Meinau", is a football stadium in Strasbourg, France. It is the home ground of RC Strasbourg and has also hosted international matches, including one game of the 1938 World Cup, two games of Euro 1984 and the final of the Cup Winners' Cup in 1988. La Meinau has also been used as a venue for concerts and a mass by John Paul II in 1988. The stadium is owned by the Strasbourg municipality and is rented by the RC Strasbourg.

On 1 April 1914, as Strasbourg was still part of Germany following the Franco-Prussian War, RC Strasbourg, then called FC Neudorf, signed a 300 Deutsche Mark lease to use the Haemmerlé Garten, essentially a pitch surrounded by the woods in the then mainly rural district of Meinau. This would eventually serve as the ground where the stadium was constructed. Between 1906 and 1914, the pitch had been used by another team, FC Frankonia, and several lawsuits were necessary to evict that team from the ground. Construction eventually proceeded and was completed in 1921 with a capacity of 30,000. During the 1938 FIFA World Cup, La Meinau hosted a first round game that saw Brazil eliminate Poland 6–5 after extra-time thanks to a triple by Leônidas who scored one of the very first Bicycle kicks in the history of football.


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Wikipedia

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