Arena da Baixada

Estádio Mario Celso Petraglia (Formerly known as Estádio Joaquim Américo Guimarães), also known as Ligga Arena for sponsorship reasons or Arena da Baixada, is a stadium located in Curitiba, the state capital of Paraná, Brazil. It is the home stadium of Club Athletico Paranaense, and has a capacity of 42,372 people. The stadium was the first in Brazil to sell its naming rights; it was known as Kyocera Arena between 2005 and 1 April 2008. It was the first retractable roof stadium built in South America.[2]

Ligga Arena
Map
Full nameEstádio Mario Celso Petraglia
Former namesEstádio Joaquim Américo Guimarães, Kyocera Arena
LocationCuritiba, Paraná, Brazil
Coordinates25°26′54″S 49°16′37″W / 25.44833°S 49.27694°W / -25.44833; -49.27694
OwnerClub Athletico Paranaense
OperatorG3 United
Capacity42,372
Record attendanceNon-football: 45,925 (religious event, 27 July 2019) [1]
Football: 40,263 (Athletico Paranaense vs. Atletico Junior, 12 December 2018)
Field size105 m × 68 m (344 ft × 223 ft)
SurfaceArtificial grass
Construction
Broke groundDecember 1, 1997
OpenedJune 24, 1999
Renovated2009, 2012–2014
Tenants
Athletico Paranaense
Website
www.arenacap.com.br

With Curitiba selected as one of the host cities of the 2014 FIFA World Cup, the stadium was rebuilt between 2012 and 2014. Its capacity was expanded to 42,372 seats.

Located in the Água Verde borough near the center of Curitiba, the history of the stadium began in the early twentieth century, when in 1914, Joaquim Américo Guimarães (1879–1917), then president of the International (the forefathers of Club Athletico Paranaense), led the construction of the then Arena da Baixada stadium. Athletico came into existence ten years later, inheriting the assets, including the stadium.

History

The stadium was built at the previous location of a Brazilian Army powder depot. In 1934, the stadium was renamed Estádio Joaquim Américo Guimarães. In 1980, the stadium received its first floodlights. From 1986 to 1994, the stadium was closed and Athletico Paranaense played their games at Estadio Pinheirão.[3] After being reopened in 1994 and operating for some years, the old stadium building was demolished on March 26, 1997, right after a construction project of a new arena was announced. In June 1999, the new stadium was built. In 2005, the stadium was renamed Kyocera Arena, after the Japanese company Kyocera purchased the naming rights. The contract with Kyocera ended in early 2008. It was not renewed, and no new partnership was announced. As a result, the stadium went back to its old name, Arena da Baixada.[4]

In February 2024, it was renamed Estádio Mario Celso Petraglia, in honor to its long-lasting president

The inaugural match of the old stadium was played on 6 September 1914, when Flamengo beat Internacional 7–1. The first goal of the stadium was scored by Flamengo's Arnaldo.

The inaugural match of the new stadium was played on 24 June 1999, when Athletico Paranaense beat Cerro Porteño of Paraguay 2–1. The first goal of the stadium after its reinauguration was scored by Athletico's Lucas Severino.[5]

The stadium's football attendance record currently stands at 40,263, set on 12 December 2018 when Athletico Paranaense defeated Atletico Junior on penalties for the 2018 Copa Sudamericana Final.[6][7]

The attendance record for a non-football event was registered on July 27, 2019, when "Semana de Avivamento" took place (a religious event among evangelical churches). On this day, 45,925 people attended the event.[8]

Arena da Baixada, in a game between Athletico Paranaense and Santos.

2014 FIFA World Cup

Ever since renovation works were completed in June 1999, the historic Estádio Joaquim Américo has been considered by many experts and journalists as one of Brazil's most modern and best-appointed stadiums.

The stadium, which was originally constructed back in 1914, was one of the venues chosen to host games at the 2014 FIFA World Cup.

Prior to welcoming the global showpiece, the stadium underwent another set of renovation works from 2012 to 2014. The renovations were a series of improvements in facilities and the addition of rows of extra seats parallel to the pitch.[9] This resulted in an increased capacity of 42,000, which made it possible for the stadium to host four World Cup matches.[10]

Construction of the stadium did not come without difficulties. Building work at the stadium was suspended in October 2013 on the orders of a Brazilian labor tribunal due to numerous and serious safety breaches. "Countless infractions have been committed, in various stages of the building project," wrote the judge Lorena Colnago in her decision, the Paraná Regional Labor Tribunal said in a statement.[11] Subsequently, the planned retractable roof for the stadium was canceled because it would not be ready in time for the world cup.[12] In late 2014, construction of the planned retractable roof resumed. With the completion of the project in March 2015, Arena da Baixada became the first stadium in South America with a retractable roof.[13]

The official inauguration of the renovated stadium was on May 14, 2014, in a friendly match between Athletico and Corinthians Paulista that finished 2–1 to Corinthians in front of 30,000 people. The first goal was scored by Athletico's Marcelo Cirino in the 13th minute.[14][15]

The first match to be held during the world cup was played between Iran and Nigeria, on June 16, ending with no goals.

Matches

Arena da Baixada in 2014 FIFA World Cup Group F match between Iran and Nigeria on 16 June 2014
DateTime (UTC-03)Team #1ResultTeam #2RoundAttendance
June 16, 201416:00  Iran0–0  NigeriaGroup F39,081
June 20, 201419:00  Honduras1–2  EcuadorGroup E39,224
June 23, 201413:00  Australia0–3  SpainGroup B39,375
June 26, 201417:00  Algeria1–1  RussiaGroup H39,311

UFC 198: Werdum vs. Miocic

The event was the first that the promotion hosted in Curitiba. It was the fourth stadium venue and first Brazilian stadium to host a UFC event and drew 45,207 fans, then the third largest crowd in UFC's history.[16][17] Two Curitiba natives, Cris Cyborg and Shogun Rua, appeared on the official card with both winning their fights.

2017 FIVB Volleyball World League

In 2017, the stadium hosted the final round of 2017 FIVB Volleyball World League.

Pool J1
DateTimeScoreSet 1Set 2Set 3Set 4Set 5TotalReport
4 Jul15:05Brazil  3–1  Canada25–2117–2525–1925–19 92–84P2 P3
5 Jul15:05Russia  0–3  Canada23–2527–2917–25  67–79P2 P3
6 Jul15:05Brazil  3–2  Russia25–1818–2525–1922–2516–14106–101P2 P3
Pool K1
DateTimeScoreSet 1Set 2Set 3Set 4Set 5TotalReport
4 Jul17:40France  3–2  United States27–2520–2526–2417–2515–12105–111P2 P3
5 Jul17:40Serbia  1–3  United States22–2523–2525–1922–25 92–94P2 P3
6 Jul18:10France  3–2  Serbia25–2125–2017–2518–2515–11100–102P2 P3
Semifinals
DateTimeScoreSet 1Set 2Set 3Set 4Set 5TotalReport
7 Jul15:05Brazil  3–1  United States25–2023–2525–2025–19 98–84P2 P3
7 Jul17:50France  3–1  Canada25–1922–2525–1925–21 97–84P2 P3
3rd place match
DateTimeScoreSet 1Set 2Set 3Set 4Set 5TotalReport
8 Jul20:00United States  1–3  Canada25–1820–2522–2521–25 88–93P2 P3
Final
DateTimeScoreSet 1Set 2Set 3Set 4Set 5TotalReport
8 Jul23:05Brazil  2–3  France25–2115–2523–2525–1913–15101–105P2 P3

Further reading

  • Enciclopédia do Futebol Brasileiro, Volume 2 - Lance, Rio de Janeiro: Aretê Editorial S/A, 2001.

References

External links

Preceded by FIVB Volleyball World League
Final Venue

2017
Succeeded by
Stade Pierre-Mauroy
Villeneuve-d'Ascq
(as FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League Final Venue)