Stadio Luigi Ferraris

44°24′59″N 8°57′9″E / 44.41639°N 8.95250°E / 44.41639; 8.95250

Luigi Ferraris
Marassi
Map
LocationVia Giovanni De Prà 1, Genoa, Italy
OwnerMunicipality of Genoa
Capacity33,205
SurfaceGrass
105 × 68 meters
Construction
Opened22 January 1911[1]
Renovated1987–1989, 2015, 2018
ArchitectVittorio Gregotti (1987–1989)
Tenants
Genoa C.F.C. (1911–present)
U.C. Sampdoria (1946–present)
Italy national football team (selected matches)

The Stadio comunale Luigi Ferraris, also known as the Marassi from the name of the neighbourhood where it is located, is a multi-use stadium in Genoa, Italy. The home of Genoa C.F.C. and U.C. Sampdoria football clubs, it opened in 1911 and is the oldest stadium still in use for football and other sports in Italy. Aside from football, the stadium has hosted meetings of rugby in the Italian national rugby team and, more rarely, some concerts.

The stadium is named after Luigi Ferraris (1887–1915), an Italian footballer, engineer and soldier who died during WWI.[2]

Notable matches

The stadium was inaugurated on 22 January 1911 with a football match between Genoa and Internazionale, and had a capacity of 20,000. On 22 December 1912, it hosted its first international, in which Italy lost 3–1 to Austria in a friendly.[1]

It also hosted the 1934 World Cup round-of-16 match between Spain and Brazil,[1] and by then its capacity had been expanded to 30,000.[citation needed]

The stadium was dismantled and rebuilt before the 1990 FIFA World Cup, for which it hosted three Group C matches (between Costa Rica, Scotland and Sweden) and a round-of-16 match between the Republic of Ireland and Romania.[3]

The highest attendance at the Luigi Ferraris was 60,000 on 27 February 1949, for a match between Italy and Portugal.[citation needed]

On 12 October 2010, a Euro 2012 qualifier between Italy and Serbia was abandoned after Serbia fans continued to throw flares onto the pitch and light fireworks. When the game finally began, more flares and fireworks were thrown onto the field and the referee stopped the match after only six minutes of play.[4]

On 29 February 2012, the United States defeated Italy 1–0 in a friendly played at the stadium. It was the first time in almost 100 years that Italy had been defeated in Genoa after 22 December 1912 defeat against Austria, and the first time that the US had ever defeated Italy.[5]

On 14 November 2014, it hosted Italy's end-of-year rugby union international against Argentina who won 20–18.[citation needed]

Sampdoria's „Gradinata Sud"

Average attendances

SeasonGenoaSampdoria
AverageTierAverageTier
1993–9426,391A30,616A
1994–9521,717A27,550A
1995–9611,229B26,070A
1996–9713,084B26,187A
1997–9812,848B24,482A
1998–9912,961B20,463A
1999–200012,928B16,709B
2000–0115,512B16,476B
2001–0216,159B13,069B
2002–0312,371B21,802B
2003–0417,347B26,224A
2004–0521,449B23,669A
2005–0617,577C122,688A
2006–0719,934B19,036A
2007–0824,745A21,888A
2008–0926,583A23,323A
2009–1027,007A25,240A
2010–1123,446A23,330A
2011–1220,898A20,854B
2012–1319,740A23,123A
2013–1420,055A22,158A
2014–1519,074A20,746A
2015–1621,025A21,350A

1990 FIFA World Cup

The stadium was one of the venues of the 1990 FIFA World Cup, and held the following matches:

DateTeam No. 1Res.Team No. 2Round
1990-06-11  Costa Rica1–0  ScotlandGroup C
1990-06-16  Sweden1–2
1990-06-201–2  Costa Rica
1990-06-25  Republic of Ireland0–0 (5–4 on penalties)  RomaniaRound of 16

References

External links