Estadio Ciudad de Caseros

City of Caseros Stadium
Estadio Ciudad de Caseros
Interior view of the stadium in 2021
Map
Former namesEstadio de Estudiantes
(1963–1992)
AddressAv. Justo José de Urquiza y Lisandro de la Torre
Caseros
Argentina
OwnerC.A. Estudiantes
OperatorC.A. Estudiantes
TypeStadium
SurfaceGrass
Current useFootball
Construction
Opened11 May 1963; 61 years ago (1963-05-11)
Renovated2010, 2011
Tenants
Estudiantes BA (1963–present)

City of Caseros Stadium (Spanish: Estadio Ciudad de Caseros) is a football stadium located in the city of Caseros, Greater Buenos Aires, Argentina. It is owned and operated by Club Atlético Estudiantes and holds 16,740 people. The venue was officially opened on 11 May 1963.[1]

The stadium's name "Ciudad de Caseros" was elected by Estudiantes' members, and is used since September 1992.[2][3]

History

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Background

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Soon after C.A. Estudiantes was founded in 1898, students of Mariano Moreno and Nacional de Buenos Aires used to play at the dock 2 of port of Buenos Aires, which had been previously used by a British institution, "Madero Rangers" located in Palermo neighborhood.[4]

In 1928, Estudiantes had to leave the field because of financial problems. In 1931, the club got a new land in Villa Devoto, on Desaguadero and José P. Varela streets. The club played in Villa Devoto until 1944.[4]

During the following years, Estudiantes used different stadiums as home venues, until the club acquired a land in the city of Caseros in Tres de Febrero Partido where it would build a new stadium.[4]

Own venue

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The stadium during a match in 1967

The first match held in the stadium was during the Torneo de Aficionados when Estudiantes played v Piraña, winning 5–0.[1]

In 1988, the club inaugurated a new concrete stand after 18 months. The stand can hold more than 10,000 spectators. In 1992, the stadium was named "Ciudad de Caseros" after the Estudiantes' members decided the name by votation.[3]

In 2000, Estudiantes won their first title in the stadium, the 1999–2000 Primera B Metropolitana championship therefore promoting to Primera B Nacional.[3]

The club renovated the stadium in 2010, adding new benches for substite players, irrigation system, and medical rooms. The lighting system was inaugurated on 20 May 2011,[3][5] with a match between children teams of the club.[6]

The venue has also been used by other teams such as Sportivo Italiano until 2005 when the club inaugurated its own stadium. Other teams using Estadio Ciudad de Caseros as home venue were Acassuso,[7] Villa San Carlos,[8] and Centro Español,[9] so their venues were not suitable for official matches. The stadium is also a frecquent venue for Copa Argentina matches.

Other events

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On 20 March 1982, the stadium hosted the Festival Rock del Sol a la Luna, a festival attended by near 20,000 people. Some of the rock music artists performing there were Sumo, Riff, Los Violadores, Los Abuelos de la Nada, Orions, Memphis la Blusera, Juan Carlos Baglietto, among others.[10][11]

Other artists that have performed at the stadium are Dread Mar-I,[12] and Vicentico (2011).[13]

References

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  1. ^ a b #SedesEn1Minuto: Ciudad de Caseros on Copa Argentina.org, 2 Feb 2023
  2. ^ Ciudad de Caseros on Interior Futbolero
  3. ^ a b c d "HISTORIA DEL CIUDAD DE CASEROS" on Subcomisión del Hincha (blog)
  4. ^ a b c Club Atlético Estudiantes, "Decano del fútbol porteño" 1898-15 Agosto-1998 by Carlos Micko on Devoto Historia
  5. ^ Es un iluminado on Olé, 18 May 2011
  6. ^ "La fiesta de los chicos!" on Mi vida por Estudiantes blog, 21 May 2011
  7. ^ Acassuso se pudo sacar la mufa jugando de local en Caseros, Clarín, 28 Feb 2012
  8. ^ Mufa afuera on El Mundo de Berisso, Dec 2009
  9. ^ Centro español: el peor de todos on Los Andes, 17 Oct 2015
  10. ^ Rock del Sol a la Luna: Sumo y la insospechada creatividad on Marcha, 27 March 2023
  11. ^ Revivimos un show mítico para la historia del Rock Nacional on Municipalidad de Tres de Febrero
  12. ^ Conciertos de Dread Mar I en Estadio Estudiantes
  13. ^ Vicentico en Caseros on n3f.com.ar, 11 Oct 2011 (archived)

34°36′21.8″S 58°33′24.3″W / 34.606056°S 58.556750°W / -34.606056; -58.556750