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Rhein-Neckar-Arena

Multi-purpose stadium in Sinsheim, Baden-Württemberg, Germany


Summary

Multi-purpose stadium in Sinsheim, Baden-Württemberg, Germany

FieldValue
namePreZero Arena
logo_image[[File:PreZero Arena Logo.svg160px]]
image[[File:PreZero Arena wiki.jpg250px]]
[[File:Hoffenheim CL.jpg250px]]
fullnameRhein-Neckar-Arena
locationSinsheim, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
broke_ground2007
opened24 January 2009
surfaceGrass
construction_cost€ 60 million
architectEheim Moebel
Sattler Europe
tenantsTSG 1899 Hoffenheim (2009–present)
Germany national football team (selected matches)
seating_capacity30,150 (league matches)
25,589 (international matches)

Sattler Europe Germany national football team (selected matches) 25,589 (international matches) Rhein-Neckar-Arena (), currently known as PreZero Arena and previously as Wirsol Rhein-Neckar-Arena for sponsorship reasons, is a multi-purpose stadium in Sinsheim, Baden-Württemberg, Germany. It is used mostly for football matches and hosts the home matches of TSG Hoffenheim. The stadium has a capacity of 30,150 people. It replaced TSG 1899 Hoffenheim's former ground, the Dietmar-Hopp-Stadion.

The stadium is the largest in the Rhine-Neckar metropolitan area, although it is situated in a town with only 3,600 inhabitants.

The first competitive match was played on 31 January 2009 against FC Energie Cottbus, and ended in a 2–0 win for Hoffenheim. The stadium hosted international matches at the 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup. The Rhein-Neckar-Arena hosted the "2017 DEL Winter Game", an outdoor ice hockey game between Adler Mannheim and the Schwenningen Wild Wings on 7 January 2017.

Traffic connection

The Sinsheim-Museum/Arena S-Bahn stop at the Elsenz Valley Railway (Elsenztalbahn) is just over a kilometre walk away and there are shuttle buses from Sinsheim main station. The stadium can be reached by car via the newly built Sinsheim-Süd junction of the federal motorway 6.

International football matches

DateCompetitionTeamResultTeamAttendance
9 September 2018Friendly2–125,494
26 March 20222–025,600
10 October 20252026 FIFA World Cup qualification4–025,249

[[2011 FIFA Women's World Cup]]

DateTime (CET)Team #1ResultTeam #2RoundSpectators
26 June 201125,475
2 July 201125,475
5 July 201120,451
16 July 201125,475

References

References

  1. [http://www.eheim-moebel.de/english/arena/rhein-neckar-arena/index.html Rhein-Neckar-Arena] architect: Eheim Moebel
  2. [http://www.sattler-europe.com/sattler-web/static/media/pdf/Referenz_TA_Rhein-Neckar-Arena_englisch.pdf Rhein-Neckar-Arena]{{Dead link. (November 2025)
  3. Gruener, Martin. "Auch wenn's zwickt: Obasi zaubert und bezaubert". [[kicker (sports magazine).
  4. "Women's World Cup Germany 2011 – Sinsheim". [[FIFA]].
  5. (30 January 2009). "New home for German giant-killers". [[BBC News]].
  6. [http://www.stimme.de/kraichgau/nachrichten/sonstige;art1943,2160544 ''Großer Bahnhof für den Fußball.''] In: ''stimme.de''
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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