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Stade Yves-du-Manoir

Stadium in Colombes, France

Stade Yves-du-Manoir

Summary

Stadium in Colombes, France

FieldValue
nameStade Yves-du-Manoir
nicknameColombes
image[[File:Stade Yves du Manoir Colombes7.jpg250px]]
locationColombes, France
opened1907
renovated2017, 2022–24
expanded2022–24
surfaceGrass
tenantsRacing Club de France Football (1907–1985, 2012–present)
Racing 92 (1907–2017)
websiteparis2024.org
fullnameStade olympique Yves-du-Manoir
former_namesStade du Matin (1907–1919)
Stade olympique de Colombes (1920–1927)
seating_capacity15,000
*14,000 {2010s)<ref>{{cite weburlhttp://www.racing-metro92.com/en/Club/The_stadium-256.htmltitle=Stade Yves Du Manoirpublisher=Racing Métro 92access-date=6 December 2013url-status=deadarchive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131206081645/http://www.racing-metro92.com/en/Club/The_stadium-256.htmlarchive-date=6 December 2013df=dmy-all }}}}

Racing 92 (1907–2017) Stade olympique de Colombes (1920–1927) Formerly

  • 45,000 (1924)
  • 60,000 (1938)
  • 50,000 (1971)
  • 7,000 (1990s)
  • 14,000 {2010s)}} The Stade Yves-du-Manoir (officially Stade olympique Yves-du-Manoir, also known as the Stade olympique de Colombes, or simply Colombes to the locals) is a rugby, track, and association football stadium in Colombes, near Paris, France.

History

The stadium after being renovated for the [[1924 Summer Olympics]].

Named in memory of French rugby player Yves du Manoir in 1928, it was the main stadium for the 1924 Summer Olympics and had a capacity of 45,000 at the time. During the 1924 Games, it hosted the athletics, gymnastics and tennis events, as well as some of the cycling, horse riding, football, and rugby events, and two of the modern pentathlon events (running, fencing).

It was later expanded to a capacity of over 60,000. Colombes was also the venue for the 1938 World Cup Final between Italy and Hungary, and also hosted the home team's two matches in the tournament.

Colombes hosted several French Cup finals and home games of the national football and national rugby union teams into the 1970s. It remained the nation's largest capacity stadium until the renovated Parc des Princes was inaugurated in 1972. Due to increasingly stringent safety regulations, the Colombes' capacity had dropped to under 50,000. The last games of the national rugby union and football teams at Colombes were respectively in 1972 and 1975.

football final]] of the 1924 Olympics.

France's professional football team RC Paris used Colombes as their home ground until about 1985, then moved on to other stadia before returning in the 2010s. Unlike RC Paris, Racing 92 rugby did not leave Colombes until November 2017. They originally planned to redevelop Yves-du-Manoir into a stadium to be shared with Racing Club de France Football. Instead, they built Paris La Défense Arena in nearby Nanterre, playing their first match in the new venue in December 2017. It remains to be seen whether the Racing Club de France football club will move as well.

It was closed and redeveloped between 2022–24 and served as the field hockey venue for the 2024 Summer Olympics.

1938 FIFA World Cup

Stade Olympique Yves-du-Manoir hosted three games of the 1938 FIFA World Cup, including the final. WC1938

DateTimeTeam #1Res.Team #2RoundAttendance
5 June 193817:003–1Round of 1630,454
12 June 193817:001–3Quarter-final58,455
19 June 193817:004–2**Final**45,000

2024 Summer Olympics

2024 Summer Olympics women's field hockey tournament

The site has been completely renovated between 2021 and 2023. Designed by the architectural firm Celnikier et Grabli Architectes and rebuilt by the construction group Léon Grosse, the work was completed in December 2023. The new complex will house the French Field Hockey Federation and its national training center, which will have the two floodlit synthetic pitches from the Olympic tournament, one of which has a 1,000-seat stand around a building constructed with administrative premises, meeting rooms and changing rooms.

The complex also includes seven new football and rugby union pitches. The legendary main pitch sees its famous Olympic athletics track surrounding it removed in favor of a small 200 m ring (only suitable for warming up) located a few hundred metres away. The track therefore now excludes any possibility of athletics competition, being now reserved for schools and associations.

However, its historic grandstand has been upgraded with new seats. It can now accommodate 6,000 spectators. The historic stadium has approximately 9,500 seats with the temporary grandstands installed for the 2024 Olympic Games. The natural grass pitch is being replaced by a brand new blue synthetic pitch.

The entire sports complex can accommodate around 13,500 spectators during the 2024 Summer Olympics.

The total cost of the project is 101 million euros; this budget was financed by the Hauts-de-Seine department and the Olympic Works Delivery Company (Solidéo).

In addition to the installation of the French Field Hockey Federation and its national training centre, it is planned that the field hockey section of Racing Club de France and the football section, Racing Club de France Football, will eventually become the resident clubs of the stadium and that Racing 92 may play a few rugby union matches and train there.

References

References

  1. "Le Stade Yves du Manoir". Racing Club de France Football.
  2. "Paris 2024 Olympics hockey venue | Yves-du-Manoir Stadium".
  3. "Stade Yves Du Manoir". [[Racing 92.
  4. [http://www.la84foundation.org/6oic/OfficialReports/1924/1924.pdf 1924 Olympics Official Report.] pp. 50–5, 96, 121, 152, 216, 222, 238, 248, 318, 339, 375, 499, 503, 536. {{in lang. fr
  5. Escot, Richard. (16 October 2017). "Le nouvel écrin du Racing 92, la U Arena, ouvre ses portes". [[L'Équipe]].
  6. (26 March 2024). "Paris Olympic hockey stadium inaugurated".
  7. (22 July 2024). "How the 1924 Olympic stadium is still in use for the 2024 games".
  8. "The Real Chariots of Fire", (TV Movie) Silver River Productions (2012)
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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