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Stadion Letná

Football stadium

Stadion Letná

Football stadium

FieldValue
nameLetná Stadium
image[[File:Stadion Sparty na Letné (srpen 2020).jpg250pxGenerali Arena during pre-season event named Sparta Opening (August 2020)]]
captionUEFA
[[Image:Nuvola apps mozilla.png12px]][[Image:Nuvola apps mozilla.png12px]][[Image:Nuvola apps mozilla.png12px]][[Image:Nuvola apps mozilla.png12px]]
locationMilady Horákové 1066/98
Prague, Czech Republic
coordinates
opened1917
renovated1937, 1969, 1994
ownerAC Sparta Praha fotbal, a.s.
surfaceGrass
architectCyril Mandel, Vladimír Syrovátka
former_namesLetná Stadium (1917–2003)
Toyota Arena (2003–2007)
AXA Arena (2007–2009)
Generali Arena (2009–2020)
Generali Česká pojišťovna Arena (2020–2022)
epet ARENA (2022–present)
tenantsSparta Prague (1917–present)
Czech Republic national football team (selected matches)
seating_capacity18,357
dimensions105×68 m
public_transitSparta (1, 2, 8, 12, 25, 26)
at Vltavská
at Hradčanská

Prague, Czech Republic Toyota Arena (2003–2007) AXA Arena (2007–2009) Generali Arena (2009–2020) Generali Česká pojišťovna Arena (2020–2022) epet ARENA (2022–present) Czech Republic national football team (selected matches) at Vltavská at Hradčanská

Exterior of the stadium in 2007 when it was named Toyota Arena
Interior of the Letná Stadium at the start of a game, Nov 2002
Letná Stadium during an AC Sparta Game

The Letná Stadium ( ), is a football stadium in Prague. It is the home venue of AC Sparta Prague and often hosts the home matches of the Czech Republic national football team. The stadium's capacity is 18,887 seats.

History

The first wooden stadium at its location opened in 1921. The origins of motorcycle speedway in Prague can be traced back to races held at the stadium, starting on 9 June 1928. It is unknown as to when the track was removed.

In 1930, it hosted the third Women's World Games. The stadium burned in 1934 and a new main reinforced concrete grandstand was built in 1937. In 1969 all the other grandstands were replaced by reinforced concrete ones and capacity was extended to 35,880 spectators. The 1994 reconstruction into its present form saw Letná closed for nine months, until the stadium met all international standards. The running track was removed and all spectator places were now seated.

Letná has frequently hosted international matches, in October 1989 the venue saw a crowd of 34,000 watch home side Czechoslovakia defeat Switzerland in a qualifying match for the 1990 FIFA World Cup.

The playing surface was renovated in 2001, including the installation of a new under-soil heating and watering system. This necessitated Sparta playing league matches at the end of the 2000–01 season at the nearby Stadion Evžena Rošického.

In 1994, the stadium was reopened after a complete modernization. The capacity was lowered to 20,854 seats. In 2009 major changes took place at the stadium – barriers between sections were removed, two video screens were installed and infrared radiators were installed to heat the eastern stand. The capacity has been 18,887 since 2009.

Czech Republic national football team matches

DateAttendanceHome teamResultAway teamCompetitionMatch report
26 April 199517,463Czech Republic Czech Republic3–1Netherlands NetherlandsUEFA Euro 1996 QReport
6 September 199519,522Czech Republic Czech Republic2–0Norway NorwayUEFA Euro 1996 QReport
15 November 199520,239Czech Republic Czech Republic3–0Luxembourg LuxembourgUEFA Euro 1996 QReport
9 October 199619,223Czech Republic Czech Republic0–0Spain Spain1998 FIFA World Cup QReport
2 April 199719,137Czech Republic Czech Republic1–2FR Yugoslavia FR Yugoslavia1998 FIFA World Cup QReport
11 October 19975,428Czech Republic Czech Republic3–0Slovakia Slovakia1998 FIFA World Cup QReport
19 August 19987,021Czech Republic Czech Republic1–0Denmark DenmarkFriendlyReport
9 June 199921,149Czech Republic Czech Republic3–2Scotland ScotlandUEFA Euro 2000 QReport
9 October 199921,362Czech Republic Czech Republic2–0Faroe Islands Faroe IslandsUEFA Euro 2000 QReport
26 April 20004,972Czech Republic Czech Republic4–1Israel IsraelFriendlyReport
28 March 200116,354Czech Republic Czech Republic0–0Denmark Denmark2002 FIFA World Cup QReport
25 April 20014,887Czech Republic Czech Republic1–1Belgium BelgiumFriendlyReport
6 October 200115,020Czech Republic Czech Republic6–0Bulgaria Bulgaria2002 FIFA World Cup QReport
14 November 200118,996Czech Republic Czech Republic0–1Belgium Belgium2002 FIFA World Cup Q (P-O)Report
18 May 200215,077Czech Republic Czech Republic1–0Italy ItalyFriendlyReport
6 September 20025,435Czech Republic Czech Republic5–0FR Yugoslavia FR YugoslaviaFriendlyReport
2 April 200317,150Czech Republic Czech Republic4–0Austria AustriaUEFA Euro 2004 QReport
10 September 200318,356Czech Republic Czech Republic3–1Netherlands NetherlandsUEFA Euro 2004 QReport
28 April 200411,802Czech Republic Czech Republic0–1Japan JapanFriendlyReport
2 June 20046,627Czech Republic Czech Republic3–1Bulgaria BulgariaFriendlyReport
9 October 200416,028Czech Republic Czech Republic1–0Romania Romania2006 FIFA World Cup QReport
8 October 200517,478Czech Republic Czech Republic0–2Netherlands Netherlands2006 FIFA World Cup QReport
16 November 200517,464Czech Republic Czech Republic1–0Norway Norway2006 FIFA World Cup Q (P-O)Report
3 June 200615,910Czech Republic Czech Republic3–0Trinidad and Tobago Trinidad and TobagoFriendlyReport
15 November 20066,852Czech Republic Czech Republic1–1Denmark DenmarkFriendlyReport
24 March 200717,821Czech Republic Czech Republic1–2Germany GermanyUEFA Euro 2008 QReport
12 September 200716,648Czech Republic Czech Republic1–0Republic of Ireland Republic of IrelandUEFA Euro 2008 QReport
17 November 200715,651Czech Republic Czech Republic3–1Slovakia SlovakiaUEFA Euro 2008 QReport
30 May 200811,314Czech Republic Czech Republic3–1Scotland ScotlandFriendlyReport
1 April 200914,956Czech Republic Czech Republic1–2Slovakia Slovakia2010 FIFA World Cup QReport
10 October 200914,010Czech Republic Czech Republic2–0Poland Poland2010 FIFA World Cup QReport
6 September 20117,322Czech Republic Czech Republic4–0Ukraine UkraineFriendlyReport
7 October 201117,873Czech Republic Czech Republic0–2Spain SpainUEFA Euro 2012 QReport
11 November 201114,560Czech Republic Czech Republic2–0Montenegro MontenegroUEFA Euro 2012 Q (P-O)Report
1 June 201217,102Czech Republic Czech Republic1–2Hungary HungaryFriendlyReport
16 October 201216,160Czech Republic Czech Republic0–0Bulgaria Bulgaria2014 FIFA World Cup QReport
7 June 201318,235Czech Republic Czech Republic0–0Italy Italy2014 FIFA World Cup QReport
3 September 201412,673Czech Republic Czech Republic0–1United States United StatesFriendlyReport
9 September 201417,946Czech Republic Czech Republic2–1Netherlands NetherlandsUEFA Euro 2016 QReport
10 October 201517,190Czech Republic Czech Republic0–2Turkey TurkeyUEFA Euro 2016 QReport
24 March 201614,580Czech Republic Czech Republic0–1Scotland ScotlandFriendlyReport
4 September 201610,731Czech Republic Czech Republic0–0Northern Ireland Northern Ireland2018 FIFA World Cup QReport
7 June 201913,482Czech Republic Czech Republic2–1Bulgaria BulgariaUEFA Euro 2020 QReport
14 October 20199,139Czech Republic Czech Republic2–3Northern Ireland Northern IrelandFriendlyReport
8 June 20211,351Czech Republic Czech Republic3–1Albania AlbaniaFriendlyReport
16 November 202110,076Czech Republic Czech Republic2–0Estonia Estonia2022 FIFA World Cup QReport¨
26 March 202416,158Czech Republic Czech Republic2–1Armenia ArmeniaFriendlyReport
11 October 202417,823Czech Republic Czech Republic2–0Albania Albania2024–25 UEFA Nations LeagueReport¨
31 March 2026Czech Republic Czech RepublicDenmark Denmark/North Macedonia North Macedonia2026 FIFA World Cup Q or FriendlyReport¨

Development of the name

  • 1917–2003: Letná Stadium
  • 2003–2007: Toyota Arena
  • 2007–2009: AXA Arena
  • 2009–2020: Generali Arena
  • 2020–2022: Generali Česká pojišťovna Arena
  • September 2022–November 2022: Letná Stadium
  • November 2022–present: epet ARENA

Non-football activities

Since the beginning the stadium has been used as a speaking tribune for events that took place in front of it, in/around the Milada Horaková street and the large "Letná Plain". During the Velvet revolution in 1989, some 800,000 people assembled for anti-government demonstrations at the Letná plain. The speaking tribune was later removed.

Transport connections

The stadium is served by the tram lines 1, 2, 8, 12, 25 and 26. The tram stop Sparta is in front of the stadium in Milada Horáková Street. The nearest metro stations are Vltavská to the east and Hradčanská to the west.

References

References

  1. [http://www.sparta.cz/cs/klub/generali-arena.shtml#a4 Stadion auf der offiziellen Website des Vereins] {{Webarchive. link. (24 August 2016 , retrieved 15 March 2021, {{in lang). cs
  2. (January 2016). "50 Years ago: Ove kicked the cat, but the pigeon flew down the stairs".
  3. "Historie stadionů Sparty Praha na místě stávajícího stadionu".
  4. Bouc, Frantisek. (26 April 1995). "Sparta Praha's Stadium Is '12th Man' for Czech Soccer". Prague Post.
  5. Bouc, Frantisek. (9 October 1996). "Czech soccer players make a pitch for World Cup '98". Prague Post.
  6. (13 June 2001). "Na Letné bude trávník z Německa". idnes.cz.
  7. (10 April 2001). "Sparta dohraje závěr ligy na Strahově". idnes.cz.
  8. "Generali Česká pojišťovna Arena".
  9. "Stadium {{!}} sparta.cz".
  10. (2022-11-22). "Letná má nové jméno: epet ARENA".
  11. "Křetínský překope stadion Sparty a postaví obchodní centrum". E15.cz.
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