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  1. Stadio Diego Armando Maradona, formerly known as Stadio San Paolo, [ 1][ 2] is a stadium in the western Fuorigrotta suburb of Naples, Italy. It is the fourth largest football stadium in Italy, [ 3] after Milan 's San Siro, Rome 's Stadio Olimpico and Bari 's San Nicola. For the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome, the stadium hosted the football ...

  2. Stadio San Paolo officially opened on the 6th of December 1959 with a match between Napoli and Juventus (2-1). It was initially completely uncovered and could hold about 87,500 spectators, mostly standing. The stadium was modernised for the European Championships in 1980, during which it hosted three first round group matches and the match for ...

  3. Lo stadio Diego Armando Maradona è un impianto sportivo polivalente italiano di Napoli . Di proprietà comunale, sorge a Fuorigrotta, quartiere della X Municipalità. Dotato di palestre polifunzionali, spazi per le arti marziali e di un campo da pallacanestro, ospita fin dall'inaugurazione gli incontri calcistici interni del Napoli .

  4. The club has strong ties with Diego Maradona and renamed the stadium in his honour in 2020, leaving the former name, Stadio San Paolo behind. Stadio Maradona was one of the grounds used to host FIFA World Cup matches when Italy was the host nation in 1990. Five games were played there, including two of Argentina’s Group B games and England ...

    • 38.8K
    • 112365 (SSC Napoli v AC Perugia (1979))
    • 54.7K
    • 1959
  5. History of the Stadium. Napoli’s Diego Armando Maradona (ex San Paolo) Stadium, inaugurated in 1959, is the third largest in Italy, after Milan’s Meazza Stadium and Rome’s Olimpico. Situated in the Fuorigrotta neighbourhood, it measures 110 by 68 meters. It was remodelled for the 1980 European Championship and again for the World Cup ...

  6. Stadio San Paolo is now super hi-tech, with the audio-video and illumination systems undergoing a complete makeover. There are 1400W speakers for the upper Tribunes and 400W for the lower ones. The lights are connected in tune to the sound system creating a sync between light and music. The effect on the public is exceptional. Overall, the light and sound systems had a cost of about £1.6 million.

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  8. Dec 27, 2023 · The San Paolo Stadium, initially roofless and open to the elements, featured external reinforced concrete ribs—56 in total—accessible via wide ramps. Originally named Stadio del Sole, symbolising Naples’ post-war rebirth, it was later renamed Stadio San Paolo in 1963.

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