Misplaced Pages

Campo de O'Donnell (Atlético Madrid)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

Campo de O'Donnell
Derbi madrileño in 1919
LocationMadrid, Spain
Capacity10 000
Field size100,38 x 64
Construction
Opened9 February 1913
Closed1923
Demolished1923
Tenants
Atlético Madrid (1913–1923)

Campo de O'Donnell was Atlético Madrid's main stadium between 1913 and 1923. It should not be confused with Atlético's fierce rivals Real Madrid's Campo de O'Donnell, which had the same name and was situated 200 meters away on the same boulevard called Calle de O'Donnell. On the other hand, the Atletico stadium was located in the block formed by the streets of O'Donnell, Narváez (then undeveloped) and Menorca. Atlético Madrid moved from Tiro del Pichón in 1913. Their inaugural match at the stadium was held on 9 February 1913 against Athletic Bilbao, who won 4–0.

History

Atlético de Madrid had been occupying a piece of land in the Tiro del Pichón, near the park, since 1902, but due to the rise of football in Spain during the first decades of the 20th century, the club looked for a new location to develop its activities, and so, at the end of 1912, the construction of a new stadium began. The project was carried out thanks to the financial contribution of Manuel Rodríguez Arzuaga, patron of the club, who put up 30,000 pesetas (which at the time represented a fortune) to prepare the land and pay for the 600 linear meters of wood used in the fenced. The O'Donnell Field was a pioneer as it was the first to install fences, which allowed the start of ticket sales to generate income, which their previous stadium, Tiro del Pichón, did not have. The installation of the fence was carried out by the members and players of the club.

The new stadium was inaugurated on 9 February 1913 with a match against Athletic Club, finishing in a victory for the Biscayan team by 0-4 with goals from Luis Cortadi, José María Belauste and Pichichi (brace). It so happens that Real Madrid, Atlético's eternal rival, inaugurated the Campo de O'Donnell a month earlier, located just 200 meters further north on the same street.

This stadium became the largest in the capital of Spain with a capacity for 10,000 spectators. In 1915, it hosted the final of the first Prince of Asturias Football Cup. Furthermore, it was the first stadium in Madrid to host an international match (and the second in Spain after San Mamés), when on 18 December 1921, Spain faced and defeated Portugal 3-1, a historic result not only to Spain, but to Portugal themselves as they were playing their first-ever international game that day.

On 8 April 1923, the Campo de O'Donnell hosted its last match, a friendly with Czechoslovakian FK Viktoria Žižkov, which ended in a 2-2 draw. The goals were the work of Monchín Triana and Joaquín Ortiz on the red and white side and Mares and Galenek scored for the visiting team, the latter being the author of the last goal in the history of the field.

Later, due to the large increase in the number of fans, the then-president Julián Ruete decided to move the team to the Estadio Metropolitano de Madrid, a more modern field and the first with a grass pitch in the club's history.

International matches

Team #1 Score Team #2 Date Attendance
Spain Spain 3–1 Portugal Portugal 18 December 1921 14,000

References

  1. ^ "Del Retiro al Wanda Metropolitano" [From del Retiro to the Wanda Metropolitano]. Atlético de Madrid. Retrieved 4 June 2022.
  2. "Historias matritenses: Los viejos estadios de fútbol de Madrid" [History Madrinense: The old stadiums of Madrid] (in Spanish). Historias-matritenses.blogspot.ro. 31 October 1916. Retrieved 10 July 2015.
  3. ^ "Santuarios del deporte. Los campos de O'Donnell: cuando Atleti y Madrid 'vivían' a un puñado de metros de distancia | ¿Qué fue de?" [The Campo de O'Donnels: When Atletico and Madrid "lived" a couple of meters away] (in Spanish). Blogs.20minutos.es. 22 May 2014. Retrieved 10 July 2015.
  4. "Madrid: Real Madrid y Atlético de Madrid tuvieron un campo originario común" [Real and Atletico had a common original field] (in Spanish). Urbanity.cc. 22 May 2014. Archived from the original on 31 August 2017. Retrieved 10 July 2015.
  5. "Spain vs Portugal international football match report". EU-football.info. Retrieved 4 June 2022.
  6. "Fuentes documentales deportivas aplicadas a la historia de un club deportivo español: Historia del Club Atlético de Madrid" [Sports documentary sources applied to the history of a Spanish sports club: History of Atlético Madrid] (PDF). Universidad Complutense de Madrid (in Spanish). Retrieved 4 June 2022.
Club Atlético de Madrid S.A.D.
Grounds
Training ground
Rivalry
Other teams
Affiliated clubs
and franchises
Defunct
Categories: