Misplaced Pages

Estadio José Gregorio Martínez

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.
Stadium in Chalatenango, El Salvador
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Estadio José Gregorio Martínez" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (April 2020) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Estadio Gregorio Martínez
El Sombrero
"The Sombrero"
Full nameEstadio Olympico José Gregorio Martínez
LocationChalatenango, El Salvador
Coordinates14°02′34″N 88°58′05″W / 14.042713°N 88.967929°W / 14.042713; -88.967929
OwnerINDES
OperatorAlcaldía Municipal de Chalatenango
Capacity15,000
Record attendance18,000 concert
Field size105 m × 70 m (344 ft × 230 ft)
Field shapelawn and French drain
SurfaceLawn
Scoreboardby hand
Construction
Broke ground1970
Built1974
OpenedJanuary 1975
Renovated2009 - 2010
Construction cost500,000 Colones
Project managerJosé Gregorio Martínez
General contractorGeneral Carlos Humberto Romero
Tenants
Chalatenango
Atlético Comapala
Alacranes del Norte (former)
Website
www.chalatenango.gob.sv

The Estadio José Gregorio Martínez is a multi-use stadium located in the city of Chalatenango, El Salvador. Specifically in the Km 72 ½ mile of the road leading from San Salvador to the provincial capital, is used for football, where the local team Chalatenango plays.

Aerial view of the José Gregorio Martínez Stadium

History

The history of the stadium goes back to the 1970s, where the land which had been former farm called Totolco was acquired by the CEL and which would later be transferred to José Gregorio Martínez, the founder of Chalatenango. Martínez was a close friend of General Carlos Humberto Romero, who at that time was the president of El Salvador, and with his assistance a new stadium was built.

The idea was to create a multi sport complex, which included a football stadium, basketball courts and swimming pools, however, the last of these failed to be completed since Romero was ousted from the presidency in October 1979 and funding was lost.

The stadium was built with a capacity of 15,000 fans, with natural grass and which created a unique structure that help give the stadium its first name the 'Sombrero'.

In 1984, The club held a vote to change the name of the club, the options were between the former president Carlos Humberto Romero and the founder of the Chalatenango José Gregorio Martínez. By a large majority the club opted to rename the stadium Estadio José Gregorio Martínez."

Distribution

  • The stadium has four light towers
  • New (not official) Olympic track
  • new bathrooms
  • Interior and exterior painting
  • Perimeter wall
  • Parking for 500 vehicles

The Stadium José Gregorio Martínez has the following distribution facilities:

Locality Capacity according to INDES
General (SUN) 10.000
high-Tribune 2.500
low Tribune 2.500
TOTAL 15.000
General field bleachers (SUN) Stadium

Details

The stadium is the largest in the north and the department also is the largest in El Salvador most glorious moments have been from 2003 to 2010, almost a decade "The Chalate" was in first division and the stadium is filled every Sunday afternoon playing equipment. The December 16, 2009 was inaugurated the electrical lighting that allow the team to play night games, which are still being carried out despite the Club Deportivo Chalatenango is currently in second division. 1 From 2009 plays some home games the Scorpions North.

A few matches in 2009 will be the host stadium for Nejapa.

References

  1. "Pláticas para remodelar el estadio Gregorio Martínez, de Chalatenango". El Gráfico.
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-06-15. Retrieved 2009-10-08.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. "Elsalvador.com :.: Nejapa se va para Chalate". Archived from the original on 2009-10-12. Retrieved 2009-10-10.

External links

Apertura 2024 Salvadoran Primera División venues
Current Venue
Former Venue
  • Tierra de Fuego (Jocoro)
  • Las Delicias (Santa Tecla)
  • Anna Mercedes Campos (Sonsonate)
  • José Gregorio Martínez (Chalatenango)
  • Flag of El SalvadorSport icon

    This article about a sports venue in El Salvador is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

    Categories: