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De Meer Stadion

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

De Meer Stadion
De Meer in 1937
Map
LocationAmsterdam
OwnerAFC Ajax
Capacity29,500 - 19,500
SurfaceGrass
Construction
Opened9 December 1934
Closed1996
Demolished1996 - 1998
ArchitectDaan Roodenburgh
Tenants
AFC Ajax (Eredivisie) (1934–1996)

De Meer Stadion (Dutch pronunciation: [dəˈmeːrˌstaːdijɔn]) is the former stadium of Dutch record football champions Ajax. It was opened in 1934 as a result of the club's former stadium (Het Houten Stadion) being too small. Upon completion, it could hold 22,000 spectators, but accommodating up to 29,500 at its maximum. At time of the closure in 1996 it could hold 19,500 spectators.

De Meer opened in 1935.

Over time, as Ajax's popularity and success grew, the De Meer proved to be too small. From 1930 onward, Ajax played their big (European) games at the Olympic Stadium. The larger venue also hosted Ajax's midweek night games, since the De Meer Stadion was not suited for floodlights until the mid-seventies.

The De Meer was abandoned with the opening of the purpose-built Amsterdam Arena in 1996, which since 2018 is called the Johan Cruyff Arena.

The Netherlands national football team played five international matches at the stadium, winning all of them. The first one, on 22 August 1973, was a qualifying match for the 1974 FIFA World Cup against Iceland (5-0). The last one, played on 25 March 1992, was a friendly against Yugoslavia (2-0).

The final match at De Meer was an Eredivisie game in which Ajax hosted Willem II on 28 April 1996. The home side won 5–1 with Finidi George scoring a hat trick, but the final ever goal in the stadium was scored by Willem II striker Jack de Gier.[1]

Following the club's departure, the De Meer was demolished to make way for a housing development. The stadium is commemorated by having the new streets named after famous football stadia where Ajax played famous away matches, like Anfield, Wembley or Bernabeu. The centre spot was recreated cosmetically as the real centre spot was built over. Also there are little bridges over ditches named after famous Ajax players like Johan Cruyff, Piet Keizer and Sjaak Swart. There is one aswel named after manager Rinus Michels.

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Transcription

References

External links

52°20′40″N 4°57′0″E / 52.34444°N 4.95000°E / 52.34444; 4.95000


This page was last edited on 7 May 2024, at 07:39
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