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Stade de France, listed as a Category 4 stadium by UEFA, hosted matches at the 1998 FIFA World Cup, the UEFA Champions League finals in 2000, 2006 and 2022. It has as well hosted the 1999 , 2007 and 2023 Rugby World Cups , making it one of only two stadia in the world to have hosted both a FIFA World Cup final and a rugby union World Cup final ...
The 2000 UEFA Champions League final was a football match that took place on 24 May 2000. The match was played at Stade de France in Saint-Denis, France, to determine the winner of the 1999–2000 UEFA Champions League. The final pitted Spanish teams Real Madrid and Valencia. It was the first time in the Champions League or the European Cup ...
Stade de France: 81,338 (field) [11] 69,000 (athletics) Saint-Denis France: France national football team, France national rugby union team 1998 FIFA World Cup venue, 2003 FIFA Confederations Cup venue, UEFA Euro 2016 venue 2000, 2006 and 2022 UEFA Champions League finals venue 2007 Rugby World Cup venue, 2023 Rugby World Cup venue, 2010 ...
The 2000 Six Nations Championship was the first series of the rugby union Six Nations Championship, ... Stade de France: Saint-Denis: Bernard Laporte: Fabien Pelous
The final was hosted in the Stade de France in Paris, the city where the original roots of the competition had begun nearly 50 years earlier. Just after two years of allowing runners-up of strongest continental leagues to enter the tournament, UEFA went even further and expanded the tournament to up to four strongest teams from Europe's top ...
The 2000 Coupe de France final was a football match held at Stade de France, Saint-Denis on 7 May 2000 that saw FC Nantes Atlantique defeat the surprising amateur team of Calais RUFC from CFA 2–1 thanks to two goals by Antoine Sibierski.
Stade de France: 75,000: Saint-Denis France: IAAF Diamond League (Meeting de Paris; 1999-2016), 2003 World Championships, 2024 Summer Olympics: Association football, rugby union, rugby league: 15 Olympiastadion: 74,228 [6] Berlin Germany: IAAF World Challenge (ISTAF Berlin), 1936 Summer Olympics, 2009 World Championships, 2018 European ...
The 1999–2000 season was Paris Saint-Germain's 30th season in existence. [1] [2] PSG played their home league games at the Parc des Princes in Paris, registering an average attendance of 43,185 spectators per match.