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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 preliminaries.
Stadio Diego Armando Maradona: 54,726: Naples ... Stadium Capacity Location Region Home Team Construction work start La Cattedrale [4] 65,000: Milan
Stadio Diego Armando Maradona, home stadium of Napoli in Naples, Italy Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles about distinct geographical locations with the same name.
Clubs in parentheses no longer share the stadium. Stadium Image Club Location ... Stadio Diego Armando Maradona: Napoli: Naples: 1959: 54,726 Stadio Dino Manuzzi ...
Maradona salutes the crowd at San Paolo Stadium during his presentation in Naples, 5 July 1984. The 1980s for the club started in relatively good fashion with third- and fourth-place league positions early in the decade. But it was until Argentine Diego Maradona joined the club from Barcelona in 1984 that Napoli were on the world football map.
The Stadio Diego Armando Maradona, where Napoli play their domestic ties since 1959. Società Sportiva Calcio Napoli is an Italian professional association football club based in Naples. The club was formed in 1926 as Associazione Calcio Napoli, [1] a name it retained until 1964, when the current name was adopted. [2]
Instead of following through with infrastructure to protect our water near the coast and west of I-75, our leaders are enabling urban sprawl.
The rivalry between Juventus and Napoli stems from a historical regional rivalry between Northern Italy and Southern Italy, of which the clubs' respective home cities of Turin and Naples are major metropolitan and economic centers. [2] The rivalry started to gain more attention in the 1980s when Napoli became league contenders. [2]