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Estadio Brigadier General Estanislao López

Coordinates: 31°39′47.58″S 60°43′31.42″W / 31.6632167°S 60.7253944°W / -31.6632167; -60.7253944
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Brigadier Estanislao López Stadium
Estadio Brigadier Gral E. López
"El Cementerio de Los Elefantes"
Aerial view of the stadium in 2015
Map
Full nameEstadio Brigadier General Estanislao López
Former names
  • Estadio Eva Perón (1952–55)
  • Estadio Centenario (1955–58)
AddressAv. Juan J. Paso 3535
Santa Fe
Argentina
OwnerClub Atlético Colón
Capacity30,835
Opened9 July 1946; 78 years ago (9 July 1946)
Tenants
Website
clubcolon.com.ar/estadio

Brigadier General Estanislao López Stadium, popularly known as The Elephant Graveyard, is a football stadium in Santa Fe, Argentina. It was inaugurated in 1946 and is owned and operated by Club Atlético Colón, which is based there.

For a long time it has also been known as the Elephants Cemetery,[n 1] due to Colón's wins over notable teams that visited Santa Fe. One of them was the famous Santos of Pelé who fell 2-1 in 1964.[1] This Brazilian team had a record of 43 undefeated matches and was two-time Intercontinental champion at that time.[2] The same Colón team later beat the Argentine team itself 2-0.[3] Other teams that were defeated there were Peñarol in 1967,[4] Millonarios, Olimpia, U de Chile, Alianza Lima, Atlético Mineiro, among others.

It currently has the capacity to hold 30,835 spectators,[5][6] and the dimensions of the playing field are 105 x 70 m. It is entirely surrounded by concrete grandstands, including an upper tray on the north, east, and south sides, plus outfitted boxes on the northwest and southwest elbows.

The Argentina national football and rugby teams played some friendly and test matches at Estadio Brigadier López.[7] It was also one of the venues of the 2011 Copa América.

History

[edit]
The stadium under construction

At the beginning, Colón played their home matches at a field, until in March 1938 the land was expropriated due to an unpaid debt so the club was evicted from that place. Because of that, Colón played its home games at the Gimnasia y Esgrima de Ciudadela Stadium and Estadio 15 de Abril. In 1939, C.A. Colón acquired a land to build a new stadium.

After some delays, the stadium was finally inaugurated on 9 July 1946, with a friendly match between Colón and Boca Juniors with an attendance of 10,000.

Eva Perón being honored by the club in 1947

On December 7, 1947, Eva Perón arrived in Santa Fe to inaugurate the Children's Hospital that bore her name. After that, he visited the Colón stadium and kicked off a classic from Santa Fe, of which the second half could not be completed because she took an hour to arrive due to the busy schedule and the stadium facilities still did not have lighting. On April 2, 1949, the lighting was finally inaugurated during the Colón 5–1 Huracán match, thanks to a subsidy of $150,000 provided by the National Government.

On September 18, 1950, the leaders of Colón managed to acquire a land adjoining the stadium, thanks to a loan of $750,000 granted by the National Government. The land itself was located in its southern sector, which, in the end, was acquired in cash for the sole purpose of continuing with the expansion of the stands. In 1952, the first section of cement on the west side was completed, which included 1,000 stalls. In this way, it increased its capacity to 20,000 people, becoming the one with the largest capacity in Santa Fe.

That same year the stadium was named "Eva Perón" who had supported Colón's affiliation to the Argentine Football Association in 1948.[8] and later financially help the institution for the construction of the first cement grandstands and artificial lighting. However, after the coup d'état that overthrew Juan Domingo Perón, the names of the president and his wife were banned, so the stadium was renamed "Brigadier General Estanislao López" in honor of the Argentine caudillo who governed the province of Santa Fe between 1818 and 1838.

In 2008, the club signed a contract with Wide Entertainment to place a LED scoreboard in the stadium, at a cost of US dollar 500,000.[9]

One year later, the AFA chose the Brigadier López Stadium as one of the venues for the 2011 Copa América hosted in Argentina. That same year, the stadium was refurbished and expanded. Works included new grandstands, scoreboards, press boxes, and a renovated lighting system. Further refurbishment included 3,500 new seats and the replacement of damaged ones.[10]

Sports events

[edit]

Football

[edit]

The stadium hosted the following matches of the 2011 Copa América:

Date Group Team #1 Res. Team #2
3 July Group B  Paraguay
0–0
 Ecuador
6 July Group A  Argentina
0–0
 Colombia
10 July Group A  Colombia
0–0
 Bolivia
16 July Quarter-finals  Argentina
1–1
 Uruguay

Rugby union

[edit]

Rugby U20 World Cup

[edit]

In 2010 the stadium was one of the three venues of the World Rugby U-20 Championship. Some pool A and pool C matches and the playoffs were played at Colón Stadium.[11]

Date Round Team 1 Score Team 2
5 Jun Pool A  Fiji
11–44
 New Zealand
5 Jun Pool A  New Zealand
77–7
 Samoa
5 Jun Pool C  Australia
58–13
 Scotland
9 Jun Pool C  South Africa
73–0
 Scotland
13 Jun Pool A  New Zealand
43–10
 Wales
13 Jun Pool C  South Africa
35–42
 Australia
17 Jun 5th. place  Wales
19–19 (8–9 p)
 Argentina
17 Jun 5th. place  France
44–9
 Fiji
21 Jun 7th. place  Wales
39–15
 Fiji

Other rugby matches

[edit]
Date Home team Score Away team Competition Ref.
25 Jun 1985 Santa Fe RU
7–82
 France France tour of South America [12]
26 May 2007  Argentina
22–20
 Ireland France tour of Argentina [13]
11 Jun 2016  Argentina
30–24
 Italy 2016 tests [14]
17 Jun 2017  Argentina
25–35
 England England tour of Argentina [7]
7 Sep 2024  Argentina
67–27
 Australia 2024 Rugby Championship [15]

Concerts

[edit]

Estadio Brigadier López has hosted several concerts of Argentine and international bands, such as:

Artist Year
Los Piojos 1997
Patricio Rey y sus Redonditos de Ricota 1997
Teen Angels 2008
Joaquín Sabina 2010
Ricardo Arjona 2012

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Nickname attributed to Ángel José Gutiérrez, sports journalist for the newspaper El Litoral

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Se cumplen 44 años de la tarde en que Colón conmovió al mundo El Litoral, 10 May 2008
  2. ^ Gabriel Briceño. "'El cementerio de los elefantes', el escenario de Argentina-Colombia" ['The Elephants graveyard', the scenario of Argentina-Colombia] (in Spanish). Fútbol Red. Retrieved July 15, 2014.
  3. ^ .ellitoral.com/index.php/diarios/2014/09/09/deportes/DEPO-02.html El día que Colón venció a la Selección, El Litoral by Tomás Rodríguez
  4. ^ =5 Government of Santa Fe, March 27, 1967
  5. ^ La verdadera capacidad del estadio de Colón: ¿cuántos hinchas entran en el Brigadier López? on Aires de Santa Fe, 17 Apr 2023
  6. ^ La noche que el Cementerio colapsó por la furia sabalera, El Litoral
  7. ^ a b England seize second stunning win over Argentina at ESPN, 17 Jun 2017
  8. ^ el-centenario-de-su-nacimiento/ El vínculo de Colón con Eva Perón at Aire de Santa Fe
  9. ^ Colón tendrá una megapantalla como Wembley at El Litoral, 1 Nov 2008
  10. ^ Estadio de Colón on Estudio Rassegna
  11. ^ IRB Junior World Championship 2010 (in Spanish) at World Rugby
  12. ^ Memoria y Balance 1985 Archived 2022-12-31 at the Wayback Machine at UAR
  13. ^ Memoria y Balance 2007 Archived 2022-11-02 at the Wayback Machine at UAR
  14. ^ Memoria y Balance 2016 at UAR
  15. ^ Las sedes de las funciones en casa on UAR, 11 Apr 2024

See also

[edit]
[edit]
Preceded by
various venues in
Japan
World Rugby U-20
Venue

2010
Succeeded by
various venues in
Italy
Preceded by
(various venues in
Venezuela)
Copa América
Venue

2011
Succeeded by
(various venues in
Chile)

31°39′47.58″S 60°43′31.42″W / 31.6632167°S 60.7253944°W / -31.6632167; -60.7253944