Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Coventry Building Society Arena

Coordinates:52°26′53″N1°29′44″W / 52.44806°N 1.49556°W /52.44806; -1.49556
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sports stadium in West Midlands, England

"Ricoh Arena" redirects here; not to be confused withRicoh Coliseum.
Coventry Building Society Arena
Map
Interactive map of Coventry Building Society Arena
Former namesRicoh Arena (2005–2021)
City of Coventry Stadium (2012 Summer Olympics)
Coventry Stadium (2022 Commonwealth Games)
LocationJimmy Hill Way, Rowleys Green,Coventry, England CV6 6GE
Coordinates52°26′53″N1°29′44″W / 52.44806°N 1.49556°W /52.44806; -1.49556
Public transitNational RailCoventry Arena
OwnerCoventry City Football Club
OperatorACL (Arena Coventry Ltd.)
Capacity40,000 (concerts)[2]
32,609 (football and rugby matches) (Subject to segregation regime)[3]
Record attendance32,128 (England V Italy, Arnold Clark Cup, 19 February 2023)
Field size120 m x 68 m
SurfaceXtraGrass (Hybrid grass)
ScoreboardYes
Construction
Built2005
Opened2005
Expanded2010
Construction cost£113 million[1]
ArchitectThe Miller Partnership
Tenants
Coventry City (2005–2013, 2014–2019, 2021–)
Coventry City Ladies (2014)
Wasps (2014–2022)
Wasps Netball (2017–2022)
Website
www.coventrybuildingsocietyarena.co.uk

TheCoventry Building Society Arena (often shortened to theCBS Arena or just simplyCoventry Arena, and formerly known as theRicoh Arena) is a complex inCoventry, West Midlands, England. It includes a 32,609-seater stadium which is currently home to football team,Championship clubCoventry City, along with facilities which include a 6,000 square metres (65,000 sq ft)exhibition hall, a hotel and acasino. The site is also home toArena Park Shopping Centre, containing one of UK's largestTesco Extra hypermarkets. Built on the site of the Foleshillgasworks, it is named after its sponsor,Coventry Building Society who entered into a ten-year sponsorship deal in 2021.[4] For the2012 Summer Olympics and2022 Commonwealth Games, where stadium naming sponsorship was forbidden, the stadium was respectively known as theCity of Coventry Stadium[5][6] andCoventry Stadium.[7]

Originally built as a replacement for Coventry City'sHighfield Road ground, the stadium was initially owned and operated by Arena Coventry Limited (ACL), with Coventry City as tenants. ACL was owned jointly byCoventry City Council and theAlan Edward Higgs Charity.

Following aprotracted rent dispute between Coventry City and ACL, the football club left the arena in 2013; playing their home matches inNorthampton for over a year before returning in September 2014. Within two months, both shareholders in ACL were bought out by rugby unionPremiership Rugby club Wasps, who relocated to the stadium from their previous ground,Adams Park inHigh Wycombe.[8] A further dispute with Wasps prior to the 2019–20 season saw Coventry City leave the Ricoh for a further two seasons.[9] In March 2021, Wasps and Coventry City agreed to a ten-year deal to return to the arena and the city of Coventry. The deal became null and void withMike Ashley'sFrasers Group's purchase of the arena.[10] In April 2023, it was announced Coventry City and Frasers Group had agreed a five-year deal for Coventry City to continue to play at the Arena,[11] and on 23 August 2025, Coventry City announced they had become the landlords of the Arena following the completion of an acquisition deal from Frasers Group.[12]

The stadium was the first cashless stadium in the United Kingdom, with customers using a prepay smartcard system in the ground's bars and shops.[13] Following this, the stadium concourse and bars have remained cashless.[14]

History

[edit]

Planning a new stadium

[edit]
The Coventry Building Society Arena
The Coventry Building Society Arena

The decision to moveCoventry City fromHighfield Road to a new stadium – with a larger capacity and better road links and parking facilities – was made in 1997 by the club's then-chairmanBryan Richardson.[15] It was anticipated that the new stadium would be ready for the2000–01 season.[16] Permission for the construction of a 45,000-seater stadium was given in the spring of 1999, with a targeted completion date of August 2001. However, the stadium was delivered four years behind schedule, and was more basic than anticipated in the original plans.

Coventry were one out of three cities to bid forEngland's newnational stadium along withLondon andBirmingham. In 2001, Nick Nolan, the leader ofCoventry City Council, claimed that their proposal was always the strongest as the construction could be completed within three years.[17] The council's plan was to build a 90,000all-seater stadium for an estimated cost of £250 million.[18] However, it was decided thatWembley, London would remain the location for the national stadium.

The original design for the arena was for a state-of-the-art stadium with a retractable roof and a pitch that could slide out to reveal a hard floor for concerts. After Coventry City's relegation from thePremiership in May 2001, a number of contractor/financier withdrawals, and England's bid to host the2006 FIFA World Cup ending in failure, the plans were significantly downsized. By the summer of 2002 plans were set for a more basic 32,500-seat stadium.

Naming of the stadium

[edit]

The arena's first name, 'The Ricoh Arena' came from a multi-year sponsorship deal, reported to be worth £10 million[19] with camera and photocopier manufacturerRicoh. During construction the stadium was variously referred to as the Jaguar Arena, Arena Coventry and Arena 2000.[20][21]

The sponsorship deal with Ricoh came about after the stadium's initial sponsor, luxury car manufacturerJaguar, was forced to pull out because of the commercial difficulties that had caused the controversial closure of the large Jaguar assembly plant at the city'sBrown's Lane, previously a major source of employment in Coventry. On 4 August 2004, 12 months before the stadium's opening, it had been announced that the new stadium would be called the Jaguar Arena in a deal worth up to £7 million until 2015. However, the deal was cancelled on 17 December 2004.[22] Jaguar did however retain naming rights to theArena's Exhibition Hall. Ricoh's sponsorship of the new stadium was confirmed on 26 April 2005.[23]

On 5 May 2021, it was announced that the venue would be renamed theCoventry Building Society Arena. The name change came into effect in summer 2021 as a part of a ten-year naming rights deal with the UK's second largestbuilding society.[4][24]

Fall into administration and ownership changes

[edit]

On 17 October 2022, it was confirmed that Wasps Holdings, the holding company for Wasps and Wasps Netball had entered administration. They ceased trading immediately and all playing and coaching staff were made redundant.[25] Although the stadium operator Arena Coventry Ltd. were not included in the administration, they filed a notice of intention to appoint an administrator.[26] On 2 November 2022, it was confirmed that stadium operator Arena Coventry Limited had also applied to enter administration.[27] Initially all scheduled events would take place as scheduled. The administration hearing took place on 17 November where it was confirmed that the arena would enter administration but also immediately fall into the ownership ofFrasers Group (owned byMike Ashley), who had a pre-signed deal to immediately take over the stadium should it fall into administration.[28]

On 23 August 2025, Coventry City Football Club officially announced the completion of its acquisition of the Arena from the Frasers Group, thereby becoming landlords of their home stadium 20 years to date of their inaugural competitive football match played here.[12]

Football at the arena

[edit]

Coventry City

[edit]
Jimmy Hill (1928–2015) Statue just outside the entrance to the Lloyds Pharmacy Stand

The stadium hosted its first football match in August 2005. The official opening was performed byDame Kelly Holmes and sports ministerRichard Caborn on 24 February 2007, by which time the arena had already hosted a sell-outEngland U21 football match against Germany as well as a full season of Coventry City matches.

The arena became the venue for Coventry City's home games at the start of the2005–06 season, following 106 years at the Highfield Road stadium. The first competitive football match played at the stadium was againstQueens Park Rangers on 20 August 2005, in front of a reduced (for safety reasons) 23,012 capacity crowd. The game ended3–0 to Coventry, withClaus Bech Jørgensen becoming the first player to score at the arena.Hull City became the first away team to win at the Ricoh, easing their way to a 2–0 win on 24 September 2005, with both goals coming fromJohn Welsh.

The stadium has never seen a capacity 32,600 crowd for a Coventry City match, but 2025 saw their highest attendance to date, coming againstMiddlesbrough in aChampionship match that saw 31,452 people in attendance. Coventry City won the match 2-0.

In December 2009, the first hat-trick was scored at the venue whenFreddy Eastwood scored three pastPeterborough United. Eastwood grabbed two goals before half-time before Craig Mackail-Smith netted a brace in the second half to level the scoring. However, Coventry City secured three points in theChampionship fixture after Eastwood grabbed the final goal of the fixture just a minute after Peterborough levelled. Freddy Eastwood remained the only player to have scored a hat-trick at the Ricoh Arena[29] until Coventry City loaneeJacob Murphy scored a first-half hat-trick in a League One fixture againstGillingham on 21 November 2015.[30]

On 28 July 2011, a bronze statue ofJimmy Hill was unveiled at the entrance to the stadium after £100,000 was raised by Coventry City fans.[31] He managed the club from 1961 to 1967 and was responsible for guiding it to the top flight. Despite this, Hill decided to resign as manager for a career in television but later returned to the Sky Blues as managing director before becoming chairman. When he died in December 2015, fans paid tribute by placing flowers and scarves by and around the statue.

The quickest ever goal scored at the ground was when Coventry strikerDan Agyei converted against Northampton Town after 19.5 seconds on 4 October 2016. This beat the previous record scored by Reading'sGrzegorz Rasiak after 27 seconds in 2009, when Reading defeated Coventry 3–1. Rasiak's goal still remains the fastest one scored by an away side at the stadium.[32]

Rent dispute (2012–13)

[edit]

In December 2012, Coventry City owners SISU Capital became embroiled in a high-profile dispute with ACL over the rent arrangement and a lack of access to matchday revenue. The previously agreed rent amounted to £1.2 million per year, but did not give Coventry City access to matchday revenue.

A deadline of 27 December 2012 was given by ACL for unpaid rent. After the deadline passed, a winding up order was enforced through the High Court. Subsequently, after ACL planned to place Coventry City FC Ltd into administration, the club itself entered administration, accepting a ten-point penalty from theFootball League as a consequence. A further 10-point penalty was incurred when ACL refused to accept the terms of acompany voluntary arrangement (CVA) proposed by the administrator. Coventry City has since been bought by Otium Entertainment Group.

On 23 March 2013, Coventry City moved all its staff and club shop stock from the venue after a long dispute over rent and access to matchday revenue with the club.[33]

Coventry City agreed to play their home games atNorthampton Town'sSixfields Stadium to ensure that they fulfilled their fixtures. This resulted in ACL threatening to sue Northampton Town if they decided to carry on hosting Coventry City's home games. Northampton Town released a statement saying that they "will not be bullied or threatened".[34] ACL subsequently withdrew its legal action against Northampton Town.

Second stint at the arena (2014–19)

[edit]

ACL and SISU agreed a two-year deal to bring Coventry City back to the arena in 2014. The club also had the option to play there for a further two years; they played their first match back at the stadium on 5 September 2014 againstGillingham.[35] This followed a payment of £470,000 from SISU Capital to ACL after a Football League ruling.[36] The deal was later extended by a year.[37][38] This meant Coventry City remained at the Ricoh Arena until May 2019 before ground-sharing for two seasons withBirmingham City atSt Andrew's.

Third stint at the arena (2021–)

[edit]

On 10 March 2021, It was announced that Coventry City and Wasps had agreed to a ten-year deal, which would mean that the club would return to the stadium from the 2021–22 season.[39] The club still intend to build a new stadium on land near theUniversity of Warwick on the southern edge of the city, as a break clause in their contract will allow them to leave the Ricoh for their new stadium.[40] Their first game back was a pre-season friendly on 1 August againstWolverhampton Wanderers in which Coventry lost 2–1.

With the administration of Wasps and subsequent transfer of ownership of the Coventry Building Society Arena Coventry City's deal became null and void and the club did not sign to continue the deal with Frasers Group. Frasers Group issued the football club with a notice of eviction on 5 December should they choose to not sign a new deal running until May 2023.[41] Coventry City signed the deal on 13 December agreeing to stay at the arena until at least May 2023.[42] On 28 April 2023, it was announced that Coventry City and Frasers Group had agreed a five-year license for the club to continue to play at the Arena.[43] It was also agreed that as part of the deal, no other sports team were to play home games at the Arena, after issues with the condition of the pitch under previous owners rugby union clubWasps.

International football

[edit]

The venue hosted threeEngland under-21 internationals. The first was a2007 European U-21 Championship qualification play-off match againstGermany on 5 October 2006. The hosts edged out the visitors 1–0 thanks toLeighton Baines' 77th-minute goal. The second was a2011 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualification Group 9 match againstMacedonia on 9 October 2009. The hosts beat the visitors 6–3, with goals fromKieran Gibbs,Micah Richards, and two apiece fromAndy Carroll andZavon Hines.[44] The most recent being a 3-0 win for England U21 in 2015 against Kazakhstan U21.

On 17 May 2007,England U-19 team played their home fixture againstNetherlands U-19 team in the Elite qualifying group round. Netherlands won the game 2–1.[45]

2012 Olympics

[edit]
The2012 Olympic Football competition at the Coventry Building Society Arena

The venue also became host to2012 Olympic Football matches, where the stadium hosted 12 tournament matches. The stadium was temporarily renamed toCity of Coventry Stadium due to sponsorships on venue names not being allowed by theInternational Olympic Committee.[46] In preparation for the Olympics, a test event on 23 April 2012 sawOman playSenegal in the Olympic Qualifier play-offs.[47] Senegal won 2–0 and took the final place in the men's 2012 Olympic draw.[48] The first Olympic match, on 25 July 2012, was betweenJapan andCanada inGroup F of the women's tournament.[49] On 9 August 2012, the bronze medal game was held between France and Canada at City of Coventry Stadium. Canada won the bronze medal in a 1–0 stoppage time victory on a goal fromDiana Matheson.[50]

Other football events

[edit]

The stadium has also hosted the 2011Women's FA Cup final, which was played betweenArsenal andBristol Academy. 13,885 watched Arsenal win their eleventh FA Cup as they ran out as 2–0 winners.[51]

During Coventry City's absence, Football Conference Youth Alliance Midland Division side Football CV Reds agreed to play eight games at the stadium in January 2014.[52]Leicester City's under-21 development squad played twice at the Arena on 29 January 2014[53] and 3 February 2014[54] due to waterlogged pitches at the original venues. The first game was behind closed doors but the second game againstManchester United was open to the public.

In August 2014 it was announced thatCoventry City Ladies would be moving to the stadium for the 2014–15 season.[55] However the team had to return to the Oval in Bedworth during the season afterWasps' purchase of the arena.

Rugby Union at the arena

[edit]

Before Wasps' relocation

[edit]

On22 April 2007, the arena hosted its first everrugby union match whenNorthampton Saints hosted Wasps (then known as London Wasps in an all-EnglishHeineken Cup semi-final. 16,186 fans saw Saints captainBruce Reihana score the first ever try at the stadium but the London Wasps came from behind to win 13-30 to secure a place in the final.[56]

London Wasps again played at the arena, this time hosting Irish sideMunster on10 November 2007 in a Heineken Cup fixture. Wasps narrowly won 24–23. The stadium hosted another Heineken Cupsemi-final in the same season whenSaracens chose it as their venue to play Munster. It was a close encounter that saw Munster win by two points with a score of 16-18.[57]

On 28 March 2009, the arena hosted theEDF Energy Cup semi-finals. The first semi-final sawGloucester beat theirWelsh opponentsOspreys with a score of 17–0.[58] A total of 26,744 people turned up with them also witnessingCardiff Blues beat Northampton Saints 11–5.[59]

The arena was one of several venues that put in a bid to host Rugby World Cup matches in 2015 as England were announced as hosts on 28 July 2009. However, the venue was unsuccessful in their bid withVilla Park and theLeicester City Stadium becoming the chosen venues withinthe Midlands to host tournament matches.[60]

Wasps

[edit]

In September 2014,Simon Gilbert of theCoventry Telegraph broke the news that Wasps (formerly London Wasps) were in talks to permanently relocate to the arena, from their home atAdams Park, inHigh Wycombe.[61] In October 2014 Wasps announced that from December 2014 they would play their home games at the Coventry Building Society Arena.[62] On 14 November 2014 Wasps confirmed the purchase of the final 50% of shares in the stadium from the Alan Edward Higgs Charity to become outright owners of the facility.[63]

After Wasps purchased the remaining 50% from the Alan Edward Higgs Charity in November 2014, the club announced that the north stand would be renamed "The Higgs Charity Stand", and added that 50pence would be donated to the charity from each ticket sold in that stand.[8]

Wasps played their first home match as owners at the stadium againstLondon Irish on 21 December 2014. The match saw Coventry-bornAndy Goode set a Premiership Rugby record with the most points scored in a single match with a total of 33. It was not the only record broken at the time as the attendance of 28,254 meant it was the largest attendance at a Rugby Premiership match at a recognised home ground.[64]

The Rugby Premiership attendance record was broken again whenLeicester Tigers came to the arena. The overall attendance was 32,019, meaning it was the highest attendance at the stadium for a sporting event as well as the largest attendance at a Rugby Premiership match at a recognised home ground. Leicester Tigers beat Wasps by a score of 21-26 on their first trip to the stadium.[65]

Samoa became the first international side to play at the stadium in aRugby World Cup warm-up match when they faced Wasps on 5 September 2015.

Wasps recorded their biggest ever win in the Champions Cup on 15 October 2016 when they defeated Italian side Zebre 82–14 after scoring twelve tries.[66]

On 28 November 2022, all external Wasps signage was removed from the stadium, confirming the end of their association with the stadium.[67] Internal signage has also since been removed.

Other sporting events at the arena

[edit]
The Davis Cup at The Coventry Building Society Arena

The arena was selected to host theGreat Britain versusRussia Group One second-round tie of the2013 Davis Cup tennis competition on 5–7 April.[68] Great Britain earned a shock 3–2 victory over Russia after they were trailing 2–0 in the tie. On Friday 5 April, Russia'sDmitry Tursunov beat Great Britain'sDan Evans andEvgeny Donskoy defeatedJames Ward, which put Russia 2–0 ahead. On the Saturday, Great Britain'sColin Fleming andJonny Marray won the doubles match againstIgor Kunitsyn andVictor Baluda. On Sunday, Great Britain completed the comeback when Ward got the win against Tursunov and Evans beat Donskoy.[69]

After the revival of theChampion of Champions snooker tournament, the arena was chosen as the venue for its first tournament since 1980.[70] After a successful event, The Coventry Building Society Arena became the annual venue for the competition until 2019 after hosting it again in 2014[71] as well as 2015.[72]

Premier League Darts was held at the venue on two occasions with the first being on 21 February 2008 and the second being on 19 February 2009.[73] Due to the rising demand for tickets in the PDC, it has not been a venue to audiences since. The venue has other minorPDC tournaments and those without audiences during the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as BDO competitions.[74]

The stadium hosted its first-ever American football game on 6 May 2007, when theCoventry Cassidy Jets beat then British national championsLondon Olympians 27–20.[75] The Jets had hoped to play their inauguralEFAF Cup game against Madrid Bears on 29 April but they were forced to change venue to the Manor Park Stadium in Nuneaton. The Heineken Cup the previous week to the Madrid game had led to CCFC objecting in case of damage to the pitch.[76]

The stadium hosted arugby league fixture for the first time when theCoventry Bears took on theKeighley Cougars at the stadium on 8 May 2016 in aLeague 1 encounter.[77]

England v Scotland in the Rugby League Four Nations at Coventry in 2016

A record home crowd for the Coventry Bears of 1,097 watched the side lose to the Cougars. The arena also hosted a2016 Rugby League Four Nations double-header in November asEngland defeatedScotland andAustralia defeatedNew Zealand at the stadium in front of 21,009 people.[78]

Australia v Scotland in the 2021 Rugby League World Cup at Coventry in 2022

The arena held therugby sevens, wrestling and judo events at the2022 Commonwealth Games.

Other events at the arena

[edit]

Stands

[edit]

North Stand

[edit]

When the ground first opened, the stand was known as theCoventry Evening Telegraph stand and was the main stand for Coventry City supporters that sang during games. After the sponsorship deal ran out for the stand, it became known as the North Stand, but was then renamed again after the Wasps' purchase of the Alan Higgs Charity share of Arena Coventry Limited. After attendances dropping due to boycotts against the ownership, Coventry City announced that for the 2014–15 season that the stand would be closed for football matches due to costs but would be opened if the demand is there, however tickets could still be bought there for Wasps' fixtures. Coventry City reopened the North Stand ahead of the 2021–22 season. It currently houses the club's family area and general admission seating.

West Stand

[edit]

The only two-tier stand at the stadium, it consists of a larger lower tier below the upper tier, which consists of corporate hospitality boxes. Also situated on this side of the stadium are hotel rooms, which have a view of the pitch. In the corner between this stand and the South Stand is a police control box.[85] This is the only stand that offers cushioned seats and it also provides seating for directors as well as the media. Recent years have seen the addition of a private lounge for premium ticketholders (known as theVodafone Lounge during Wasps' tenure after their main sponsor, now renamed "The Mill") and new hospitality experiences on the upper balcony.

East Stand

[edit]

The East Stand provided a video screen in the corner by the South Stand until 2018. This corner soon became known as the singers' corner to Coventry fans as first called by Aidy Boothroyd, when he was manager of the Sky Blues; ever since, it has been the primary source of atmosphere at the ground. This is where the main cameras are positioned. The stand has been formerly known as the NTL stand and the Tesco Stand. In 2021, in response to Coventry Building Society's sponsorship deal, the black seats which previously speltRicoh were rearranged to spellWasps. Following Wasps' bankruptcy and the purchase of the ground by Mike Ashley, theWasps seats were removed and replaced with seats that speltFrasers.[86]Safe standing was installed in the top of Singers' Corner ahead of the 2024-25 season, and after the football club purchased the ground outright in 2025, theFrasers seats were reconfigured to now readSky Blues.

South Stand

[edit]

This stand is used for away supporters forCoventry City football matches and only opened for rugby matches when needed due to extra demand. Clubs such asSheffield Wednesday,Chelsea,West Ham United,Leicester City,Wolves,Sunderland andLeeds United have sold out the stand in the past. In cases of insufficient travelling demand it has also been opened for the home support during football matches. The stand has had previous names in the past due to naming rights. In October 2018, the capacity of the stand was reduced when a new large screen was installed to replace the previous one situated between the South and East stands.[87] Following City's return to the CBS in 2021-22, most of the stand was given over to away supporters, with large patches of the stand closed for segregation and covered with banners paying tribute to various Sky Blues figures (includingJimmy Hill,George Curtis, and then-managerMark Robins). Recent work has reduced the away end's proportion to roughly 3,000 seats, directly abutting the west stand. The top portion of the away section is safe standing, as football grounds which install safe standing in their home areas must also install a commensurate amount in the away section.

Facilities

[edit]

Stadium Bowl

[edit]
Stadium Bowl used mainly forCoventry City football matches.

Thestadium bowl has aseating capacity of 32,609 with the overall capacity rising to 40,000 for concerts and has easy access to refreshments for customers from the many bar and food outlets around the bowl. Access for production is accessible via two main tunnels on the pitch and the stadium bowl also has back of house facilities meeting artist and production standards.[88]

The Stadium bowl is the main venue for its sporting events as it currently hostsCoventry City's home fixtures as well as hosting top sporting events such as2012 Olympic Football matches andHeineken Cup semi-finals.

It has also hosted music concerts withMuse,Bon Jovi,Red Hot Chili Peppers,Take That,Bruce Springsteen,Oasis,Pink,Rolling Stones,Rihanna,Spice Girls andKings of Leon all performing on the outdoor pitch.Coldplay also performed there with tickets selling out in ninety minutes.[88]

Indoor Arena – Coventry

[edit]

TheIndoor Arena – Coventry,[89] formerly theJaguar Exhibition Hall andEricsson Exhibition Hall, is 6,000 square metres and column-free. The first ever gig at The Coventry Building Society Arena was held in the Exhibition hall whenBryan Adams played to a sell-out 8,000 crowd. The current maximum capacity is 12,000.[90]Florence and the Machine,Scouting for Girls,The Enemy as well asthe Specials (twice) have all performed in the hall.[91]

It is also the host to theChampion of Champions snooker competition annually and was home toNetball Superleague sideWasps Netball between February 2017 and their final season in2022. The hall has also hosted major events such as theDavis Cup in 2013.

Besides Entertainment and Sport the indoor arena is also used as the counting hall for Council and Parliamentary Elections within Coventry and occasionally Nuneaton/Bedworth.

Hotels

[edit]

The site includes a 121 bedroomDoubleTree by Hilton hotel including 50 rooms with pitch-side views of the stadium bowl.[92] All of the rooms are en-suite as well as coming with access to satellite TV and wi-fi. The Singers Bar & Bistro is available for hotel guests to use, which is divided into a restaurant, bar area and coffee lounge.[93]

A secondHampton by Hilton branded 150-room hotel was due to open at the site from late 2022.[94][95]

Casino

[edit]

The casino is built under the ground and has a standalone Show Bar, which has had live entertainment such asRebecca Ferguson performing. There is a 120-seater poker room as well as other casino games on offer such as blackjack, roulette and slots. There is a gaming lounge, which shows the big televised sporting events.[96]

Club shops

[edit]

There are club shops situated at the stadium, where it is possible to buy merchandise and match tickets for all teams. Coventry City moved all its staff and stock out of the complex in March 2013. A new combined club shop and ticket office for Coventry City opened ahead of the 2021–22 season, this is the first time Coventry City have had a club shop at the arena since 2013 after relocating the club shop to Gallagher Retail Park and then to theArena Park Shopping Centre, and the ticket office having been situated at theButts Park Arena.[97] Coventry opened a second club shop inWest Orchards Shopping Centre in July 2022.

Sports Bar

[edit]

A 400 square metre sports bar opened at the arena in 2021, located by the front door in the space previously occupied by Wasps' club shop.[98] The bar is namedThe Anecdote.[99]

Arena Shopping Park

[edit]
Main article:Arena Park Shopping Centre

TheArena Shopping Park is also on the same site of The Coventry Building Society Arena but is not operated by Arena Coventry Limited. It is instead owned by Tesco with a largeTesco Extra store available to customers. Other stores such asNext,New Look,Boots,Marks and Spencer,Currys andDecathlon are also at the shopping park with other smaller unit shops likeGame,Clinton Cards andTUI travel agent inside the mall where Tesco Extra is situated.[100]

Accessibility

[edit]
See also:Coventry Arena railway station
Coventry Arena Station (while under construction)
Railway line by the Coventry Building Society Arena

The stadium is situated on the northern side ofCoventry, one mile (1.6 km) south of junction 3 of theM6 motorway, on theA444 road from Coventry toNuneaton.[101] Therailway line between Coventry and Nuneaton is immediately adjacent andCoventry Arena railway station which opened on 18 January 2016.[102] It is located in the small suburb of Rowley's Green, between two larger suburbs, namelyHolbrooks to the west, and Longford to the east. The stadium was constructed on the former site of the Foleshill gasworks complex (which fell within the former Foleshill civil parish and, until 1932,Foleshill Rural District), although what is today considered the Foleshill district begins around one-half mile (0.8 km) to the south-east. The stadium is located within one-quarter mile (0.4 km) of the boundary with the borough ofNuneaton and Bedworth and the county ofWarwickshire. It is adjacent to theArena Park Shopping Centre.

From the city centre,National Express Coventry routes 3[103] & 5[104] bus go to theArena Park Shopping Centre. Routes 20, 20A, 20B & 20C,[105] andStagecoach Midlands Route 48[106] stop nearby on Foleshill Road. It is also served byArriva Midlands routes 78 & 78A, and Stagecoach Midlands routes 60 & 703.

When arriving by train to Coventry, the number 8 bus can be caught at the railway station to the Transport Museum.[107] There is a railway station located at the stadium but it was announced in August 2015 that the new station will be closed following major events at the stadium.[108][109] It was announced that trains will be provided to transport 1,000 extra supporters for the Wasps' fixtures against Harlequins on 28 February and Leicester Tigers on 12 March 2016 as a trial run. London Midland and Wasps will review the trial run before deciding any more decisions with Coventry City "hopeful" that they will eventually benefit from the services.[110]

Attendance and Records

[edit]

Highest attendances

[edit]

Top ten sporting attendances

[edit]

The table shows the top ten attendances at the Coventry Building Society Arena for sporting events, in order of attendance.

#MatchTournamentSportDateAttendanceRef
1England Women 2–1Italy WomenArnold Clark CupFootball19 February 202332,128 Claimed but this event split over 2 matches.[111]
2Wasps 21–26Leicester TigersPremiership RugbyRugby Union9 May 201532,019[112]
3Wasps 14–24BathPremiership RugbyRugby Union23 December 201831,626[113]
4Coventry City 2-0MiddlesbroughEFL ChampionshipFootball3 May 202531,452[114]
5Coventry City 0–2ChelseaFA Cup quarter-finalFootball7 March 200931,407[115]
6Coventry City 2-0West Bromwich AlbionEFL ChampionshipFootball18 April 202531,167[116]
7Coventry City 0–3Crewe AlexandraFootball League Trophy northern area-finalFootball5 February 201331,054[117]
8England U21 1–0Germany U21UEFA European U21 Championship qualifierFootball6 October 200630,919[118]
9Saracens 16–18MunsterHeineken Cup semi-finalRugby Union27 April 200830,325[119]
10Coventry City 2–1Leeds UnitedEFL ChampionshipFootball7 April 202430,232[120]

Highest attendances by season

[edit]
icon
This sectiondoes notcite anysources. Please helpimprove this section byadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged andremoved.(June 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

The table shows the highest attendances of Coventry City and Wasps fixtures each season.

Coventry CityWasps Rugby
SeasonCompetitionOppositionAttendanceRefCompetitionOppositionAttendanceRef
2005–06ChampionshipWolverhampton Wanderers26,851Wasps played their home games at Adams Park
2006–07ChampionshipWest Bromwich Albion26,343
2007–08FA Cup fifth roundWest Bromwich Albion28,163
2008–09FA Cup Quarter-FinalChelsea31,407
2009–10ChampionshipLeicester City22,209
2010–11ChampionshipLeeds United28,184
2011–12ChampionshipBirmingham City22,240
2012–13Johnstone's Paint Trophy Area FinalCrewe Alexandra31,054
2013–14Coventry City played all their home games at Sixfields Stadium
2014–15League OneGillingham27,306Premiership RugbyLeicester Tigers32,019
2015–16League OnePort Vale17,779Premiership RugbySaracens24,053
2016–17League OneBristol Rovers11,946Premiership RugbySaracens30,115
2017–18League TwoAccrington Stanley28,343Premiership RugbyGloucester26,296
2018–19League OneGillingham26,741Premiership RugbyBath31,626
2019–20Coventry City played all their home games at St. AndrewsPremiership RugbyHarlequins24,842
2020–21All games played behind closed doors due to COVID
2021–22ChampionshipAFC Bournemouth24,492Premiership RugbyNorthampton Saints11,423
2022–23ChampionshipBirmingham City30,175Wasps no longer currently functioning as an active team.
2023–24ChampionshipLeeds United30,232
2024–25ChampionshipMiddlesbrough31,452
2025–26ChampionshipLeicester City31,410

Average attendances

[edit]

This table shows the average attendances for league matches played at the Coventry Building Society Arena for both Coventry City and Wasps.

Coventry CityWasps Rugby
SeasonCompetitionAve attRefCompetitionAve attRef
2005–06Championship21,302[121]N/AN/AN/A
2006–07Championship20,342[121]
2007–08Championship19,132[121]
2008–09Championship17,451[121]
2009–10Championship17,305[121]
2010–11Championship16,309[121]
2011–12Championship15,118[121]
2012–13League One10,864[121]
2013–14N/AN/AN/A
2014–15League One9,700[a]Premiership Rugby19,911[b][122]
2015–16League One12,570[123]Premiership Rugby15,051[124]
2016–17League One9,118[125]Premiership Rugby18,096[126]
2017–18League Two9,255[127]Premiership Rugby17,904[128]
2018–19League One12,363[129]Premiership Rugby16,161[130]
2019–20N/AN/AN/APremiership Rugby13,569[c][citation needed]
2020–21Games played behind closed doors due to COVID
2021–22Championship19,541[131]Premiership Rugby9,931[citation needed]
2022–23Championship19,950[132]N/AN/AN/A
2023–24Championship25,468[133]N/AN/AN/A
2024–25Championship27,497[134]N/AN/AN/A

Football and Rugby Records

RecordPlayerOpponentDate
First CCFC goal scorer at The ArenaClaus Bech JørgensenQ.P.R.20 August 2005[135]
First Away goal scorer at The ArenaRicardo FullerSouthampton29 August 2005[136]
First CCFC Red Card at The ArenaClaus Bech JørgensenCrystal Palace15 October 2005[137]
First Away Red Card at The ArenaMark LynchHull City24 September 2005[138]
First CCFC Hat Trick at The ArenaFreddy EastwoodPeterborough United12 December 2009[139]
First Wasps Try Scorer at The ArenaJoe SimpsonLondon Irish21 December 2014[140]
First Away Try Scorer at The ArenaGeoff CrossLondon Irish21 December 2014[141]
Last Wasps Try Scorer at The ArenaGabriel OghreHarlequins7 November 2021[142]
Last Awat Try Scorer at The ArenaLuke NorthmoreHarlequins7 November 2021[143]

Hat Tricks Scored at The Arena

PlayerOpponentCompetitionDate
Freddy EastwoodPeterborough UnitedChampionship12 December 2009[144]
Jacob MurphyGillinghamLeague One21 November 2015[145]
Jodi JonesNotts CountyLeague Two5 August 2017[146]
Marc McNultyGrimsby TownLeague Two24 March 2018[147]
Ellis SimmsMaidstone UnitedFA Cup26 February 2024[148]
Ellis SimmsRotherham UnitedChampionship5 March 2024[149]
Haji WrightSunderlandChampionship15 March 2025[150]
  1. ^The average attendance for the 2014–15 season does not include home matches played atSixfields Stadium.
  2. ^The average attendance for the 2014–15 season does not include home matches played atAdams Park.
  3. ^Does not include games played behind closed doors due to COVID.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Shaw, Phil (20 August 2005)."Football's man of the future: The stadiums Paul Fletcher has helped to build".The Independent. London: Independent Print. Retrieved25 June 2010.
  2. ^John Daly (27 June 2006)."Arena Construction Completion Report"(PDF). Coventry City Council. Retrieved23 August 2025.
  3. ^"Sports". Coventry Building Society Arena. Retrieved23 August 2025.Coventry Building Society Arena is a premier destination for national and international sport in the heart of the West Midlands – with a 32,609-seat stadium bowl and 8,000 capacity indoor arena.
  4. ^abBridge, Bobby (5 May 2021)."New name for Ricoh Arena after 'landmark' 10-year deal signed".Coventry Telegraph.Coventry,England. Retrieved5 May 2021.
  5. ^"Coventry City's Ricoh Arena chosen for Olympics".BBC Sport. British Broadcasting Corporation. 3 June 2010. Retrieved3 June 2010.
  6. ^London2012.com profile.Archived 19 August 2010 at theWayback Machine – accessed 29 September 2010.
  7. ^"Coventry Stadium". Birmingham Organising Committee for the 2022 Commonwealth Games Limited. Retrieved23 August 2025.
  8. ^ab"Wasps Confirm 100% Shareholding In The Ricoh Arena" (Press release). Wasps RFC. 14 November 2014. Retrieved14 November 2014.
  9. ^"Coventry City to groundshare with Birmingham City for 2019–20 season".BBC Sport. 7 June 2019. Retrieved7 June 2019.
    "Groundshare to continue". Birmingham City F.C. 24 July 2020. Archived fromthe original on 13 August 2021. Retrieved24 July 2020.
  10. ^"Ashley completes deal for CBS Arena's operating company in blow to new Coventry owners".talkSPORT. 17 November 2022. Retrieved13 January 2024.
  11. ^"Coventry City and Frasers Group finally reach agreement over CBS Arena".Coventry Live. 28 April 2023. Retrieved13 January 2024.
  12. ^ab"Coventry reach 'defining day' as stadium purchase finally complete".The Independent. 23 August 2025. Retrieved23 August 2025.
  13. ^Butler, Sarah (27 July 2009)."A customer and his money are soon parted if a smart card means no queue".The Times. London: Times Newspapers. Archived fromthe original on 10 August 2011. Retrieved10 January 2010.
  14. ^"NEWS: New Ticket Office and Club Shop to be cashless".www.ccfc.co.uk. Retrieved20 October 2023.
  15. ^Shoesmith, Ian (28 April 2012)."Why are Coventry City at their lowest ebb for nearly 50 years?".BBC Sport. British Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved28 April 2012.
  16. ^Coventry and Warwickshire Webcams – Highfield Road virtual tour. BBC.
  17. ^Davies, Gareth A. (3 September 2001)."Coventry claim edge for new Wembley".
  18. ^"Coventry bid for National Stadium". 13 September 2001. Archived fromthe original on 2 October 2015. Retrieved11 August 2015.
  19. ^Rice, Simon (31 March 2011)."Giving the name away: Stadiums named after sponsors".The Independent. London: Independent Print.
  20. ^"The "strange" way the Ricoh Arena sponsorship deal was struck".Coventry Live. 18 May 2012. Archived fromthe original on 14 December 2021. Retrieved14 December 2021.They had a real fear that after paying their £10million (as reported in the Press) fee, the media would then call the building 'The Coventry Arena', or 'Arena Coventry', or 'that new Arena in the Midlands' etc.
  21. ^Hazelton, Liz (22 July 2004)."IT'S THE BIG CAT STADIUM! Jaguar unveils pounds 7m Arena sponsorship".Coventry Evening Telegraph.The Free Library. Archived fromthe original on 14 December 2021.JAGUAR was today unveiled as the record-breaking backer of the city's Arena. The ten-year multi-million pound sponsorship deal ends months of speculation and will see the stadium named the Jaguar Arena.
  22. ^Jaguar drops stadium naming plans – News – London Evening Standard. Thisislondon.co.uk (17 December 2004).
  23. ^"Coventry announce stadium sponsor".BBC Sport. British Broadcasting Corporation. 26 April 2005.
  24. ^"Wasps stadium to become Coventry Building Society Arena in naming rights deal".ITV News. 5 May 2021. Retrieved5 May 2021.
  25. ^Meagher, Gerard (17 October 2022)."Wasps players made redundant after club enters administration | Rugby union | The Guardian".amp.theguardian.com. Retrieved17 October 2022.
  26. ^Bridge, Bobby; Rowlands, Robert (17 October 2022)."CBS Arena owners announce 'intention to appoint administrators'".CoventryLive. Retrieved17 October 2022.
  27. ^Bridge, Bobby (2 November 2022)."'Preferred bidder' for CBS Arena identified as administration move made".CoventryLive. Retrieved2 November 2022.
  28. ^Turner, Andy (17 November 2022)."Mike Ashley owns CBS Arena after decision made".CoventryLive. Retrieved17 November 2022.
  29. ^"Eastwood's hat-trick seals three points".BBC Sport. 12 December 2009.
  30. ^"Coventry leapfrog Gillingham to go top".BBC Sport. Retrieved25 November 2015.
  31. ^"Jimmy Hill statue unveiled at Coventry's Ricoh Arena".BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 28 July 2011. Retrieved28 July 2011.
  32. ^Marshall, Billie."RECORD: Daniel Agyei scores the fastest ever goal at the Ricoh during Checkatrade Trophy win". Retrieved16 October 2016.
  33. ^"Coventry City transfer staff and stock from Ricoh Arena".BBC Sport. British Broadcasting Corporation. 23 March 2013. Retrieved27 March 2013.
  34. ^"Ricoh Arena to sue Northampton Town if it hosts Coventry City 'home' matches".Coventry Telegraph. 12 July 2013. Retrieved7 January 2014.
  35. ^"Coventry City agree deal to return to Ricoh Arena".BBC News. BBC. 21 August 2014. Retrieved21 August 2014.
  36. ^"Coventry City make £470,000 ACL payment after Football League ruling".Coventry Telegraph. 14 August 2014. Retrieved8 February 2015.
  37. ^"Coventry City extend Ricoh Arena stay until 2018".BBC Sport. 23 December 2015. Retrieved13 June 2020.
  38. ^"Coventry City: League Two club agrees deal with Wasps to stay at Ricoh Arena".BBC Sport. 9 February 2018. Retrieved13 June 2020.
  39. ^@Coventry_City (10 March 2021)."NEWS: Coventry City and Wasps Group..." (Tweet) – viaTwitter.
  40. ^"Coventry will return to Ricoh Arena but press on with plans for new stadium".TheGuardian.com. 10 March 2021.
  41. ^"NEWS: Statement following receipt of an eviction notice from Frasers Group, new owners of the CBS Arena".www.ccfc.co.uk. Retrieved13 December 2022.
  42. ^"Coventry City sign deal to continue playing at CBS Arena until end of season".www.yorkshirepost.co.uk. 13 December 2022. Retrieved13 December 2022.
  43. ^"NEWS: Coventry City and Frasers Group plc agree new five year licence for club to play at Coventry Building Society Arena".www.ccfc.co.uk. Retrieved28 April 2023.
  44. ^"Match Report – England U21 6 – 3 Macedonia U21 – 09 Oct 2009".Sky Sports. Retrieved19 January 2016.
  45. ^"England Matches – Under-19's 1991–2010". Retrieved19 January 2016.
  46. ^Parenthesis."Coventry 2012 – A co-Host for London 2012 – Olympic Football Tournaments". Archived fromthe original on 29 January 2016. Retrieved19 January 2016.
  47. ^"Senegal to face Oman for final spot at 2012 Olympics".BBC Sport. British Broadcasting Corporation. 29 March 2012. Retrieved1 April 2012.
  48. ^"London 2012: Senegal beat Oman for final Olympic spot".BBC Sport. British Broadcasting Corporation. 23 April 2012. Retrieved24 April 2012.
  49. ^"Football – event schedule".BBC Sport. British Broadcasting Corporation. 30 March 2012. Retrieved21 July 2012.
  50. ^"London 2012: Canada's women win Olympic football bronze with late goal".theguardian.com. Guardian News and Media. 9 August 2012. Retrieved1 January 2014.
  51. ^"Women's FA Cup final: Arsenal 2–0 Bristol Academy".BBC Sport. Retrieved19 January 2016.
  52. ^"Non-league amateur side sign up to play at Ricoh Arena next season".Coventry Telegraph. 30 January 2014. Retrieved30 January 2014.
  53. ^Perry, Keith (28 January 2014)."Leicester City to play at the Ricoh Arena!".Coventry Telegraph. Retrieved18 May 2014.
  54. ^"Leicester City playing at Ricoh Arena again tonight – this time against Manchester United".Coventry Telegraph. 3 February 2014. Retrieved18 May 2014.
  55. ^"Coventry City Ladies Football Club will call the Ricoh Arena home this season".BBC News. BBC. 8 August 2014. Retrieved10 August 2014.
  56. ^"Wasps join Tigers in Twickenham final : European Rugby Champions Cup (EPCR)".epcrugby.com. Archived fromthe original on 17 November 2015. Retrieved19 January 2016.
  57. ^"Rugby Union – Saracens 16–18 Munster".BBC Sport. 27 April 2008. Retrieved19 January 2016.
  58. ^"Rugby Union – Gloucester 17–0 Ospreys".BBC Sport. 28 March 2009. Retrieved19 January 2016.
  59. ^"Rugby Union – Cardiff Blues 11–5 Northampton".BBC Sport. 28 March 2009. Retrieved19 January 2016.
  60. ^"Coventry lose out on Rugby World Cup".Coventry Telegraph.
  61. ^"Rugby club Wasps in talks to buy major stake in Ricoh Arena".Coventry Telegraph. 18 September 2014. Retrieved4 October 2015.
  62. ^"Ricoh Stadium Move".Wasps RFC. Wasps RFC. 8 October 2014. Archived fromthe original on 10 October 2014. Retrieved8 October 2014.
  63. ^"Wasps Confirm 100% Shareholding In The Ricoh Arena".Wasps RFC. Wasps RFC. 14 November 2014. Retrieved14 November 2014.
  64. ^"Premiership: Wasps 48–16 London Irish".BBC Sport. Retrieved19 January 2016.
  65. ^"Premiership: Wasps 21–26 Leicester Tigers".BBC Sport. 9 May 2015. Retrieved19 January 2016.
  66. ^Smith, Paul (15 October 2016)."Wasps earn their stripes with club record demolition of Zebre".Coventry Telegraph. Retrieved16 October 2016.
  67. ^Turner, Andy (28 November 2022)."Wasps signage and logos removed at Coventry Building Society Arena".CoventryLive. Retrieved13 December 2022.
  68. ^"Ricoh Arena set to host Great Britain Davis Cup tie".Coventry Observer. 31 January 2013. Retrieved15 March 2013.
  69. ^"Davis Cup 2013: Great Britain shock Russia in Coventry".BBC Sport. BBC. 7 April 2013. Retrieved7 January 2014.
  70. ^"Ricoh to host Champion of Champions snooker".Coventry Telegraph. 2 May 2013. Retrieved18 June 2014.
  71. ^"Champion of Champions: Ronnie O'Sullivan beats Judd Trump".BBC Sport. 9 November 2014. Retrieved19 January 2016.
  72. ^"Champion of Champions 2015 – World Snooker".World Snooker. Retrieved19 January 2016.
  73. ^"Planet Darts – Tournaments – Whyte & Mackay Premier League Darts – Whyte & Mackay Premier League Darts – Premier League Darts – Night Three". Archived fromthe original on 22 February 2009. Retrieved19 January 2016.
  74. ^Rodger, James (5 September 2014)."Darts greats set for Ricoh Arena show".Coventry Telegraph. Retrieved19 January 2016.
  75. ^"Welcome to the Cassidy Jets Website! – News". 4 October 2011. Archived from the original on 4 October 2011.
  76. ^"Welcome to the Cassidy Jets Website! – News". 4 October 2011. Archived from the original on 4 October 2011.
  77. ^"Ricoh Arena set to host first ever rugby league clash as Coventry Bears take on Keighley Cougars".Coventry Observer. 12 April 2016. Retrieved14 April 2016.
  78. ^McCartney, Aidan (22 April 2016)."Rugby League's Four Nations internationals heading to Coventry".
  79. ^"Oasis at Coventry Ricoh Arena: Our review". Archived fromthe original on 15 July 2013.
  80. ^"Insomnia Gaming Festival". Retrieved8 February 2015.
  81. ^"Rihanna 2016 Tour". Archived fromthe original on 2 February 2017. Retrieved28 November 2015.
  82. ^Bourke, Fionnuala (5 February 2016)."MTV Crashes Coventry 'exciting artists' to be revealed 'in next few weeks'".Coventry Telegraph. Retrieved5 February 2016.
  83. ^Sandford, Elis (6 June 2019)."Spice Girls: What the Ricoh experience was like on day two".CoventryLive. Retrieved9 June 2019.
  84. ^Khan, Shehnaz (3 September 2025)."Ed Sheeran announces Coventry and Manchester shows".BBC News. Retrieved22 September 2025.
  85. ^Adams, Duncan."Ricoh Arena | Coventry City FC | Football Ground Guide".www.footballgroundguide.com. Retrieved5 February 2016.
  86. ^Bridge, Bobby (4 July 2021)."Arena makes first big change after rebrand and not everyone's happy".CoventryLive. Retrieved2 August 2021.
  87. ^"Big screen launch".
  88. ^ab"Stadium Bowl". Archived fromthe original on 28 January 2016. Retrieved19 January 2016.
  89. ^Campelli, Matthew (4 August 2016)."Ricoh Arena Exhibition Hall renamed following technology deal with Ericsson | Leisure Opportunities news".www.leisureopportunities.co.uk. Retrieved27 January 2021.
  90. ^"Music events at Ricoh Arena | Ricoh Arena | Wasps".www.ricoharena.com. Archived fromthe original on 18 June 2019. Retrieved22 May 2019.
  91. ^"Jaguar Indoor Arena". Archived fromthe original on 28 January 2016. Retrieved19 January 2016.
  92. ^"Coventry Accommodation at The Ricoh Arena Hotel". Retrieved31 October 2016.
  93. ^"Coventry Bar & Bistro Restaurant – Singers Bistro & Bar". Archived fromthe original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved19 January 2016.
  94. ^"A new 150-room hotel at one of the Midlands' premier sporting and leisure complexes".www.ricoharena.com. Retrieved15 March 2021.
  95. ^Davis, Tom (21 October 2020)."New Hilton hotel in Coventry to be finished by 2022".Coventry Telegraph. Archived fromthe original on 23 October 2020. Retrieved9 October 2021.We are delighted that the planning application has been approved and our focus now moves on to the construction of the hotel, which we hope to conclude by late 2022.
  96. ^"G Casino – Ricoh Arena". Archived fromthe original on 16 February 2016. Retrieved19 January 2016.
  97. ^Turner, Andy (12 March 2021)."Sky Blues are moving their ticket office back to the Ricoh".CoventryLive. Retrieved14 March 2021.
  98. ^"State-of-the-art Sports Bar Set To Open At Ricoh Arena".www.ricoharena.com. Retrieved11 March 2021.
  99. ^Bridge, Bobby (12 March 2021)."What the new Ricoh Arena sports bar will be called".CoventryLive. Retrieved14 March 2021.
  100. ^"Stores Archive – Arena Shopping Park".Arena Shopping Park. Archived fromthe original on 23 January 2016. Retrieved19 January 2016.
  101. ^"How To Get Here". Archived fromthe original on 28 January 2016. Retrieved19 January 2016.
  102. ^"Coventry Arena and Bermuda Park railway stations open".BBC News. BBC. 18 January 2016. Retrieved18 January 2016.
  103. ^"3 Arena Shopping Park – University Hospital".nxbus.co.uk. Archived fromthe original on 3 May 2022. Retrieved3 May 2022.
  104. ^"5 Coventry City Centre – Arena Shopping Park".nxbus.co.uk. Archived fromthe original on 22 January 2022. Retrieved3 May 2022.
  105. ^"20 Coventry City Centre – Nuneaton".nxbus.co.uk. Archived fromthe original on 3 May 2022. Retrieved3 May 2022.
  106. ^"Timetable PDF".www.stagecoachbus.com. Retrieved3 May 2022.
  107. ^"Bus, Taxi and Train Information – Ricoh Arena". Archived fromthe original on 18 January 2016. Retrieved19 January 2016.
  108. ^Gilbert, Simon (25 August 2015)."Coventry City FC and Wasps RFC fans warned not to use new Ricoh Arena train station".Coventry Telegraph.Coventry:Reach plc. Archived fromthe original on 26 August 2015. Retrieved23 March 2021.
  109. ^"Coventry City fans cannot use Ricoh Arena rail station".BBC News.BBC. 26 August 2015. Retrieved23 March 2021.
  110. ^Gilbert, Simon (13 February 2016)."Coventry City FC fans could benefit from Ricoh Arena train station service".Coventry Telegraph.Coventry:Reach plc. Archived fromthe original on 14 February 2016. Retrieved23 March 2021.
  111. ^"Arnold Clark Cup: Daly scores twice as England see off Italy – reaction".BBC Sport. 18 February 2023. Retrieved19 February 2023.
  112. ^"Wasps eased out by experienced Tigers outfit". Wasps. 9 May 2015. Retrieved9 May 2015.
  113. ^"Dai Young's damning thoughts after Wasps lose to Bath". Coventry Telegraph. 23 December 2018. Retrieved24 December 2018.
  114. ^"Civentry City vs Middlesbrough". EFL. Retrieved3 May 2025.
  115. ^"Chelsea beat Coventry to reach Semi-Finals". BBC. Retrieved10 August 2015.
  116. ^"Coventry City 2-0 West Brom: Sky Blues get vital win".BBC Sport. Retrieved20 April 2025.
  117. ^"Crewe gain three-goal advantage".BBC Sport. Retrieved10 August 2015.
  118. ^"Baines gives England advantage over Germany". Retrieved10 August 2015.
  119. ^"Munster secure place in the final". BBC. Retrieved10 August 2015.
  120. ^"CCFC 2-1 LUFC".EFL. 13 January 2024. Retrieved7 April 2024.
  121. ^abcdefgh"Why Return to Ricoh is special?".BBC Sport. Retrieved20 August 2015.
  122. ^"Wasps : Clubs | Aviva Premiership Rugby | Official Website". Archived fromthe original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved20 August 2015.
  123. ^"League One 2015/2016 – Attendance".worldfootball.net. Retrieved19 May 2019.
  124. ^"Home attendance Aviva Premiership 15/16".Statbunker. Retrieved9 January 2019.
  125. ^"League One 2016/2017 – Attendance".worldfootball.net. Retrieved19 May 2019.
  126. ^"Home attendance Aviva Premiership 16/17".Statbunker. Retrieved9 January 2019.
  127. ^"League Two 2017/2018 – Attendance".worldfootball.net. Retrieved19 May 2019.
  128. ^"Home attendance Aviva Premiership 17/18".Statbunker. Retrieved9 January 2019.
  129. ^"League One 2018/2019 – Attendance".worldfootball.net. Retrieved19 May 2019.
  130. ^"Aviva Premiership".premiershiprugby.com. Retrieved19 May 2019.
  131. ^"Championship 2021/2022 – Attendance".worldfootball.net. Retrieved18 April 2022.
  132. ^"Championship 2022/2023 – Attendance".worldfootball.net. Retrieved29 April 2023.
  133. ^"Championship 2023/2024 - Attendance".worldfootball.net. 18 May 2024. Retrieved20 May 2024.
  134. ^"Championship 2024/2025 - Attendance".worldfootball.net. 16 July 2025. Retrieved16 July 2024.
  135. ^"Coventry 3-0 QPR". 20 August 2005. Retrieved20 April 2025.
  136. ^"Coventry 1-1 Southampton". 29 August 2005. Retrieved20 April 2025.
  137. ^"Coventry 1-4 Crystal Palace". 15 October 2005. Retrieved20 April 2025.
  138. ^"Coventry 0-2 Hull". 24 September 2005. Retrieved20 April 2025.
  139. ^"Coventry 3-2 Peterborough". 12 December 2009. Retrieved20 April 2025.
  140. ^"Premiership: Wasps 48-16 London Irish".BBC Sport. 19 December 2014. Retrieved20 April 2025.
  141. ^"Premiership: Wasps 48-16 London Irish".BBC Sport. 19 December 2014. Retrieved20 April 2025.
  142. ^"Premiership: Wasps 16-26 Harlequins - Champions come from behind to win".BBC Sport. 5 November 2021. Retrieved20 April 2025.
  143. ^"Premiership: Wasps 16-26 Harlequins - Champions come from behind to win".BBC Sport. 5 November 2021. Retrieved20 April 2025.
  144. ^"Coventry 3-2 Peterborough". 12 December 2009. Retrieved20 April 2025.
  145. ^"Coventry City 4-1 Gillingham".BBC Sport. 20 November 2015. Retrieved20 April 2025.
  146. ^"Coventry City 3-0 Notts County".BBC Sport. 5 August 2017. Retrieved20 April 2025.
  147. ^"Coventry City 4-0 Grimsby Town".BBC Sport. 24 March 2018. Retrieved20 April 2025.
  148. ^"Coventry City 5-0 Maidstone United: Ellis Simms' first senior hat-trick ends Stones' brave FA Cup run".BBC Sport. 26 February 2024. Retrieved20 April 2025.
  149. ^"Coventry City 5-0 Rotherham United: Ellis Simms hat-trick leads way in Sky Blues win".BBC Sport. 5 March 2024. Retrieved20 April 2025.
  150. ^"Coventry City 3-0 Sunderland: Wright scores hat-trick for Sky Blues".BBC Sport. Retrieved20 April 2025.

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toCoventry Building Society Arena.
Olympic Park
River Zone
Central Zone
Outside London
Football stadia
1890s
1900s
1910s
1920s
1930s
1940s
1950s
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
2010s
2020s
2030s
Wheelchair
*unmarked: Men's RLWC only, ‡: Men's and Women's RLWC, †: Women's RLWC only
Birmingham and the West Midlands
Outside West Midlands
Authority control databases: GeographicEdit this at Wikidata
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Coventry_Building_Society_Arena&oldid=1333915396"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp