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Jan Breydel Stadium

Coordinates:51°11′36″N3°10′50″E / 51.19333°N 3.18056°E /51.19333; 3.18056
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Football stadium in Bruges, Belgium
Jan Breydel Stadium
Map
Interactive map of Jan Breydel Stadium
Former namesOlympiastadion
LocationKoning Leopold III-laan 50,Sint-Andries,Bruges,Belgium
Coordinates51°11′36″N3°10′50″E / 51.19333°N 3.18056°E /51.19333; 3.18056
OwnerBruges
Capacity29,062[1]
Field size105 x 68m
SurfaceMixto Hybrid Grass Technology
Construction
Built1975
Opened1975
Renovated1987, 1993, 1998–1999, 2002, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2015, 2016
Expanded1998
Tenants
Club Brugge
Cercle Brugge

Jan Breydel Stadium (Dutch:Jan Breydelstadion,pronounced[jɑmˈbrɛidəlˌstaːdijɔn]) is amulti-purpose stadium inSint-Andries,Bruges,Belgium. The city-owned stadium is the home stadium of two top-flight association football clubs and rivals,Club Brugge andCercle Brugge. It is used mainly for football matches, which cost between €5 and €60/seat/match.[2] The stadium was built in 1975. It currently has 29,042[3] seats. It is named afterJan Breydel, an instigator of theBruges Matins, the insurgency that led to the 1302Battle of the Golden Spurs. Prior to 1999 and theEuro 2000 Championship, the stadium was known asOlympiastadion[oːˈlɪmpijaːˌstaːdijɔn] and had 18,000 seats. During December 2015, the pitch was resurfaced with an Italian proprietary hybrid grass (a mix of natural and artificial grass) called Mixto.

Average attendances

[edit]

Below are the average season attendances from league matches held at the Jan Breydel for Cercle Brugge and Club Brugge. Attendance for matches of the latter has been much higher than those of Cercle Brugge.[4]

SeasonCercle BruggeClub Brugge
1990–913,94112,500
1991–923,65911,970
1992–933,65911,529
1993–943,64710,176
1994–953,31210,618
1995–964,12914,176
1996–974,02113,824
1997–98?13,676
1998–99?12,324
1999–2000?14,249
2000–01?16,265
2001–021,49117,854
2002–032,50620,976
2003–045,10323,716
2004–055,15624,432
2005–065,94525,329
2006–076,55225,034
2007–0810,10126,368
2008–0910,50226,085
2009–108,83324,368
2010–117,77524,113
2011–128,50924,368
2012–138,45924,433
2013–147,53625,378
2014–157,46226,000
2015–164,72526,129
2016–173,28526,828
2017–185,66726,183
2018–195,65824,399
2019–204,65425,262
2020–211561,629
2021–223,04618,396
2022–234,46520,987
2023–245,40420,876

Euro 2000 Matches

[edit]
DateResultRound
11 June 2000 France3–0 DenmarkGroup D
16 June 2000 Czech Republic1–2 FranceGroup D
21 June 2000 FR Yugoslavia3–4 SpainGroup C
25 June 2000 Spain1–2 FranceQuarter-finals

References

[edit]
  1. ^Jan Breydel Stadium clubbrugge.be (last check 20/10/2017)
  2. ^"Jan Breydel Stadion - Bruges - the Stadium Guide".
  3. ^"Jan Breydel Stadion - Bruges - the Stadium Guide".
  4. ^"european football statistics". Retrieved2021-05-23.

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toJan Breydelstadion.
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