The Championship | |
View of the main grandstand in August 2025 | |
| Location | 8272 Great Park Blvd Irvine,California,United States |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 33°40′28″N117°44′22″W / 33.674460°N 117.739335°W /33.674460; -117.739335 |
| Public transit | |
| Owner | City of Irvine |
| Operator | Orange County Great Park |
| Type | Soccer-specific |
| Seating type | Chairs Bleachers |
| Capacity | 5,500[1] |
| Record attendance | 5,500 |
| Field shape | Rectangle |
| Surface | Grass |
| Scoreboard | LED Scoreboard with Video Display |
| Construction | |
| Opened | May 6, 2017 (2017-05-06) |
| Architect | FivePoint Communities |
| Builder | FivePoint Development |
| Tenants | |
| Orange County SC (USLC) (2017–present) Los Angeles Black Storm (X League) (2022–present) Irvine Zeta FC (NISA) (2024–present) Los Angeles Force (NISA) (2023) Orange County FC (NPSL) (2018–2019) California United Strikers FC (NISA) (2019–2022) | |
| Website | |
| City of Irvine Website | |
Championship Soccer Stadium is a 5,500 seatsoccer-specific stadium at theOrange County Great Park inIrvine,California. The stadium serves as the permanent home ofOrange County SC of the second tierUSL Championship league after the club began its existence relocating to various stadiums within the county. Championship Soccer Stadium is publicly owned by the city of Irvine and is operated by the Great Park.
The stadium features locker rooms, concession stands, a specialized fan experience area, and abox office,[1] as well as run on onlyrenewable energy.[2] The facility has been credited with aiding and accelerating Orange County SC's youth development.[3]
The idea of a new, soccer-specific stadium in Orange County was born after the sale of the then Orange County Blues FC, when the club was sold to businessman James Keston in December 2016.[4] Construction on the site began in early 2017, as part of a major $250 million redevelopment of the area in building a massive sports complex that included basketball, volleyball, and other sports facilities, as well as new homes.[5][6]
After construction on the site was completed, the stadium opened up to the public on August 5, 2017 with a reduced capacity of 2,506, in an opening ceremony that included local soccer legends likeLandon Donovan andAmy Rodriguez and a soccer match between Orange County high school all stars.[7]
The Championship's first professional soccer match was on August 15 in a match between Orange County SC and theTulsa Roughbacks with the continued reduced capacity,[8][9] in a 0-0 draw.[10] However, the first soccer match with the full capacity of 5,000 occurred on August 18 againstPhoenix Rising SC.[11] During the match, Phoenix's forwardChris Cortez became the first professional player to score a goal. However, on front of a sell-out crowd,midfielderSola Abolaji scored the first home goal in the stadium's history in the 89th minute to result in a 1-1 draw.[12]
Between 2018 and 2019,Orange County FC of theNational Premier Soccer League, which has no relationship with Orange County SC, played some of their home matches at Championship Stadium.[13]
The newly foundedCalifornia United Strikers FC of the third tierNational Independent Soccer Association moved into the venue in 2019, which made the stadium a shared venue.[14] The Strikers would eventually move out in 2022.
In 2022,MLS Next Pro clubLA Galaxy II (a reserve team for theLA Galaxy) entered discussions with the City of Irvine to use the stadium as its home venue beginning in the 2023 season. The leaked proposal included an exclusivity agreement that would have left Orange County SC without a home venue, causing protests from the club and other parties.[15] The situation eventually ended up in favor of Orange County SC, with the club signing a new stadium lease in October 2023 with the city of Irvine to allow for a decade-long deal that runs until 2033.[16][17]
Ahead of the2026 FIFA World Cup, an organization organized by tourism company Visit Anaheim called the OC Sports Commission was tasked with identifying a potential site to host one or multiple national teams in Orange County as a team base camp.[18] After identifying possible venues, the Championship Soccer Stadium and the surrounding park was chosen to be advertised toFIFA, due to the park being one of the few venues in the area that met the requirements of having two FIFA regulation-sizedsoccer pitches and natural grass.[19] The Championship and the Great Park was officially identified in June 2024 as a potential host site.[20]
The stadium haspublic transportation access via theIrvine Transportation Center, which is located on the southwest corner of the former footprint of the oldMarine Corps Air Station El Toro and in walking distance from the stadium. From the station, access to both trains serviced byAmtrak andMetrolink,[21] as well as bus services offered by both the city of Irvine and the county viaOC Bus are available.[22][23]