Estadio Antonio Amilivia, the Glossary
Estadio Antonio Amilivia was an association football stadium located in León, Spain.[1]
Table of Contents
5 relations: Association football, Barakaldo CF, Cultural y Deportiva Leonesa, Estadio Reino de León, León, Spain.
- Defunct football venues in Spain
- Sports venues demolished in 1998
Association football, more commonly known as football or soccer, is a team sport played between two teams of 11 players each, who primarily use their feet to propel a ball around a rectangular field called a pitch.
See Estadio Antonio Amilivia and Association football
Barakaldo CF
Barakaldo Club de Fútbol is a Spanish football team based in Barakaldo, in the autonomous community of the Basque Country.
See Estadio Antonio Amilivia and Barakaldo CF
Cultural y Deportiva Leonesa
Cultural y Deportiva Leonesa, better known as Cultural Leonesa or La Cultural, is a Spanish football team based in León, in the autonomous community of Castile and Leon.
See Estadio Antonio Amilivia and Cultural y Deportiva Leonesa
Estadio Reino de León
Estadio Municipal Reino de León is a football stadium located in León, in the autonomous community of Castile and León, Spain.
See Estadio Antonio Amilivia and Estadio Reino de León
León, Spain
León is a city and municipality of Spain, capital of the province of León, part of the autonomous community of Castile and León, in the northwest of the Iberian Peninsula.
See Estadio Antonio Amilivia and León, Spain
See also
Defunct football venues in Spain
- Atotxa Stadium
- Camp de Les Corts
- Camp de la Indústria
- Camp del Centenari
- Camp del Guinardó
- Camp del carrer Muntaner
- Campa de los Ingleses Park
- Campo de Altabix
- Campo de Ciudad Lineal
- Campo de Coia
- Campo de Jorge Juan
- Campo de O'Donnell
- Campo de O'Donnell (Atlético Madrid)
- Campo de la Reina Victoria
- Campo del Mercantil
- Campo del Patronato Obrero
- El Relleno
- El Solar de Estrada
- Estadio Antonio Amilivia
- Estadio Carlos Tartiere (1932)
- Estadio Chamartín
- Estadio Colombino
- Estadio El Sardinero (1913)
- Estadio Insular
- Estadio José Zorrilla (1940)
- Estadio Las Gaunas (1923)
- Estadio Metropolitano de Madrid
- Estadio Torrero
- Estadio de Amute
- Estadio de La Victoria
- Estadio de Nervión
- Estadio de Vallejo
- Hipódromo de la Castellana
- Hippodrome of Can Tunis
- Hippodrome of Lamiako
- Jolaseta Stadium
- Martínez Campos
- Nuevo Velódromo de Barcelona
- Ondarreta Stadium
- San Mamés Stadium (1913)
- Sarrià Stadium
- Tablada Aerodrome
- Tiro del Pichón
- Velódromo de la Bonanova
Sports venues demolished in 1998
- Bader Field (ballpark)
- Boston Garden
- De Meer Stadion
- Eastville Stadium
- Elm Park (stadium)
- Estadio Antonio Amilivia
- Heiwadai Stadium
- Montreal Forum
- Roker Park
- Sam Houston Coliseum
- Silver Stadium
- St. Paul Civic Center
- Stadio Moretti
- Wales Empire Pool
- Winnipeg Velodrome