Wembley Stadium (1923): Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox defunct venue | {{Infobox defunct venue | ||
| venue_name = Wembley Stadium | | venue_name = Wembley Stadium | ||
| location = | | location = Wembley, London, England | ||
| opened = April 28, 1923 | | opened = April 28, 1923 | ||
| closed = October 7, 2000 | | closed = October 7, 2000 | ||
| demolished = 2002-03 | | demolished = 2002-03 | ||
| other_names = Empire Stadium<br/>British Empire Exhibition Stadium | | other_names = Empire Stadium<br/>British Empire Exhibition Stadium | ||
| tenants = [[ | | tenants = [[England national football team]] (1923–2000)<br/>[[Arsenal]] (UEFA matches, 1998-2000)<br/>[[London Monarchs]] (1991-92)<br/>[[Leyton Orient]] (1930) | ||
}} | }} | ||
Revision as of 13:27, 4 February 2022
Location | Wembley, London, England |
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Opened | April 28, 1923 |
Closed | October 7, 2000 |
Demolished | 2002-03 |
Other Names | Empire Stadium British Empire Exhibition Stadium |
Tenants | England national football team (1923–2000) Arsenal (UEFA matches, 1998-2000) London Monarchs (1991-92) Leyton Orient (1930) |
The original Wembley Stadium was a stadium in Wembley, London, best known for hosting important football matches. It stood on the same site now occupied by its successor.
List of credited publications
League | Date/Season | Team(s) | Type |
---|---|---|---|
FA Cup | April 26, 1930 | Arsenal vs. Huddersfield Town | Program |
May 7, 1955 | Newcastle United vs. Manchester City | Program | |
International football | February 9, 1977 | England vs. Netherlands | Program |
FIFA World Cup | June 3, 1989 | England vs. Poland | Program |
World League of American Football | April 20, 1991 | London Monarchs vs. Montreal Machine | Program |
June 9, 1991 | World Bowl '91 (London Monarchs vs. Barcelona Dragons) | Program | |
April 18, 1992 | London Monarchs vs. Barcelona Dragons | Program |
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