Villa Park: Difference between revisions

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!League!!Date/Season!!Team(s)!!Type
!League!!Date/Season!!Team(s)!!Type
|-
|-
| rowspan=3| [[English football]]
| rowspan=4| [[English football]]
| [[1948-49 English football season|February 19, 1949]]
| [[1948-49 English football season|February 19, 1949]]
| [[Aston Villa]] vs. [[Manchester United]]
| [[Aston Villa]] vs. [[Manchester United]]
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| [[Aston Villa]] vs. [[Manchester City]]
| [[Aston Villa]] vs. [[Manchester City]]
| [[Aston Villa vs. Manchester City (October 25, 1952)|Program]]
| [[Aston Villa vs. Manchester City (October 25, 1952)|Program]]
|-
| [[1952-53 English football season|April 7, 1953]]
| [[Aston Villa]] vs. [[West Bromwich Albion]]
| [[Aston Villa vs. West Bromwich Albion (April 7, 1953)|Program]]
|-
|-
| [[FA Cup]]
| [[FA Cup]]

Revision as of 09:54, 12 October 2022

Villa Park
Location Aston, Birmingham, England
Opened 1897
Other Names Aston Lower Grounds
Tenants Aston Villa (1897-present)

Villa Park is a football stadium in Aston, Birmingham, England, with a seating capacity of 42,749. The ground is less than a mile from both Witton and Aston railway stations and has hosted sixteen England internationals at senior level, the first in 1899 and the most recent in 2005. Villa Park has hosted 55 FA Cup semi-finals, more than any other stadium.

List of credited publications

League Date/Season Team(s) Type
English football February 19, 1949 Aston Villa vs. Manchester United Program
February 16, 1952 Aston Villa vs. Stoke City Program
October 25, 1952 Aston Villa vs. Manchester City Program
April 7, 1953 Aston Villa vs. West Bromwich Albion Program
FA Cup March 26, 1955 Manchester City vs. Sunderland Program
English football December 15, 2013 Aston Villa vs. Manchester United Program
August 22, 2018 Aston Villa vs. Brentford Program
March 5, 2022 Aston Villa vs. Southampton Program
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