The Stade de France is a football stadium in Saint-Denis, France, an inner suburb of Paris.
The Stade de France is the national stadium of France, built for the 1998 FIFA World Cup. It hosted France's greatest sporting triumph to date—the 3-0 victory over Brazil in the World Cup final on July 12, 1998. This was the first time that the France has won the World Cup, as well as the first time in twenty years that a host nation had captured the title.
The stadium's owner and operator, Consortium Stade de France, asserts registered trademark status for the name Stade de France.
However, recent developments make it conceivable that Stade de France may eventually gain a semi-regular tenant. The Paris rugby club Stade Français gambled on scheduling their TOP 14 home fixture on 15 October 2005 against Toulouse at Stade de France. Stade Français' president, Max Guazzini, publicly said that the club would have to sell 25,000 to 30,000 tickets to break even. Three weeks before the match, 61,000 tickets had been sold, setting a French record for tickets sold to a league match for any sport, including football. The final attendance was 79,454, smashing the national attendance record for a league match in any sport by more than 20,000. Biarritz in March 2006 would also be held at Stade de France. [http://www.planet-rugby.com/Tournaments/Top_14/story_46763.shtml" target="_blank" >* The Stade-Biarritz match broke the attendance record from earlier in the season, with 79,604 present.
Even with the lack of a regular league tenant, the stadium will see a large revenue increase as it will be used extensively during the highly anticipated 2007 Rugby World Cup in France where it will host numerous pool matches, a quarterfinal match, both of the semi finals and the final.
The Lille OSC football team played all its "home" games in European competition during the 2005-06 season, both in the UEFA Champions League and the UEFA Cup, at Stade de France because its own stadium was then under renovation, and the only nearer alternative on French soil, Stade Félix Bollaert, was not available as that ground's occupant, Lille's local rival Lens, was also participating in the UEFA Cup. Stade de France hosted the 2005-2006 UEFA Champions League Final, which was won 2-1 by FC Barcelona over Arsenal.
Athletics (track and field) venues | FIFA World Cup stadiums | Football venues in France | Rugby union stadiums in France | Seine-Saint-Denis | Sports venues in Paris | UEFA 5 star stadiums
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