The Obafemi Awolowo Stadium in Ibadan, Nigeria, originally known as Liberty Stadium until 2010 is a football stadium with a capacity of 25,000 seats. It is located at Liberty road, Ring Road [1]
Full name | Obafemi Awolowo Stadium |
---|---|
Former names | Liberty Stadium |
Address | Ibadan 7°21′58″N 3°52′27″E / 7.366031°N 3.874151°E |
Capacity | 25,000 |
Opened | 1960 |
History
editConstruction
editThe stadium was opened in 1960[2] during the tenure of Chief Obafemi Awolowo who was serving as the Premier of the Western Region at the time. It was named Liberty Stadium in honor of Nigeria's independence. Constructed by direct labour under the supervision of the regional Ministry of Works and Transport, the stadium was the central location of sports in the old Western region of Nigeria. It was sited at the southern end of Ibadan in 1960 near the summit of a hill, and located close to a bypass that leads to the Ibadan-Abeokuta and Ibadan-Lagos roads.[3]
At its inception, besides the football pitch in the main bowl with floodlights, the stadium boasted the indoor sports halls, swimming pool, courts for tennis, volleyball, handball, basketball, hockey, etc.[4]
Boxing
editOn August 10, 1963, the stadium hosted the first ever boxing world title fight in Africa. The match was initially slated for July 13, 1963. This was for the Middleweight Championship of the World belt and was fought between Nigeria's own Dick Tiger and Gene Fullmer of the US.
African Cup of Nations
editIn 1980, the stadium hosted several matches during the African Cup of Nations, including a semi-final between Algeria and Egypt.
FIFA World Youth Championship
editIn 1999, the Liberty Stadium was selected along with eight other stadiums in Nigeria to host the 1999 FIFA World Youth Championship.[5] The stadium hosted all of the Group C matches, one of the Round of 16 matches, and one of the quarter-final matches.
Renaming
editOn November 12, 2010, the stadium was renamed as the Obafemi Awolowo Stadium.[6] The renaming of the stadium was announced by the then Nigerian president, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, when he visited Chief Obafemi Awolowo's widow, Chief (Mrs.) Hannah Awolowo.[7]
Notable football events
editDate | Team 1 | Result | Team 2 | Round |
---|---|---|---|---|
9 March 1980 | Ghana | 0–0 | Algeria | Group B |
Morocco | 1–1 | Guinea | ||
13 March 1980 | Algeria | 1–0 | Morocco | |
Ghana | 1–0 | Guinea | ||
16 March 1980 | Algeria | 3–2 | Guinea | |
Morocco | 1–0 | Ghana | ||
19 March 1980 | Algeria | 2–2 (4–2 p) | Egypt | Semi-final |
Date | Team 1 | Result | Team 2 | Attendance | Round |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
4 April 1999 | Australia | 3–1 | Saudi Arabia | 2,000 | Group C |
Mexico | 1–0 | Republic of Ireland | 3,000 | ||
7 April 1999 | Australia | 1–3 | Mexico | 500 | |
Saudi Arabia | 0–2 | Republic of Ireland | 1,000 | ||
10 April 1999 | Australia | 0–4 | Republic of Ireland | 800 | |
Saudi Arabia | 1–1 | Mexico | 2,000 | ||
15 April 1999 | Mexico | 4–1 | Argentina | 16,000 | Round of 16 |
18 April 1999 | Japan | 2–0 | Mexico | 17,000 | Quarter-final |
References
edit- ^ "Liberty Stadium Ibadan | The Liberty Stadium now renamed Oba… | Flickr".
- ^ Wolfgang F. Stolper, Clive S. Gray (2003). Inside Independent Nigeria: Diaries of Wolfgang Stolper, 1960-1962. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. ISBN 0-7546-0995-2.
- ^ "The Liberty Stadium at Ibadan Nigeria". West African Builder and Architect: 2–4. 1963.
- ^ "When will Nigeria's first, Obafemi Awolowo Stadium come back to life?". Archived from the original on 2018-01-01.
- ^ Ajimotokan, Olawale (22 April 2012). "World Cup Venue: Crowd Attitude Counts against Ibadan". This Day Live. Retrieved 18 June 2012.
- ^ Awolowo Stadium At last Archived 2010-12-27 at the Wayback Machine, Nigerian Tribune, November 23, 2010.
- ^ "Jonathan Renames Liberty Stadium in Ibadan after Awolowo". The African Examiner. 14 November 2010. Archived from the original on 7 January 2011. Retrieved 18 June 2012.
External links
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