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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  





2 Access  



2.1  Rail transit  





2.2  Osaka City Bus  







3 See also  





4 References  





5 External links  














Nagai Stadium






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Coordinates: 34°3650.83N 135°316.42E / 34.6141194°N 135.5184500°E / 34.6141194; 135.5184500
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Nagai Stadium
Map
Former namesOsaka Nagai Stadium (1964–2014)
LocationNagai Park, Higashisumiyoshi-ku, Osaka, Japan
Coordinates34°36′50.83″N 135°31′6.42″E / 34.6141194°N 135.5184500°E / 34.6141194; 135.5184500
Public transitWest Japan Railway CompanyJR West:
  R  Hanwa LineatNagai
Osaka Metro:
Midosuji LineatNagai
OwnerOsaka City
OperatorWaku Waku Park Project Team [1]
Capacity47,816
Field size105 x 68 m
SurfaceGrass (107 m x 71 m)
ScoreboardYes
Construction
Opened1964 (1964)
Renovated2007
Expanded1996
Tenants
Cerezo Osaka (1996–present)
Website
About Nagai Stadium (in Japanese)

Nagai Stadium (大阪市 長居陸上競技場, Ōsaka-shi Nagai Rikujō Kyōgijō) is a stadiuminOsaka, Japan. It is the home ground of J. League club Cerezo Osaka. The stadium has a seating capacity of 47,000. The rugby union club NTT DoCoMo Red Hurricanes Osaka use the venue for most of their home games.

History

[edit]

When Nagai Stadium initially opened in 1964, its capacity was 23,000, and its opening event was a football match during the 1964 Summer Olympics. The stadium's seating capacity was expanded to 50,000 in 1996 for the 52nd National Sports Festival of Japan in 1997.

The stadium hosted three matches in the 2002 FIFA World Cup.

Date Team #1 Res. Team #2 Round
12 June 2002  Nigeria 0–0  England Group F
14 June 2002  Tunisia 0–2  Japan Group H
22 June 2002  Senegal 0–1 (asdet)  Turkey Quarter-finals

Nagai Stadium has been used many times for athletic competitions; it played host to the Athletics at the 2001 East Asian Games and the 2007 World Championships in Athletics. It is also the venue for the annual Osaka Grand Prix athletics meeting which took place every May from 1996 to 2010, and again since 2018. In addition, the stadium is the starting and finishing point for the Osaka International Ladies Marathon, held annually in late January-early February.[2]

Other than sports event, this venue also used as concert venue. In 2018 Nogizaka46 held a two days concert for their Summer Tour. K-Pop girl group TWICE played at the stadium on May 13th and 14th 2023 as part of their Ready to Be World Tour, and will return to play encore dates on July 13th and 14th 2024.

Access

[edit]

Rail transit

[edit]

Osaka City Bus

[edit]
Subway Nagai
  • Route 4: Subway Suminoekoen – Subway Nagai – Deto Bus Terminal
  • Route 24: Sumiyoshi Shako-mae – Subway Nagai – Minami-Nagai
  • Route 40: Sumiyoshi Shako-mae – Subway Nagai – Deto Bus Terminal
Nagaikoen-kitaguchi
  • Route 54A: Sumiyoshi Shako-mae → Subway Abiko → Takaai Danchi-mae → Nagaikoen-kitaguchi → Subway Nishitanabe → Furitsu Sogo-iryo-center (General Medical Center) → Sumiyoshi Shako-mae
  • Route 54B: Sumiyoshi Shako-mae → Furitsu Sogo-iryo-center (General Medical Center) → Subway Nishitanabe → Nagaikoen-kitaguchi → Takaai Danchi-mae → Subway Abiko → Sumiyoshi Shako-mae

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Jain, Chelsi. "Osaka Nagai Park Management Project Launched to Enhance Appeal through Food, Sports, Art, and Learning". Yanmar.
  • ^ Nakamura, Ken (2001-05-25). Day One of the East Asian Games. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-02-28.
  • [edit]
    Preceded by

    Busan Gudeok Stadium
    Busan

    East Asian Games Football tournament
    Final Venue

    2001
    Succeeded by

    Estádio Campo Desportivo
    Macau

    Preceded by

    Busan Gudeok Stadium
    Busan

    East Asian Games Athletics competitions
    Main Venue

    2001
    Succeeded by

    Estádio Campo Desportivo
    Macau

    Preceded by

    Koshien Stadium

    Site of the
    Koshien Bowl

    2007, 2008
    Succeeded by

    Koshien Stadium


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Nagai_Stadium&oldid=1233127256"

    Categories: 
    Athletics (track and field) venues in Japan
    2002 FIFA World Cup stadiums in Japan
    Football venues in Japan
    Rugby union stadiums in Japan
    Sports venues in Osaka
    Higashisumiyoshi-ku, Osaka
    2007 World Championships in Athletics
    College football venues
    Venues of the 1964 Summer Olympics
    Olympic football venues
    Cerezo Osaka
    American football venues in Japan
    1964 establishments in Japan
    Sports venues completed in 1964
    Hidden categories: 
    Pages using gadget WikiMiniAtlas
    Articles with short description
    Short description matches Wikidata
    Coordinates on Wikidata
    Articles with Japanese-language sources (ja)
    Articles containing Japanese-language text
    Commons category link from Wikidata
    Articles with StadiumDB identifiers
    Pages using the Kartographer extension
     



    This page was last edited on 7 July 2024, at 11:57 (UTC).

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