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1 History  





2 Future  





3 Gallery  





4 References  














Sportland Arena






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Coordinates: 59°2514.7N 24°4403.2E / 59.420750°N 24.734222°E / 59.420750; 24.734222
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Sportland Arena
Map
LocationTallinn, Estonia
Coordinates59°25′14.7″N 24°44′03.2″E / 59.420750°N 24.734222°E / 59.420750; 24.734222
OwnerEstonian Football Association
Capacity1,198[1]
Field size105 × 68 m
SurfaceArtificial turf
Construction
Opened2003
Renovated2018
Tenants
TJK Legion
FC Flora (during winter)
FCI Levadia (during winter)
JK Tallinna Kalev (during winter)

Sportland Arena is an association football stadium in Tallinn, Estonia.[2] Located next to Estonia's largest stadium A. Le Coq Arena, it is part of the Lilleküla Football Complex. The stadium is named after the sporting goods retail company Sportland.

Sportland Arena is used as a home ground by TJK Legion. Due to its artificial turf surface and under-soil heating, the stadium also serves as the home ground for FC Flora, FCI Levadia and Tallinna Kalev in the winter and early spring months.

History[edit]

First opened in 2003, the stadium underwent renovation for the 2018 season, for which a 1,198-seat grandstand was constructed on the south side of the ground.[3] The stadium was also awarded the FIFA Quality Pro certificate, which is the highest quality standard for artificial turf football fields.[4]

The start of the 2022 Premium Liiga season saw Sportland Arena used as a home ground by 5 out of the 10 Estonian top-flight teams (Flora, Levadia, Kalju, Kalev, Legion), which resulted in 23 out of the first 45 matches being held in one stadium.[5] In total, Sportland Arena hosted 51 Premium Liiga matches during the 2022 season, meaning 28% of the whole league campaign was played in this stadium.[6] This received heavy criticism by the Estonian football community, who mockingly suggested the league to be renamed as "Sportland Arena Liiga".[6]

Future[edit]

The future of Sportland Arena will see the stadium have a capacity of 4,500, so it would be eligible for the UEFA Stadium Category 3 certificate and would thus be able to host international matches.[3] The south stand was constructed in 2018 and the remaining three stands are to be completed by 2025.[7]

Gallery[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Sportland Arena".
  • ^ "Sportland Arena - ESR". www.spordiregister.ee. Retrieved 2023-01-24.
  • ^ a b Elissaar, Kasper (2017-08-31). "Fotod: järgmise hooaja alguseks võib valmida Sportland Arena uus tribüün". Soccernet.ee - Jalgpall luubi all!. Retrieved 2023-01-24.
  • ^ "Sportland Arena kunstmurustaadion teenis taas FIFA kõrgeima sertifikaadi". Sportland Magazine (in Estonian). 2020-08-28. Retrieved 2023-01-24.
  • ^ "Premium liiga". jalgpall.ee (in Estonian). Retrieved 2023-01-24.
  • ^ a b Heli, Heiti (2022-11-11). "Premium liiga suurimad üllatused ja pettumused 2022". Soccernet.ee - Jalgpall luubi all!. Retrieved 2023-01-24.
  • ^ https://www.jalgpall.ee/docs/EJL%20Arengukava%202021-2025_landscape.pdf

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sportland_Arena&oldid=1135476815"

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    This page was last edited on 24 January 2023, at 22:25 (UTC).

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