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  1. Stadio Diego Armando Maradona, formerly known as Stadio San Paolo, [1] [2] is a stadium in the western Fuorigrotta suburb of Naples, Italy. It is the fourth largest football stadium in Italy, [3] after Milan 's San Siro, Rome 's Stadio Olimpico and Bari 's San Nicola. For the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome, the stadium hosted the football ...

    • Carlo Cocchia, Luigi Corradi
    • Comune di Napoli
    • 1948–1959
  2. Napoli’s Diego Armando Maradona (ex San Paolo) Stadium, inaugurated in 1959, is the third largest in Italy, after Milan’s Meazza Stadium and Rome’s Olimpico. Situated in the Fuorigrotta neighbourhood, it measures 110 by 68 meters. It was remodelled for the 1980 European Championship and again for the World Cup hosted by Italy in 1990 ...

  3. A New Temple for Napoli Fans has Opened. With minor construction delays just finished before the deadline of 14 September 2019, for the clash between S.S.C. Napoli and Sampdoria, Napoli came out as champions in their new revitalised Stadio San Paolo. This stadium is in the western suburb of Fuorigrotta in Naples, Italy.

  4. Lo stadio Diego Armando Maradona è un impianto sportivo polivalente italiano di Napoli . Di proprietà comunale, sorge a Fuorigrotta, quartiere della X Municipalità. Dotato di palestre polifunzionali, spazi per le arti marziali e di un campo da pallacanestro, ospita fin dall'inaugurazione gli incontri calcistici interni del Napoli .

    • 6 dicembre 1959
    • Italia
    • 27 aprile 1952
    • via Jacopo de Gennaro, 80125 Napoli
  5. www.stadiumjourney.com › stadiums › stadio-san-paoloStadio San Paolo – SSC Napoli

    The Azzurri. Stadio San Paolo is the largest sports facility in the city of Naples. For seven years, from 1984-1991, one of the greatest soccer players of the twentieth century, Diego Maradona, was seen on the playing field of El Pibe de Oro. San Paolo Stadium is located in the Fuorigrotta neighborhood, in the western and most populous part of ...

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  7. Mar 22, 2021 · Inaugurated in 1959 to a crowd of 90,000 standing spectators who bore witness to a game against the old enemy Juventus, which ended 2-1 for the Azzurri, Stadio San Paolo has undergone many changes. The third-largest ground in the country, now it holds 54,726, San Paolo has been at the forefront of Italian football for the best part of sixty years.

  8. Sep 4, 2021 · Stadio San Paolo home of Napoli is the third largest football stadium in Italy with a capacity of 60,240 after the San Siro and the Stadio Olimpico in Rome. The ground is famous for hosting the 1990 world cup semi final between Italy and Argentina where Napoli legend Diego Maradona scored the winning penalty for his country. Napoli Stadium Guide

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