Camp Nou
Football stadium in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
Spotify Camp Nou is a football stadium used by FC Barcelona that was opened in 1957. It can hold 99,354 people, making it the largest stadium in Europe and the second largest football stadium in the world.[1]
The stadium was used to host the 1982 FIFA World Cup and the 1992 Summer Olympics. It also hosted the 1999 UEFA Champions League Final between Manchester United and Bayern Munich.

FC Barcelona fans show their colours at Spotify Camp Nou.
Matches hostedEdit
European Competition FinalsEdit
Competition | Season | Winner | Score | Runner-Up |
---|---|---|---|---|
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup | 1971-72 | Rangers | 3-2 | Dynamo Moscow |
1981-82 | Barcelona | 2-1 | Standard Liège | |
European Cup | 1988-89 | AC Milan | 4-0 | Steaua București |
UEFA Champions League | 1998-99 | Manchester United | 2-1 | Bayern Munich |
European Super Cups/UEFA Super CupsEdit
Competition | Season | Home Team | Score | Away Team | Match Leg |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
European Super Cup | 1979 | Barcelona | 1-1 | Nottingham Forest | Second Leg |
1982 | Barcelona | 1-0 | Aston Villa | First Leg | |
1989 | Barcelona | 1-1 | AC Milan | First Leg | |
1992 | Barcelona | 2-1 | Werder Bremen | Second Leg | |
UEFA Super Cup | 1997 | Barcelona | 2-0 | Borussia Dortmund | First Leg |
International CompetitionsEdit
Competition | Match | Winner | Score | Loser |
---|---|---|---|---|
1964 European Championship | Semi-Finals | Soviet Union | 3-0 | Denmark |
3rd Place Match | Hungary | 3-1 (a.e.t.) |
Denmark | |
1982 FIFA World Cup | First Group Stage (Group 3) |
Belgium | 1-0 | Argentina |
Second Group Stage (Group B) |
Poland | 3-0 | Belgium | |
Soviet Union | 1-0 | Belgium | ||
Soviet Union | 0-0 | Poland | ||
Semi-Finals | Italy | 3-0 | Poland |
Football at the 1992 Summer OlympicsEdit
Match | Winner | Score | Loser |
---|---|---|---|
Group A | Italy | 2-1 | United States |
Group C | Sweden | 0-0 | Paraguay |
Sweden | 1-1 | South Korea | |
Quarter-Finals | Poland | 2-0 | Qatar |
Australia | 2-1 | Sweden | |
Semi-Finals | Poland | 6-1 | Australia |
Bronze Medal Match | Ghana | 1-0 | Australia |
Gold Medal Match | Spain | 3-2 | Poland |
GalleryEdit
The stadium during the opening ceremony of the 1999 UEFA Champions League Final.
ReferencesEdit
- ↑ "Camp Nou - Barcelona - The Stadium Guide". Retrieved 2019-12-13.