Estadio El Collao

Last updated
El Collao Stadium
El Collao Stadium.jpg
Estadio El Collao
Full nameEstadio El Collao
LocationCalle Oliver s/n
03802 Alcoy, Spain
Coordinates 38°41′27.52″N0°29′24.93″W / 38.6909778°N 0.4902583°W / 38.6909778; -0.4902583
Operator CD Alcoyano
Capacity 3,371 [1]
Field size102 m × 65 m (335 ft × 213 ft)
Surfacegrass
Construction
Built1921
Opened28 August 1921

El Collao Stadium is located on Calle Oliver in the city of Alcoy (Alicante), Spain. It is the ground of CD Alcoyano with a capacity of 3,371 spectators. [1] The stadium was inaugurated on August 28, 1921.

This stadium has hosted matches of the 1st division, 2nd division, 2nd division B, 3rd division, and regional levels. The pitch has a dimensions of 102 x 63 meters.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Real Avilés CF</span> Association football club in Spain

Real Avilés Club de Fútbol is a Spanish football team based in Avilés, in the autonomous community of Asturias. Founded in 1903 it plays in Segunda Federación – Group 1, holding home matches at Estadio Román Suárez Puerta, with an approximate capacity of 5,400 seats.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Real Unión</span> Spanish football club

Real Unión Club, S.A.D. is a Spanish football club based in Irun, in the autonomous community of the Basque Country, in the province of Gipuzkoa, near the border with France. Founded on 15 May 1915 it currently plays in Primera División RFEF – Group 2, holding home matches at the 5,000-seater Stadium Gal. Real Unión was one of the founding members of La Liga in 1929. The club spent four seasons in the Spanish elite, suffering relegation in 1932. Real is yet to return to the top tier, spending the rest of its history bouncing between the second and fourth tiers of Spanish football.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Primera División de Futsal</span> Football league

The Primera División is the premier professional futsal league in Spain. It was founded in 1989 with the name of División de Honor. Administered by Liga Nacional de Fútbol Sala, it is contested by 16 teams and is played under UEFA rules.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Arosa SC</span> Association football club in Spain

Arosa Sociedad Cultural is a Spanish football team based in Vilagarcía de Arousa, in the autonomous community of Galicia. Founded in 1945, it plays in Tercera Federación – Group 1, holding home games at Estadio A Lomba, with a capacity of 5,000 seats.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">FC Andorra</span> Andorran club associated with the Spanish football league system

Futbol Club Andorra is a professional football club based in Andorra la Vella, Andorra, that currently competes in Segunda División, the second tier of the Spanish league system. The club was founded in 1942 and currently plays its home fixtures at Estadi Nacional. In spite of being based in the microstate of Andorra, the club, voluntarily affiliated to the Catalan Football Federation, has been allowed to compete in Spanish leagues since 1948.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">CD Marino</span> Football club

Club Deportivo Marino Playa de Las Américas, known simply as CD Marino, is a semi-professional Spanish football club based in Playa de Las Américas, Tenerife, in the autonomous community of the Canary Islands.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Salamanca CF UDS</span> Spanish football team

Salamanca Club de Fútbol UDS, previously known as CF Salmantino, is a Spanish football team based in Salamanca, in the autonomous community of Castile and León. Founded in 2013 after the dissolution of UD Salamanca, it currently plays in Tercera Federación – Group 8, holding home games at the Estadio Helmántico with a 17,341-seat capacity.

The 2013 Segunda División B play-offs were the final playoffs for promotion from 2012–13 Segunda División B to the 2013–14 Segunda División. The four first placed teams in each of the four Segunda División B groups played the Playoffs de Ascenso and the four last placed teams in Segunda División were relegated to Segunda División B. It also decided the three teams which placed 16th to be relegated to the 2013–14 Tercera División.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2015 Copa del Rey final</span> Match on 30 May 2015 to decide the winner of the 2014–15 Copa del Rey

The 2015 Copa del Rey final was an association football match on 30 May 2015 to decide the winner of the 2014–15 Copa del Rey, the 113th edition of Spain's premier football cup since its establishment.

The 2016–17 Copa del Rey was the 115th staging of the Copa del Rey.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2018–19 Copa del Rey</span> Football tournament season

The 2018–19 Copa del Rey was the 117th staging of the Copa del Rey. The winners were assured a place in the 2019–20 UEFA Europa League group stage, and both they and the runners-up automatically qualified for the four-team 2019–20 Supercopa de España.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gonzalo Collao</span> Chilean footballer (born 1997)

Gonzalo Antonio Collao Villegas is a Chilean professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper.

The 2019–20 Segunda División B season was the 43rd since its establishment. Eighty teams participated, distributed in four groups of twenty clubs each. On 11 March 2020, the season of Segunda División B was suspended due to the coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic in Spain.

The 2019–20 Copa del Rey was the 118th staging of the Copa del Rey. In its original format, the winners were assured a place in the 2020–21 UEFA Europa League group stage, however this place was forfeited under the extraordinary circumstances of the COVID-19 pandemic in Spain, with the two finalists opting instead to delay the date of the postponed match. Both finalists qualified for the four-team 2020–21 Supercopa de España.

The 2020 Tercera División play-offs to Segunda División B from Tercera División were the final playoffs for the promotion from 2019–20 Tercera División to 2020–21 Segunda División B. The first four teams in each group took part in the play-off.

The 2020–21 Segunda División B season was the 44th since its establishment and the last as the third tier. A total of 102 teams participated, and were distributed in three groups of 20 teams each and two groups of 21, with eight subgroups of ten teams each and two with eleven teams each.

The 2021–22 Primera División RFEF season was the first and the only season under the name Primera División RFEF, the new third highest level in the Spanish football league system. It succeeded the old Segunda División B, which renamed itself Segunda División RFEF and downgraded to the fourth level in the pyramid. Forty teams participated, divided into two groups of twenty clubs each based on geographical proximity. In each group, the champions automatically promoted to Segunda División and the second to fifth placers played promotion play-offs and the bottom five were relegated to the Segunda División RFEF.

The 2021–22 Copa del Rey was the 120th staging of the Copa del Rey. The winners were assured a place in the 2022–23 UEFA Europa League group stage. Both the winners and the runners-up qualified for the four-team 2022–23 Supercopa de España.

The 2022–23 Copa del Rey was the 121st staging of the Copa del Rey, the oldest official football competition in Spain. The winners of the competition would have automatically qualified for the 2023–24 UEFA Europa League group stage; however, as Real Madrid had already qualified for European competition via league standings, their place was passed down to the sixth-placed team in La Liga and the UEFA Europa Conference League spot reserved for the sixth-placed team was awarded to the team who finished seventh in the league. Both the winners and runners-up qualified for the four-team 2023–24 Supercopa de España.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2022–23 Primera Federación</span> Football league season

The 2022–23 Primera Federación season was the second season for the Primera Federación, the third highest level in the Spanish football league system. Forty teams participated, divided into two groups of twenty clubs each based on geographical proximity. In each group, the champions were automatically promoted to Segunda División, while the second to fifth placers played the promotion play-offs and the bottom five were relegated to the Segunda Federación.

References

  1. 1 2 "CIRCULAR N.º 124 PLAY OFF DE ASCENSO A PRIMERA RFEF Y TORNEO PORLA PERMANENCIA EN SEGUNDA RFEF" (in Spanish). Royal Spanish Football Federation. 11 May 2022. Retrieved 7 December 2023.