Estadio Alvear y Tagle

The Estadio Alvear y Tagle was a stadium in Buenos Aires, Argentina. The venue had a capacity for 40,000 spectators and was located on Alvear (now Del Libertador Avenue and Tagle street), in the Recoleta district. Opened in 1923, it was rented and operated by Club Atlético River Plate,[1] being used as its home venue until the club inaugurated the Estadio Monumental in 1938.[2]

Estadio Alvear y Tagle
Aerial view of the stadium, c. 1932
Map
AddressAlvear Avenue and Tagle, Buenos Aires
Coordinates34°34′55″S 58°23′49″W / 34.582°S 58.397°W / -34.582; -58.397
OwnerBA Pacific Railway
OperatorC.A. River Plate
Capacity50,000
SurfaceGrass
Construction
Opened20 May 1923
Closed1937
Demolished1938; 86 years ago (1938)
ArchitectBernardo Messina
Tenants

History

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In 1922, Club Atlético River Plate signed a contract with British company Buenos Aires and Pacific Railway to rent a land in Recoleta district. The contract was for a period of 5 years, for m$n 500 per month. The purpose was to build a stadium to host River Plate home football matches.[3]

The stadium was built and inaugurated in 1923 to serve as home venue for Club Atlético River Plate football team. The official grandstand, built on Alvear avenue, had 120 meters long. Under the grandstands, there were first aid room, hair saloon, sports clothing for club's members and a party hall. [3]

In May 1923, the stadium was officially inaugurated in occasion of a friendly match between local host River Plate and Uruguayan club Peñarol. In June 1923, Scottish club Third Lanark played at River Plate stadium six games of their tour on South America.[4] Then President of Argentina, Marcelo T. de Alvear, attended the Third Lanark v. Asociación Amateurs combined match on June 24, 1923.

The first official match played by River Plate in that stadium was on July 22, 1923, v. Vélez Sársfield. River Plate won by 2–1. The venue also hosted the Campeonato Argentino final stage. It was a competition played by Argentine provincial sides. In December 1923, boxer Luis Ángel Firpo made an exhibition fight v. Joe Boykin.[5][6]

In August 1924 and May 1925, the Asociación Amateurs combined played Federación Uruguaya de Football. Both teams were representatives of dissident associations of both countries. The stadium would be refurbished later, extending its capacity to near 50,000 spectators.

The stadium was the venue for several football matches during the tours made by European teams at the end of the 1920s. Some of them were Spanish clubs Real Madrid (which played their first game v. the Argentina national team) and Barcelona[7] Scottish Motherwell F.C. (one of several British clubs that toured on South America),[4] Hungarian Ferencváros and Italian Torino.[7]

River Plate was also one of two stadiums that hosted the 1929 Copa América. The 1929 Primera División playoff match between Boca Juniors and Gimnasia y Esgrima de La Plata was also played in River Plate. In 1930, Yugoslavia became the first European national side that played at the venue, facing the Argentine side on August 3.

The club expanded their facilities around the stadium. Other sports include tennis, basketball and volleyball courts and a swimming pool. In 1936 the club installed a lighting system in the stadium, supported on six metallic towers. Nevertheless, the increase of popularity of football in Argentina forced River Plate to build a new stadium with higher capacity. The last game played there was on December 5, 1937, v. San Lorenzo de Almagro. The following year the stadium would be dismantled and the land became a public park. Part of the grandstand structures (made in wood) were sold to Club Almagro and placed in the stadium the club owned on Fraga and Estomba streets.[8]

References

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  1. ^ El Monumental on FIFA website
  2. ^ River, sus comienzos y sus estadios Archived 2014-12-19 at the Wayback Machine on La Nación
  3. ^ a b Estadio Alvear y Tagle on Viejos Estadios website
  4. ^ a b British and Irish Clubs - Overseas Tours 1890-1939 by Javier García on RSSSF
  5. ^ Sport: Bull's Meat at Time magazine, 3 Mar 1924
  6. ^ Boxeo, espectáculo y deporte. Hacia la construcción de una institucionalidad pugilística en la Buenos Aires de los años veinte by María Ullivarri, Anuario del Instituto de Historia Argentina, May-Oct 2020, vol. 20, n° 1, e113. ISSN 2314-257X
  7. ^ a b European Clubs in Argentina and Uruguay (1914-1935) by Sergio Hernández on RSSSF
  8. ^ David Goldblatt; World Soccer Yearbook; 2002 ISBN 0-7894-8943-0
Preceded by Campeonato Sudamericano
Venue

1929
Succeeded by
Preceded by Campeonato Sudamericano
Venue

1937
Succeeded by