NACK5 Stadium Omiya

Football stadium

35°54′59″N 139°38′00″E / 35.916303°N 139.633377°E / 35.916303; 139.633377Public transitTobu Railway:
TDTobu Urban Park Line at Omiya-KoenOwnerSaitama CityOperatorSaitama City Park AssociationCapacity15,500Field size105 x 68 mSurfaceGrassConstructionOpened1960Renovated1995Expanded2007TenantsOmiya Ardija

NACK5 Stadium Omiya (ナックファイブスタジアム大宮, Nakku-faibu Sutajiamu Ōmiya) is a football stadium located in Ōmiya-ku, Saitama, Japan. It is the home stadium of J2 League club Omiya Ardija.

It was formerly known as Omiya Football Stadium. Since 14 May 2007 it has been called NACK5 Stadium Omiya (ナックファイブスタジアム大宮, Nakku-faibu Sutajiamu Ōmiya) for the naming rights.

History

Built in 1960, it was one of the first stadia in Japan dedicated to the code. The grandstands were added to host several matches of 1964 Summer Olympics and 1967 National Sports Festival of Japan. The stadium used to accommodate 12,500 spectators.

In 2006-2007 it was closed for expansion works to meet the J. League Division 1 requirements for Ardija to host its home matches. Ardija used Saitama Stadium 2002 and Urawa Komaba Stadium until works were complete.

From 14 May 2007 it would be called NACK5 Stadium Omiya (ナックファイブスタジアム大宮, Nakku-faibu Sutajiamu Ōmiya) to reflect a six-year sponsorship from FM NACK5 (エフエムナックファイブ, Efu Emu Nakku-Faibu) (JODV-FM, 79.5 MHz), an independent commercial radio station based in Ōmiya-ku and covering Saitama Prefecture.

The expansion works were complete in October 2007 and since it accommodates 15,500 spectators.

On 11 November, the re-opening match was held as a J. League season match between the Ardija and Oita Trinita (1-2).

A fun fact about the stadium is that this is the venue for the High School National Championships on the football manga-anime "Captain Tsubasa"

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Omiya Park Soccer Stadium.
  • 1964 Summer Olympics official report. Volume 1. Part 1. p. 133.
  • Omiya Ardija stadium

External links

  • Official website
  • FM NACK5
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Omiya Ardija
Saitama, Saitama
Club
Stadium
Rivalries
J.League
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Training ground
Website: www.ardija.co.jp
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2024 J2 League venues
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1890s
1900s
1910s
1920s
1930s
1936
Hertha-BSC Field, Mommsenstadion, Olympiastadion (final), Poststadion
1940s
1950s
1960s
1970s
1972
Dreiflüssestadion, ESV-Stadion, Jahnstadion, Olympiastadion (final), Rosenaustadion, Urban Stadium
1976
Lansdowne Park, Olympic Stadium (final), Sherbrooke Stadium, Varsity Stadium
1980s
1990s
2000s
2010s
2020s
2030s
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