Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The 20,000-capacity New Clark City Athletics Stadium. The 20,000-capacity Philippine Sports Stadium in Ciudad de Victoria. The 12,873-capacity Rizal Memorial Stadium, which opened in 1934, is the home of the Philippines national football team. The 6,000-capacity stadium at the Cauayan City Sports Complex. The 2,000-capacity McKinley Hill Stadium.
2,000. Former home arena of the San Juan Knights of the now-defunct Metropolitan Basketball Association. Hagonoy Sports Complex. Taguig. 2,000. Former home arena of the Taguig Generals of the National Basketball League (Philippines). Amoranto Sports Complex Basketball Court. Quezon City. 2,000.
Since the first season of the Philippines Football League, league matches have been played in 11 stadiums from as far north as Bantay in Ilocos Sur and as far south as Tagum in Davao del Norte. While matches of the original United Football League were only played in Metro Manila due to the status of the league, the establishment of the PFL in ...
The Philippine Sports Stadium, also known as Iglesia ni Cristo Stadium, is a football and track stadium at Ciudad de Victoria, a 140-hectare (350-acre) tourism enterprise zone in the towns of Bocaue and Santa Maria, Bulacan, Philippines. [2] The stadium was built right next to the Philippine Arena, the world's largest indoor arena. [3]
In July 2014, the Philippine Sports Stadium and the Philippine Arena opened in Santa Maria and Bocaue, Bulacan. They are the largest football stadium and indoor arena in the Philippines which served as the venue for some of the 2015 AFC Cup group stage matches and the first Philippine Basketball Association games for the 2014–15 season .
B. Barotac Nuevo Plaza Field. Biñan Football Stadium. Binirayan Sports Complex. Bukidnon Sports and Cultural Complex. Butuan Polysports Complex.
The Philippine Arena is the world's largest indoor arena. [8] It is a multipurpose indoor arena with a maximum seating capacity of 55,000 at Ciudad de Victoria, a 140-hectare (350-acre) tourism enterprise zone in Bocaue and Santa Maria, Bulacan, Philippines [9] about 30 kilometers (19 mi) north of Manila.
The Rizal Memorial Track and Football Stadium (simply known as the Rizal Memorial Stadium; officially the Simeon Toribio Track Stadium) [3] is the main stadium of the Rizal Memorial Sports Complex in Manila, Philippines. It served as the main stadium of the 1954 Asian Games and the Southeast Asian Games on three occasions.