Stadium Name: | Chevron Stadium Tijuana |
Nickname: | Cerro Colorado Stadium |
Fullname: | Estadio Chevron |
Location: | Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico |
Coordinates: | 32.4832°N -116.9175°W |
Opened: | 1976 |
Renovated: | 2004 |
Expanded: | 2006 |
Surface: | Grass |
Former Names: | Estadio Nacional de Tijuana Estadio de Beisbol Calimax Estadio Gasmart |
Tenants: | Potros de Tijuana (Mexican Pacific League, 1977-1991) Toros de Tijuana (Liga Mexicana de Béisbol, 2004) Potros de Tijuana (Liga Mexicana de Béisbol, 2005-2008) Tijuana Cimarrones (Golden Baseball League, 2010) Toros de Tijuana (Liga Norte de Mexico) (2013) Toros de Tijuana (Liga Mexicana de Béisbol) (2014-Present) |
Seating Capacity: | 17,000[1] |
The Tijuana National Stadium (Spanish: Estadio Nacional de Tijuana), also known as Stadium of the Bulls of Tijuana (Estadio de los Toros de Tijuana), is a baseball stadium located in Tijuana, Baja California, in Mexico with a capacity of 17,000, all seated. It was built in 1976 with a capacity of 14,000 and named Cerro Colorado Stadium (Estadio Cerro Colorado), after a supermarket chain based in Baja California. It was expanded in 2006 to its current capacity of 17,000. It is currently known as Chevron Stadium Tijuana (Estadio Chevron) for commercial reasons, and was formerly known as Calimax Baseball Stadium (Estadio de Beisbol Calimax) and Gasmart Stadium (Estadio Gasmart).
The stadium was inaugurated on October 12, 1977 with a game between the Potros de Tijuana and the Águilas de Mexicali of the Mexican Pacific League. In 2004, professional baseball returned, now with a Mexican Baseball League franchise under the name "Toros de Tijuana". The following year would change its name to "Potros de Tijuana", as they were known in their previous iterations and would be from 2005 to 2008. It played host to the Tijuana Cimarrones of the Golden Baseball League for one season in 2010.[2] Most recently, it has been hosting the second iteration of the Toros de Tijuana, members of the Liga Norte de México (League of Northern Mexico). This iteration of the Toros de Tijuana would join the Mexican Baseball Leagues in 2014.
Tijuana National Stadium has also been the site of several México Second Division (second division) and México Third Division football clubs in the Mexican League System, such as Inter de Tijuana, Chivas Tijuana, and Nacional Tijuana.