Estádio Moça Bonita Explained

Stadium Name:Estádio Proletário Guilherme da Silveira Filho
Nickname:Estádio Moça Bonita
Fullname:Estádio Proletário Guilherme da Silveira Filho
Location:Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil
Opened:November 17, 1947
Owner:Fábrica Bangu
Operator:Bangu Atlético Clube
Surface:Grass
Tenants:Bangu Atlético Clube
Clube Atlético Castelo Branco
Seating Capacity:9,024

The Estádio Proletário Guilherme da Silveira Filho, but usually known as Estádio Moça Bonita is a football stadium inaugurated in 1947 in Bangu neighborhood, Rio de Janeiro, state of Rio de Janeiro, with a maximum capacity of 9,564 people.[1]

Estádio Moça Bonita is owned by Fábrica Bangu. It hosts the games of Bangu Atlético Clube and Clube Atlético Castelo Branco. The stadium is named after Guilherme da Silveira Filho, who was Bangu's president during the stadium construction. The nickname Moça Bonita means Pretty Girl.

History

In 1947, the works on Moça Bonita were completed. It was inaugurated on November 17 of that year, but the inaugural match was played only on December 12, when Flamengo beat Bangu 4–2. The first goal of the stadium was scored by Flamengo's Joel Rezende.

The stadium's attendance record currently stands at 17,000, set on July 3, 1948 when Bangu and Fluminense drew 1-1.

On April 20, 1980, Palmeiras beat Bangu 1–0. The match's attendance was 16,779 people, much higher than the current capacity.

References

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: CNEF - Cadastro Nacional de Estádios de Futebol . . September 28, 2011 . Portuguese . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130510210022/http://www.cbf.com.br/cnef/cnef.pdf . May 10, 2013 .