Stadium Name: | Yokohama Stadium |
Native Name: | 横浜スタジアム |
Native Name Lang: | ja |
Former Names: | Lou Gehrig Stadium |
Logo Image: | Yokohamastadiumlogo.png |
Address: | Yokohama Park, Naka-ku |
Location: | Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan |
Broke Ground: | April 1977 |
Opened: | April 4, 1978 |
Renovated: | March 2007 |
Owner: | Yokohama City |
Operator: | Yokohama Stadium, Ltd. |
Surface: | FieldTurf (since 2003) |
Construction Cost: | 4,800,000,000 yen |
Publictransit: | Yokohama Municipal Subway
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Tenants: | Yokohama DeNA BayStars (NPB) (1978–present) Japan Bowl (1980–91) |
Seating Capacity: | 20,000 (Football) 34,046 (Baseball) |
Dimensions: | Left/right field – 94 m (308.4 ft) Left/right-center – 111.4 m (366 ft) Center Field – 118 m (387.1 ft) Height of Outfield Fence – 5 m (16.4 ft) |
is a baseball stadium in Naka-ku, Yokohama, Japan. It opened in 1978 and has a capacity of 34,046 people.
It is primarily used for baseball and is the home field of the Yokohama DeNA BayStars. The stadium features dirt around the bases and pitcher's mound, but with dirt colored turf infield and base paths. The entire green portion of the field is also turfed.
It hosted an Australian rules football match and drew the second largest crowd for such an event outside of Australia.[1]
Santana and Masayoshi Takanaka performed at the stadium on August 2, 1981.
Anzen Chitai performed at the stadium on August 31, 1985. The live performance titled "One Night Theater 1985" was recorded and released on VHS on December 21, 1985, and on LaserDisc and Video High Density on January 25, 1986. The performance was released on CD and DVD on August 19, 1998.
Prince performed his final shows with his backing band, The Revolution, at the stadium during his 1986 Parade Tour. The final show is known for the moment when Prince, uncharacteristically, destroys 2 guitars, including the original "cloud" guitar made for the film Purple Rain, during a final encore of "Purple Rain".
Michael Jackson performed at the stadium during his Bad World Tour in five sold-out concerts, more than any other artist in Yokohama, for a total audience of 240,000 fans (about 48,000 people per concert) on September 25, 26, and 27, 1987 and October 3–4, 1987 and the September 26 Concert was recorded and released as a bootleg VHS titled Michael Jackson Live in Japan, and is also available on YouTube in its Entirety.
Tina Turner played 4 concerts for the first time at the stadium in March 1988 during Break Every Rule Tour.
Madonna performed, on three consecutive nights, during her Blond Ambition World Tour on April 25–27, 1990. The final date was recorded and released on July 25, 1990, as a VHS and Laserdisc exclusively in Japan, titled Blond Ambition – Japan Tour 90.
Bon Jovi played 3 sold-out concerts here on their These Days tour in May 1996. The second date was broadcast on Wowow.
Luna Sea performed a Christmas concert here on December 23 as the final performance of their 1996 tour. There they announced a yearlong hiatus for the members to perform solo activities.[2] The concert was later released as the Mafuyu no Yagai DVD in 2003.
Nana Mizuki performed a concert here on August 3 as the final performance of her 2014 domestic tour, which drew a crowd of about 32,000 fans, making it the biggest local artist event ever held here.
In September 2014, ONE OK ROCK held a 2-day concert in front of a crowd of 60,000 people called "Mighty Long Fall Live at Yokohama Stadium 2014".
In March 2016, AKB48 held a 2-day concert in 3 shows for commemorate Minami Takahashi graduation.[3] [4] [5] [6] In 2019, AKB48 held spring concert on April 27[7] [8] and followed by Rino Sashihara graduation concert from HKT48 on April 28.[9] [10] [11] [12] [13]
In April 2023, Hinatazaka46 held 2-days concert for commemorate their 4th anniversary as Hinatazaka46 called "4-kaime no Hinatansai" (4回目のひな誕祭).[14] [15] [16] [17] [18]
Yokohama Stadium served as the baseball and softball venue at the 2020 Summer Olympics.
Ever since moving to Yokohama in 1978 from Tokyo, the Yokohama DeNA BayStars have called Yokohama Stadium home.