Stadion Lazur
Former names | Lazur Stadium Neftochimic Stadium Naftex Stadium |
---|---|
Location | Burgas, Bulgaria |
Coordinates | 42°30′45″N 27°28′13″E / 42.51250°N 27.47028°E |
Owner | Petrol Holding AD |
Operator | Neftochimic 1962 Burgas |
Capacity | 18,037 |
Field size | 105 x 68 |
Surface | Grass |
Construction | |
Opened | 1967 |
Renovated | 1997 2009 2010 |
Tenants | |
Naftex Burgas (1967–2009) Chernomorets Burgas (2006–2015) Neftochimic 1986 (2012–2013) Neftochimic Burgas (2015–2017, 2019-2021) Pomorie (2017–2019) Chernomorets 1919 Burgas (2023-present) |
efbet Arena (Bulgarian: „Ефбет Арена“, English: 'efbet Arena') is a multi-purpose stadium in Burgas, Bulgaria. It is currently used for football matches and is the home ground of Neftochimic 1962 Burgas. The stadium holds 18,037 people and carries a 3-star rating by UEFA. It was opened in 1967 and was renovated between 1990 and 1997. Officially opened after renovation at 13 April 1997 with the match Neftochimik - Levski Sofia 4:1. Until 2002 the stadium was named "Neftochimic" and later "Naftex".
The stadium was used by PFC Chernomorets Burgas between 2006 and 2015, even though they had plans to move to a new stadium in the future. It was used also in some European matches of Litex Lovech (for the UEFA Champions League match against FC Spartak Moscow), PFC Lokomotiv Plovdiv (for UEFA Champions League match against Club Brugge and for UEFA Cup matches against OFK Beograd and Bolton Wanderers F.C.) and PFC Cherno More Varna (for UEFA Intertoto match against UC Sampdoria and for the UEFA Europa League matches against Iskra-Stal and PSV Eindhoven).
- During several renovations of the Vasil Levski National Stadium the Bulgaria national football team has played some of their home matches at "Lazur".
- In the summer of 2009, the stadium underwent some serious upgrades, which included replacing the yellow-green seats with blue ones, as well as increasing the roof covers of the stadium to 10 meters.
- During the summer of 2015, the stadium was one of 4 venues hosting the 2015 UEFA European Under-17 Championship. It hosted 11 games in total, including the final, which had an official attendance of 14,680.
National team matches
Date | Competition | Opponent | Score | Att. | Ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bulgaria (1997–present) | ||||||
8 June 1997 | 1998 FIFA World Cup qualifying | Luxembourg | 4–0 | 19,000 | [1] | |
6 September 1998 | UEFA Euro 2000 qualifying | Poland | 0-3 | 15,000 | [2] | |
14 October 1998 | UEFA Euro 2000 qualifying | Sweden | 0-1 | 12,000 | [3] | |
22 August 2007 | Friendly | Wales | 0-1 | 15,000 | [4] |
Bulgarian Cup & Supercup finals
Season | Winner | Score | Runner-up | Date | Att. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bulgarian Cup (2012–present) | |||||
2011–12 | Ludogorets Razgrad | 2–1 | Lokomotiv Plovdiv | 19 May 2012 | 13,103 |
2013–14 | Ludogorets Razgrad | 1–0 | Botev Plovdiv | 15 May 2014 | 13,250 |
2014–15 | Cherno More Varna | 2–1 (aet) | Levski Sofia | 30 May 2015 | 13,910 |
Bulgarian Supercup (2004–present) | |||||
2004 | Lokomotiv Plovdiv | 1-0 | Litex Lovech | 31 July 2004 | 4,500 |
2011 | CSKA Sofia | 3-1 | Litex Lovech | 30 July 2011 | 12,620 |
2012 | Ludogorets Razgrad | 3-1 | Lokomotiv Plovdiv | 11 July 2012 | 2,730 |
2014 | Ludogorets Razgrad | 3-1 | Botev Plovdiv | 13 August 2014 | 4,400 |
2015 | Cherno More Varna | 1-0 | Ludogorets Razgrad | 12 August 2015 | 1,810 |
2017 | Botev Plovdiv | 6-5 (pen) | Ludogorets Razgrad | 9 August 2017 | 1,830 |
See also
References
External links
- (in Bulgarian) Official website of the football club
- Articles with short description
- Short description matches Wikidata
- Use dmy dates from March 2020
- Infobox mapframe without OSM relation ID on Wikidata
- Pages using gadget WikiMiniAtlas
- Articles containing explicitly cited English-language text
- Articles containing Bulgarian-language text
- Articles with Bulgarian-language sources (bg)
- Multi-purpose stadiums in Bulgaria
- Football venues in Bulgaria
- Sports venues in Burgas
- Pages using the Kartographer extension