Everything about Wembley Stadium 1923 totally explained
The original
Wembley Stadium was a
football stadium in
Wembley, a suburb of north-west
London, standing on the site now occupied by the
new Wembley Stadium that opened in
2007. First known as the
British Empire Exhibition Stadium or simply
Empire Stadium, the original stadium was built by
Sir Robert McAlpine for the
British Empire Exhibition of
1923, at a cost of
£750,000, on the former site of
Watkin's Tower.
Sir John Simpson and Maxwell Ayrton were the architects and
Sir Owen Williams was the Head Engineer. Originally intended to be demolished at the end of the Exhibition, it was saved at the suggestion of
Sir James Stevenson, a
Scot who was chairman of the organising committee for the Empire Exhibition. The stadium's distinctive
Twin Towers became its trademark. Also well known were the thirty nine steps needed to be climbed to reach the Royal box and collect a trophy (and winners'/losers' medals). Wembley was the first pitch to be referred to as "Hallowed Turf", with many stadia around the world borrowing this phrase.The stadium's first turf was cut by
King George V and it was first opened to the public on
28 April 1923. In
1934, the
Empire Pool was built. The Wembley Stadium Collection is held by the
National Football Museum.The stadium closed in
October 2000 and was demolished in 2003 for
redevelopment.==Football==
White Horse Cup Final
The Empire Stadium was built in exactly 300 days at the cost of £750,000. Described as the world's greatest sporting arena (at the time), it was ready only 4 days before the White Horse Final. The FA hadn't considered admission by ticket, grossly under-estimating the anticipation of the number of fans turning up to the 104 gates on matchday. However, after the game, every event since has been ticketed.The first event held at the stadium was the
FA Cup final on
28 April 1923 between
Bolton Wanderers and
West Ham United. This is known as the
White Horse Final. Such was the eagerness of fans and casual observers to attend the final at the new
national stadium that vast numbers of people crammed through the 104
turnstiles into the stadium, far exceeding its official 127,000 capacity. The crowds overflowed onto the pitch as there was no room on the terraces. Estimates of the number of fans in attendance range from 240,000 to well over 300,000. It is estimated that another 60,000 were locked outside the gates. The FA were forced to refund 10% of the total gate money to fans unable to reach the terraces. The White Horse Final has the highest ever unofficial "non-racing" sports attendance in the world, which is very unlikely to be broken in the near future. This claim, however, is disputed, as the
Maracana held (officially) 199,854 fans during the
1950 World Cup final match between
Brazil and
Uruguay.It was thought that the match wouldn't be played because of the volume of spectators inside the stadium that had spilled onto the pitch. That was until mounted police, including Police Constable George Scorey and his white horse,
Billy, slowly pushed the masses back to the sides of the field of play for the FA Cup Final to start, just 45 minutes late. In honour of Billy, the footbridge outside the new Wembley Stadium has been named the
White Horse Bridge. The official attendance is often quoted as 126,047. The stadium also sported the largest football pitch in the world until it was made smaller to conform to
FIFA regulations.
The "Matthews Final"
The
1953 FA Cup Final (dubbed the "
Matthews" Final, after the performance of the winger) between
Blackpool and
Bolton Wanderers featured a
hat-trick by Blackpool's
Stan Mortensen in his side's 4-3 win. It remained the only hat-trick ever scored in an
FA Cup Final at the original Wembley.
The Home of England
The FA Cup final was played there in April or May until
2000 (excluding the 1970 replay when
Chelsea beat
Leeds at
Old Trafford). It was also the venue for Finals of the
FA Amateur Cup,
League Cup (except for the early years when this was settled on a home and away basis),
Associate Members' Cup and the
Football League promotion
play-offs (in the early years of play-offs they were home and away fixtures).
As the home of the
English national football team, in 1966 it was the leading venue of the
World Cup. It hosted the
final game, where the tournament hosts, England, won 4-2 after extra-time against
West Germany. Thirty years later, it was the principal venue of
Euro 96, hosting all of England's matches, as well as the tournament's final, where reunified Germany won the cup for a third time with the first international
Golden Goal in football history.
In all, the stadium hosted five
European Cup finals, including the
1963 final between
AC Milan and
Benfica, and the
1968 final between
Manchester United and Benfica. In
1971 it again hosted the final, between
Ajax and
Panathinaikos, and once more in
1978, this time between
Liverpool and
Club Brugge. The last such occasion was in
1992, when
Barcelona played
Sampdoria. The FA unsuccessfully bid for the redeveloped Wembley to host the
2007 final. Wembley has also hosted two
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup finals (in
1965, when
West Ham United beat
1860 Munich, and
1993).
It was also the venue for
Arsenal's home Champions League matches in
1998–99 and
1999–2000. It has hosted an individual club's home matches on two other occasions, in 1930 when
Clapton Orient played two home
Third Division South games and in 1930-31 for eight matches by
non-League Ealing A.F.C.
The last FA Cup final to be played at the old Wembley saw
Chelsea defeat
Aston Villa with the only goal scored by
Roberto Di Matteo.
David Jack scored the first goal at Wembley during the The White Horse Final in
1923. The last goal to be scored at the old Wembley came in
Kevin Keegan's
last game as England manager. Manchester City midfielder
Dietmar Hamann (at the time a Liverpool player) hit a low free-kick as England were beaten 0-1 by their arch-rivals Germany on October 7, 2000. On that day,
Tony Adams played his 60th Wembley match, setting the record for the most matches played there. As well as England appearances, his tally includes Cup Finals, Cup semi-finals, pre-season tournaments and Champions League matches for Arsenal. Adams also captained England in that match.
Peter Shilton made 58 Wembley appearances, the second highest tally.
Of Wembley Stadium,
Pelé said, "Wembley is the cathedral of
football. It is the capital of football and it's the heart of football." in recognition of its status as the world's best-known football stadium.
Other sports
Wembley was the main athletics venue for the
1948 Summer Olympics, with
Fanny Blankers-Koen and
Emil Zátopek among the notable winners.
In the sport of
rugby league, the
RFL has held its
Challenge Cup final at Wembley from 1929 onwards. The largest crowd being for the 1985 cup final when
Wigan beat
Hull F.C. 28-24 in front of 99,801 fans. The stadium was also regularly used by the sport for major international matches, such as
Great Britain versus
Australia. The first
Ashes test of 1994 is particularly well remembered by rugby league supporters. The stadium also holds the international record crowd for a
rugby league game when 73,631 fans turned out for the 1992
Rugby League World Cup Final between
Great Britain &
Australia. The
Mal Meninga led Aussies won the game 10-6 on the back of a brilliant Steve Renouf try in the north-east corner and Meninga's flawless goal kicking.
From
1958 until the mid 1970s,
hurling and
gaelic football tournaments known as the "Wembley Tournaments" were held at Wembley Stadium to bring the Irish sports to expatriates in Britain at the time.
Though the venue hasn't traditionally been a regular host of
rugby union matches,
England played a friendly against
Canada on October 17th 1992, as their regular home stadium at
Twickenham was undergoing redevelopment.
Wales played its
Five Nations home matches at Wembley (as
Twickenham Stadium wouldn't accommodate them) while
Cardiff Arms Park was being rebuilt as the
Millennium Stadium in the late 1990s (despite being in England).
The
National Football League held several preseason
American football games at Wembley during the 1980s and 1990s, and the
London Monarchs of the
World League of American Football played at the venue in 1991 and 1992. Wembley hosted the inaugural
World Bowl where the Monarchs defeated the
Barcelona Dragons 21-0.
As well as special events, Wembley was also a venue for regular sporting fixtures, notably in
greyhound racing and
motorcycle speedway. Between 1936 and 1960 it hosted all of the first fifteen finals of the
Speedway World Championship. It hosted another seven World Finals, the last one at Wembley took place in 1981. Wembley was also the home to the
Wembley Lions motorcycle speedway team. Speedway first took place at Wembley in 1929 and operated until the outbreak of
WWII in 1939, a few days before the 1939 World Championship Final. The Lions returned in 1946 and operated in the top flight until the end of the 1956 season. A short lived revival saw the Lions in the
British League in the 1970 and 1971 seasons. Wembley's owner's refusal to cancel the regular greyhound racing meant that the match between
Uruguay and
France in the 1966 World Cup was played at
White City.
Wembley Stadium also staged women's field hockey matches in which England appeared in their annual match between 1951 to 1969 and then from 1971 to 1991.
On
31 May, 1975, in front of 90,000 people,
Evel Knievel crashed while trying to land a jump over thirteen single decker city buses, an accident which resulted in his initial retirement from his daredevil life.
In 1992, the
World Wrestling Federation drew a sellout of 80,355 when
SummerSlam was hosted at Wembley Stadium. This was one of the biggest crowds ever at a WWE event. The main event featured English wrestler
Davey Boy Smith winning the
Intercontinental Championship from
Bret Hart.
Trivia
- Manchester United F.C. have won more trophies (11) at Wembley than any other English side, having beaten 4–1 a.e.t. SL Benfica, European Champions Cup final in Wembley Stadium season 1967–68 ten years after the Munich disaster. first English club to bring home the European coveted trophy and to do it on home soil.
Liverpool F.C.Have won the European Champions Cup against Club Brugge KV 1-0 1977–78 season at Wembley.
Everton F.C. despite not having won as much at the old Wembley, have appeared under the twin towers more times than any other English league side, eleven times alone in the 1980s.
Music
Wembley Stadium became a musical venue in 1972 with an all-star rock 'n' roll concert. It has since played host to a number of concerts and events. Most notably the British leg of Live Aid, which featured such acts as David Bowie, Queen, Paul McCartney, The Who, Dire Straits and U2, was held at the stadium on 13 July 1985.
Other charity concerts to have taken place in the stadium were the 1988 Nelson Mandela 70th Birthday Tribute concert, The Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert for AIDS Awareness and the NetAid charity concert.
Acts who played at Wembley Stadium include:
Michael Jackson (15 times)
The Rolling Stones (12 times)
U2 (8 times)
Genesis (they had four sold out shows in a row in early July 1987)
Bon Jovi (they had three sold out shows in a row from 23th June to 25th June 1995)
Tina Turner (7 times, who had two sold out concerts recorded during her Twenty Four Seven Tour for the live tour DVD in the year 2000)
Oasis (2 times, who recorded their video and album "Familiar To Millions" at Wembley)
The Cure (who recorded tracks for their Pictures of You single)
Bob Dylan
Bruce Springsteen
Prince
Celine Dion
Queen (whose concert on 12 July 1986 during the "Magic" tour was recorded for a live album)
Electric Light Orchestra
Cliff Richard
Crosby Stills Nash and Young
ABBA
Guns N' Roses
Status Quo
Elton John
The Beach Boys
The Eagles
Van Halen
INXS
Pink Floyd
Metallica
Bros
Bee Gees
Simple Minds
The Spice Girls
Madonna.
Bon Jovi were the last musical act to play at the old Wembley before it was closed, and they were scheduled to be the first band to play at the new Wembley Stadium, with concerts on June 10 2006 and the following day. However, due to the delays in the construction of the new stadium, the concerts were moved to the National Bowl in Milton Keynes.
Michael Jackson's Record
During Michael Jackson's Bad Tour in 1988, seven sell-out concerts were staged at Wembley which included five in a row, and two at a later date. Each concert had an attendance of 72,000 people. According to the Guinness Book of World Records Jackson set a new world record with 504,000 people attending the seven total concerts. These seven concerts were highly anticipated and created huge media attention. A further five sell-out concerts followed in 1992 during his Dangerous Tour and his three shows in 1997 during his HIStory Tour brought total tickets sold to over 1 million. Until the demolition of the 1923 stadium, this record hadn't been beaten.
In fiction
In the arcade game Revolution X, Wembley Stadium was the location of the final battle.
There is a popular British board game from the 1960s called "Wembley" made by Ariel.
In the 1979 TV Serial Quatermass starring John Mills, Wembley is seen as a gathering point for young people attracted there by an alien force who then kill the 80,000 or so people there in a harvest. Special effect designers covered large sections of the ground in white dust to symbolize the ashes of those taken.
Although the expression "thirty-nine steps" may have been influenced by the book and film The Thirty-nine Steps, the book was written a decade before the stadium was built.
One of the last filmings at the Old Wembley was for the film .
In Viz 166 (June 2007), the comic-strip character Cockney Wanker participated in a boot sale at which he successfully passed off chunks of rubble and strips of turf as pieces of the torn-down Wembley Stadium.Further Information
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