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San Diego - Qualcomm Stadium, USA

Venue Address: RaceLegal - (Show Map)
San Diego - Qualcomm Stadium, USA
San Diego - Qualcomm Stadium, USA

San Diego Stadium - Wikipedia

Super Bowls (NFL)[edit]. All-Star Games (MLB)[edit]. Configurations[edit]. Capacity for seating [edit]. Other football games[edit]. Concerts on the Green[edit]. Non-sporting events[edit]. In TV and movies [edit]. Big SoCal Euro[edit]. Sale and Demolition[edit]. External links[edit].

San Diego State Aztecs (NCAA) (1967-2019)San Diego Chargers (AFL/NFL) (1967-2016)Holiday Bowl (NCAA) (1978-2019)Poinsettia Bowl (NCAA) (2005-2016)San Diego Fleet (AAF) (2019).

San Diego Padres (PCL) (1968) San Diego Padres (MLB) (1969-2003).

San Diego Stadium was a multipurpose stadium located in San Diego, California. [3] The stadium was originally known as San Diego Stadium in 1967. It was also known as Jack Murphy Stadium between 1981 and 1997. The stadium was known by its naming rights from 1997 to 2017. It was owned by Qualcomm Stadium, a San Diego-based telecoms equipment company. San Diego County Credit Union purchased the naming rights on June 14, 2017. They renamed the facility SDCCU Stadium on September 19, 2017, after which they expired. [5] The demolition of San Diego Stadium began December 2020, with the stadium's last remaining section freestanding. It was completed by the superstructure on March 22, 2021. The site was renamed the San Diego State Aztecs football club's new Snapdragon Stadium.

From 1967 to 2019, San Diego Stadium was home to the Aztecs from San Diego State University. The stadium hosted the Holiday Bowl every December, a college football bowl game. In early 2019, the stadium was briefly home to the San Diego Fleet of Alliance of American Football. It was home to two professional teams, the San Diego Chargers (NFL), and the San Diego Padres (MLB) for many years. From 1967 to 2016, the Chargers played in the stadium. In 2016, they moved to Los Angeles and became the Los Angeles Chargers. From their 1969 founding, the Padres played at the stadium until the 2003 season when they moved to Petco Park. From 2005 to its dissolution in 2016, the stadium hosted the Poinsettia bowl, a college bowl game.