STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- The new National Stadium in the Polish capital of Warsaw was opened on Sunday
- Poland and Ukraine will host the forthcoming Euro 2012 football tournament
- The National Stadium will host the opening match between Poland and Greece on June 8
- It will also be a semifinal venue, with Poland set to play there for the first time on February 29
The newly-constructed
National Stadium in Warsaw will host the opening match of the
four-yearly tournament on June 8 when co-hosts Poland take on Euro 2004
winners Greece in Group A.
The first 40,000 fans to
arrive on Sunday were given the chance to see Polish pop acts including
VooVoo i Haydamaky, Zakopower, Coma, T. Love and Lady Pank.
The at the 50,000-seat
arena, which will also host a semifinal, was built on the site of the
old 10th Anniversary Stadium, which had stood since 1955 and welcomed
Pope John Paul II in 1983.
I hope that Poland's players play to their best, with the backing of thousands of local supporters
Adam Olkowicz
Adam Olkowicz
"I am very happy that the
National Stadium has been finally unveiled," Poland's tournament
director Adam Olkowicz told the website of European football's governing
body UEFA.
"It's the biggest Polish
venue for this year's final tournament. On June 8, we will witness the
opening ceremony here followed by the first match between Poland and
Greece.
"I hope that Poland's players play to their best, with the backing of thousands of local supporters."
On February 29,
Franciszek Smuda's Poland team will play in their new home for the first
time -- exactly 100 days before the start of Euro 2012 -- when they
take on Portugal, who boast players such as Real Madrid star Cristiano
Ronaldo.
The first football match
to be played at the stadium, located on the east bank of the river
Vistula, will be a Polish Super Cup clash between Legia Warsaw and Wisla
Krakow on February 11.
The National Stadium is
one of five venues built especially for the 14th European Championship,
which is being co-hosted with Ukraine, and one of three new stadia in
Poland.
The other two are the Arena Gdansk and the Municipal Stadium in Wroclaw.
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