Sammy Ofer Stadium


Sammy Ofer Stadium, also known as Haifa Municipal Stadium, is a 30,950 seats multi-purpose stadium in Haifa, Israel. Construction began in late 2009 and was completed in 2014. The stadium was developed and built by the Haifa Economic Corporation, managed by Adv. Gal Peleg.
Currently, the stadium is used mostly for football matches, hosting the home games of Maccabi Haifa and Hapoel Haifa. The stadium replaced Kiryat Eliezer Stadium, which was closed in 2014 and demolished in 2015. The stadium is named after the late Israeli billionaire Sammy Ofer, who donated $20,000,000 to build the stadium. Ofer's contribution was 19% of the total cost of the stadium.
Statue of World Peace, a 15-meter high stainless steel sculpture created and donated by Chinese artist We Yuan Yan, adorns the stadium plaza. The design features a woman and a dove poised as if about to take flight.

History

On 16 September 2008, the Haifa Construction Committee approved the stadium's plans and gave it the green light. In August 2009, official plans for the stadium were released. In September 2009, it has been announced that the works on building the foundations of the stadium would begin at the end of September 2009.
The first official match ever at Sammy Ofer Stadium was played on 27 August 2014. Hapoel Haifa hosted Hapoel Acre and won 2–0. The first historic goal in the new stadium was scored by Hapoel Haifa striker Tosaint Ricketts. The first league match was played on 15 September 2014. Maccabi Haifa hosted Bnei Sakhnin, who they defeated by a score of 4–2. The historic first goal by a Maccabi Haifa player was scored by Israeli national team midfielder Hen Ezra during stoppage time of the first half. Over 28,000 supporters were in attendance.
The first UEFA Champions League match was played on 30 September 2015 by Maccabi Tel Aviv against Dinamo Kyiv, Dinamo won 2–0 with goals by Andriy Yarmolenko and Júnior Moraes.
The first match of the football team">Association football">football team was played on 16 November 2014. Israel hosted the Bosnia and Herzegovina national football team in the UEFA Euro 2016 qualifying match and won 3–0. The stadium was sold out, which resulted in an atmosphere beyond compare, helping Israel win their 3rd game in a row in the tournament.
The first concert at the stadium was by Omer Adam on 24 May 2018, there were 30,000 people in the audience, and all the tickets were sold within an hour of being released.

Milestones and Records

On 5 January 2017, four goals were scored by a single player at the stadium for the first time, when Hanan Maman scored in Hapoel Haifa's 6–1 victory over Kfar Qassem in a cup match. On 7 February 2022, this achievement was repeated, when Omer Atzili scored in Maccabi Haifa's 6–0 win over F.C. Ashdod in the Israeli Premier League.
In the 2022–23 Israeli Premier League, Maccabi Haifa won their third consecutive championship, with a home record of 18 wins, one draw, and no losses, accumulating 52 points out of a possible 54.
International matches
DateResultCompetitionAttendance
16 November 20143–0UEFA [Euro 2016 qualifying Group B|2016 Euro qualifying group stage]28,300
28 March 20150–32016 Euro qualifying group stage30,200
3 September 20154–02016 Euro qualifying group stage22,650
5 September 20161–32018 [FIFA World Cup qualification - UEFA Group G|2018 FIFA World Cup qualification]29,300
11 June 20170–32018 FIFA [World Cup qualification - UEFA Group G|2018 FIFA World Cup qualification]15,150
2 September 20170–12018 FIFA World Cup qualification11,350
11 October 20182–12018–19 [UEFA Nations League C|2018–19 UEFA Nations League]10,234
21 March 20191–1UEFA [Euro 2020 qualifying Group G|UEFA Euro 2020 qualifying]12,430
24 March 20194–2UEFA Euro 2020 qualifying16,150
11 October 20201–22020–21 UEFA Nations League0
4 September 20215–22022 FIFA World Cup qualification13,550
2 June 20222–22022–23 UEFA Nations League13,150

Gates

GateEntranceArea
Silver ClubA, B301–305, 307, 309-312
Press BoxA, B306, 308
Gold and Diamond ClubVIP401–410
Sky BoxVIP501–536
North TribuneC, D101–109, 201-212
Family TribuneE, G110–113, 119–122, 213–217, 223-227
East TribuneF114–118, 218-222
South TribuneH, J123–128, 228-234
Guest TribuneK129–132, 235-240