7th Dec,2024 18:30( Local time) Spain | Valencia | Estadio de Mestalla
Seating in pairs
If you buy tickets in pairs, it is estimated to sit next to each other.
Single tickets
We will sell single tickets from time to time and marked with “Single”. Single tickets is cheaper than “Seating in pairs”. If you buy 2 ‘Single tickets”, your seat is separated with your friend’s.
More tickets wanted
If you buy 3 or more tickets, we cannot promise that you are sit next to each other. However, we can promise to sit not so far away from each other.
Home-and-away section
Tickets without any further specification will always be situated in the home sections.
Long side/Short side
Long side seats are located behind the longer line area on the field; short side seats are located behind the shorted line area.
The Mestalla stadium first opened to football fans on the 20th May 1923 with Valencia hosting local rivals Levante UD in the inaugural match. With an initial capacity of 17,000, Estadio de Mestalla replaced Valencia’s first home, Algirós which lacked the necessary facilities to propel Los Murciélagos (The Bats) onto the centre stage of Spanish football. Unfortunately the Spanish Civil war put the brakes on any progress for the club, and Mestalla was used as a concentration camp and storage facility meaning that the stadium became into a state of disrepair until the early 1940s. After a lot of renovations, Valencia won their first cup title in 1941 with the Copa del Rey after defeating Espanyol, followed by a succession of three league titles and two further league cups. With this onward momentum, the club drew up plans for expansion dubbed “Gran Mestalla” which took the capacity up to 45,000 in the 1950s before another disaster befell the club, in the form of a flood, when the nearby Turia River’s banks burst in 1957. Once the club restored the pitch, the next decades were characterised by consistent, small improvements and a new bottom tier to accommodate more fans for the 1982 World Cup. Since the 1970s Valencia’s management have always flirted with the idea of relocating the stadium to a new site, but plans have been thwarted by adverse economic conditions and lack of investment. Rather farcically, Los Che have begun to construct a Nou Mestalla with an expected capacity of 75,000 but the project has been temporarily abandoned with the basic concrete structure very much a proverbial elephant in the room. Still, the current Mestalla is the fifth largest stadium in Spain, and continues to host important matches such as 2011 and 2014 Copa del Rey final, both contested by Barca and Real Madrid, Los Merengues.
Avenida Suecia s/n, 46010 Valencia
1. Tickets can not be returned or refunded after purchase.
2. It is only available to choose from stadium area not for specified seat.
3. It is the separate single ticket price for seats in pairs. The two seats are in pairs. If you need more connected seats, please contact us and ask for a new price.
4. Anyone who need to watch the game shall buy a ticket. Children must obtain their own tickets.
5. There are 3 kinds of tickets: paper ticket, e-ticket and seasonal card. The final kind is subject to official document.
6. We will change our ticket price in accordance with global market and international demand and charge some service fee. Therefore, the reservation price is more expensive than the par value. Customers show understanding and support before buying tickets.
7. We assume no liability and responsibility concerning the condition that your match schedule changed by some force majeure or temporary decision by host. Please be aware of the notification on match time.
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