Pakansari Stadium

(Redirected from Bogor Stadium)

Stadion Pakansari is an all-seater stadium at Pakansari, Cibinong, Bogor, West Java in Indonesia. It is mostly used for football matches and is the home stadium of Persikabo 1973.[1] It can hold 30,000 spectators.[2] The stadium is one of the venues for men's football in the 2018 Asian Games and 2018 AFC U-19 Championship.

Stadion Pakansari
Stadion Pakansari is located in Bogor Regency
Stadion Pakansari
Stadion Pakansari
Location in Bogor Regency
LocationCibinong, Bogor Regency, West Java, Indonesia
Coordinates6°29′42.0″S 106°50′00.1″E / 6.495000°S 106.833361°E / -6.495000; 106.833361
OwnerBogor Government
OperatorBogor Government
Capacity30,000
SurfaceBermuda grass
Construction
Opened2015
Renovated2023–
Tenants
Persikabo 1973
RANS Nusantara

History edit

Stadion Pakansari is an all-seater stadium located in Bogor Regency in the West Java province of Indonesia. It was opened in 2015. Indonesia played their 2016 AFF Championship semifinal and final matches here in Pakansari because of the renovations at GBK. The stadium hosted the 2017 President's Cup final. It also hosted the 2018 Asian Games men's football gold medal match and the 2018 AFC U-19 Championship final. It is the home of Liga 1 club TIRA-Persikabo.

PSM Makassar played their 2019 AFC Cup matches here in Stadion Pakansari as their permanent home.

International matches hosted edit

Date Competition Team Res. Team Crowd
21 March 2017 International Friendly   Indonesia 1–3   Myanmar 13,150
27 September 2022   Indonesia 2–1   Curaçao 21,819

Tournament results edit

2016 AFF Championship edit

Date Time (UTC+07) Team #1 Res. Team #2 Round Attendance
3 December 2016 19:00   Indonesia 2–1   Vietnam Semifinals first leg 30,000
14 December 2016 19:00   Indonesia 2–1   Thailand Finals first leg 30,000

2018 PSSI Anniversary Cup edit

Date Time (UTC+07) Team #1 Score Team #2 Attendance
27 April 2018 16:00   Uzbekistan 2–2   North Korea N/A
27 April 2018 19:30   Indonesia 0–1   Bahrain N/A
30 April 2018 16:00   Bahrain 3–3   Uzbekistan N/A
30 April 2018 19:30   North Korea 0–0   Indonesia N/A
3 May 2018 16:00   North Korea 1–4   Bahrain N/A
3 May 2018 19:30   Indonesia 0–0   Uzbekistan N/A

2018 Asian Games Men's Football edit

Date Time (UTC+07) Team #1 Res. Team #2 Round Attendance
14 August 2018 16:00   Uzbekistan 3–0   Bangladesh Group B N/A
14 August 2018 19:00   Thailand 1–1   Qatar Group B N/A
16 August 2018 16:00   Bangladesh 1–1   Thailand Group B N/A
16 August 2018 19:00   Qatar 0–6   Uzbekistan Group B N/A
19 August 2018 19:00   Thailand 0–1   Uzbekistan Group B N/A
20 August 2018 19:00   Chinese Taipei 0–2   Laos Group A N/A
27 August 2018 16:00   Saudi Arabia 1–2   Japan Quarter-finals N/A
27 August 2018 19:30   United Arab Emirates 1–1 (a.e.t.)
(5–3 p)
  North Korea Quarter-finals N/A
29 August 2018 16:00   Vietnam 1–3   South Korea Semi-finals N/A
29 August 2018 19:30   Japan 1–0   United Arab Emirates Semi-finals N/A
1 September 2018 15:00   Vietnam 1–1 (a.e.t.)
(3–4 p)
  United Arab Emirates Bronze medal match N/A
1 September 2018 18:30   South Korea 2–1 (a.e.t.)   Japan Gold medal match N/A

2018 AFC U-19 Championship edit

Date Time (UTC+07) Team #1 Res. Team #2 Round Attendance
19 October 2018 16:00   Iraq 3–3   Thailand Group Stage 50
19 October 2018 19:00   Japan 5–2   North Korea Group Stage 35
22 October 2018 16:00   North Korea 1–0   Iraq Group Stage 52
22 October 2018 19:00   Thailand 1–3   Japan Group Stage 134
24 October 2018 19:00   Qatar 4–0   Chinese Taipei Group Stage 5
25 October 2018 16:00   Japan 5–0   Iraq Group Stage 138
25 October 2018 19:00   Australia 1–1   Jordan Group Stage 42
26 October 2018 19:00   China 2–0   Malaysia Group Stage 102
1 November 2018 16:00   Qatar 1–3   South Korea Semi-finals 145
1 November 2018 19:30   Japan 0–2   Saudi Arabia Semi-finals 311
4 November 2018 19:30   South Korea 1–2   Saudi Arabia Final 3,089

Events edit

International edit

National edit

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Mencari Nama Stadion Baru Persikabo". ligaindonesia.co.id (in Indonesian). Archived from the original on 24 October 2017. Retrieved 5 October 2013.
  2. ^ "West Java to build new sporting venue". The Jakarta Post. 14 April 2012. Archived from the original on 20 April 2012. Retrieved 15 December 2016.

External links edit

Events and tenants
Preceded by Asian Games Football tournament
Final Venue

2018
Succeeded by