Stade Mohammed V
ملعب محمد الخامس | |
Interactive map of Stade Mohammed V | |
| Former names |
|
|---|---|
| Address | Rue al-Azrak Ahmed |
| Location | Maârif, Casablanca, Morocco |
| Owner | The City of Casablanca |
| Capacity | 45,000 |
| Surface | Grass |
| Record attendance | 110,000
|
| Field size | 105 m × 68 m |
| Construction | |
| Opened | 6 March 1955 |
| Renovated | 1981, 2000, 2007, 2015, 2024–2025 |
| Tenants | |
| |
Stade Mohammed V (Arabic: ملعب محمد الخامس) is a multi-purpose stadium which is named after King Mohammed V and situated at the heart of Casablanca, Morocco, in the western part of the Maârif neighborhood. The stadium has a seating capacity of 45,000 and it is the oldest football stadium in Morocco.
It was inaugurated on March 6, 1955 under the name of the Marcel-Cerdan stadium, in homage to the famous Franco-Moroccan world champion boxer, before being renamed "Stade d'Honneur" a year later. It received its current name on the occasion of the 1983 Mediterranean Games organized in Casablanca, in honor of Mohammed V, Sultan of the Cherifian Empire from 1927 to 1957 and King of Morocco from 1957 to 1962.
It primarily hosts association football matches, serving as the home ground of the Morocco national football team and local rival football clubs Wydad AC and Raja CA. In 1997, the stadium set a record of attendance of 110,000 during the Casablanca football derby and a match between the Moroccan and Ghana national teams. The same record attendance was repeated during Morocco's match against Argentina in 2004.