on August 26, 2005 (image during TV commercial break)
Athletics Commonwealth Stadium was the centrepiece of the 1978 Commonwealth Games, which were hosted from August 3 to 12. The games saw 1,474 athletes from 46 nations competed in 128 events. Canada conducted its all-time best performance, capturing 45 gold medals and 109 medals in total. Commonwealth Stadium
hosted the athletics events, For the
1979 season, they drew an average 42,540 spectators, selling out seven of eight games. The all-time regular-season attendance record is 62,517, set against the
Saskatchewan Roughriders on September 26, 2009. 28 regular-season Edmonton Elks games have sold out at Commonwealth. With the laying of artificial turf in 2010, the team stopped training on Clarke Stadium and have since used Commonwealth Stadium as their training ground. The stadium has been host to the
Grey Cup, the CFL's championship game, five times, in
1984,
1997,
2002,
2010, and
2018. Tickets to the 2010 Grey Cup were sold out prior to the start of the season. The game was spectated by a crowd of 63,317, the largest to attend the stadium.
Soccer ;Edmonton Drillers The
Edmonton Drillers of the
North American Soccer League, then the premier soccer league in Canada and the United States, was established in
1979 with the relocation of the
Oakland Stompers. Bought by
Peter Pocklington, the team chose to play its first three seasons at Commonwealth Stadium. The team played to home play-off matches during the
1980 season. The Drillers averaged between 9,923 and 10,920 in their first three seasons. After having lost $10.5 million in three years, Pocklington chose to relocate to Clarke Stadium for the
1982 season. This caused average attendance to plummet to 4,922 and the team was disbanded at the end of the year. The Canadian Soccer Association twice invited to the
Canada Cup, a three- or four-way invitational international friendly tournament, with all matches hosted at Commonwealth Stadium. The
1995 Canada Cup featured Canada,
Northern Ireland and
Chile, while the
1999 Canada Cup featured
Canada U-23,
Iran,
Ecuador and
Guatemala U-23. On November 16, 2021, the stadium hosted a
third-round match in the
CONCACAF 2022 FIFA World Cup qualifiers between Canada and
Mexico; with a 2–1 victory, Canada defeated Mexico for the first time in 21 years, taking the lead in the pool. Due to the frigid
Prairie temperatures of November,
Canada Soccer tweeted that the stadium was "Canada's frozen fortress", while fans also nicknamed the field "Estadio Iceteca" or "The Iceteca", in reference to Mexico's home field
Estadio Azteca. With a temperature of −9 °C at kickoff, it was the coldest game in Mexico national team history. Edmonton has hosted five international friendly matches and two
FIFA Women's World Cup matches featuring the
Canada women's national soccer team. Before the
2015 FIFA Women's World Cup, the record attendance was 29,953 for a game on August 31, 2003, when Canada beat
Mexico 8–0. The attendance record was broken in 2015, when a record crowd of 53,058 saw Canada beat
China 1–0 in the first match of the Women's World Cup. Canada and Commonwealth Stadium were host to the
1996 edition of the
CONCACAF Men's Olympic Qualifying Tournament, which featured the Men's Under-23 National Team between 10 and 19 May. The tournament drew crowds up to 19,401, Canada played
Australia, playing 2–2 at Commonwealth Stadium on 26 May. Canada lost 5–0 in Australia and fail to qualify. Edmonton co-hosted the inaugural
2002 FIFA U-19 Women's World Championship between August 17 and September 1 along with
Vancouver and
Victoria. Edmonton was the base of operations and featured 12 of the 26 matches.
FIFA was originally skeptical to using such a large venue, especially for those matches which did not involve
Canada. The 12 games drew a total 238,090 and an average 19,841 spectators. The final, which saw the
United States defeat Canada 1–0 in
extra time, was spectated by 47,784; this remains a world-record attendance for youth-level women's soccer. Commonwealth Stadium was one of six Canadian venues selected to host the
2007 FIFA U-20 World Cup between June 30 and July 22. Nine of 52 matches were played in Edmonton, including a quarterfinal and a semifinal, and two of Canada. The games drew a total attendance of 243,517 and an average attendance of 27,057, second only to the Olympic Stadium in Montreal. The highest attendance was 32,058, which watched Canada play
Congo. Two club friendly matches were played at Commonwealth in 2009 and 2010, under the
Edmonton Cup umbrella. In the first, 15,800 spectators watched Argentinian side
River Plate defeat England's
Everton 1–0. In the second, 8,792 spectators watched FC Edmonton play English side
Portsmouth to a 1–1 draw. A third club friendly was played in 2019 at Commonwealth Stadium between Cardiff City FC (English Football League) and Real Valladolid (La Liga Spain). Cardiff City fought out a 1–1 draw against the Spanish La Liga club, owned by Brazilian ace Ronaldo, before winning the penalty shoot-out 4–2. FC Edmonton started competing in the
Canadian Championship in
2011 season and played these games at Commonwealth Stadium until 2014 when they returned to Clarke Stadium which is their regular home ground. Commonwealth Stadium also hosted matches during the
2014 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup between August 5 and 24,
Concerts during its
U2 360° Tour on June 1, 2011, which drew a record attendance of 65,000. Concerts held at Commonwealth Stadium include
Pink Floyd,
Beyoncé,
David Bowie,
Tim McGraw,
Genesis,
the Rolling Stones,
the Police,
Fiction Plane,
AC/DC,
Metallica,
U2,
Kenny Chesney,
Bob Dylan,
Willie Nelson,
Taylor Swift,
Bon Jovi,
Guns N' Roses,
Lilith Fair,
Mötley Crüe,
Edgefest and
One Direction.
Ice hockey The
2003 Heritage Classic was an
outdoor ice hockey game played on November 22 between the
National Hockey League (NHL) sides
Edmonton Oilers and the
Montreal Canadiens. The first regular-season NHL game to be played outdoors, it saw the Canadiens win 4–3 in front of a crowd of 57,167, despite temperatures of close to −18 °C, −30 °C (−22 °F) with wind chill. It was held to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the
Oilers joining the NHL in 1979 and the 20th anniversary of their first
Stanley Cup win in
1984. The
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation television broadcast drew 2.747 million viewers in Canada, the second-highest audience for a regular-season NHL game. where the Oilers won 5–2.
Rugby union Commonwealth Stadium has been used to host
Churchill Cup matches. The
2004 edition had the first round played in
Calgary and the second round played at Commonwealth Stadium. The
2005 edition saw all matches being played in Edmonton, with the final drawing a crowd of 17,000. In the
2006 edition the three finals were played at Commonwealth Stadium. The
2006 Women's Rugby World Cup was hosted in Edmonton and its suburb,
St. Albert. Most of the Edmonton games were played at
Ellerslie Rugby Park, but the final, third-place match and fifth-place match were all played at Commonwealth Stadium. On June 9, 2018, the Canadian Men's National team played host to Scotland, world number 6 at the time, in a test match at Commonwealth Stadium. Scotland came away with a 48–10 victory over Canada in front of a crowd of 12,824 at Commonwealth Stadium.
Other events In 1980, the venue hosted a
Billy Graham event during his Northern Canada Crusade. In 1983, the
Edmonton Trappers Triple-A baseball team defeated the
California Angels of
Major League Baseball in an exhibition baseball game witnessed by a crowd of 24,830. On 26 July 2022,
Pope Francis led an open-air
Mass in front of an attendance of nearly 50,000 people as part of his
first visit to Canada. On 30 July 2022,
Monster Jam made its only appearance at the stadium. In 2024, it hosted the
IFAF U20 World Junior Championship, marking the first time
American football was played at the stadium. ==See also==