The venue was opened with a friendly football match between the Trondheim city team and the Vestfold county team, which Trondheim won 4–3. The opening, attended by 8,000 spectators, also saw several track and field events. The original main football tenants were
SK Freidig and
FK Kvik. The latter played in the Main League in
1951–52 and
1955–56, and otherwise remained in the Second Division throughout most of the 1950s and 60s. A record 18,000 spectators watched Freidig lose the
1948 Norwegian Football Cup semifinal against
Viking. On 18 October 1950, Lerkendal hosted a friendly between Kvik and
Spartak Moscow. Lerkendal hosted its first international on 26 June 1951, when
Norway beat
Iceland 3–1. On 28 August 1953 it hosted a B international game against
Finland. Later national games consist of 5–0 against
Malta on 3 July 1962, 2–0 against Finland on 20 August 1964, 4–2 against
Luxembourg on 27 May 1965, with the record international audience of 22,319, 2–1 against Iceland on 21 July 1969, 0–1 against
Denmark on 23 September 1973, 2–0 against
West Germany on 26 September 1979, 1–0 against
Wales on 6 June 1984, 1–0 against
Bulgaria on 26 May 1987. and 1–2 against Denmark on 6 June 1990, The
Football Association of Norway no longer plays international matches elsewhere than
Ullevaal Stadion because of the conditions in its sponsorship agreements. On 26 May 1977, the
Norway national under-21 football team lost 2–3 against
Sweden at Lerkendal. Rosenborg took Lerkendal into use from the 1957–58 season, when they were promoted to the Regional League. The season ended in relegation and Rosenborg played the following season at their old home ground,
Rosenborgbanen. With the promotion ahead of the 1959–60 season, Rosenborg returned to Lerkendal and have remained there since. setting a new stadium record. From the
1960–61 season, Rosenborg established itself in the Main League. A new stadium spectator record was set in the cup semifinal against
Brann in 1967, which was watched by 25,551 people. Per-season average attendance for Rosenborg's league matches lay between five and ten thousand people during the 1970s and early 1980s, with an all-time low of 2,549 in 1978, when Rosenborg played in the Second Division. The venue hosted the Norwegian Athletics Championships four times, in 1963, 1967, 1973 and 1983. Lerkendal hosted the Women's Cup Final in 1986, where
Sprint-Jeløy beat
Trondheims-Ørn.
Strindheim IL played in the top division in
1984 and
1995, both times playing their home games at Lerkendal. Kvik remained at Lerkendal until the upgrades started in 2000, after which they moved to
Øya stadion.
Bodø/Glimt played their home game in the
1999–2000 UEFA Cup against
Werder Bremen at Lerkendal, attracting 1,425 spectators. The official all-time record at Lerkendal is the final game of the
1985 season, when Rosenborg won the league in the last game against Lillestrøm in a league final which attracted 28,569. ==Attendance==