BMO Field
( "BEE-moe") is a soccer-specific stadium located in Exhibition Place in the city of Toronto. The open-air structure can seat up to 20,500 spectators, depending on seating configurations. It is owned by the City of Toronto, and managed by Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment Ltd. It opened on April 28 2007 with a 1-0 loss by home side Toronto FC against the Kansas City Wizards.
Aside from the adjacent parking lot, the stadium is accessible by public transport via the Exhibition GO Train station, the 509 Harbourfront and the 511 Bathurst streetcar lines, as well as the 29 Dufferin and 193 Exhibition Rocket bus routes.
The stadium was known as the National Soccer Stadium
during international FIFA competitions, including the 2007 FIFA U-20 World Cup.
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BMO FIELD TICKETS
| EVENT | DATE | AVAILABILITY |
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| Toronto FC vs. Colorado Rapids Tickets 4/4 | Apr 04, 2026 Sat, 1:00 PM |  | | Toronto FC vs. FC Cincinnati Tickets 4/11 | Apr 11, 2026 Sat, 1:00 PM |  | | Toronto FC vs. Austin FC Tickets 4/18 | Apr 18, 2026 Sat, 1:00 PM |  | | Toronto FC vs. Philadelphia Union Tickets 4/22 | Apr 22, 2026 Wed, 7:30 PM |  | | Toronto FC vs. Atlanta United FC Tickets 4/25 | Apr 25, 2026 Sat, 1:00 PM |  |
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History
BMO Field is the fifth stadium to be located at its exact location at Exhibition Place. The most recent was
Exhibition Stadium, former home of the
Toronto Argonauts and
Toronto Blue Jays, which lost its permanent tenants with the opening of SkyDome (now
Rogers Centre) in
1989 and was demolished in
1999.
The stadium was part of Canada's successful bid to host the
2007 FIFA U-20 World Cup. The original plan was for the site to be located at
York University, with the university contributing
$15 million toward the cost of the new stadium. However, the university was forced to back out in May
2005. The eventual site was moved to the location of demolished Exhibition Stadium and then-existing
Sports Hall of Fame building.
On
May 11,
2006,
Major League Soccer announced that
Toronto FC would join the league as its thirteenth (and first
Canada-based) team in 2007. The league considers soccer-specific stadiums to be a critical part of its strategy; MLS commissioner
Don Garber has been adamant that expansion teams must have plans for a
soccer-specific stadium in place to be granted a franchise. These facilities are thought to improve overall crowd atmosphere (because they are smaller than stadiums built primarily for
NFL football or
CFL football), and may allow teams to control most revenues generated by their facilities.
On
August 31,
2006, the
Toronto Star
reported that
BMO Financial Group purchased the
naming rights to the stadium, known then as the National Soccer Stadium.
BMO is the stock
ticker symbol of the
Bank of Montreal, whose operational headquarters are in Toronto, despite its
Montreal name. The symbol is often pronounced "BEE-moe", as are references to the bank itself. On
September 20,
2006, stadium webcam viewers watched as a banner was raised on the West Grandstand renaming the stadium "BMO Field". The name was later announced on the team's official website. It was referred to under the National Soccer Stadium name in official references to the U-20 World Cup, as non-FIFA-supporting sponsors are not permitted references.
The grand opening celebration took place on
May 12,
2007. MLS's commissioner has declared that the 2008
All-Star Game will take place at BMO Field, as well an MLS Cup by the year 2012.
The first and only music concert thus far at BMO Field was performed by classic rock group
Genesis on
September 7,
2007.
The 2008 MLS All Star game was held at BMO Field on
July 24,
2008 versus
West Ham United F.C. of the
English Premier League.
Historic goals
The first goal at BMO Field was scored by
Eddie Johnson for
Kansas City Wizards in a 1-0
Major League Soccer win over home side Toronto FC in the stadium opener on
April 28,
2007. The first ever Toronto FC goal at the stadium was
Danny Dichio's first-half strike against
Chicago Fire on
May 12,
2007 (also his club's first ever
MLS goal).
The first goal at BMO Field scored by a Canadian came at the official opening on
May 11,
2007, in an under-20 friendly between
Canada and
Argentina.
David Edgar scored a penalty in a 2-1 defeat for Canada, just four minutes after
Alejandro Gomez had scored the first ever international goal at the stadium.
Costa Rica's
Victor Núñez scored the first ever senior international goal in a 1-1 friendly draw with hosts
Canada on
September 12,
2007, just minutes before
Dwayne De Rosario scored Canada's first senior goal at the stadium.
The first
Toronto FC goal scored by a Canadian at BMO Field was in a
June 25,
2007 friendly against
Aston Villa of the English Premier League.
Andrea Lombardo scored an equalizer at BMO Field's south end to make it 2-2 before
Villa ran out 4-2 winners. The first
MLS goal at BMO Field scored by a Canadian came when
Miguel Cañizalez scored for Toronto FC in the second minute of their 2-1 defeat to
Columbus Crew on
September 22,
2007, snapping an 824-minute MLS goalless streak.
On
May 19,
2007, Bolivian forward
Jaime Moreno scored his 108th MLS goal on a penalty kick for
D.C. United in their 2-1 win over Toronto FC at BMO Field, tying him for the all-time league lead with
Jason Kreis. Moreno has since taken sole ownership of the record.
Management, ownership and funding
Toronto FC is owned by
Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment Ltd. (MLSE), owners of the
National Hockey League's
Toronto Maple Leafs and the
National Basketball Association's
Toronto Raptors. In addition, MLSE contributed towards the cost of the building of the stadium. With the total costs in the realm of $62 million ($72 million including land), contributions came from multiple sources. MLSE contributed $8 million towards the construction of the stadium and $10 million towards securing the naming rights of the stadium. The Canadian Federal Government contributed $27 million, with Ontario's government adding an additional $8 million. Toronto paid $9.8 million, and has the ownership of the stadium. (All figures are in
Canadian dollars.)
Stadium specifics
BMO Field uses
FieldTurf rather than a natural grass pitch which has
attracted some criticism.
[1] [2] [3] The turf was laid in March, 2007. The seats are entirely red with the exception of a design on each of the main stands. On the east side, the design is a large maple leaf while on the lower west stand the design spells out "TORONTO", and has a portion of the Toronto FC logo. The south stand has "BMO" spelled out. Field of play dimensions are 75 yards wide x 115 yards long or 68 m wide x 105 m long.
Attendance
The largest attendance at the stadium for an MLS game was 20,822 on
July 24,
2008 for the
MLS All-Star game when the
MLS All-Stars defeated
West Ham United by a score of 3 - 2.
The largest attendance overall was 21,978 on
August 20,
2008 when BMO Field hosted the Canada vs Jamaica 2010 World Cup qualifier.
[4]
Structural issues
BMO Field has experienced some structural difficulties since its official opening.
The Globe and Mail
reported on
17 May 2007 that spectators attending Toronto FC matches detected bolts
[5] ranging from four to six centimetres in length falling from BMO Field's galvanised metal grandstands to the concrete concourse below. Emergency repairs to the locking fasteners on the stadium's grandstands were underway, with completion expected by
20 May. The stadium has been noted for boisterous fans banging on the metal floors of the stadium, which may have contributed partially. Television cameras mounted on the structure are known to shake in broadcast visibly during such moments.
See also
- Exhibition Place
- Exhibition Stadium
- Toronto FC
References
- Don't use artificial grass in Toronto FC stadium: players
- Beckham hopes to play against DC
- Saputo Stadium to Host Canada's World Cup Qualifier
- MLS All-Star Game Live Blog
- Falling debris forces emergency repairs at BMO Field