Really? Ok, thanks for imparting your wisdom. I had no idea.
I assume this is withering sarcasm. And ok fine, you knew that and liked it anyway, I don't begrudge you that.
I'm just saying, stuff named after people has a little less charm to me than, say, Craven Cottage or White Hart Lane. And some names are better than others, and perhaps "Wrigley" is more fun to refer to than, I dunno, Bryant-Denny Stadium. There's something about "Kyle Field" at Texas A&M that makes me want to know the backstory (involving an agriculture professor who used campus cropland to make their first makeshift stadium 115 years ago). Either way they're much better than corporate names that went to the highest bidder, and change every time at contract renewal.
I think it's that permanence which is another big aspect of charm. Something you can get attached to, even if the players change from year to year. Here in Pittsburgh, the Steelers played at "Heinz Field" for 50 years, and the change last year to some random insurance company is just actively ignored by everyone. It's Heinz Field. I don't care what you call it on the broadcasts. So when you've got something whose name is not for sale, like Fenway, where the team is actively refusing an opportunity to make money because they value that permanence and community-connection more, I think it adds a lot to the charm. And maybe that's equally true for stadia named after people than for those named after, well, anything else.
La Liga does pretty well with this.
Only a handful of stadiums in the league have a corporate sponsor, a lot are municipally owned. Not all are equally charming, some are just place-names (e.g. Montilivi in Girona is just the local barrio name), or a local river (hey, it works for the Maracana!), or named after a club president. Vallecas (Rayo Vallecano) marks the name of a community whose separate identity was erased when it was absorbed into the Community of Madrid. Cadiz CF's original team name was Mirandilla, so after
some controversy relating to the stadium's longtime previous name, they changed it to Nuevo Mirandilla.
I guess my favorite there, after reading about all of them, would be Deportivo Alaves, whose stadium, "Mendizorrotza", is a Basque word for mountain peak - which I guess is in the backdrop. The stadium also turns
100 years old next year.