ditchy said:Great stadiums for Usa , but can you imagine a stadium like that in UK now with no roof ... A giant Withdean !!
Brovian said:Edna - the old Seahawks stadium was the Kingdome, built in 1976 and demolished in 2000. Towards the end of its life though it was HATED by the fans, not least because the roof leaked badly! BTW the new ground was built largely or completely (can't remember which) with public money. Before it was built there was a referendum as to whether City money should be spent on a new sports ground. The people voted overwhelmingly 'No' - but they went ahead and built it anyway!
One of the reasons was that the Seahawks, in the manner of American sports franchises, had been making noises about moving unless the Kingdome was replaced. The Seattle authorities decided that keeping their professional football team was more important than the views of local residents!
edna krabappel said:Florida does appear to be rather well off for spactacular stadiums...
Municipal Stadium, Jacksonville (NFL)
I mention this one because a few years back, some rich guy decides Jacksonville needs an NFL team, so builds this thing in the middle of the city (and it is, I've been there), in the HOPE of enticing an NFL franchise. Dammit, we can't even build a stadium WITH a team, and they get to build 75,000 seats in the middle of a city before they've even invented one...
Raymond James Stadium, Tampa (NFL)
edna krabappel said:Just to really rub it in, these are Portsmouth's latest stadium plans (I know they come up with a new one every year, but as they're suddenly fashionable again, their council are obviously taking notice). The architect is the same bloke who designed the Allianz Arena (see above) and the new Olympic stadium in Beijing.
They'll probably have European money lobbed freely at them too, by virtue of the fact that it'll be regenerating a totally crappy area.
Honestly, if this ever replaces Fratton Park- and let's face it, they'll probably have it built before Falmer ever is, I will cry.
does look niceBilly the Fish said:Capacity is only 60.000 for that one.
I think the coolest of all those is the doak campbell, it's proper old school and has a history, and it's made out of bricks and not mecano like the rest of them
League1Champions said:
Coliseum home of the USC (University of Southern California) Trojans
League1Champions said:
Coliseum home of the USC (University of Southern California) Trojans
Whoops forgot to say capacity 92,000 and its sold out for every game
Billy the Fish said:My mate played college football for Ithaca and he said the same thing, if not bigger. He said the standard isn't far off the NFL, but the big difference is that the players are all hungry for success because they haven't made it yet. Even high school football gets crowds of a few thousand.
True, but do they really need it? When I went to San Fransisco last year I got tickets for the Raiders no problem at all - the ground wasn't even full (perhaps not surprising given the recent form). However all everybody wanted to talk about was college football. My brother-in-law's family and friends (he's married to a Californian) are all mad-keen football fans but none of them give a toss about the NFL; all they're interested in is their college teams. If pushed they say they follow players, for example the USC old boys were all looking forward to seeing Reggie Bush in the pro game.Buffalo Seagull said:The college games in Los Angeles (USC and UCLA) are huge. It's a bit of an embarrassment to the NFL that greater Los Angeles has a population of almost 20 million, but no NFL team.
Brovian said:True, but do they really need it? When I went to San Fransisco last year I got tickets for the Raiders no problem at all - the ground wasn't even full (perhaps not surprising given the recent form). However all everybody wanted to talk about was college football. My brother-in-law's family and friends (he's married to a Californian) are all mad-keen football fans but none of them give a toss about the NFL; all they're interested in is their college teams.
Brovian said:True, but do they really need it? When I went to San Fransisco last year I got tickets for the Raiders no problem at all - the ground wasn't even full (perhaps not surprising given the recent form). However all everybody wanted to talk about was college football. My brother-in-law's family and friends (he's married to a Californian) are all mad-keen football fans but none of them give a toss about the NFL; all they're interested in is their college teams. If pushed they say they follow players, for example the USC old boys were all looking forward to seeing Reggie Bush in the pro game.
We discussed this and one of the reasons IS the franchise system. USC is never going to relocate to, say, Florida, whereas with teams like the Raiders, who have a history of moving, you never know if you'll wake up one morning and find them gone. Consequently you feel you can't 'commit' to them 100%.
Barry Hazgon said:And this stadium is air conditioned !!
I've been to see baseball at the Arizona Diamondbacks in Phoenix (45,000 seater) and they shut the roof for day games and switch the aircon on the night before.
100 degrees outside. Just lovely in the stadium.
Baseball teams play 81 home games, (and 81 away) have home stands of 8 to 14 consecutive days, sell out usually, cheap ticket prices, stadium cleaned top to bottom overnight.
But our players play too much and the new Wembley is indeed the best in the world