"The Swamp" | |
Location | 201 Reinhardt Dr, Lafayette, Louisiana 70506 |
---|---|
Coordinates | 30°12′57″N92°2′31″W / 30.21583°N 92.04194°W |
Owner | University of Louisiana at Lafayette |
Operator | University of Louisiana at Lafayette |
Capacity | 41,264 (2016–present) 41,426 (2014–2015) 31,000 (1992–2013) 26,000 (1971–1991) Additional capacity on hill behind north end zone (1971–present) and south end zone (1971–2014) |
Surface | ProGrass, artificial turf |
Construction | |
Broke ground | 1970 |
Opened | September 25, 1971 |
Renovated | 1992, 2008, 2014, 2024-present |
Tenants | |
Louisiana Ragin' Cajuns football (NCAA) (1971–present) New Orleans Bowl (NCAA) (2005) New Orleans Breakers (USFL) (1 game, 1984) |
Cajun Field is a football stadium located on the South Campus of the University of Louisiana at Lafayette in the city of Lafayette, Louisiana. Nicknamed The Swamp, it is the home field of Louisiana Ragin' Cajuns athletics. Cajun Field is primarily used for its American football team. Cajun Field has an official capacity of 41,426 with 2,577 chairback seats.
It is currently the largest facility and football stadium in the Sun Belt Conference and the second largest college football stadium in Louisiana.
In planning since at least 1967 (when a rendition was featured on the football media guide), it was built in 1970 as a replacement for McNaspy Stadium, opening on September 25, 1971, with a shutout of Santa Clara University. The stadium consists of a bowl with seating on the sidelines, with a second deck on the west sideline. In one of the biggest games at the stadium, on September 14, 1996, 38,783 spectators saw the Cajuns upset 25th-ranked Texas A&M, 29–22, the first victory for the Cajuns over a ranked opponent. [1] The largest crowd at The Swamp as of 2013 [update] was 41,357 fans on September 5, 2009, when the Cajuns beat Southern University 42–19 at the 9th annual Herbert Heymann Football Classic. [2]
The stadium won the Sun Belt Conference Attendance Championship in 2004, 2008, and 2011.
Because of Hurricane Katrina, the 2005 New Orleans Bowl was played here instead of in New Orleans, with Southern Miss defeating Arkansas State, 31–19. Also the Tulane Green Wave football team used it for a home game in 2005 after being displaced by the hurricane.
In addition, Cajun Field hosted the final pre-season game of the New Orleans Breakers of the United States Football League on February 18, 1984, a 20–0 victory over the Memphis Showboats.
In 1992, Cajun Field saw the attendance rise from 26,000 to 31,000 due to an upgrade to the ends of the stadium seating.
In the summer of 2008 Cajun Field replaced its long-standing natural grass with ProGrass, an artificial turf. The stadium was pressure-washed and repainted. Advertisements and banners reading "University of Louisiana at Lafayette," "Ragin' Cajuns," and "www.ragincajuns.com" also were installed around the black retaining wall that surrounds the field.
In spring 2014, construction of the south endzone seating began. This first phase project included bowling in the south endzone with new bleacher seating as well as concession and restroom facilities. This change has increased capacity to 41,426 and was completed for the 2014 season kickoff. [3] Daktronics also installed a 30-by-54-foot (9.1 by 16.5 m) HD screen in the north end zone, replacing the previous scoreboard.
In June 2021 a major renovation was announced. The Our Lady of Lourdes Regional Medical Center has secured naming rights for the new facility to take the place of Cajun Field with a commitment to invest $15 million over 15 years. [4] The facility will now be known as Cajun Field at Our Lady of Lourdes Stadium. The stadium officially started construction at the conclusion of the 2023 season and is slated to be complete by the beginning of the 2025 season. For the 2024 season, the stadium will utilize the east side and south end zone, as well as north end zone grass seating.
Cajun Field's surface is two feet below sea level in a natural bowl. With the below-sea level playing surface, a total of four 60 horsepower (45 kW) pumps and a sophisticated drainage system help keep the field in good playing condition even during the frequent south Louisiana rainstorms. The subsurface stadium requires many fans to walk down to their seats. Ragin' Cajuns football players and their opponents enter Cajun Field through a tunnel from the Louisiana athletics complex.
In 1988 the stadium was nicknamed "The Swamp," as then noted on stadium signage, in the school yearbook and, a year later, in the 1989 official Southwestern Louisiana sports media guide. The nickname is tied to the field's early 1970s construction, and even refers to the original football field for what was then the Southwestern Louisiana Industrial Institute in the early 1900s. The university's first football field was on the main campus adjacent to a small cypress pond, which later became Cypress Lake, also nicknamed The Swamp.
The "Swamp" nickname also fits with the area's geography, with many bayous and wetlands, including the Atchafalaya Basin and the nearby Gulf of Mexico marshlands. The National Wetlands Research Center, a United States Geological Survey research facility at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, is less than half a mile from Cajun Field.
Division I FBS Ben Hill Griffin Stadium at the University of Florida was later also nicknamed "The Swamp" by then-Gators head coach Steve Spurrier in 1991.
Rankings come from AP poll
Rank | Attendance | Date | Game Result |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 41,357 | September 5, 2009 | Louisiana–Lafayette 42, Southern 19 |
2 | 38,783 | September 14, 1996 | Southwestern Louisiana 29, 25 Texas A&M 22 |
3 | 36,170 | August 30, 2014 | Louisiana–Lafayette 45, Southern 6 |
4 | 36,133 | October 6, 1990 | Southwestern Louisiana 6, RV Alabama 25 |
5 | 33,828 | September 15, 2007 | Louisiana–Lafayette 17, McNeese State 38 |
6 | 32,823 | October 15, 2011 | Louisiana–Lafayette 30, North Texas 10 (vacated) |
7 | 31,014 | December 4, 2021 | 20 Louisiana 24, Appalachian State 16 |
8 | 30,176 | November 6, 1976 | Southwestern Louisiana 23, Arkansas State 14 |
9 | 30,028 | November 2, 2013 | Louisiana–Lafayette 49, New Mexico State 35 (vacated) |
10 | 29,775 | October 8, 2011 | Louisiana–Lafayette 31, Troy 17 (vacated) |
11 | 29,758 | October 6, 2012 | Louisiana–Lafayette 41, Tulane 13 (vacated) |
12 | 29,031 | November 1, 2008 | Louisiana–Lafayette 49, FIU 20 |
13 | 28,871 | September 14, 2013 | Louisiana–Lafayette 70, Nicholls State 7 (vacated) |
14 | 28,866 | September 1, 2018 | Louisiana 49, McNeese State 17 |
15 | 28,794 | October 30, 2021 | RV Louisiana 45, Texas State 0 |
16 | 28,752 | November 12, 1977 | Southwestern Louisiana 13, Northwestern State 20 |
17 | 28,741 | September 17, 2011 | Louisiana–Lafayette 38, Nicholls State 21 (vacated) |
18 | 28,176 | November 5, 2011 | Louisiana–Lafayette 36, Louisiana–Monroe 35 (vacated) |
19 | 27,814 | October 30, 1993 | Southwestern Louisiana 24, San Jose State 13 |
20 | 27,300 | October 15, 1988 | Southwestern Louisiana 45, Northern Illinois 0 |
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