This article needs additional citations for verification .(December 2007) |
"The Brick House" | |
Location in the United States Location in Minnesota | |
Address | University Ave SE |
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Location | University of Minnesota Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S. |
Coordinates | 44°58′32″N93°13′45″W / 44.975535°N 93.229192°W |
Owner | University of Minnesota |
Operator | University of Minnesota |
Capacity | 56,652 (1970–81) 52,809 (1924–69) |
Surface | Natural grass (1977–1981) Tartan Turf (1970–1976) Natural grass (1924–1969) |
Construction | |
Broke ground | March 6, 1924 |
Opened | October 4, 1924 |
Closed | November 21, 1981 |
Demolished | 1992 |
Tenants | |
Minnesota Golden Gophers (NCAA) (1924–1981) |
Memorial Stadium, also known as the "Brick House", was an outdoor athletic stadium in the north central United States, located on the campus of the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis. It was the home of the Minnesota Golden Gophers football team for 58 seasons, from 1924 through 1981. Prior to 1924, the Gophers played at Northrop Field.
Starting in 1982, the Gophers played their home games in the new Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, and Memorial Stadium was demolished a decade later. After 27 seasons indoors, the Gophers returned to campus in 2009 at the new Huntington Bank Stadium, a block from the site of Memorial Stadium.
Opened 100 years ago on October 14, 1924, the stadium was dedicated to the 3,527 students, graduates, and workers who served in World War I, which had ended six years earlier. It sat on approximately eleven acres (4.5 ha).
While Memorial Stadium was its home, the football team won six national championships, including three consecutive (1934–1936). The championship years were 1934, 1935, 1936, 1940, 1941, and 1960. The official capacity of the stadium during the 1970s was listed as 56,652. From the 1940s onward, temporary bleachers were occasionally brought in to boost capacity to approximately 66,000, though many of the seats were far away from the field. The stadium's attendance record was 66,284, set in 1961 against Purdue on November 18. [1]
Memorial Stadium also served as the university's track and field venue, and was an occasional back-up venue for professional football and soccer. In 1969, the NFL's Minnesota Vikings played a regular season game on October 5 against the Green Bay Packers at Memorial Stadium. It was due to a conflict with a Minnesota Twins playoff game at Metropolitan Stadium, game three of the 1969 American League Championship Series the following day. The Vikings also played a pre-season game at Memorial in 1971, its second season with artificial turf. The artificial Tartan Turf was removed after seven seasons and returned to natural grass in 1977. [2]
The Minnesota Kicks soccer team of the NASL played once at Memorial Stadium, a 1981 playoff game on September 6 against the Fort Lauderdale Strikers and lost 3–0. The game was moved due to a schedule conflict with the Twins at Met Stadium. It was the last game in Kicks' history.
Ancel Keys founded the Laboratory of Physiological Hygiene underneath Memorial Stadium, on the ground floor accessed at Gate 27. Here thirty-six conscientious objectors were confined during the yearlong Minnesota Starvation Experiment. [3] [4]
Memorial Stadium served as the anchor for Stadium Village, a small commercial area at the southeast portion of the Twin Cities campus.
Pressured by downtown Minneapolis business interests and athletic boosters, the school elected to move out of the stadium to the new Metrodome, about two miles (3 km) away, during the spring of 1982. Athletic director Paul Giel cited the advantages of recruiting by playing in a new NFL venue. Also, the attendance was expected to go up in the late fall with protection from harsh weather. [5]
Memorial Stadium had been neglected by that time, and was badly in need of renovation. [5] New head coach Lou Holtz gave an impassioned speech when the time came in 1984 to decide whether to remain at the Metrodome, and declared that "Athletes want to play at the Dome." [5]
Following the move, the University of Minnesota proposed a new natatorium that would extend into the field at the open end of the horseshoe and ensure that there could be no return to Memorial Stadium. After legal challenges to halt construction of the natatorium failed, the Aquatic Center opened in 1990 and the stadium was torn down two years later. The original brick entrance arch was preserved, and when the McNamara Alumni Center was built on the same site it was installed in the interior atrium over the entrance to a small museum.
The move to the Metrodome proved to be a dismal failure in the long run, as Gophers home games lost the charm of being on a college campus. [6] The Gophers had the lowest priority in scheduling, behind the Twins and Vikings, and had to move games if the Twins were in the baseball playoffs. The university also gave up most concession and parking revenue, although their portion of the rent was the lowest of the three Metrodome tenants.
On May 20, 2006, the state legislature passed a bill providing funding for a new on-campus stadium. It opened in the fall of 2009 as TCF Bank Stadium. The original Memorial Stadium site could not be used, due to the construction of the aquatic and alumni centers. The new stadium is located about a block from where the old stadium once stood and was designed so that the alumni center on the old site is visible through the open end of the horseshoe.
Year | Total | Games | Season highest | Average |
---|---|---|---|---|
1924 | 139,772 | 6 | Illinois (35,341) | 23,297 |
1925 | 193,707 | 7 | Notre Dame (49,009) | 27,672 |
1926 | 156,032 | 5 | Michigan (58,362) | 31,206 |
1927 | 166,848 | 5 | Wisconsin (48,443) | 23,126 |
1928 | 146,185 | 5 | Chicago (53,016) | 29,237 |
1929 | 204,083 | 6 | Michigan (58,160) | 34,014 |
1930 | 167,728 | 6 | Northwestern (50,225) | 27,955 |
1931 | 115,631 | 5 | Wisconsin (48,443) | 23,126 |
1932 | 113,956 | 5 | Northwestern (52,426) | 43,557 |
1933 | 164,301 | 6 | Iowa (41,177) | 27,384 |
1934 | 192,922 | 5 | Michigan (59,362) | 38,584 |
1935 | 217,785 | 5 | Northwestern (52,426) | 43,557 |
1936 | 247,653 | 5 | Iowa (61,172) | 49,531 |
1937 | 254,188 | 5 | Notre Dame (63,237) | 50,838 |
1938 | 237,000 | 5 | Michigan (54,212) | 47,400 |
1939 | 229,954 | 5 | Northwestern (52,372) | 45,991 |
1940 | 234,990 | 5 | Michigan (61,976) | 46,998 |
1941 | 239,227 | 5 | Northwestern (61,784) | 47,845 |
1942 | 231,307 | 6 | Michigan (52,351) | 38,551 |
1943 | 182,779 | 7 | Purdue (38,709) | 26,111 |
1944 | 179,979 | 6 | Northwestern (39,997) | 29,997 |
1945 | 246,931 | 6 | Ohio State (55,789) | 41,155 |
1946 | 328,003 | 6 | Michigan (59,037) | 54,667 |
1947 | 289,612 | 5 | Purdue (61,087) | 57,922 |
1948 | 308,556 | 5 | Purdue (65,549) | 61,711 |
1949 | 305,200 | 5 | Wisconsin (63,139) | 61,040 |
1950 | 267,015 | 5 | Iowa (60,312) | 53,403 |
1951 | 224,759 | 5 | Nebraska (54,573) | 45,152 |
1952 | 270,292 | 5 | Iowa (60,376) | 54,058 |
1953 | 293,313 | 5 | Michigan (62,795) | 58,663 |
1954 | 347,555 | 6 | Iowa (65,464) | 57,926 |
1955 | 305,581 | 5 | USC (64,074) | 61,116 |
1956 | 372,654 | 6 | Iowa (64,235) | 62,109 |
1957 | 314,769 | 5 | Purdue (64,629) | 62,954 |
1958 | 282,230 | 5 | Iowa (63,726) | 56,446 |
1959 | 256,039 | 5 | Michigan (56,082) | 51,208 |
1960 | 342,199 | 6 | Iowa (65,292) | 57,033 |
1961 | 361,929 | 6 | Purdue (66,284) | 60,322 |
1962 | 368,200 | 6 | Iowa (65,061) | 61,367 |
1963 | 286,797 | 5 | Michigan (61,817) | 57,759 |
1964 | 268,908 | 5 | Iowa (62,514) | 53,782 |
1965 | 302,747 | 6 | Michigan (58,519) | 50,458 |
1966 | 248,248 | 5 | Iowa (62,631) | 49,600 |
1967 | 237,798 | 6 | Michigan State (56,334) | 39,633 |
1968 | 312,806 | 6 | USC (60,820) | 52,134 |
1969 | 272,449 | 6 | Ohio State (52,972) | 45,417 |
1970 | 225,468 | 5 | Nebraska (52,539) | 45,093 |
1971 | 207,662 | 6 | Michigan (44,412) | 34,610 |
1972 | 222,079 | 6 | Iowa (44,196) | 37,013 |
1973 | 252,917 | 6 | Nebraska (56,782) | 42,153 |
1974 | 226,127 | 6 | Ohio State (45,411) | 37,688 |
1975 | 220,081 | 7 | Wisconsin (37,578) | 31,440 |
1976 | 262,878 | 6 | Iowa (53,222) | 43,813 |
1977 | 247,118 | 7 | Michigan (44,165) | 35,303 |
1978 | 231,411 | 6 | Ohio State (52,209) | 38,569 |
1979 | 241,952 | 6 | Purdue (47,281) | 40,325 |
1980 | 265,105 | 6 | Iowa (58,158) | 44,184 |
1981 | 301,248 | 7 | Michigan (52,875) | 43,035 |
The Minnesota Vikings are a professional American football team based in Minneapolis. The Vikings compete in the National Football League (NFL) as a member club of the National Football Conference (NFC) North division. Founded in 1960 as an expansion team, the team began play the following year. They are named after the Vikings of medieval Scandinavia, reflecting the prominent Scandinavian American culture of Minnesota. The team plays its home games at U.S. Bank Stadium in the Downtown East section of Minneapolis.
The Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome was a domed sports stadium located in downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota. It opened in 1982 as a replacement for Metropolitan Stadium, the former home of the National Football League's (NFL) Minnesota Vikings and Major League Baseball's (MLB) Minnesota Twins, and Memorial Stadium, the former home of the Minnesota Golden Gophers football team.
Metropolitan Stadium was an outdoor sports stadium in the north central United States, located in Bloomington, Minnesota, a suburb of Minneapolis.
The Little Brown Jug is a trophy contested between the Michigan Wolverines football team of the University of Michigan and the Minnesota Golden Gophers football team of the University of Minnesota. The Little Brown Jug is an earthenware jug that serves as a trophy awarded to the winner of the game. It is one of the oldest and most played rivalries in American college football, dating to 1892. The Little Brown Jug is the most regularly exchanged rivalry trophy in college football, the oldest trophy game in FBS college football, and the second oldest rivalry trophy overall, next to the 1899 Territorial Cup, contested between Arizona and Arizona State.
Huntington Bank Stadium is an outdoor stadium located on the campus of the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States. The stadium opened in 2009, after three years of construction. It is the home field of the Minnesota Golden Gophers of the Big Ten Conference.
Northrop Field was the on-campus stadium of the Minnesota Golden Gophers football team from 1899 to 1923. The original field had seating of around 3,000 and was named for University President Cyrus Northrop. After the 1902 season, the playing field was moved and new seating was added that allowed for crowds of up to 20,000. The stadium was sometimes referred to as Greater Northrop Field after 1902. In 1903, the first season at the enlarged field, the Gophers played the Michigan Wolverines in the first Little Brown Jug game. The stadium continued on as the football team's home until the end of the 1923 season. The U of M then built Memorial Stadium and moved there in 1924.
Throughout the years, a number of teams in the National Football League (NFL) have either moved or merged.
The Minnesota Golden Gophers football team represents the University of Minnesota in college football at the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision level. Founded in 1882, Minnesota has been a member of the Big Ten Conference since its inception in 1896 as the Western Conference. The Golden Gophers claim seven national championships, including four from the major wire-service: AP Poll and/or Coaches' Poll.
Stadium Village is an area of Minneapolis, Minnesota near the East Bank campus of the University of Minnesota. While not an official neighborhood of Minneapolis, the area is an important commercial district that serves university students with many bars and restaurants. There are plans to incorporate it into an official neighborhood of Minneapolis along with the surrounding area. It is part of Southeast Minneapolis, that part of Minneapolis on the East Bank of the Mississippi River and south of Hennepin Avenue
Downtown East is an official neighborhood in Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States. It is in Ward 3, currently represented by council member Michael Rainville.
The University of Minnesota Marching Band is the marching band of the University of Minnesota and the flagship university band for the state of Minnesota. The Pride of Minnesota serves as an ambassador for the university, representing the school at major events both on and off campus. The band performs before, during, and after all home Golden Gopher football games and bowl games, occasional away games, local parades, numerous pepfests, exhibition performances, as well as a series of indoor concerts toward the end of the regular football season. Members of the band, along with non-member students, also participate in smaller athletic pep bands that perform at other major sporting events, including men's hockey, men's basketball, women's hockey, women's basketball, and women's volleyball.
The Minnesota–Wisconsin football rivalry is an American college football rivalry between the Minnesota Golden Gophers and Wisconsin Badgers. It is the most-played rivalry in the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision, with 133 meetings between the two teams. The winner of the game receives Paul Bunyan's Axe, a tradition that started in 1948 after the first trophy, the Slab of Bacon, disappeared after the 1943 game when the Badgers were supposed to turn it over to the Golden Gophers. Minnesota and Wisconsin first played in 1890 and have met every year since, except for 1906. Wisconsin leads the series 63–62–8 through 2023. Wisconsin took the series lead for the first time after defeating Minnesota 31–0 in the 2017 game; Minnesota had led the overall series since 1902, at times by as many as 20 games.
The 1998 season was the Minnesota Vikings' 38th in the National Football League (NFL). The Vikings became the third team in NFL history to win 15 games during the regular season, which earned them the National Football Conference (NFC) Central division championship and the first overall seed in the NFC playoffs. The team entered the playoffs as the favorite to win Super Bowl XXXIII, but their season ended when they were upset by the Atlanta Falcons 30–27 in the 1998 NFC Championship Game.
The 2000 season was the Minnesota Vikings' 40th in the National Football League (NFL). They won the NFC Central division title with an 11–5 record. After not retaining either Randall Cunningham or Jeff George, the team was led by first-year starting quarterback Daunte Culpepper and running back Robert Smith, who ran for a then team record 1,521 yards and seven touchdowns. The Vikings started out 7–0 and were 11–2 after 14 weeks, but slumped briefly, losing their last three to the St. Louis Rams, Green Bay Packers and Indianapolis Colts while Culpepper was hampered by injury.
The 1982 season was the Minnesota Vikings' 22nd season in the National Football League (NFL) and their first in the newly constructed Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome. The team was looking to improve on its 7–9 record from 1981. However, a players strike meant seven of the team's 16 games were canceled, and each NFL team was only able to play nine games. The Vikings won their opener against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers before losing the next week to the Buffalo Bills, a game in which they had a 19–0 lead before the Bills pulled off a comeback to win 23–22.
U.S. Bank Stadium is an enclosed stadium located in downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota. Built on the former site of the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, the indoor stadium opened in 2016 and is the home of the Minnesota Vikings of the National Football League (NFL); it also hosts early season college baseball games of the University of Minnesota Golden Gophers.
The Minnesota Twins are an American professional baseball team based in Minneapolis. The Twins compete in Major League Baseball (MLB) as a member club of the American League (AL) Central division. The team is named after the Twin Cities area of Minneapolis and Saint Paul. The club was originally founded in 1901 as the Washington Senators, and was one of the American League's eight original charter franchises. By 1903, peace was restored with agreements between the two rival baseball loops on player contract and represented member cities/teams, and the beginnings of a national championship series titled the World Series. In 1905, the team changed its official name to the Washington Nationals. The name "Nationals" would appear on the uniforms for only two seasons, and would then be replaced with the "W" logo for the next 52 years. The media often shortened the nickname to "Nats". Many fans and newspapers persisted in continuing using the previous "Senators" nickname. Over time, "Nationals" faded as a nickname, and "Senators" became dominant. Baseball guides would list the club's nickname as "Nationals or Senators", acknowledging the dual-nickname situation. After 61 years in the capital, in 1961, the Washington Senators relocated to the Twin Cities of Minnesota, to be called the Twins, being the first major league baseball team to use a state in its geographical identifier name rather than the traditional city; Washington would get a new incarnation of the Senators to fill the void left by the original team's move.
Olga Mural Field at Schoonover Stadium is a baseball venue located on the campus of Kent State University in Kent, Ohio, United States. It is home to the Kent State Golden Flashes baseball team, a member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) in Division I and the Mid-American Conference East Division. The field opened in 1966 and was previously known as Gene Michael Field from 1990 to 2003. The field was renamed in late 2003 and renovated in 2005 with additional upgrades made from 2006 through 2008 and again in 2013 to 2014. It has a seating capacity of 1,148 people with a Shaw Sports Turf synthetic playing surface.
Sports in Minneapolis–Saint Paul includes a number of teams.
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: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)] Star Tribune, September 2, 2009Events and tenants | ||
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Preceded by | Host of the Minnesota Gophers 1924 – 1981 | Succeeded by |