Dowdy–Ficklen Stadium

(Redirected from Bagwell Field)

Dowdy–Ficklen Stadium is the on-campus football facility at East Carolina University for the East Carolina Pirates in Greenville, North Carolina. The official capacity of the stadium is 51,000, tying it for the second largest college stadium in North Carolina. The record attendance for the stadium was on September 3, 2022, against North Carolina State University with 51,711 in attendance. The stadium is also the site of Spring Commencement exercises for the university. The field itself was commemorated as Bagwell Field in 1997.[1]

Dowdy–Ficklen Stadium
"Rowdy Dowdy"
Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium in 2021
Dowdy–Ficklen Stadium is located in North Carolina
Dowdy–Ficklen Stadium
Dowdy–Ficklen Stadium
Location in North Carolina
Dowdy–Ficklen Stadium is located in the United States
Dowdy–Ficklen Stadium
Dowdy–Ficklen Stadium
Location in the United States
Full nameDowdy–Ficklen Stadium
Former namesFicklen Memorial Stadium (1963–1994)
Location100 Ficklen Dr, Greenville, North Carolina 27858
Coordinates35°35′47″N 77°21′55″W / 35.59639°N 77.36528°W / 35.59639; -77.36528
OwnerEast Carolina University
OperatorEast Carolina University
Capacity51,000
SurfaceTifton 419 Hybrid Bermuda
Construction
Broke ground1962
Built1962-1963
OpenedSeptember 21, 1963
Renovated1991 - $1.6 million in repairs and renovations, 2002, 2009-2010, 2018-2019 ($60MM)
Expanded1967–1968 - increased seating capacity to 20,000
1977–1978 - increased seating capacity to 35,000
1996–1998 - increased seating capacity to 43,000
2010 - increased seating capacity to 50,000
2019 - increased seating capacity to 51,000
Construction cost$283,387 ($2,234,553.41 in 2016 dollars)
ArchitectDudley & Shoe

Walter, Robbs, Callahan & Pierce, 1996-1998 expansion Corley, Redfoot, Zack, Inc.,(now CRA Associates, Inc.), 2010 expansion

LS3P Associates, Ltd., 2019 expansion
Tenants
East Carolina Pirates (NCAA) (1963–present)

History

edit

Original construction

edit

The initiative to build a new stadium was announced on October 7, 1961. On that day, President Leo Jenkins announced to a meeting of boosters, that a new stadium will be built to replace College Stadium. By 1962, over $280,000 was raised and Ficklen Memorial Stadium was built.[2] The stadium was named for James Skinner Ficklen, the owner of Greenville's E.B. Skinner Tobacco Company. Skinner was a booster of the college, and established a scholarship fund in his name.[3] The original stadium included permanent stands on the south side, a press box, and a lighting system.[4] Ficklen Memorial Stadium opened on September 21, 1963 with a win against Wake Forest.[2] The original seating capacity was 10,000.[3]

Early expansions

edit

The north side permanent seating was constructed in 1967 and 1968, increasing the capacity of the stadium to 20,000.[4] The seats were designed by W.M. Freeman Associates from High Point. The exterior of the stadium was painted in 1970 by F.A. Miller Company.[3] The lighting system was the next item that changed. The original lighting system was replaced with six towers outside of the stadium in 1975. The cost of the new lighting system was $450,000.[2] L.E. Wooten company built the lighting system.[3]

The next addition occurred two years later. The university added seats to the four corners increased the seating capacity to 35,000. This addition made Ficklen Memorial Stadium the third largest stadium in North Carolina.[4] The expansion was funded by a $2.5 million drive in the spring of 1977. A three-story press box was built as part of this expansion. The press box, which had space for 92 writers and an entire floor for electronic media, was in use until 2018 when it was replaced by the much larger Townbank Tower. Lastly, scoreboard with a lightbank message center was placed on the east end of the stadium. The playing surface was redone in 1983. A new drainage system, new base of gravel and sand, new treated topsoil, and a new grass—Tifton 419 Hybrid Bermuda were all installed.[2] A new sound system was built in 1988.[3]

1990s expansions

edit
 
Dowdy–Ficklen press box side in 2008

In 1991, $1.6 million in renovations and repairs were accomplished on the stadium.[3]

Ronald and Mary Ellen Dowdy of Orlando, Florida, donated $1 million during a fund-raising drive in 1994. Because of this donation, Ficklen Memorial Stadium was renamed Dowdy–Ficklen Stadium.[2] Also that year the roads were improved around the stadium.[3] Three years later, Al and Debbie Bagwell of Lake Gaston, Virginia donated to the East Carolina Educational Foundation. Because of this donation, the field inside the stadium was named Bagwell Field.[2]

The upper deck on the north side was completed in 1998. It increased the capacity to 40,000. This was the first seating capacity increase since 1977. A year later the club level on the north side was completed. It added 3,000 seats to the total capacity.[4] During the expansion of the upper deck and club level, the press box received improvements.[3] In 1999, a $2 million scoreboard was built in the east endzone.[2] Also that year a Pirate sculpture was dedicated in the southeast area of the stadium. The three-ton bronze sculpture is over 20 feet (6.1 m) tall. Irwin Belk gave the sculpture to the school. Jodi Hollnagel, a faculty member of the School of Art created the sculpture.[3][5]

Murphy Center construction

edit
 
The Murphy Center in the west endzone.

The $13 million Murphy Center was dedicated on September 13, 2002. It was built in the west endzone of the stadium. It connects the stadium to Williams Arena at Minges Coliseum. The 52,475-square-foot (4,875.1 m2) strength and conditioning, banquet rooms, sport memorabilia, and an academic enhancement center building was named for Pete and Lynn Murphy of Rose Hill.[6]

2009–2010 expansion

edit

The next expansion began in December 2009. The expansion included removing the scoreboard located in the east end zone. 7,000 seats were built in its place. The seats connect the north and south sides in a horseshoe pattern. Those seats increased the capacity to 50,000. Restroom and concession stands were built under the new section. Above the east end zone, a new scoreboard was built. The HD scoreboard is 88 feet (27 m) wide and a little over 28 feet (8.5 m) tall. The LED portion is 84 feet (26 m) wide.[4] This makes the new scoreboard the 22nd largest scoreboard in NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision. On the north and south sides of the stadium, 10,200 chair-back seats were installed. Lastly, another scoreboard was built on the west end zone in front of the Murphy Center.[4] The total cost of the expansion was $20 million.[7][8]

 
Dowdy–Ficklen in 2011

2018–2019 renovation project

edit

In May 2016, East Carolina revealed a $60 million renovation project for Dowdy–Ficklen Stadium, which is a portion of its athletic facilities master plan.

The project, which is slated to begin construction after the 2017 football season and was to be completed in time for the 2018 football season, has been extended to a 16-18 month construction period.[9] In April 2019, TowneBank donated $3 million toward the renovation for naming rights.[10] The renovation includes:

  • A four-story tower above the south general admission seats which will add than 1,000 premium seats through the addition of a new Club Level, Loge Boxes, and Suites.
  • A new field-level Club Section at the Murphy Center
  • A modern press box with additional space for media, including amended radio and television broadcast and production locations.
  • Improvements to the Ward Sports Medicine Building and Scales Field House to provide needed functional space for student-athletes.[11]

TowneBank Tower officially opened in August 2019 and includes 19 skyboxes, four founder suites, 22 loge boxes, 530 club seats, and more than 100 media seats.[12]

Marshall University plane crash

edit

On November 14, 1970, the visiting Marshall University Thundering Herd lost a game 17-14 to the Pirates at Dowdy–Ficklen Stadium, which ended with Marshall quarterback Ted Shoebridge controversially being called for intentional grounding on the last play of the game. Later that evening, while on approach to Huntington Tri-State Airport, the Marshall football team's plane, which had been chartered to transport the Thundering Herd to and from Greenville, crashed, killing all 75 people on board.

On December 11, 2006, a plaque was erected at the visitors' entrance to Dowdy–Ficklen Stadium. It depicts the memorial fountain on the Marshall University campus.

Attendance

edit

List of average attendance

edit
Year Total attendance Average attendance Rank Reference
2019 198,717 33,119 70 [13]
2018 230,356 32,908 65 [13]
2017 257,090 36,727 61 [13]
2016 264,680 44,113 55 [13]
2015 259,645 43,274 60 [13]
2014 268,713 44,786 58 [13]
2013 263,910 43,985 54 [13]
2012 282,076 47,013 45 [14]
2011 300,069 50,012 40 [15]
2010 297,987 49,665 44 [16]
2009 292,191 41,742 57 [17]
2008 210,080 42,016 56 [18]
2007 249,219 41,537 56 [19]
2006 223,006 37,168 63 [20]
2005 165,230 33,046 70 [21]
2004 153,418 30,684 71 [22]
2003 198,073 33,012 68 [23]
2002 148,144 29,629 67 [24]
2001 186,875 37,375 58 [25]
2000 217,742 36,290 61 [26]
1999 294,255 42,036 49 [27]
1998 158,716 31,743 64 [28]
1997 164,375 32,875 - [29]
1996 146,324 29,265 -
1995 151,889 30,378 -
1994 159,805 31,961 -
1993 134,482 26,896 -
1992 164,068 32,814 -
1991 160,108 32,022 -
1990 143,285 28,657 -

Top 15 attended games

edit
Attendance Opponent Date Score Reference
1 51,711 NC State September 3, 2022 L, 21-20
2 51,082 North Carolina September 20, 2014 W, 70-41 [30]
3 50,719 NC State September 10, 2016 W, 33-30
4 50,610 North Carolina October 1, 2011 L, 20-35
5 50,514 Virginia Tech September 26, 2015 W, 35–28
6 50,410 NC State October 16, 2010 W, 33-27OT
7 50,345 Southern Miss November 5, 2011 L, 28-48
8 50,277 UCF November 19, 2011 W, 38-31
9 50,191 Navy November 6, 2010 L, 35-76
10 50,145 Marshall October 23, 2010 W, 37-10
11 50,096 Virginia Tech September 14, 2013 L, 15-10
12 50,092 NC State November 20, 1999 W, 23-6
13 50,023 UAB September 24, 2011 W, 28-23
14 50,010 Tulsa September 5, 2010 W, 51-49
15 49,410 Tulane October 29, 2011 W 34-13

Photographs of Dowdy–Ficklen Stadium

edit

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Dowdy–Ficklen Stadium". East Carolina Official Athletic Site. East Carolina University. 2008. Archived from the original on December 23, 2008. Retrieved February 10, 2009.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g "Dowdy–Ficklen Stadium". Facilities. East Carolina Pirates. 2010. Archived from the original on July 12, 2016. Retrieved August 2, 2010.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Dowdy–Ficklen Stadium". Building Histories. Joyner Library. October 1, 2008. Retrieved August 2, 2010.
  4. ^ a b c d e f "Growing Season - Football Stadium Expansion". Web Features. East Carolina University. June 2, 2010. Retrieved August 2, 2010.
  5. ^ "Minges Coliseum/Williams Arena". Building Histories. Joyner Library. October 1, 2008. Retrieved August 2, 2010.
  6. ^ ECU Pirates Official Athletic Site. "Murphy Center". ecupirates.com. Retrieved September 13, 2017.
  7. ^ Gibson, Todd (August 3, 2010). "ECU Set To Unveil $20M Stadium Expansion". NBC17. Retrieved August 3, 2010.
  8. ^ Basden, Morgan Newell and Sydney (August 12, 2019). "Check it out: Inside the new TowneBank Tower at ECU". WCTI. Retrieved October 14, 2019.
  9. ^ ECU Pirates Official Athletic Site (August 31, 2017). "Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium Southside Renovation Timeline Extended". ecupirates.com. Retrieved September 13, 2017.
  10. ^ "TowneBank commits $3 million to ECU for Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium Southside renovation project". WNCT. April 10, 2019. Retrieved October 14, 2019.
  11. ^ ECU Pirates Official Athletic Site (April 16, 2016). "Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium Southside Renovation Project Plans Released". ecupirates.com. Retrieved September 13, 2017.
  12. ^ "TowneBank Tower officially opens at ECU's Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium". www.witn.com. August 16, 2019. Retrieved October 14, 2019.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g "NCAA Statistics". stats.ncaa.org.
  14. ^ Attendance ncaa.org
  15. ^ Attendance ncaa.org
  16. ^ Attendance ncaa.org
  17. ^ Attendance ncaa.org
  18. ^ Attendance ncaa.org
  19. ^ Attendance ncaa.org
  20. ^ Attendance ncaa.org
  21. ^ Attendance ncaa.org
  22. ^ Attendance ncaa.org
  23. ^ Attendance ncaa.org
  24. ^ "Hamrick secures East Carolina blessing to pursue UNLV post". Bonesville.net. Retrieved November 28, 2013.
  25. ^ "2001 Division I-A Home Football Attendance". NCAA.org. November 11, 2002. Archived from the original on December 3, 2013. Retrieved November 28, 2013.
  26. ^ "2000 Division I-A Home Football Attendance". NCAA.org. Archived from the original on December 3, 2013. Retrieved November 28, 2013.
  27. ^ "1999 Division I-A Home Football Attendance". NCAA.org. May 15, 2002. Archived from the original on December 3, 2013. Retrieved November 28, 2013.
  28. ^ "1998 NCAA Division I-A Football Home Attendance". NCAA.org. Archived from the original on December 3, 2013. Retrieved November 28, 2013.
  29. ^ ECU Football Guide pageturnpro.com [dead link]
  30. ^ "Top Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium Crowds". East Carolina University. Retrieved September 13, 2016.
edit