This article needs to be updated.(January 2022) |
Gaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium, also known as Owen Field or The Palace on the Prairie, is the football stadium on the campus of the University of Oklahoma in Norman, Oklahoma. It serves as the home of the Oklahoma Sooners football team. The official seating capacity of the stadium, following renovations before the start of the 2019 season, is 80,126, making it the 41st largest stadium in the world, the 15th largest college stadium in the United States and the ninth largest in the Southeastern Conference.[1]
"Owen Field" "The Palace On The Prairie" | |
Former names | Oklahoma Memorial Stadium (1923–2002) |
---|---|
Address | 1185 Asp Ave. |
Location | Norman, Oklahoma |
Coordinates | 35°12′21″N 97°26′33″W / 35.20583°N 97.44250°W |
Owner | University of Oklahoma |
Operator | University of Oklahoma |
Capacity | 80,126 (since 2019)[1][2] |
Record attendance | 88,308 (November 11, 2017 vs. TCU) |
Surface | Grass: 1923–1969 AstroTurf: 1970–1980 Superturf: 1981–1993 Bermudagrass: 1994–present |
Construction | |
Broke ground | 1922 |
Opened | October 20, 1923[5] |
Renovated | 1980, 1997, 2003, 2016 |
Expanded | 1925, 1929, 1949, 1957, 1974, 1980, 2003, 2016 |
Construction cost | $293,000 ($5.07 million in 2023 dollars[3]) $125 million (renovations) |
Architect | Layton & Hicks[4] HOK Sport/360 Architecture (renovations) |
Structural engineer | Walter P Moore (renovations) |
Tenants | |
Oklahoma Sooners (NCAA) (1923–present) | |
Website | |
soonersports.com/memorialstadium |
The stadium is a bowl-shaped facility with its long axis oriented north/south, with both the north and south ends enclosed. The south end has only been enclosed since the 2015-2016 off-season, when it was renovated as part of a $160 million project. Visitor seating is in the south end zone and the southern sections of the east side. The student seating sections are in the east stands, surrounding the 350-member Pride of Oklahoma band which sits in section 29, between the 20- and 35-yard lines. The Sooners' bench was once located on the east side with the students, but the home bench was moved to the west side in the mid-1990s.
Early history
editThe first game played at the current stadium site was in 1923, with the Sooners prevailing over Washington University 62–7.[6] Originally, seating consisted of an approximately 500-seat bleacher area on the east side. The first permanent seating wasn't built until 1925, when 16,000 seats were built on the west side of the site–corresponding to the lower level of the current facility's west grandstands. However, OU reckons 1923 as the stadium's opening date. The new stadium was named "Oklahoma Memorial Stadium" in honor of university students and personnel that died during World War I. The facility was constructed at an approximate cost of $293,000,[7] and coach Bennie Owen himself helped raise the money.[8] To honor Owen, the playing surface was named Owen Field during the 1920s. The stadium as a whole has long been called Owen Field, but in actuality the field and the stadium are two separate objects with two separate names.[8]
There are two main reasons why the stadium was not originally a fully enclosed "bowl" like, for example, Michigan Stadium or the Rose Bowl. First, access to the three outdoor football practice fields, which are behind the south end zone seats, would have been restricted by completely enclosing the south end of the stadium. Secondly, any enclosure would have forced the baseball field, which shared its outfield with the practice fields until 1982, to shorten its left field line considerably.[7][9]
More permanent seating was added, this time to the east side, in 1929. In 1949, the north end of the stadium was enclosed, the playing area was lowered six feet with the elimination of the running track around the field.[7] This created a 55,000-seat "horseshoe," and the addition of south end bleachers in 1957 brought capacity to just under 61,836 fans.[7] AstroTurf replaced the natural grass field in 1970. The west side upper deck was added in 1975, featuring a lounge and a new press box, for a total capacity of 71,187 fans at a cost of about $5.7 million.[6] Improved south end zone seating, including new coaches' offices and training facilities, was added in 1980 and the old turf was replaced with Superturf in 1981.[6] The new turf was more or less a necessity; the old surface had literally become threadbare.[10] With a few exceptions, these changes took place during or shortly after the Sooners' national championship seasons of 1950, 1955, 1956, 1974, and 1975 – all high times for Sooner sports.
Lights, camera, football, money
editUp until the 1980s, the NCAA had a tight grip on television contracts for Division I-A college football games. Compared to the current plethora of college football games on television, only two (on rare occasions, three) college football games were televised each week and the schedule of games was set in stone well in advance of the season opening. The NCAA reasoned that televised games cut into attendance, and more TV games would cost more money in lost gate receipts than could be gained with television contracts.[11]
In the fall of 1981, OU and the University of Georgia sued the NCAA in federal court in Oklahoma City.[12] In this class-action lawsuit on behalf of members of the College Football Association, the two schools alleged that the NCAA's contracts with ABC, NBC, and CBS violated the Sherman Antitrust Act by preventing each college and conference from selling its product on the open market. The court agreed with the schools in 1982 and voided the NCAA's television contracts.[11]
However, the ruling was appealed by the NCAA and finally heard by the Supreme Court of the United States, (NCAA v. Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma, 468 U.S. 85 (1984)). The Supreme Court upheld the original trial decision, confirming that the NCAA's television plan indeed violated the Sherman and Clayton Antitrust Acts.
Less than two years later, the Sooners and the rest of Division I-A were playing seven to ten games each season on television. This presented a new problem for both the Sooners and Owen Field.
At the time, Owen Field did not have permanent artificial lighting sufficient for television broadcasts at night. This meant that untelevised home games had to start in the morning or early afternoon so as to be completed by dark, because the cost of leasing a set of portable lights was too high for a game that would not earn enough revenue to pay for those lights. For all televised games, portable lights on trucks were rented – but the leasing costs cut into the university's revenue, and often the four or five portable light trucks stayed on campus for weeks in anticipation of the next televised game. True night games were difficult to play in Norman because of the amount of portable lighting needed to illuminate the field adequately for spectators to see the players, much less the light required for television. Prior to 1982, the university knew which games would be televised and could plan months ahead for leasing the necessary lighting.
With the successful outcome of the court case against the NCAA, more late afternoon and night games were scheduled in Norman and television schedules changed during the season, requiring large portable light trucks to take up space on campus while waiting for the next televised game. It was not until 1997 that permanent television lights were installed in the four corners of the stadium, along with a new south end zone video scoreboard to replace the antiquated main scoreboard.[7]
Owen Field switched back to natural grass, or Prescription Athletic Turf, from the aging Superturf in 1994, improving the field's drainage system in the process.[7] The switch was more or less out of necessity, as the condition of the Superturf field had deteriorated to the point it was almost unplayable. The turf's poor condition is widely believed to have contributed to a crash of the Sooner Schooner during a 1993 game against Colorado.[10] The return to natural grass in 1994 and the lighting and scoreboard installation in 1997 would be the only major improvements to the stadium for nearly 20 years.[6][7]
21st-century improvements
editBy 1999, the 75-year-old stadium was showing its age. Aside from the turf and lighting enhancements, the last substantial upgrade to the stadium had been the construction of the press box in 1975.[13] The OU College of Architecture was housed under the west stands and in the north end zone, until other facilities became available in 1990.[14] The east stands still had the original dirt flooring underneath the stands, making for a cloudy, dusty walk into the student and visitor seating sections. Restrooms were old and inadequate; paint was peeling off external walls and the areas under the stands (the east side in particular) were dark and smelled like dust.
Plans began in 1997 to upgrade most athletic department facilities, beginning with a five-year fundraising campaign. Then, unexpectedly, the Sooners won the BCS National Championship for the 2000 season. The university began to get more freshman applications than it could house due in large part to the football team's success.[15] Along with other campus improvements such as more and better student housing, the refurbishment and expansion plan for the stadium was accelerated to be ready by the beginning of the 2003 season.[13]
In 2002, every seat in the stadium was replaced and the north end zone scoreboard was dismantled in preparation for replacement. From 2003 to 2004, the video and audio systems were completely replaced, and new video scoreboards were placed at both end zones. The west side, long ignored except for the press box construction in 1975, received restroom and concession improvements. Most importantly, a street running east of the east stands was moved to allow for the construction of an upper deck with club seating for 2,500 and 27 suites on the east side, which increased the capacity of the stadium to 83,469.[13] The renovation, led by architecture firms 360 Architecture and HOK Sport (now Populous), cost $54 million.
The north and west entries were renovated to match the Cherokee Gothic look of most campus buildings, and other cosmetic enhancements were made to the press box. A reflecting pool just north of the stadium, filled in during the 1949 north end zone expansion, was restored in 2000. A new war memorial, listing the names of Sooners killed while serving in the U.S. armed forces, was placed next to the reflecting pool in 2003.
The basketball coaches' offices are located in the Lloyd Noble Center, but the rest of the OU athletic coaches' offices, the Athletic Director's office, and the OU Athletics administrators' offices are located in the north end of the stadium in the McClendon Center.[16]
$12 million toward the $75 million cost of the stadium project was donated by Christy Gaylord Everest, then publisher of The Oklahoman and daughter of Edward K. Gaylord, in 2002. The stadium was renamed to its current name in honor of this gift.[13] (The Gaylords donated a total of $50 million to the university around this time, including $22 million for a new building to house the College of Journalism.)[8]
Rock band U2 performed a sold-out show at the stadium as a part of the 360° Tour on 18 October 2009.
Barry Switzer Center
editThe Barry Switzer Center housed football offices, the football locker room, equipment room, the Siegfried Strength and Conditioning Complex, the Freede Sports Medicine Facility and the Touchdown Club Legends Lobby. The Center was located at the south end of the stadium. It was dedicated on April 24, 1999, and named after OU’s all-time winningest head football coach. During Summer 2015 the Switzer Center was demolished as part of the expansion of the stadium.[17] In Barry Switzer’s 16 seasons as the Oklahoma Sooners head football coach, the team won three national championships, 12 Big Eight Conference championships and eight bowl games in 13 appearances.
Mural
editArtist Ted Watts completed a mural in the Barry Switzer Center in December 1998, and updated the mural to include later accomplishments in 2002, 2005 and 2009. Subjects included:
Recent innovations and future plans
editIn a February 2007 radio interview, OU Athletic Director Joe Castiglione said that a new stadium master plan was in development. Castiglione spoke about replacing the press box and expanding the south end zone seating but gave no timetable or other details.[7] In March 2007, the OU Board of Regents approved an Athletic Department request for $10.3 million to replace the displays and the sound systems of both the stadium and the Lloyd Noble Center.[18][19]
The improvements include the installation of a state-of-the-art Daktronics 16mm HD-ready video replay board in the north end zone, which replaced an older matrix messageboard, and digital 23mm LED ribbon displays along the edges of both upper decks, the north end zone, and the north tunnel entrances. Eight new concession stands were added, along with more than 60 new toilets in the women's restrooms, 30 new water fountains, handrails on all aisles of the upper decks, new speakers in all restrooms, and a new public address system.[20]
Phase two replaced the obsolete displays and sound system of the Lloyd Noble Center. The final phase was completed prior to the 2008 season and included replacement of the stadium's south scoreboard and sound system within the existing structure. The new displays are compatible with high-definition television equipment, although no HD cameras were purchased during the project.[19][21]
On March 10, 2015, the University of Oklahoma board of regents approved the initial construction of "Phase 1" to renovate Gaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium.[22] The renovation is expected to cost approximately $160 million and anticipated completion is just prior to the start of the 2016 football season. Due to uncertain economic conditions, the board of regents decided to start with "Phase 1" (which will focus primarily on the south endzone, football offices, training center and weight room), and proceed to "Phase 2" (which will focus on the west side of the stadium, including the press box, club seats and new facade. As well as various improvements to restrooms, escalators and concessions) at a later date, when the economic conditions have improved. The first phase of construction will bowl in the south endzone, and bring the total capacity to 83,489.[23]
Timeline of seating capacity
editAttendance records
editThe following are the largest crowds in the history of the stadium.[when?][26][failed verification]
Rank | Date | Attendance | Opponent | Oklahoma rank | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | November 11, 2017 | 88,388 | #6 TCU | #5 | W, 38–20 |
2 | September 17, 2016 | 87,939 | #3 Ohio State | #14 | L, 45–24 |
3 | December 3, 2016 | 87,527 | #11 Oklahoma State | #7 | W, 38–20 |
4 | September 22, 2018 | 87,177 | Army | #5 | W, 28–21 OT |
5 | September 10, 2016 | 87,037 | Louisiana-Monroe | #14 | W, 59–17 |
6 | September 29, 2018 | 86,642 | Baylor | #6 | W, 66–33 |
7 | September 1, 2018 | 86,402 | Florida Atlantic | #7 | W, 63–14 |
8 | September 8, 2018 | 86,402 | UCLA | #6 | W, 49–21 |
9 | October 28, 2017 | 86,309 | Texas Tech | #10 | W, 49–27 |
10 | October 29, 2016 | 86,301 | Kansas | #16 | W, 56–3 |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c Reneau, Kegan (August 31, 2019). "New Seating Capacity for Gaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium 3,000 Less Than Projected". USA Today. Retrieved November 6, 2021.
- ^ Duarte, Joseph (August 26, 2019). "Houston vs. Oklahoma: By the Numbers". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved August 27, 2019.
- ^ 1634–1699: McCusker, J. J. (1997). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1700–1799: McCusker, J. J. (1992). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1800–present: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Retrieved February 29, 2024.
- ^ "Layton, Soloman Andrew". Oklahoma Historical Society. Archived from the original on July 19, 2010.
- ^ "Memorial Stadium". University of Oklahoma Department of Intercollegiate Athletics. Archived from the original on October 30, 2010. Retrieved September 1, 2011.
- ^ a b c d "Stadium History". University of Oklahoma Department of Intercollegiate Athletics. September 9, 2015. Retrieved September 10, 2015.
- ^ a b c d e f g h "Oklahoma Memorial Stadium/Owen Field". Sooner Stats. Archived from the original on September 27, 2007. Retrieved October 13, 2007.
- ^ a b c Nichols, Max (October 7, 2002). "Stadium Name Change Follows Tradition". The Journal Record. Oklahoma City. Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved October 13, 2007.
- ^ See this 1976 photo Archived 2011-07-16 at the Wayback Machine, an aerial view of the stadium from northeast to southwest. The baseball field is clearly visible in the top left, behind the then-temporary south end zone stands.
- ^ a b Walters, John (September 4, 2004). "Road Trip: University of Oklahoma". Sports Illustrated. Archived from the original on September 10, 2004. Retrieved October 13, 2007.
- ^ a b Hawes, Kay (December 6, 1999). "Gridiron Gridlock". National Collegiate Athletic Association. Archived from the original on January 3, 2007. Retrieved September 10, 2015.
- ^ "Court Continues Restraints on NCAA". The New York Times. Associated Press. September 19, 1981. Retrieved June 7, 2014.
- ^ a b c d Upchurch, Jay C. (2003). "A Towering Achievement". Sooner Magazine. The University of Oklahoma Foundation. Archived from the original on October 17, 2007. Retrieved October 13, 2007.
- ^ "College History". University of Oklahoma College of Architecture. Retrieved October 13, 2007.
- ^ Burr, Carol J. (2003). "Prologue: The Harder It Is to Get In, the More They Want to Come". Sooner Magazine. The University of Oklahoma Foundation. Archived from the original on October 17, 2007. Retrieved October 13, 2007.
- ^ "McClendon Center for Intercollegiate Athletics". University of Oklahoma Department of Intercollegiate Athletics. September 8, 2003. Archived from the original on October 12, 2007. Retrieved October 13, 2007.
- ^ "Oklahoma football: Temporary locker room brings Sooners 'back to reality'".
- ^ "Annual Meeting Agenda" (PDF). University of Oklahoma Board of Regents. Retrieved October 13, 2007. [dead link ]
- ^ a b Wright, Scott (March 30, 2007). "Scoreboard, Display Upgrades Approved". The Oklahoman. Oklahoma City. Retrieved October 13, 2007.
- ^ "2007 Game Day Information" (Press release). University of Oklahoma Department of Intercollegiate Athletics. August 29, 2007. Archived from the original on December 8, 2008. Retrieved October 13, 2007.
- ^ Hoover, John (March 28, 2007). "OU Athletics: Sooners Seek Upgrades for Sports Venues". Tulsa World. World Publishing Company. Archived from the original on October 10, 2007. Retrieved October 13, 2007.
- ^ "Stadium Project Moves Forward" (Press release). University of Oklahoma Department of Intercollegiate Athletics. March 10, 2015. Retrieved September 15, 2018.
- ^ Aber, Ryan (March 10, 2015). "OU football: Board of Regents Approves Updated Stadium Renovation Plan". The Oklahoman. Oklahoma City. Retrieved September 15, 2018.
- ^ "Stadium History".
- ^ Houck, Mike; Pigg, Tyler; Beene, Andie, eds. (July 15, 2018). "Oklahoma Football 2018 Media Guide" (PDF). University of Oklahoma Department of Intercollegiate Athletics. pp. 6, 9. Retrieved September 15, 2018.
- ^ "Football Game Attendance Records". SoonerStats. Retrieved August 31, 2019.
External links
edit- Official website
- Official McClendon Center information page
- University of Oklahoma Western History Collections – Memorial Stadium and Owen Field photographs from 1929 to present
- Google 3D Warehouse geo-referenced model of Memorial Stadium for Google SketchUp and/or Google Earth at Google 3D Warehouse
- Voices of Oklahoma interview with Barry Switzer. First person interview conducted on August 17, 2009 with Barry Switzer. Original audio and transcript archived with Voices of Oklahoma oral history project.