Friday, October 18, 2024

The Mile High Stadium

 
Photo Credit

Former Name(s): Bear Stadium (1948 – 1968)
Address: 2755 West 17th Avenue
Location: Denver, Colorado
Owner: 
1.     City & County of Denver (1968 – 2001)
2.     Rocky Mountain Sports Inc.
3.     (Denver Bears/Broncos, 1948 – 1968)
Operator: Denver Parks and Recreation
Capacity:
1.     76,273 (1986–2001)
2.     75,100 (1984–1985)
3.     75,123 (1982–1983)
4.     75,103 (1980–1981)
5.     75,092 (1979)
6.     75,087 (1977–1978)
7.     63,532 (1976)
8.     51,706 (1973–1975)
9.     51,656 (1972)
10.   51,200 (1971)
11.   50,705 (1970)
12.   50,000 (1968–1969)
13.   34,643 (1966–1967)
14.   34,264 (1962–1965)
15.   34,657 (1960–1961)
16.   18,000 (1948–1959)
Field Size: 
1.     Left Field – 333ft
2.     Left Center – 366 ft
3.     Center Field – 423 ft
4.     Right Center 400 ft
5.     Right Field 370 ft(4)
Surface: Natural Grass

Construction

Broke Ground: 1947
Opened: August 14th, 1948(1)
Expanded: 1959, 1968, 1976, 1977, 1986
Closed: September 8th 2001
Demolished: January – April 17th, 2002(1)
Architect: Stanley E. Morse(2)
General Contractor: Platt Rogers Construction 
                                Company(3)
Tenants
1.     Denver Bears Western League 1948 – 1954
2.     Denver Bears/Zephyrs American Association / 
        Pacific Coast League 1955 – 1992
3.     Denver Broncos AFL / NFL 1960 – 2000
4.     Denver Dynamos NASL 1974 – 1975
5.     Colorado Caribous NASL 1978
6.     Denver Gold USFL 1983 – 1994
7.     Colorado Rockies MLB 1993 – 1994
8.     Colorado Rapids MLS 1996 – 2001

Mile High Stadium (originally Bears Stadium until 1968) was an outdoor multi-purpose stadium located in Denver, Colorado, from 1948 to 2001.

The stadium was built in 1948 to accommodate the Denver Bears baseball team,(5) which was a member of the Western League during its construction. Originally designed as a baseball venue,(5) the stadium was expanded in later years to accommodate the addition of a professional football team to the city, the Denver Broncos, as well as to improve Denver’s hopes of landing a Major League Baseball team. Although the stadium was originally built as a baseball-specific venue, it became more popular as a pro-football stadium despite hosting both sports for a majority of its life.

The Broncos called Mile High Stadium home from their beginning in the American Football League (AFL) in 1960 until 2000. The Bears, who changed their name to the Zephyrs in 1984, continued to play in the stadium until 1992 when the franchise was moved to New Orleans. The move was perpetuated by the awarding of a Major League Baseball franchise to the city of Denver, and in 1993 the Colorado Rockies season opened in Mile High. The team played the 1993 and strike-shortened 1994 seasons in Mile High setting MLB attendance records while Coors Field was being constructed in downtown Denver.

In addition to the Broncos, Bears/Zephyrs, and Rockies, Mile High Stadium was home to several other professional teams during the course of it's history. The Denver Gold of the United States Football League (USFL) called Mile High home from 1983 to 1985, and the stadium played host to the inaugural USFL championship game on July 17th, 1983. Three professional soccer teams also played at Mile High. The first was the Denver Dynamos of the North American Soccer League (NASL) who were founded in 1974 and played their first two seasons in Denver before moving to Bloomington, Minnesota and becoming the Minnesota Kicks. The second was the Colorado Caribous of the NASL playing just the 1978 season before moving to Atlanta and becoming the Atlanta Chiefs. Denver was home to one of Major League Soccer’s (MLS) 10 charter franchises as the Colorado Rapids were formed and played in Mile High from 1996 until 2001, making them the last franchise to play in Mile High Stadium prior to its closure.

After the Rapids’ 2001 season, Mile High Stadium was closed and in 2002 the stadium was demolished.

History

Early Years as Bears Stadium (1948 – 1959)

Mile High Stadium was originally built as Bears Stadium for minor league baseball by Bob Howsam in 1948 at the site of a former landfill. The stadium initially consisted of a single 18,000-seat grandstand stretching along the north side from the left field foul pole to the right field foul pole on the west side(5). Luther “Bud” Phillips hit the first official home run out of Bears Stadium(6). In its first full season in 1949, the Bears averaged over 6,600 per game to lead the minor leagues in attendance. (5)

In the late 1950s, there was an attempt from a third major league, the Continental League, helmed by former Dodger general manager Branch Rickey. Howsam, who had worked with Rickey years before with the St. Louis Cardinals, joined the ranks with Rickey, pleading for a major league team in Denver. Advised that to get a major league franchise Denver would need a much larger ballpark, Bears Stadium would begin the first of its many expansions. Over 8,000 seats were added to the south stands, bringing the stadium’s capacity to 23,100.

Major League Baseball’s (MLB) answer to the Continental League was to expand its two leagues, which would eventually lead to the folding of the Continental League. Although Denver was not awarded a franchise, the MLB promised teams in the future for Denver and other cities. Howsam was now trapped with a massive debt load and a stadium far too big for a minor-league team. Frantically searching for a solution, he concluded the only way out was to extend the stadium’s season with football.

The Broncos as the primary tenant (1960 – 1992)

A large bleacher section was added along the south side and temporary east stands were built in 1960, raising the capacity to 34,657;(6) baseball capacity was 26,500 in 1963.(7)

Howsam’s ownership in the AFL was short-lived, as overwhelming debt forced Howsam to sell all his sports interests in 1961. His dream of major league baseball in Denver would be placed on hold for another 30 years.

One condition of including Denver in the AFL – NFL merger announced in 1966 was expanding Bears Stadium to at 50,000 seats. This required adding second and third decks along the west sideline (first base line). This expansion was completed in 1968, when the stadium was sold to the city of Denver, which renamed it Mile High Stadium and built the upper deck along the west side, thus raising capacity to 50,657. (8)

1970’s

Early ‘70’s expansion

The Broncos sold out every game in their inaugural NFL season. Every Broncos game – preseason, regular season (not including games with replacement players), and the playoffs – has been sold out since, a streak that continued after the Broncos left Mile High. As ticket sales increased, the stadium expanded to 51,706 seats. With a $25 million bond issue in 1974, another stadium renovation added more seats. By 1976, seating was up to 63,532 as the upper deck construction was completed along the north end zone (third base line).

The east stands

An ingenious expansion that took place from 1975 to 1977 raised the capacity to 75,103 by extending the upper deck that was along the north side and building moveable, triple-decked stands would form a horseshoe for football, appropriate considering the team was the Denver Broncos. Yet when fully extended by 145 feet, the stadium could still fit a normal-sized baseball field with outfield distances of 335 feet down the left-field line, 375 feet to the left-center, and 423 to the center field. (9)

The moveable structure was 450 feet long, and 200 feet wide, and weighed nearly 9 million pounds. When a game or event required moving the stands 145 feet in or out, engineers pumped water into 163 water bearings spaced out beneath the stands, lifting the structure off its foundation. A sheet of water 1/3-inch thick formed under the structure. Hydraulic rams then pushed the stands forward at the rate of two feet per minute, taking stadium engineers about six hours from start to finish to move the stands.(9)

The south stands

The south stands of Mile High Stadium had, for many years, a reputation for having the most vociferous fans. While not matching other cities’ stadiums for rowdiness or bad behavior, the south stands ticketholders nevertheless represented some of the Broncos’ most ardent fans who were able to generate an outsized impact on the noise level of the stadium despite the open gaps between the south stands, and the east and west stands.

Bucky Bronco

In 1975, Denver approached actor Roy Rogers to commission a statue of his horse, Trigger, for display at the stadium. A 24-foot, 1,300-pound fiberglass replica of the horse had previously been produced for the Roy Rogers Museum in Victorville, California. Rogers agreed, with the stipulation that the new statue, not be named “Trigger”. Denver fans were polled by The Denver Post to decide on a different name, and “Bucky” was chosen. Painted white to match the Broncos logo, the statue was mounted atop the scoreboard at Mile High, where it remained for 25 years before being relocated to the new stadium (Empower Field at Mile High). Mounted, the statue measures 27 feet and 1,600 pounds.(10)

1980’s

Mile High Stadium, in the 1970s and 1980s, was the only professional-caliber baseball facility to have an all-grass infield, with sliding pits around bases. This unique feature was similar to newer Major League Baseball stadiums that also used sliding pits, except those other stadiums that had artificial turf infields. In 1986, 77 luxury suites were added atop the west stands, increasing the official seating capacity to 76,123.

1990s

The Colorado Rockies Arrive

The stadium’s large capacity combined with enthusiasm for the new team and the lowest MLB ticket prices allowed the expansion Rockies to set Major League Baseball attendance records before moving to Coors Field for the 1995 season. The stadium was known for its loudness with the sound of fans stomping in the bleachers echoing within the horseshoe. The large center and right fields, foul territory areas (although left field was shorter than average), and center field’s 30-foot-high fence, was not as problematic for pitchers as Coors Field would be. The club’s 1993 season attendance was 4,483,350 in 79 home dates (81 games – 2 double headers), an average of 56,751 per home date. The Rockies were on pace to exceed the record during the strike-shortened 1994 season. They had drawn 3,281,511 in 57 home dates (also 57 games), an average of 57,570 per home date. (Season attendance figures from The Sporting News Baseball Record Book, 2007, p. 234; Game counts are from game logs on Retrosheet).(11)(12)

Final Years: 2000 – 2001

The final football game at Mile High Stadium was December 23rd, 2000, in which the Broncos routed the 49ers, 38 – 9. The Broncos had defeated every visiting franchise from the stadium’s opening to close, enjoying perfect records against the Arizona Cardinals (3 – 0), Baltimore Ravens (1 – 0), Carolina Panthers (1 – 0), Green Bay Packers (5 – 0), and Indianapolis Colts (5 – 0). (13)

The Colorado Rapids of Major League Soccer (MLS) were the final professional team to play in Mile High Stadium, their home from 1996 to 2001(14). The team had sought a soccer-specific stadium as early as 1999 due to the lack of control at Mile High(15). Team captain John Spencer became the first Rapids player to record a hat-trick during a 3 – 1 win against D.C. United on Independence Day 2000 in front of 60,500 fans, a team attendance record(16). The Rapids played the last professional sporting event ever held at Mile High on September 8th, 2001, a 2 – 0 loss to the Los Angeles Galaxy with 17,129 in attendance(17). The team was scheduled to move to Empower Field at Mile High for their season finale on September 12th, but the match was postponed due to the September 11th attacks and ultimately canceled. (18)

Mile High Stadium closed in 2001, after the Colorado Rapids and Denver Broncos moved to neighboring Empower Field at Mile High (then known as Invesco Field at Mile High), upon completion of the new stadium. The demolition of Mile High Stadium began in January 2002, an event covered extensively by local newspapers and broadcast live on television. The demolition was performed by Spirtas Wrecking Company of St. Louis, Missouri, the same group that led the demolition of arenas and stadiums in St. Louis, Pittsburgh, and Seattle. Conventional demolition was chosen over implosion. The stadium demolition was completed by April.

The former stadium is now a parking lot for Empower Field at Mile High. A mini replica of the stadium is in the parking lot. The historical site of many games and events for 40 years is marked by the hills forming the west and north stands, the corner between them descended by a staircase, much as the stands were. The location of the home plate is identified by a marker located at 39o44’47” N 105o01’19” W.(19)

Notable Events

Concerts

June 27th, 28th, and 29th, 1969, concert promoter Barry Fey held the Denver Pop Festival at Mile High Stadium with many well-known acts performing every evening. The city of Denver supported the festival and was made available for camping and other services. The Denver Police however allowed non-ticket holders to enter the parking area whereupon they attempted to climb over the chain link fencing to see the show while claiming that the music should be “free”. Police responded by lobbing tear gas canisters towards the fences knowing full well that the gas would affect everyone in attendance at the outdoor venue. Sunday night’s final act was The Jimi Hendrix Experience which proved to be the Experience’s final performance as a trio as well. Bassist Noel Redding quit and simply flew back to England that night. Jimi did not perform again for 6 weeks until mid-August when he closed The Woodstock Music and Art Fair with his new band. Jimi Hendrix died 13 months later in September 1970.

Lynyrd Skynyrd played at the stadium on June 27th, 1976, as part of their One More From The Road Tour.

The Jacksons performed two concerts at Mile High Stadium on September 7th and 8th, 1984, during their Victory Tour.(20)

The stadium was the penultimate stop on Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band’s Born in the U.S.A. Tour, where they performed two shows on September 23rd and 24th, 1985.

The stadium hosted the final show of The 1988 Monsters of Rock Festival Tour, featuring Van Halen, Metallica, Scorpions, Dokken, and Kingdom Come, on July 30th, 1988. On June 28th, 1991, the Grateful Dead performed in the stadium.

Metallica and Guns N’ Roses brought the Guns N’ Roses/Metallica Stadium Tour to the stadium on September 19th, 1992, with Body Count as their opening act.

On October 21st, 1992, U2 performed at Mile High as part of the third leg of their Zoo TV Tour(21). U2 would return again to perform in concert on May 1st, 1997, on the first leg of their PopMart Tour.(22)

The stadium played host to Ozzfest on June 24th, 1997. The stadium again hosted Ozzfest, for the second and last time, on June 21st, 2001, and hosted the Area: One Festival on July 28th, 2001.

In Film

The stadium was featured in Michael Moore’s 2002 documentary Bowling for Columbine as the backdrop for Moore’s interview with controversial rock musician Marilyn Manson during the 2001 Ozzfest tour. (23)

Other Events

In 1977 and 1978, Mile High Stadium hosted the Drum Corps International World Championships (with the 2004 championships held at the successor stadium). From 1963 to 2019, the Denver-based Blue Knights Drum & Bugle Corps annually hosted Drums Along the Rockies, making it the single longest-running event held at the stadium and its successor aside from Denver Broncos football. Cancelled in 2020 due to the Covid-19 Pandemic, the event has since returned for the annual gathering but has since moved to Colorado State University’s stadium at Fort Collins.

Billy Graham held his “Rocky Mountain Crusade” at the stadium in 1987.

In August 1993, Denver hosted World Youth Day. On August 12th and 13th, Mile High Stadium hosted two events with Pope John Paul II, the Papal Welcoming Ceremony and the Way of the Cross.(24)

The weekend of June 16th and 17th, 1995, saw Mile High Stadium transform into a revival tent when it played host to the Promise Keepers, a male-only Evangelical Christian ministry co-founded in 1990 by Bill McCartney, former head coach for the University of Colorado, Boulder football organization (CU Buffs for short). Membership in the Promise Keepers had skyrocketed year-over-year, such that their previous venue Folsom Field (seating capacity 53,613), located on the University of Colorado, Boulder campus, had outgrown their needs(25). Mile High Stadium was chosen because it could accommodate 70,000+ men and boys that would fill the stadium that weekend.

References and copyright citations

1.     "Mile High Stadium". Project Ball Parks. 2010.

2.     "Stanley E. Morse architectural records, 1924-
        2008-Denver Public Library". ARCHIVEGRID.
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4.     Lowry, Philip J. (2006). Green Cathedrals: 
        and Negro League Ballparks. New York: 
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10.   "Bucky Bronco". Waymarking.com.

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        Game Log". Retrosheet.

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        Game Log". Retrosheet.

13.   "Mile High Stadium Memories". Denver 
        Broncos – Traditions. Retrieved April 29, 2015.

14.   Renck, Tracy (July 12, 2007). "A new home 
        of their own". The Pueblo Chieftain. Retrieved 
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15.   Mitchell, Eric (August 23, 1999). "With 
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        Crowd". The Washington Post. July 4, 2001. 
        Retrieved June 4, 2024.

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20.   Victory Tour.

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Tuesday, October 15, 2024

Heinz Field - Part 2

Part 2 of the Heinz Field article
from October 11, 2024

researched and  compiled 
by Carrie Birdsong

 Field Design

When the outdoor sports venue opened in 2001, both end zones were pained athletic gold during Steelers home games (this also happened for the final five seasons at Three Rivers Stadium), with “PITTSBURGH” on the North side and “Steelers” on the South side, both words were painted black with white outlines. Either “Steelers” or “Panthers” was painted in the end zone, depending on the game, during the first three years.

For the 2002 Steelers regular season, the area covered by gold paint was reduced to just around the words. The design for the Wild Card matchup replaced the white letter outlines with athletic gold paint and removed it everywhere else.

In 2003, the Steelers played the Philadelphia Eagles in a preseason game with plain diagonal white lines in the South end zone, which were common in NFL end zones until the 1960s. Although the Steelers lost the game 21 – 16, team president Dan Rooney liked the look of the South end zone being “plain”, and decided to bring it back the next year. The 2003 season was the last to date which contained “PITTSBURGH” and “Steelers” in black words with athletic gold outlines in both end zones.

Starting in 2004, the wordmark designs were flipped in paint color, “PITTSBURGH” in the North and “Steelers” in the South were now athletic gold with the former having either dark blue outlines for Pitt or black for the Steelers. The diagonal white lines in the South end zone during the college portion of the season began this year too, with “Steelers” being added after Pitt played their final home game of the year.

In the aforementioned Dolphins-Steelers Monday Night Football match of 2007, the surface conditions had become so deteriorated from the rain and gameplay itself that the field grid of hash marks, yard lines, mid-field logo, and wordmarks in both end zones was barely visible throughout the game. Sideline hash marks (painted orange) and yard lines were re-painted at halftime.

From 2001 through 2010, there was typically no midfield logo when both Pitt and the Steelers were in season; the Steelers had their logo painted on the sidelines when Pitt’s football season was going and transferred it to midfield after Pitt’s football season ended (except for the first two seasons when it was only added for the postseason).

As of the 2011 season, Pitt and the Steelers in cooperation have their respective logos at midfield for their own home games, being interchanged frequently.

Being a member of the American Football Conference (AFC), the grounds crew of Acrisure Stadium has painted the conference logo in both end zones for every Pittsburgh Steelers postseason home game to date.

Recently, following the end of the Pittsburgh Panthers season, fans, including T.J. Watt and J.J. Watt, have spoken out to change the endzones to the gold ones, similar to the one at Three Rivers Stadium.(93)(94)(95)

Seating and Tickets

As of 2018, the Pittsburgh Steelers have sold out every home game since the 1972 season(96). Entering the 2008 season, the Steeler's average ticket price of $69.47 was the 15th highest out of the NFL’s 32 teams(97). The majority of the 65,050 seats are colored “Steelers gold”, though club seats are dark gray(10)(25). Acrisure Stadium features 1,500 seats in 129 luxury boxes, with prices ranging from $64,000 to $135,000 depending on location and size. These boxes were predicted to increase the Steelers’ profits from $10 to $11 million per season over those at Three Rivers Stadium. The stadium also features 6,600 club seats that include a restaurant and an indoor bar, at prices up to $2,000 per person(23). For the 2010 season, season ticket prices for Panthers games range from a maximum of $295 per club seat with required donations per seat between $250 and $500 depending on location, to as low as $87 per seat with no required donation for upper-end zone sections. Individual game ticket prices ranged from $30 to $65 depending on the seat location and the opponent. (98)

Great Hall

The Great Hall spans approximately 40,000 square feet on the east side of the stadium and houses a collection of Steelers and Panthers memorabilia. The Hall included a timeline of the Steelers franchise's major events, an oversized Steelers helmet hanging from the ceiling beside a video screen that shows entertainment for fans throughout game days(99). The Great Hall also features the actual lockers of several former Steelers, including Hall of Fame members Franco Harris, Joe Greene, and Bill Dudley. (99)

Six large Super Bowl trophies-shaped display columns were erected and contain artifacts from each championship the Steelers have won including replica trophies(100). Two display columns are dedicated to the University of Pittsburgh and contain memorabilia from the Panther’s teams. The floor is painted to resemble the post-baseball season football field at Three Rivers Stadium, with the word “Steelers” painted in black over a gold background(99). The University of Pittsburgh players are featured on two large murals within the Hall. Eight additional title murals created by local high schools represent Western Pennsylvania football history(100). In 2007, the Great Hall was named the best concourse at an NFL stadium by writer Bill Evans, in an article for ESPN.com.(43)

Seating Expansion

The Steelers notified the Pittsburgh Stadium Authority in December 2010 of their intention to add up to 4,000 seats to the lower southern end of the stadium. The plan would increase seating up to 69,050 as soon as the 2012 NFL season(101). Seating was added in that section for the 2011 NHL Winter Classic, which had an attendance of 68,111. The temporary seating was left in place for the 2010 – 2011 NFL playoffs, with the AFC Championship game on January 23rd having a record attendance of 66,662.(102)

On April 12th, 2012, the Steelers confirmed they would seek approval from the NFL to expand seating by 3,000(103). On May 19th, 2014, after more than two years, the Steelers and the SEA came to an agreement to add about 3,000 seats to the venue(104). After contractors surveyed the complex the final number of 2,390 added seats with five additional suites including more parking, restrooms, and concessions was determined in 2014 to increase capacity to a total of 68,400. The seating was put in place by the summer of 2015.(105)

On September 10th, 2016, the then largest crowd of 69,983 to ever see a sporting event in Pittsburgh watched the Pitt Panthers defeat the Penn State Nittany Lions, 42 – 39 as they renewed their rivalry in football.

On September 1st, 2022, a crowd of 70,622 fans broke the record attendance for a sporting event in Pittsburgh again, as No. 17 Pitt defeated the West Virgina Mountaineers 38 – 31 in the first Backyard Brawl since 2011.

Transportation access

Acrisure Stadium is located at Exit 1B of Interstate 279 within a mile of direct access to both Interstate 376 and Interstate 579. The stadium also has a dedicated elevated walkway access to the Allegheny Station of the Light Rail/Subway system. On Steelers and Panthers game days, access is also provided from Station Square parking facilities via the Gateway Clipper Fleet.(106)

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