Clemson, South Carolina // USA | Home to: Clemson Tigers NCAA I-A - ACC // College Football
Memorial Stadium, in Clemson, South Carolina, USA, popularly known as “Death Valley” is home to the Clemson University Tigers NCAA Division I-A football team. Capacity is officially just over 81,000, though the record attendance was set in 1999 at 86,092. The stadium is one of the ten largest on-campus stadiums in the United States and is the second largest in the Atlantic Coast Conference. Built in the 1940s, the stadium has been expanded throughout the years, and an expansion of the west side of the stadium began in 2004.
Capacity 81,473 Opened September 19, 1942 Owner Clemson University Operator Clemson University Surface Natural Grass Construction cost $125,000 (original stadium) Among the most interesting features of the stadium are the grassy hill on the east side of the stadium, a popular sitting area for Clemson students. At the top of the hill lies “Howard’s Rock”, which is an imported rock from Death Valley, California that was presented to legendary Clemson coach Frank Howard in 1967. The Tigers’ traditional team entrance involves each player rubbing the rock for “magical powers” and then running down the hill, a procession that has been termed “the most exciting 25 seconds in college football.”
The term “Death Valley” comes from the fact that the field is physically situated in a valley. Two additional facts add to the mystique. First, the university cemetery sits on a hill that once overlooked the field before the upper decks were constructed. The other reference comes from the late Lonnie McMillian, the former Presbyterian College football coach. He used to take his teams to play at Clemson, and they rarely scored, never mind gained a victory. Once he told the writers he was going to play Clemson up at Death Valley because his teams always got killed. It stuck somewhat, but when Frank Howard start calling it that in the fifties, the term really caught on.
Many people think the name is derived from the fact that there rests a cemetery outside the fence on the press box side of the stadium. But, although it would make sense, the name was first coined by Lonnie McMillian.
Before the Tigers played in Memorial Stadium, games were originally played on Bowman Field and later moved to Riggs Field, now home to Clemson’s soccer teams.
Memorial Stadium was also the original home field for the Carolina Panthers of the NFL. When the Panthers played their inaugural season in 1995, their permanent stadium in Charlotte was still under construction; the team played its entire home schedule in Clemson. The arrangement ended with the opening of Ericsson Stadium, now Bank of America Stadium, at the start of the 1996 season.
The noise level that is reached in Death Valley is part of the stadium’s appeal. In Clemson’s 2005 game against the Miami Hurricanes, the crowd noise reached 126 decibels. Commentators commented that they could barely hear themselves speak, and even said they felt the stadium “move.”
Many players have commented on how loud Death Valley can become. Chris Rix, former Florida State quarterback, who has played in some of the loudest stadiums in the south, commented that Death Valley was the loudest stadium, or even place, in which he had ever been.
(source .. wikipedia) reproduced under GFDL
[ Anything to add? Spotted an error? Click here to improve this entry ]
Why not add your photos?
Some of the above images are reproduced from external sources under the license of the Creative Commons Project
The ACC.com - The Official website of the Atlantic Coast Conference
NCAA - National Collegiate Athletic Association website
Clemson University[ Anything to add? Spotted an error? Click here to improve this entry ]


(1 votes, average: 4/5)
Google Maps
Live Search Maps
Yahoo Maps
Multimap
__
__




