Canad Inns Stadium
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Canad Inns Stadium | |
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Location | 1465 Maroons Road Winnipeg, Manitoba R3G 0L6 |
Broke ground | 1952 |
Opened | 1953 |
Owner | Winnipeg Blue Bombers |
Operator | Winnipeg Blue Bombers |
Surface | AstroPlay |
Construction cost | $2.5 million CAD (Includes cost of Winnipeg Arena) |
Architect | Unknown |
Former names | |
Winnipeg Stadium | |
Tenants | |
Winnipeg Blue Bombers (CFL) 1953-Present Winnipeg Goldeyes (NL) 1994-1998 Winnipeg Whips (IL) 1970-1971 Winnipeg Goldeyes (NL) 1953-1964 |
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Capacity | |
Football: 29,503 (50,000 with temporary seating) |
Canad Inns Stadium (formerly Winnipeg Stadium) is a Canadian football stadium located in Winnipeg, Manitoba. The stadium, named for hotel chain Canad Inns, and originally completed in 1953, seats 29,503 for football. It has been the home of the Winnipeg Blue Bombers of the CFL since 1953 and the Winnipeg Rifles of the Prairie Football Conference and has also been home to various incarnations of the Winnipeg Goldeyes and Winnipeg Whips (AAA Montreal Expos farm team) baseball teams.
During the Blue Bombers' early years the team played at Osborne Stadium, a much smaller stadium near the Manitoba Legislative Buildings. The fast passing-dominated play of Bombers quarterback Jack Jacobs dramatically increased attendance at Blue Bombers game and precipitated the need for a new, larger stadium. Thus, in 1953, Winnipeg Stadium was born and was affectionately nicknamed "the house that Jack built" because of the contribution of Jack Jacobs. The Blue Bombers continue to play at the stadium, though it has gone through significant changes over the years.
The original baseball grandstands were demolished in the early 1980s to make way for the Blue Bombers' new clubhouse. Stadium renovations in the late 1980s were aimed attracting an AAA baseball club to the hitherto football-only portion of the complex. To that end, artificial turf, retractable seats on the east side stands, and new seating behind the home plate area were installed. Although AAA baseball never returned to the city, the independent Northern League granted Winnipeg an expansion team for the 1994 season, adopting the Goldeyes name. After five years at the stadium, the Goldeyes moved to the new baseball-only facility, CanWest Global Park, in 1999.
Canad Inns Stadium hosted the opening ceremonies of the 1999 Pan-American Games. Several improvements were undertaken in preparation for the event, including the replacement of benches with individual seats, improved lighting and sound, and a new Sony JumboTron scoreboard. The stadium's artificial turf was replaced in 2003, and a new AstroPlay surface was installed.
The CFL Grey Cup championship game was held at Canad Inns Stadium in 1991, 1998, and 2006.
The original stadium held around 17,600. This was added onto in 1971 when second decks were added for a capacity of 25,000. Many additions were added on to make the capacity 29,503 for football. A nine million dollar renovation in 1999 added new seats and among other things a new lounge and luxury seating area.
The north endzone seating is bleachers and is referred to as the Labatt Zone (Section P), formerly the Family Fun Zone.
For the 2006 Grey Cup series, a large amount of temporary bleachers were put up in the south end of the football field, englarging the stadiums capacity to 44,784.[1]
There is currently a proposal for a new football facility to be built on the same site as Canad Inns Stadium.
The following is a Multimedia Clip about the new Stadium-> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZCH3iBQsysg
Under the conditions of the deal proposed by David Asper(Vice president of CanWest Global Communications) he would contribute 40 million dollars towards the construction of the new 120 million dollar Stadium, with the remainder being split between the federal and provincal Governents, in return for his stadium investment he would assume control of the Blue Bombers, who have been a community owned franchise for 70 years.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20061113/Grey_Cup_winnipeg_061113/20061113?hub=Canada
Preceded by Osborne Stadium |
Home of the Winnipeg Blue Bombers 1953– Present |
Succeeded by Current |
Current stadiums in the Canadian Football League |
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Western Division | Eastern Division | |
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BC Place Stadium | Commonwealth Stadium | McMahon Stadium | Mosaic Stadium at Taylor Field | Canad Inns Stadium | Ivor Wynne Stadium | Percival Molson Stadium | Rogers Centre | (Olympic Stadium) |