Yager Stadium
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Fred C. Yager Stadium | |
---|---|
|
|
Location | Oxford, Ohio |
Opened | October 1, 1983 |
Owner | Miami University |
Operator | Miami University |
Surface | FieldTurf |
Tenants | |
Miami RedHawks (NCAA) (1983-Present) |
|
Capacity | |
24,286 |
Fred C. Yager Stadium is a football stadium in Oxford, Ohio, USA. It is home to the Miami University RedHawks football team. It has a capacity of 24,286 spectators, and was built in 1983. It replaced Miami Field, which had been used since 1895 (the stands had been built in 1916) and was the home field for many of the coaches who had made the school so famous.
The stadium has an unbalanced layout, with the west grandstands being 20 rows taller than than the east (student) grandstands. A small set of bleachers sit in the north end zone; there are no seats in the south end zone under the main scoreboard. A Cradle of Coaches room is located inside the stadium, along with football offices, player meeting rooms, and locker rooms.
Due to the successes of Miami's football program, the University has undertaken a continued series of facility upgrades beginning in 2003 with the addition of a FieldTurf playing surface. Other recent substantial upgrades of the facility include broadcast-quality permanent lighting, a new scoreboard with three Daktronics videoboards and the new Cradle of Coaches plaza in 2004, and new student bleacher sections on the east sideline and the north end zone in 2005.
As part of the University's For Love and Honor fundraising campaign, funds are currently being raised for an indoor practice facility to be constructed behind the north end zone seats.
The stadium is named for Fred C. Yager, class of 1914, who was the lead benefactor in the project to build the stadium
[edit] External links
Football Stadiums of the Mid-American Conference |
---|
Dix Stadium (Kent State) • Glass Bowl (Toledo) • Huskie Stadium (Northern Illinois) • Kelly/Shorts Stadium (Central Michigan) • Lincoln Financial Field (Temple) • Peden Stadium (Ohio) • Doyt Perry Stadium (Bowling Green) • Rubber Bowl (Akron) • Rynearson Stadium (Eastern Michigan) • Scheumann Stadium (Ball State) • University at Buffalo Stadium (Buffalo) • Waldo Stadium (Western Michigan) • Yager Stadium (Miami) |