Floyd Casey Stadium

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Floyd Casey Stadium
Floyd Casey Stadium almost sold out on November 5th, 2005.  UT vs Baylor.
Location S Valley Mills Dr
Waco, TX 76711
Broke ground 1950
Opened September 30, 1950
Owner Baylor University
Operator Baylor University
Surface SportGrass
Former names Baylor Stadium (1950-1988)
Tenants Baylor Bears (NCAA) (1950-Present)
Capacity 50,000

Floyd Casey Stadium is a stadium in Waco, Texas. It is primarily used for American football, and is the home field of the Baylor Bears. It opened in 1950 with a game against Houston, and has room for 50,000 people. It is located about four miles from campus.

Originally known as Baylor Stadium, the stadium received its current name in 1988, when it was renamed for Floyd Casey by his son, university trustee and longtime booster Carl B. Casey of Dallas, who gave $5 million towards an $8 million renovation project.

The stadium has a long history of renovations as well. In 1998, the stadium installed SportGrass, a leading natural grass surface. In 2005, the stadium underwent massive renovations to extend the Grant Teaff Plaza to memorialize Baylor's most prestigious head coach, Grant Teaff. The extended plaza created much-needed updates to the stadium's façade.

The stadium is an elongated oval shape, running southeast-northwest, with large grandstands on the sidelines. The southeast endzone is cleared, with athletic marks painted on the ground and the large LED scoreboard behind it. (Prior to the creation of the current athletic marks, the area was painted gold, with "BAYLOR" painted in large green block letters.) The northwest endzone has seating in front of the Carl & Thelma Casey Athletic Center, site of the football offices, training facilities & stadium field house.

Prior to the building of the stadium, the team had played at Waco Stadium and Carroll Field, an on-campus field last used in 1935.



[edit] External links

Coordinates: 31°31′48.7″N, 97°08′55.1″W

This article about a sports venue in Texas is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
Languages