Raymond James Stadium

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Raymond James Stadium
Ray Jay, The New Sombrero, The CITS
Image:RJSLogo1.jpg
Main entrance to Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida
Location 4201 N. Dale Mabry Highway
Tampa, Florida 33607
Broke ground Fall 1996
Opened September 20, 1998
Owner Tampa Sports Authority
Operator Tampa Sports Authority
Surface Natural grass, Tifway 419 Bermuda
Construction cost $168.5 million
Architect HOK Sport
Former names Tampa Community Stadium (1996-June 1998)
Tenants Tampa Bay Buccaneers (NFL) (1998-present)
Tampa Bay Mutiny (MLS) (1999-2001)
USF Bulls (NCAA) (1998-present)
Outback Bowl (NCAA) (1999-present)
ACC Championship (NCAA) (2008-09)
Capacity 65,857 (expandable to 75,000)

Raymond James Stadium (formerly Tampa Community Stadium) is a football and soccer stadium located in Tampa, Florida. It is home to the NFL's Tampa Bay Buccaneers as well as the NCAA's South Florida Bulls, and was formerly home to the MLS's Tampa Bay Mutiny. The stadium seats just over 66,000, and it is expandable to 75,000 for special events. The stadium also hosts the annual Outback Bowl on New Year's Day, and the Super Bowl of Motorsports monster truck event in mid-January. Super Bowl XXXV was held there on January 28, 2001 between the Baltimore Ravens and New York Giants. It will host Super Bowl XLIII in 2009.

Raymond James Stadium was built primarily to replace the aging Houlihan's Stadium, formerly located adjacent to the property. It is located on the former site of the now-demolished Al Lopez Field. The stadium officially opened September 20, 1998, when the Tampa Bay Buccaneers defeated the Chicago Bears, 27-15. The final cost of the stadium was $168.5 million, publicly financed. It was known as Tampa Community Stadium during construction, but the naming rights were bought for $32.5 million for a thirteen-year deal by St. Petersburg-based Raymond James Financial in June 1998.[1] On April 27, 2006 an extension was signed to maintain naming rights through 2015.

The stadium was selected to host the ACC Championship Game in 2008 and 2009.

Contents

[edit] Features

The pirate ship at Raymond James Stadium
The pirate ship at Raymond James Stadium

One of the most recognizable features of the stadium is a 103-foot, 43-ton steel-and-concrete replica pirate ship, which fires soft-rubber footballs and confetti each time that the Bucs score points. The cannons fire six times for a touchdown, once for an extra point, twice for a safety or two point conversion, and three times for a field goal. In addition, when the Buccaneers enter their opponent's red zone, stadium hosts hoist team flags around the perimeter of the upper deck. During various times throughout the game, the song "Yo Ho (A Pirate's Life for Me)" is played on the stadium public address system (taken from Pirates of the Caribbean), which signals patrons onboard the ship to throw beads, t-shirts, and other free prizes to the people below.

During Super Bowl XXXV on CBS, the pre-game, halftime, and post-game desk reporting took place from aboard the pirate ship.

When it opened, Raymond James Stadium was dubbed the "crown jewel" of the NFL. Buc Vision, a pair of 92-foot wide video screens, are among the largest in the league. Buccaneer Cove features a weathered, two-story fishing village facade, housing stadium concessions and restrooms. All areas of the stadium are ADA compliant.

Temporary bleachers were erected in the endzones for Super Bowl XXXV, and the attendance was a stadium record 71,921.

In 2003, the corner billboards in the stadium were replaced with rotating trilon billboards.

Raymond James boasts the best turf in the NFL, according to a 2004 biannual players' survey.

[edit] Historical Notes

Buccaneer game action at Raymond James Stadium
Buccaneer game action at Raymond James Stadium

On September 3, 1996, the voters of Hillsborough County, Florida approved, by 53% to 47% margin, a thirty-year, half-cent sales tax to build new schools, improve public safety and infrastructure, along with building the new stadium. Voting precincts reported record turnout.

On October 31, 1996, the NFL owners met in New Orleans to select the host site for Super Bowl XXXIII and Super Bowl XXXIV. Pro Player Stadium in the Miami area was selected to host Super Bowl XXXIII. Atlanta, Tempe and Tampa were candidates for Super Bowl XXXIV, with Tampa the favorite, following the successful tax referendum. The Georgia Dome in Atlanta, however, was awarded the game. As a compromise, Tampa was awarded Super Bowl XXXV, which the NFL had not originally planned to select that day.

On May 25, 2005, NFL owners met in Washington, D.C. to select the host site for Super Bowl XLIII. During the balloting, Raymond James Stadium defeated the Georgia Dome (Atlanta), Reliant Stadium (Houston), and Dolphin Stadium (Miami Gardens).

After a nearly two-year legal battle, the Tampa Sports Authority came to a settlement with popular sports-seating and telescopic platform/bleacher company Hussey Seating of North Berwick, Maine. Following the stadium’s opening in 1998, roughly 50,000 Hussey-manufactured seats at Raymond James Stadium began to fade from their original color – a bright, vibrant shade of red – to a shade of washed-out pink. Spotting this obvious defect, the Buccaneers organization pleaded to the TSA to sue the seating manufacturing company for the cost to replace the affected chairs in 2003. Initially, in May of 2004, after testing samples of the seats, Hussey Seating did not find any cause for the fading, and thus, found no reason to replace the seats at the company’s cost under the current 10-year warranty. After the TSA cited a portion of the warranty which did, in fact, state that Hussey would replace seats if any fading were to occur, Hussey president Tim Hussey admitted an error in the research and eventually would come to a $1.5-million agreement with the TSA to replace the problem seats. Reportedly, the seat-fading occurred due to a manufacturing error by Hussey, as a UV inhibitor – a sunscreen-like component for the plastic – was forgotten in the mixture used to create the seats. All of the problem seats were replaced by new, non-pink seats in the spring of 2006.

Although there are no official nicknames, the stadium is sometimes referred to as "Ray Jay", "The New Sombrero" (a spinoff of the former Bucs' home, as coined by Chris Berman of ESPN), or humorously by local residents as "the CITS", which stands for the Community Investment Tax Stadium. The name "CITS" was coined by long time Tampa sportscaster and sports talk radio host, Chris Thomas and was taken from the tax referendum that was created to fund its construction. On occasions during radio broadcasts of games, Buccaneers Radio Network and Seminoles Radio Network commentator Gene Deckerhoff refers to the stadium as Jesse James Stadium.

[edit] Gallery

[edit] Notable football games

Super Bowls

NFL Playoff Games

College Football Games

Coordinates: 27°58′33.48″N, 82°30′12.06″W

Preceded by
Tampa Stadium/Houlihan's Stadium
Home of the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers

1998 – present
Succeeded by
current
Preceded by
Houlihan's Stadium
Home of the
South Florida Bulls football

1998 – present
Succeeded by
current
Preceded by
Tampa Stadium/Houlihan's Stadium
Home of the
Tampa Bay Mutiny

1999 – 2001
Succeeded by
last stadium
Preceded by
Tampa Stadium
Home of the
Outback Bowl

1998 – 2009
Succeeded by
current
Preceded by
Jacksonville Municipal Stadium
Home of the
ACC Championship Game

2008 – 2009
Succeeded by
Bank of America Stadium
Preceded by
Georgia Dome
University of Phoenix Stadium
Host of the Super Bowl
XXXV 2001
XLIII 2009
Succeeded by
Louisiana Superdome
Dolphin Stadium