Savage Stadium

Savage Stadium
Full name Dill Field at Savage Football Stadium
Former names Dill Field
Location Woodland Street north of Union Street, Oberlin, Ohio 44074
Coordinates 41.29931, -82.22217
Opened October 1925
Owner Oberlin College
Surface Grass
Scoreboard Daktronics
Construction cost $38,000
Architect Osborn Engineering Company
Capacity 3,050
Tenants
Oberlin Yeomen football (1925–present)

The Oberlin College football complex, including Savage Stadium and Dill Field is a 3,000-seat outdoor, grass field football stadium which hosts primarily Oberlin's varsity football home games. It was formerly the site of Oberlin's home soccer and lacrosse matches as well as track and field meets and includes a seven-lane all-weather running track. However, since the completion of the Fred Shults Soccer Field and Robert Kahn Track in the Fall of 2006, the stadium has been used primarily for football.[1]

Contents

Construction and naming

The contract to build the stadium was awarded on June 12, 1925 to the Van Blarcom Company of Cleveland. The Osborn Engineering Company of Cleveland was the architect. The construction was made possible by subscriptions from 826 alumni, present students, and others, who provided funds for the erection of 1,750 seats at $12.50 per seat. These subscribers, known as "Stadium Builders," were given the privilege of purchasing seats for a period of years in the central preferred section of the stand. The new stands were ready for use in October 1925.[2]

The stadium was named for former athletic director Charles W. Savage, who served the college from 1905 to 1918 and from 1920 to 1935. It was during his tenure that the College built several physical education facilities including the stadium.[3]

The new Savage Stadium scoreboard, installed in 2007, was a gift from Robert Fishback '58, a three-sport Oberlin Athlete. The $55,000 scoreboard replaced an older model — also donated by Fishback, in 1987[4]

Facilities and setting

The stadium sits on the far North of the rural Oberlin College campus and is bordered by upperclassmen housing to the East and other athletic facilities to the North, South, and West. Savage stadium facilities include stadium seating for approximately 3,000 people and a press box, reserved for game-day announcers, coaches and statisticians, that holds up to 50.

The playing surface is natural grass, utilizing field paint to outline the 120 x 53.5 yard inbound area (including end zones) and yard lines. At the center of Dill field Oberlin's current athletics logo, the stylized letters O and C, is painted facing the seating. Surrounding Dill Field is a seven-lane all-weather outdoor rubber track. Until 2006, the track hosted all of the College's home track & field meets, as well some meets and practices for local area grade schools. The track has gone largely unused by the college since being replaced by Kahn Track in 2006 and has since fallen into disrepair.

The area directly underneath the stadium houses a concession stand, equipment storage, and locker rooms for six of Oberlin's mens sports teams: Football, baseball, soccer, lacrosse, track & field, and cross country. It also features a guest locker room to host visiting teams in those sports.

Use

1925–2006

Up until the Fall of 2006, Savage Stadium played host to most of the college's sports teams. Both men's and women's soccer teams, as well as the football team shared the field during the Fall sports season, often leaving the field little time to recover between games. Similarly, during the spring months, men's and women's lacrosse shared the field along with the college's track and field team.

2006–present

Starting in the fall of 2006, the soccer and lacrosse teams began playing home games at Fred Shults Field, while Track and Field began to hold meets on Robert Kahn Track. By the 2007–08 school year, Savage Stadium hosted primarily football games, with a couple of lacrosse matches being the exception. Currently, the stadium is home exclusively to the football program.

References

External links