Ryan Field (stadium)

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Ryan Field
Former names Dyche Stadium (1926–1996)
Location 1501 Central Street
Evanston, IL 60201
Coordinates 42°3′56″N 87°41′33″W / 42.06556°N 87.69250°W / 42.06556; -87.69250Coordinates: 42°3′56″N 87°41′33″W / 42.06556°N 87.69250°W / 42.06556; -87.69250
Broke ground April 8, 1926[1]
Opened October 2, 1926[2]
Renovated 1996
Expanded 1949, 1952
Owner Northwestern University
Operator Northwestern University
Surface Grass: 1926–1972, 1997–present
Astroturf: 1973–1996
Construction cost $2.6 million (original)[3]
($34.3 million in 2014 dollars[ 1])
1996 renovation: $20 Million
Architect James Gamble Rogers
General contractor J. B. French Construction Company[4]
Capacity 47,130 (1997–present)
48,187 (1996)
49,256 (1982–1995)
48,500 (1975–1981)
55,000 (1954–1974)
52,000 (1949–1953)
47,000 (1927–1934)
25,000 (1926)
Tenants
Northwestern Wildcats (NCAA) (1926–present)

Ryan Field is a stadium in Evanston, Illinois, United States on the campus of Northwestern University. It is primarily used for American football, and is the home field of the Northwestern Wildcats football team. The field opened in 1926 and holds 47,130 people. Prior to 1997, the stadium was named Dyche Stadium, for William Dyche, Class of 1882, former Evanston mayor and overseer of the building project. In 1997, the field was renamed Ryan Field in honor of the family of Patrick G. Ryan, who was then the chairman of Northwestern's board of trustees. The renaming was made by the other members of the board in recognition of the Ryan family's leadership and numerous contributions to Northwestern, including the lead gift to the Campaign for Athletic Excellence, Northwestern's fundraising drive for athletic facilities.

History

At the time it was constructed, Dyche Stadium was considered one of the finest college football stadiums in the country.[5] The stadium originally consisted of two semi circular grandstands on either sideline, with the west (home) sideline having a small, curved upper deck whose 2 ends abut in matching concrete towers. The purpose of the curved grandstands was to maximize the number of fans sitting close to the action.[5] Endzone seating was later added in the south endzone, and in 1952 McGaw Memorial Hall was built beyond the north endzone.

The stadium had an artificial turf surface from 1973 to 1996. Prior to the 1997 season, natural grass was installed and the playing surface was lowered approximately five feet to improve sight lines from the lowest rows of the grandstands.

The Chicago Bears hosted their first home game of the 1970 season at Dyche Stadium as an experiment; the NFL had demanded that the Bears move out of Wrigley Field because Wrigley's seating capacity was under 50,000. After Evanston residents petitioned city officials to block the team from moving there permanently, the Bears ended up moving to Chicago's Soldier Field the following year.

November 2006
November 2006

Transportation

The closest transit stations are Metra commuter railroad's Central Street station and Chicago Transit Authority's Central station on the Purple Line.

Pedicab services are frequently available around the stadium during Wildcat home games.

In popular culture

Parts of The Express, a 2008 film about Syracuse University Heisman Trophy winner Ernie Davis starring Rob Brown as Davis, and Dennis Quaid as Davis' Syracuse coach, Ben Schwartzwalder, were filmed at Ryan Field.[6]

Parts of Four Friends, a 1981 film directed by Arthur Penn, were filmed at Ryan Field.

References

  1. "Northwestern Starts Work on New $1,000,000 Stadium". Chicago Daily Tribune. April 8, 1926. p. 26. Retrieved November 13, 2013. 
  2. LaTourette, Larry. Northwestern Wildcat Football. Chicago: Arcadia Publishing. p. 35. ISBN 0-7385-3433-1. Retrieved September 28, 2011. 
  3. 's+New+Field+Named+Dyche+Stadium&pqatl=google "Northwestern's New Field Named Dyche Stadium". Chicago Tribune. October 28, 1926. Retrieved September 28, 2011. 
  4. "Ryan Field". Ballparks.com. Retrieved November 13, 2013. 
  5. 5.0 5.1 Pridmore, Jay (2000). Northwestern University: Celebrating 150 Years. Northwestern University Press. p. 126. 
  6. Bhattarai, Abha (May 1, 2007). "Bringing Hollywood to NU". Daily Northwestern (Northwestern University). Retrieved May 6, 2007. 

External links

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