Huskie Stadium
"The House That Bork Built" | |
Full name | Brigham Field at Huskie Stadium |
---|---|
Location | 1245 Stadium Drive South DeKalb, IL 60115 |
Coordinates | 41°56′2″N 88°46′40″W / 41.93389°N 88.77778°W |
Owner | Northern Illinois University |
Operator | Northern Illinois University |
Capacity | 23,595 (2007–present)[4] 28,000 (2003–2006)[2] 31,000 (1995–2002)[2] 30,998 (1982–1994)[2] 20,257 (1965–1981)[2] |
Surface | Natural grass 1965 to 1968 Astroturf 1969 to 2000 FieldTurf 2001 to present |
Construction | |
Broke ground | January 30, 1964 |
Opened | November 6, 1965 |
Expanded | 1982, 1995 |
Construction cost | $2,265,172 (original) ($21.9 million in 2024 dollars[1]) |
Architect | Holabird & Root, Chicago (West) HOK Sport (East expansion) |
General contractor | Peterson-Roberts Construction[2] |
Tenants | |
NIU Huskies (NCAA) (1965-present) IHSA Football Playoffs (2013-odd years thru 2019)[3] |
Brigham Field at Huskie Stadium in DeKalb, Illinois, is the home field of the NIU Huskies. It opened in 1965 and is primarily used for American football.
Location
Huskie Stadium is on the west end of the campus, bordered by Stadium Drive to the south, the Yordon Athletic Center to the north, Mary Bell Field to the east, and Ralph McKinzie Field to the west.
Stadium history
Early years
Before the 1965 college football season, the Huskies played at Glidden Field, a 5,500-seat facility on the east end of campus. However, after quarterback George Bork lead them to an AP Small College National Championship in 1963, they began the construction of Huskie Stadium. Marred by construction setbacks that put the opening day two months behind schedule, the stadium played host to its first official NIU football game on November 6, 1965, when the Huskies defeated the Illinois State Redbirds, 48-6.[5]
On September 20, 1969, the game between NIU and Idaho marked the state's first major-college gridiron contest played on artificial turf; the Huskies won, 47–30. The field was re-carpeted in 1980 and 1990 before being replaced by a new FieldTurf surface in 2001. The stadium originally consisted of the main concrete west stands (which used to contain practice facilities for the gymnastics and wrestling teams) and much smaller temporary stands on the east side. The east side was completely redone in 1995, creating a steel structure to mirror the concrete one. The university has maintained and enhanced the institution's all-around athletics facility, updating the scoreboard and video display system in both 2000 and 2001, and creating the South End Zone berm in 2002. In 2003, the field was renamed Brigham Field in honor of Robert J. Brigham, a former player, coach, and athletic director at the school.
The stadium was also the site of a few NCAA records. On October 6, 1990, against Fresno State, quarterback Stacey Robinson rushed for 287 yards (262 m) in the 1st half, and finished with 308 overall, as the Huskies upset then-24th ranked Bulldogs, by a final score of 73–18. In that game, the Huskies established school records for rushing yards(733), total offense (806), and First Downs (36). It was also the first victory over a ranked opponent at the stadium. Additionally, on November 26, 2013, Jordan Lynch rushed for 321 yards, setting an NCAA FBS record for most rushing yards in a game by a quarterback.
Recent years
The Huskies have experienced large amounts of success in the national spotlight, defeating the Alabama Crimson Tide, the Iowa State Cyclones and the Maryland Terrapins. Because of the Huskies success, NIU has averaged the highest attendance per game in the MAC between 2004-2006.
In recent years, the football program has generated national headlines for the institution. With seven consecutive winning seasons (best in the MAC), NIU has the 25th best record in the nation since 2000 (53–30)---including triumphs over Bowl Championship Series programs such as Wake Forest, Minnesota, University of Alabama, Kansas, University of Maryland, Purdue University (2009, 2013), Iowa, and Iowa State University among others. The Huskies finished ranked in the Top 30 during the 2003 and 2004 seasons and defeated Troy University, 34–21, in the 2004 Silicon Valley Football Classic. In 2006, NIU faced off against TCU in the Poinsettia Bowl in San Diego, California making it the second time in three years NIU had gone to a postseason bowl game. The Huskies made it four bowls in six years with a trip to the International Bowl in 2010 against the University of South Florida. Later, in 2012, they became the first non-AQ team with one loss to go to a BCS bowl game (Orange Bowl). With the addition of the Yordon Athletic Center, the total capacity for the stadium has decreased to 23,595. In 2013, Huskie Stadium in its current seating format recorded two sellouts in the year.[6] This was the first time since 2003 the Huskies recorded a sellout at the stadium.[7][8][9]
Planned renovation
NIU plans to renovate Huskie Stadium. Following its renovation, the stadium will have a horseshoe shape, with end zone seating added to the south side of the stadium. The capacity will be raised to between 30,000 and 35,000, with the potential to expand it further to 42,000 in the future. The gymnastics and wrestling practice areas housed within the stadium will be moved to make room on the west side for a full concourse, more concessions, and more easily accessible restrooms. The east side will hold new luxury seating sections, including suites, double suites, loge box seating, a club lounge, as well as both indoor and outdoor club seats. Naming rights for the stadium might be sold after its renovation.
With a capacity somewhere between 30,000 and 35,000, the renovation will make Huskie Stadium amongst the MAC's largest in capacity. Both InfoCision Stadium (Akron) and Waldo Stadium (Western Michigan) hold 30,000; Rynearson Stadium (Eastern Michigan) holds 30,200; Kelly/Shorts Stadium (Central Michigan) holds 30,255. Additionally UMass) plays a portion of their home game schedule at the 68,756-seat Gillette Stadium (home of the NFL's New England Patriots), and the rest at the on-campus 17,000-seat McGuirk Stadium. The only three of the venues mentioned that are in the West Division of the MAC alongside the Huskies are Waldo Stadium, Rynearson Stadium, and Kelly/Shorts Stadium, meaning that post-renovation, Huskie Stadium will quite possibly be the largest stadium in the division, if not the MAC (excluding Gillette Stadium).
In the announcement of the planned renovations, athletic director Sean Frazier commented, “We always want more seats, but we also people to fill those seats"..."We want something very intimate. We have a great, great facility right now. What we want to do is build off of that. When that thing is full nobody wants to play in Huskie Stadium. It is definitely a difference-maker when you’re out there.”[This quote needs a citation]
The renovations will be part of a $138 million overhaul to NIU's athletic facilities. As part of this overhaul, Ralph McKinzie Field, located just west of Huskie Stadium, will be replaced by a new artificial-turf baseball stadium to be built northeast of the Convocation Center and south of the Outdoor Recreation Sports Complex. A tennis facility featuring four indoor courts and locker rooms will be built to the west of the Chessick Practice Center and house NIU's tennis teams. An 'Olympic sports facility' containing practice areas for golf, gymnastics and wrestling, as well as locker rooms for multiple sports, will be built to the west of the tennis facility. The wrestling and gymnastics practice areas will replace those currently housed within Huskie Stadium. The Convocation Center will have a ring built behind the seating area to connect the lobbies on the north and south sides, allowing fans to walk from one side of the venue to the other using the concourse. Mary M. Bell Field will see an increase from 650 seats to 1,000 seats, and will also be given new restrooms, concessions and locker rooms.[10]
Yordon Athletic Center
In 2005, it was announced that the NIU Academic and Athletic Performance Center, a new field house and athletic training facility, would be built in the north end zone. At a press conference in conjunction with the annual NIU Spring Football Game, first-year Athletics Director Jim Phillips announced on April 23, 2005, that Huskie Intercollegiate Athletics would embark on the largest capital project in its history. Located at the north end zone, NIU began breaking ground for the new $14-million all-purpose facility in the fall of 2006, with the construction finishing the folloowing summer and opening in August 2007.
Inside the Jeffrey and Kimberly Yordon Center [11] is a 3,150 sq ft (293 m2) football locker room with a 780 sq ft (72 m2) gathering area, a 12,505 sq ft (1,161.8 m2) strength and conditioning center (largest in the MAC), an academic support center, athletic training room with rehab pools, a 150-seat meeting room, video editing room, all ten coaches' offices, football equipment room, coaches' locker room, and computer classrooms for student-athletes.
Chessick Practice Center
In October 2013, NIU opened their indoor Chessick Practice Center.
The practice center features a full-size 120-yard practice field with two end zones and overrun buffer space around the field for safety. The practice room itself is 80,600 square feet, with 6,400 square feet in the adjoining Barsema Hall of Champions, and can house practice equipment for the NIU football, baseball, softball, and soccer teams.[12]
Attendance records
- 28,211 vs. Western Michigan (10-18-2003)
- 28,218 vs. Iowa State (09-27-2003)
- 28,071 vs. Southern Illinois (09-11-2004)[clarification needed]
- 28,018 vs. Maryland (08-28-2003)
- 27,802 vs. Long Beach State (09-12-1981)[clarification needed]
References
- ^ 1634–1699: McCusker, J. J. (1997). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1700–1799: McCusker, J. J. (1992). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1800–present: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Retrieved February 29, 2024.
- ^ a b c d e "Huskie Stadium (2005 Northern Illinois Football Media Guide)" (PDF). Northern Illinois University Department of Athletics. Retrieved August 7, 2012.
- ^ Miraski, Benjamin (June 11, 2012). "IHSA Approves Northern Illinois for Football Finals in Odd Years". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved December 31, 2013.
- ^ "NIU to host IHSA state football finals". NIU Today. June 11, 2012. Retrieved August 18, 2012.
- ^ "KORCEK'S CORNER: Tearing down the west grandstand unrealistic". Daily Chronicle. February 20, 2014. Retrieved September 30, 2014.
- ^ "NIU-Akron: Another sellout crowd expected at Huskie Stadium". Daily Chronicle. Retrieved June 24, 2015.
- ^ "NIU Notebook: First Huskie Stadium sellout in 10 years". Daily Chronicle. Retrieved June 24, 2015.
- ^ Mike Breese. "NIU Huskies vs EIU Panthers is SOLD OUT". Red And Black Attack. Retrieved June 24, 2015.
- ^ "Single Game Tickets for NIU 107th Homecoming Game No Longer Available - NIUHUSKIES.COM - The Northern Illinois Official Athletic Site". niuhuskies.com. Retrieved June 24, 2015.
- ^ Gogoia, Frank (November 3, 2014). "NIU athletics facilities to get $138M upgrades". northernstar.info. Northern Star. Retrieved November 30, 2014.
- ^ Jeffrey and Kimberly Yordon Center
- ^ "NIUHUSKIES.COM - The Northern Illinois Official Athletic Site - Hasf". niuhuskies.com. Retrieved June 24, 2015.