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Martin Stadium

Coordinates: 46°43′54.5″N 117°09′37.6″W / 46.731806°N 117.160444°W / 46.731806; -117.160444
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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 66.234.218.146 (talk) at 06:28, 29 October 2010 (→‎Fire at Rogers Field: moved Glenn Johnson call to new "Tradition" section). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Martin Stadium
Map
Former namesRogers Field (1892–1970)
LocationWashington State University
720 NE Stadium Way
Pullman, Washington 99164
 United States
OwnerWashington State University
OperatorWashington State University
Capacity35,117 - (2006- )
37,600 - (1979-2005)
26,500 - (1972-78)
SurfaceFieldTurf - (2000– )
Omni-turf - (1990–99)
SuperTurf - (1979–89)
AstroTurf - (1972–78)
Construction
Broke ground1971
Opened (1972-09-30) September 30, 1972 (age 51)
Renovated1979, 2006-
Construction cost$1 million (undergoing a
$70 million renovation)
Architectrenovations by
Graham Construction
Tenants
Washington State Cougars (1972– )
(Pacific-10 Conference, NCAA)
Idaho Vandals - (1999–2001) NCAA

Martin Stadium is an outdoor athletic stadium in Pullman, Washington, on the campus of Washington State University. Primarily used for college football, it is the home field of the Washington State Cougars of the Pacific-10 Conference. The FieldTurf playing field runs an unorthodox east-west, at an elevation of 2520 feet (768 m) above sea level.[1]

History

The stadium is named after Clarence D. Martin, the governor of the state of Washington from 1933-41, and a former mayor of Cheney. Ironically, Martin was a 1906 graduate of the University of Washington in Seattle, WSU's in-state rival.

Martin Stadium opened on September 30, 1972, with a disappointing loss to Utah.[2] Two and a half years had passed since its predecessor, the wooden Rogers Field, was significantly damaged by fire, a suspected case of arson. The WSU Cougars played all of their home games at Joe Albi Stadium in Spokane in 1970 and 1971.

As of 2006, the stadium has a seating capacity of 35,117. Since the renovation of Reser Stadium at Oregon State, Martin Stadium has fallen to last in seating capacity among Pac-10 football stadiums. The current attendance record was set on November 15, 1997, when WSU beat Stanford in front of 40,306 fans (The '97 Cougar team won the Apple Cup in Seattle the following week to win the Pac-10, and played in the Rose Bowl for the first time in 67 years). Despite the relatively small size of Martin Stadium, it has one of the highest ratios of seating capacity to population base; almost 1.6 seats per every citizen in the city of Pullman, and a seat for everyone in Whitman County.

1979 Expansion

Martin Stadium was the first college football stadium to expand (in 1979) by removing its 400 meter running track and lowering the playing field, by 16 feet (5 m). This modification added over 12,000 new seats that were closer to the field (and the opponent's bench). The first game following the renovation was played in October 1979, a victory over the UCLA Bruins. Following a 10-3 season and an undefeated home campaign in 2003, Martin Stadium was ranked by Sports Illustrated as one of the toughest stadiums for visiting teams in college football.[citation needed]

Playing Surface

The current playing surface is FieldTurf, first installed in 2000 and replaced in 2006, [3] it was preceded by the sand-filled Omni-turf, installed in 1990. The original playing surface at Martin Stadium in 1972 was AstroTurf, replaced by SuperTurf in 1979.[4] The playing surface at Rogers Field was natural grass.


Apple Cup

Martin Stadium, home of WSU Cougars Football in Pullman, Washington.
Martin Stadium, home of WSU Cougars Football in Pullman, Washington.
WSU defeats UW 16-13 in double overtime at the 2008 Apple Cup. The score is shown on the new scoreboard, part of phase II upgrades
File:Cougar Pride Statue.JPG
The new 11-foot-tall bronze "Cougar Pride" statue in front of the WSU ticket office. Located at the renovated NE plaza of the stadium.

Washington State hosts the Apple Cup in even-numbered years. Except for 1954, the Apple Cup was played at Joe Albi Stadium in Spokane from 1950-80, rather than in Pullman. The Cougars went 3-12 in these fifteen Spokane Apple Cups (winning in 1958, 1968, and 1972), while winning the previous games played at Rogers Field in Pullman (1948, 1954).

Since 1982, a Cougar victory, the rivalry game with UW has been played at Martin Stadium, with the Cougars winning six of the fourteen Pullman games. Through the 2009 season, WSU has won 4 out of the last 6 Apple Cup games, but trails in the overall series by a significant margin.[5]

Sharing with a rival

For two and a half seasons, 1999-2001, the Idaho Vandals of nearby Moscow borrowed Martin Stadium to use as its home field, as Idaho transitioned from Division I-AA up to I-A. At the time, the Vandals' Kibbie Dome was too small to support the NCAA's attendance requirements for Division I-A. The attendance criteria for Division I-A (FBS) was changed and Idaho is now a member of the WAC in Division I FBS, and uses its own facility.

Washington State and Idaho renewed their dormant football rivalry in 1998, and matched up annually in the Battle of the Palouse for a decade. The game was played at Martin Stadium in September, although the 2003 game was curiously played far from the Palouse, 300 miles (480 km) west at Seahawks Stadium in Seattle.[6] After a ten year renewal, new Vandal head coach Robb Akey, a former WSU defensive coordinator, stated that he preferred the game not be played every year.[7] The game was last played in 2007.


Fire at Rogers Field

At 10:30 p.m. on Saturday, April 4, 1970 (the first day of spring break), residents heard what they described as a gunshot at the football stadium. By 2:00 a.m., the south grandstand and press box of the 1930s wooden venue had burned to the ground, witnessed by a thousand residents and firefighters. The exact cause, or offender, was never found, though there were several suspects.

The Cougars played their entire home schedule for the 1970 and 1971 football seasons at Joe Albi Stadium in Spokane. The fire also displaced the Idaho Vandals, whose wooden Neale Stadium was condemned before the 1969 season (and set afire by arson that November). The Vandals had used WSU's Rogers Field for its two Palouse home games in 1969 and were planning to use it again in for four home games in 1970. Without another suitable stadium in the Moscow-Pullman vicinity, Idaho played its 1970 home schedule at the reduced capacity Rogers Field, returning to its Moscow campus in 1971. The 1970 WSU-Idaho game in Spokane on September 19th was dubbed "The Displaced Bowl," and was easily won by the Cougars, 44-16, their only victory of the season.[8][9]

The name "Rogers Field" continues on campus. It has been transferred to areas used for intramural sports and football practices.[10]

Tradition

The public address announcer at Martin Stadium is WSU professor Glenn Johnson, who is also the mayor of Pullman. Johnson is known for his first-down call of "...and that's ANOTHER...", to which the crowd responds by chanting "...COUGAR FIRST DOWN!" in unison along with Johnson.


References

  1. ^ terraserver.microsoft.com - USGS topo map and aerial photo
  2. ^ cfbdatawarehouse.com - WSU results - 1970-74
  3. ^ wsutoday.wsu.edu - Returfing Martin Stadium - 2006-06-02
  4. ^ wsucougars.cstv.com - Martin Stadium
  5. ^ cfbdatawarehouse.com - Apple Cup results
  6. ^ cfbdatawarehouse.com - WSU vs. Idaho
  7. ^ Seattle Times
  8. ^ cfbdatawarehouse - WSU results - 1970-74
  9. ^ washingtonstate.scout.com/2/243292.html
  10. ^ washingtonstate.scout.com/2/33621.html

46°43′54.5″N 117°09′37.6″W / 46.731806°N 117.160444°W / 46.731806; -117.160444