Yale Bowl
Encyclopedia : Y : YA : YAL : Yale Bowl
The Yale Bowl is a football stadium in West Haven, Connecticut. Completed in 1914, the stadium seats 64,269 – reduced by renovations from the original capacity of 70,869. It is the home to the Yale University football team (the "Bulldogs" or the "Elis"), and also hosted the New York Giants from 1973–1974 while Yankee Stadium was being renovated and Giants Stadium was under construction.
Ground was broken on the stadium in August of 1913. It was built into an enormous natural bowl located several miles west of Yale's main campus at The Walter Camp Field, with locker rooms located under the sidelines. It was the first natural bowl stadium in the country, copied with the design of such stadiums as the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, the Rose Bowl, and Michigan Stadium. (Yale's arch-rival, Harvard, has the first concrete stadium and first "horseshoe"-shaped stadium, which is another major prototype for football stadia.) The current scoreboard (notable for the time clock being arranged vertically instead of horizontally) was added in 1958, and in 1986 the current press box was added. The facility was designed to partially echo the campus's neogothic design. As such, parts of the façade were treated with acid to imitate the effects of aging, a procedure that has instead required constant upkeep and renovation to prevent deterioration. As of summer, 2005, many of the outside retaining walls and portal entries were deteriorating as a result.
The Connecticut Tennis Center (owned by Yale), home to the annual ATP/WTA event (the Pilot Pen tournament), is located across Yale Avenue from the stadium.
External Link
[The Yale Bowl (from YaleBulldogs.com)]
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
