James Griffin Stadium
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Griffin Stadium | |
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"The Jimmy," "The Griff" | |
An overhead view of James Griffin Stadium, with an exterior shot of the press box. |
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Full name | James S. Griffin Stadium |
Location | Saint Paul, Minnesota |
Opened | 1930 |
Owner | |
Tenants | Central High School (football, soccer, and track and field) (1940-Present) Concordia University (football and soccer) (1999-Present) Minnesota Thunder (USL1) (2004-May 12, 2008) |
Capacity | 4,367 |
James Griffin Stadium is a 4,367-capacity stadium in Saint Paul, Minnesota, USA. Although it is located on the grounds of Saint Paul Central High School, it is also home the Concordia University, Saint Paul's Football and women's soccer team. It also is a venue for three high schools in the Saint Paul public school district who do not have a football stadium of their own; Arlington, Como Park, and Johnson being the three who use this facility. It also hosted Hamline University football for one season while their stadium was rebuilt. The stadium was home to the Minnesota Thunder from 2004 through May 12, 2008.
The stadium, affectionately dubbed "The Jimmy" by Thunder supporters and "The Griff" by Concordia fans, was originally named Central Stadium. It was renamed in 1988 for James S. Griffin, the first black police captain in Saint Paul, as well as an athlete and athletic official.[1][2][3]
After 14 years at the National Sports Center in Blaine, Minnesota the Minnesota Thunder moved to James Griffin Stadium.[4] The Thunder cited the increased accessibility, compared to a suburb 20 miles away, and the want to expand its fanbase.[4][5] In May 2008 the Thunder moved back to the National Sports Center.
[edit] Evolution
James Griffin Stadium has seen a significant number of changes in this decade. The first of these changes were the installation of powerful halogen lights in place of old light poles that were placed in front of the bleachers. The old lights were known to block some viewing angles from fans as well as television crews.
In 2003, the grass surface was removed from the field and replaced by artificial turf, manufactured and installed by Sprinturf. This was a welcome move by many Central and Concordia athletes, as the grass surface was torn up by the high amount of football and soccer games in the fall. Funding was made possible through donations from Concordia University, the Minnesota Vikings and the NFL Youth Football Fund.[6]
During the winter of 2006-2007, the track was replaced and expanded. The track had been previously damaged when the artificial turf was installed in 2003. The track expanded from 6 lanes to 8 lanes and now can accommodate Minnesota State High School League sanctioned events in track and field. The renovations moved the handicap accessible ramps from ground level into the stands themselves.
In addition to sporting events, James Griffin Stadium has been the host site for the Rondo Days drill team competition numerous times.
[edit] References
- ^ Grow, Doug (August 30, 1988) "High school honors the man who walked a tough beat all his life" Star Tribune
- ^ James S. Griffin Central High School Hall of Fame
- ^ Porter II, Louis (August 30, 1988) "ST. PAUL SCHOOL HONORS NATIVE SON CENTRAL HIGH STADIUM NAMED FOR GRIFFIN" Saint Paul Pioneer Press
- ^ a b Minnesota Thunder kicks around in new home field. Minnesota Public Radio (2004-06-18). Retrieved on 2007-09-23.
- ^ Marketing the Thunder #2: Creating a buzz with guerrilla marketing (2006-09-11). Retrieved on 2007-09-23.
- ^ FULLER, MARCUS R. (December 4, 2002), " PROTECTING THE HOME TURF - WITH HELP FROM PROS AND COLLEGE, GRIFFIN STADIUM MIGHT GET A NEW FIELD", Saint Paul Pioneer Press
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