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Location | 2700 Bearcats Way (174 West Corry Street) Cincinnati |
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Coordinates | 39°7′52″N 84°30′58″W / 39.13111°N 84.51611°W / 39.13111; -84.51611 |
Owner | University of Cincinnati |
Operator | University of Cincinnati |
Capacity | Football:
40,000 (2015–present) |
Record attendance | 40,124 |
Surface | UBU Sports’ Speed M6-M (2016–Present) UBU Sports' Speed S5-M (2013–2015) FieldTurf (2000–2012) AstroTurf (1970–1999) Grass (1924–1969) |
Construction | |
Broke ground | 1915 |
Opened | 1915[1] (Dedicated September 27, 1924)[2] |
Renovated | 1936, 1954, 1970, 1992, 2000, 2005, 2013–2015 |
Construction cost | $10.5 million USD ($187 million in 2024 dollars[3]) |
Architect | Frederick W. Garber |
Tenants | |
Cincinnati Bearcats (NCAA) (1924–1989, 1991–2013, 2015–present) Cincinnati Bengals (AFL) (1968–1969) FC Cincinnati (USL) (2016–present) |
Nippert StadiuminCincinnati, Ohio, is the University of Cincinnati's football stadium, home to their Bearcats football team in rudimentary form since 1901, and as a complete stadium since 1924, making it the fourth-oldest playing site and fifth-oldest stadium in college football, respectively.[4]
During the final game of the 1923 season with intrastate rival Miami University, UC player James Gamble Nippert sustained a spike wound injury. He died a month later of blood poisoning, reportedly due to having been infected by droppings left after a pre-game chicken race. Nippert's grandfather, James N. Gamble of Procter & Gamble, donated the required funds to complete the stadium. A locker room and training (medical) facility was added as part of the renovation for the safety of players.
In 1895, the organizer of UC's first football team, Arch Carson, introduced a plan to build a stadium complete with wooden bleachers on the site upon which Nippert Stadium currently stands. The plans became a reality in 1901 while Carson was serving as UC's physical education director. The first game played on the site originally called Varsity Field in Burnet Woods was on November 2, 1901 vs the Ohio University Bobcats. Cincinnati was defeated 16–0 in that contest. They rebounded a week later and defeated Hannover on Varsity field November 9, 1901, 10–0. Although Cincinnati has played home contests in other Cincinnati parks, this site has been the primary home of Cincinnati Football since that time. The playing surface at Nippert Stadium is called Carson Field in honor of Arch Carson.
In 1915, construction was completed on the first sections of a brick and concrete structure to replace the wooden stands and continued for several seasons as funds were raised.
In 1924, the completed structure was dedicated as James Gamble Nippert Memorial Stadium with a capacity of 12,000.
The field was lowered in 1936, allowing capacity to reach 24,000.
In 1954, a small upper deck on the East sideline was completed, and named the Reed Shank Pavilion. This increased capacity to 28,000.
In 1992, the stadium was heavily renovated, expanding the upper deck on the East sideline and adding a new Press Box on the West sideline. This increased capacity to 35,097.
In 2005, new gameday locker rooms behind the north end zone (underneath the newly completed Campus Rec Center) were added, as well as a new bigger video board above the north end zone.
As the UC program rose to prominence in the late 2000s, the small seating capacity of Nippert became an issue. Former UC head coach Brian Kelly called for an expansion of Nippert, the smallest stadium in the Big East (renamed the American Athletic Conference after the 2013 split by non-FBS schools). On December 18, 2012, President Santa J. Ono and then Athletic Director Whit Babcock unveiled the long-anticipated plans to update and expand Nippert Stadium. Originally the price tag was estimated at $70 million,[8] but eventually an increased budget of $86 million was announced. On June 25, 2013, the University of Cincinnati Board of Trustees approved the Nippert Stadium Expansion. The West Pavilion now includes a new press box and premium seating area, which will add suites, loge boxes, and club seating. The western concourse also boasts improved general fan amenities, including concession stands, restrooms, and more efficient in-stadium traffic flow. Additions on the east side of the stadium were more sparse, but included additional concession stands, restrooms, and an expansion of the formerly-cramped concourse walkways, due to the addition of skywalks to connect the Herschede-Shank Pavilion with the O’Varsity Way brick plaza, which is located just outside the stadium. After renovations, Nippert's capacity is now around 40,000 (an exact figure hasn't yet been put forth by the university). The addition was designed by the New York-based firm, Architecture Research Office in close collaboration with Heery International. ARO served as the design architect, while Heery served as the sports consultant and executive architect.[9] Construction on the Nippert Stadium expansion started in December 2013, and was completed on time, in September 2015.[10] During the 2014 season, the Bearcats played all of their home games at Paul Brown Stadium, the downtown home of the Cincinnati Bengals.[11]
On October 24, 2015, the Bearcats hosted the UConn Huskies on Homecoming weekend. The crowd on hand was 40,124 making this the second consecutive official sellout in the newly renovated Nippert Stadium.
Rank | Date | Attendance | Result | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | October 24, 2015 | 40,124 | Cincinnati 37 – Connecticut13 | W |
2 | October 1, 2015 | 40,101 | Cincinnati 34 – Miami (FL)23 | W |
3 | September 5, 2015 | 39,095 | Cincinnati 52 – Alabama A&M 10 | W |
4 | September 12, 2015 | 38,112 | Cincinnati 26 – Temple 34 | L |
5 | August 31, 2013 | 36,007 | Cincinnati 42 – Purdue 7 | W |
6 | November 27, 2009 | 35,106 | #5 Cincinnati 49 – Illinois 36 | W |
7 | November 13, 2009 | 35,105 | #5 Cincinnati 24 – #24 West Virginia 21 | W |
8 | November 7, 2009 | 35,100 | #5 Cincinnati 47 – Connecticut 45 | W |
9 | October 24, 2009 | 35,099 | #5 Cincinnati 41 – Louisville 10 | W |
10 | November 22, 2008 | 35,098 | #19 Cincinnati 28 – #20 Pittsburgh 21 | W |
Nippert has earned a reputation as a tough place to play. One national columnist, visiting the sold-out Keg of Nails rivalry game in 2013, described Nippert Stadium as a "quaint bowl of angry noise sitting under the gaze of remarkable architecture" and went on to compare it to a "baby Death Valley" (referring to LSU's notoriously intimidating Tiger Stadium).[12] In 2012, USA Today called Nippert Stadium the best football venue in what was then the Big East Conference.[13]
The stadium served as home for the American Football League expansion team, the Cincinnati Bengals, in 1968 and 1969, while their eventual permanent home at Riverfront Stadium was being constructed.
The stadium has served as a concert venue only once, on August 3, 1975 hosting The Ohio River Rock Festival (Aerosmith, Black Oak Arkansas, Blue Öyster Cult, Foghat, Mahogany Rush, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, REO Speedwagon, and Styx; admission was festival seating/general admission, attendance 32,000 est. according to local radio broadcasts).
On November 2, 2008, Democratic Presidential candidate Barack Obama held a rally at Nippert two days before the election to an estimated 27,000 attendees.[14]
UC has used Paul Brown Stadium, home of the NFL's Cincinnati Bengals, as an alternate home field for several high profile home games. The downtown stadium has a larger seating capacity of 65,535. Games against Ohio State (2002), Oklahoma (2010), and West Virginia (2011) drew crowds of 66,000, 58,000, and 51,000, respectively, at Paul Brown Stadium. Whit Babcock didn't rule out the occasional home game to be played at Paul Brown Stadium, but made it known that the school is in favor of staying at Nippert Stadium.
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Preceded by First stadium |
Home of the Cincinnati Bengals 1968–1969 |
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