Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
1 Schedule. 2 Rankings. 3 Game summaries. ... The 1982 Pittsburgh Panthers football team represented the University of Pittsburgh as independent in the 1982 NCAA ...
2.2.1 Atlantic League of Professional Baseball. 2.2.2 Eastern League ... Philadelphia White Stockings ... Pittsburgh Athletic Club (football) American Association ...
College football in Pittsburgh dates back to the University of Pittsburgh which first organized a football team in 1889 and played its first sanctioned game in 1890. In the first half of the 20th century, Pitt, Duquesne, and Carnegie Tech (now called Carnegie Mellon) all fielded football squads that made "major" bowl game appearances from the ...
Baseball, Pitt's oldest varsity sport started in 1869 [19] and has produced multiple All-Americans, Major League Baseball players, and was a regular threat in the Big East baseball tournament championship. [20]
The 1900 team, competing when the university was still known as WUP, went 5–4 shutting out opponents four times under head coach Dr. M. Roy Jackson. Football at the University of Pittsburgh began in the fall of 1889 when the school was still known as the Western University of Pennsylvania, often referred to as WUP, and was located in what was then known as Allegheny City and is today the ...
A proposal for a new sports stadium in Pittsburgh was first made in 1948; however, plans did not attract much attention until the late 1950s. [9] The Pittsburgh Pirates played their home games at Forbes Field, which opened in 1909, [10] and was the second oldest venue in the National League (Philadelphia's Shibe Park/Connie Mack Stadium was oldest, having opened only two months prior to Forbes).
Pitt Stadium was an outdoor athletic stadium in the eastern United States, located on the campus of the University of Pittsburgh in the Oakland neighborhood of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Opened in 1925 , it served primarily as the home of the university's Pittsburgh Panthers football team through 1999 .
The Petersen Sports Complex (PSC) is a 12.32-acre (4.99 ha) sports complex on the campus of the University of Pittsburgh in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.It houses Charles L. Cost Field, Vartabedian Field, and Ambrose Urbanic Field, the respective home practice and competition venues of the university's NCAA Division I varsity athletic baseball, softball, and men's and women's soccer teams.