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The Sacramento Mountain Lions played their first game at the stadium on September 25, 2010 in a 24–20 win over the Florida Tuskers in front of a crowd that was estimated to be over 20,000. The stadium hosted the U.S. Olympic Trials for track and field in 2000 and 2004. In 2011, the stadium hosted the World Masters Athletics Championships.
Fred Anderson Field at Hornet Stadium is a 21,195-seat college football and track stadium on the campus of California State University, Sacramento (Sacramento State). [8] It opened 55 years ago on September 20, 1969, it has also been the home stadium of the Sacramento Surge of the WLAF , [ 9 ] the Sacramento Gold Miners of the Canadian Football ...
Though Sacramento State and UC Davis traditionally switched stadiums for the annual Causeway Classic football game, Hughes Stadium was used as a third-party venue for several games in the 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, and last in 2002. It was the host of the famous "mud bowl" in 2000, where wind and rain was so strong that a UC Davis punt actually flew ...
On Nov. 9, Sacramento State’s governing body Associated Students Inc. passed a resolution in favor of the project, which followed Wood sending a letter with his proposal.
95-year-old Hughes Stadium in Sacramento has hosted football, baseball, soccer, track and field, boxing, top musicians and more. Almost 100 years of memories as Sacramento Republic FC returns to ...
Last Friday was not a particularly good day to be a Hornet. Sacramento State’s 12-0 season was derailed by Incarnate Word of Texas in an FCS quarterfinal as the Cardinals won the highest-scoring ...
As part of the Golden State Hockey Rush, Raley Field hosted a minor league hockey game between the Stockton Heat and the Bakersfield Condors of the American Hockey League on December 18, 2015. [14] The ballpark was renamed Sutter Health Park after the 2019 season as part of a naming rights agreement with Sacramento-based Sutter Health. [15]
It is home to the Sacramento State Hornets college baseball team. Opened in 1953, it has a capacity of 1,200 fans. [1] The facility is named for former Sacramento State baseball coach John Smith, who coached the program for 32 seasons. The park was dedicated in 2010, after Smith's retirement following the 2010 season. [2]