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Veterans Memorial Stadium or Veterans Memorial Sports Complex [1] is an outdoor stadium and sports complex in La Crosse, Wisconsin on the campus of the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse. As part of a larger sports complex, it is the home field of the UWL Eagles football and track & field teams.
Wisconsin–La Crosse has won three national titles: the NAIA Division II Football National Championship in 1985 and the NCAA Division III Football Championship in 1992 and 1995, all during the tenure of Roger Harring, who served as head coach from 1969 to 1999 and was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2005.
After the Texans replaced the Oilers, a team that left Houston over stadium issues after nearly four decades in Texas, the NFL returned to the nation's fourth-largest city six years later, partly ...
The NFL uses several other stadiums on a regular basis in addition to the teams' designated regular home sites. In England, two London venues – Wembley Stadium and from 2016 to 2018 the Twickenham Stadium then the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium – are contracted to host a combined four games per season, as part of the NFL International Series ...
The Eagles, led by 4th-year head coach Matt Janus, played their home games at Veterans Memorial Stadium in La Crosse, Wisconsin. Wisconsin–La Crosse finished the regular season 7–3 (5–2 in the WIAC) which was good enough for second in the conference. The team earned their fourth-consecutive NCAA Division III playoff berth.
And still, the New Orleans Saints are a small country's GDP away from being under the salary cap. NFL teams got some good news Wednesday. They were informed the 2025 salary cap will be between ...
Wisconsin State League: Defunct La Crosse Blackhawks: La Crosse 1905–1913, 1917, 1926, 1940–1942 Baseball Wisconsin State League: 1: 1940 Defunct La Crosse Pinks: La Crosse 1905–1912 Baseball Wisconsin State League: 2: 1905, 1906 Defunct Oshkosh Giants: Oshkosh 1886–1887, 1891–1892, 1902, 1905–1914, 1941–1942, 1946–1953 Baseball
Map depicting where participating franchises held training camp when they were a part of the 'Cheese League' The Cheese League was the informal name given to the National Football League teams that held their training camps and scrimmages in Minnesota and Wisconsin. The Cheese League reached its apex in 1995 with six NFL teams.