Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Lindsey Nelson Stadium is a baseball stadium in Knoxville, Tennessee. It is the home field of the University of Tennessee Volunteers college baseball team. The stadium opened on February 23, 1993 [1] and holds 5,548 people. [2] The facility is named after Hall of Fame broadcaster [a] Lindsey Nelson, who attended the university and founded the ...
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
More than 130,000 tickets were sold for the shows, and Knoxville hotels were packed for the events. The Saturday concert set a tour record for the Jacksons at the time with 50,239 tickets sold.
Tickets were selling so fast after going on sale for the first show that a second Knoxville show was added just a few hours later. Wallen’s return to Knoxville is less the two weeks away, but ...
The museum is located in Knoxville, Iowa, the home of the Knoxville Nationals at Knoxville Raceway. The National Sprint Car Hall of Fame & Museum Foundation, Inc., is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization incorporated in the state of Iowa on April 25, 1986, for the sole purpose of preserving the history of the sport of sprint car racing and ...
The walk became an official part of gameday in a Tennessee-Alabama match on October 20, 1990. Prior to each home game, the Vols will file out of the Neyland-Thompson Sports Complex, down past the Tennessee Volunteers Wall of Fame, and make their way down Peyton Manning Pass and onto Phillip Fulmer Way.
It’s happening! Morgan Wallen is coming home. After teasing hometown fans in June, the country superstar and Gibbs High School graduate is coming back to Knoxville for a special concert Sept. 22 ...
City of Knoxville: Operator: SMG: Capacity: 6,500 (coliseum) 2,500 (auditorium) Construction; Opened: 1961 () Architect: Painter, Weeks, and McCarty: Tenants; Knoxville Knights (1961–1968) Knoxville Cherokees (1988–1997) Tennessee Volunteers ice hockey (1992–present; half of home games) Knoxville Speed (1999–2002)