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The stadium hosted many athletic, musical, and theatrical events. It was one of New York's public landmarks. [1] [2] Lewisohn Stadium was demolished in 1973 to make way for the $125 million North Academic Center. [3] In 1985, a plaza outside the center was rededicated as the Lewisohn Plaza, in memory of the stadium and its philanthropist. [2]
Doubleday Field is a baseball stadium in Cooperstown, New York named for Abner Doubleday and located two village blocks from the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. The grounds have been used for baseball since 1920, on what was Elihu Phinney 's farm.
In 1925, civic boosters in Cleveland Heights proposed constructing a 14,000-seat football stadium at the west end of the parkland acquired a decade earlier. [15] That same year, local businessman Benjamin A. Roseman purchased a wooded tract of land [16] [17] west of Taylor Road and adjacent to the north side of Dugway Brook.
It opened in 1999 as Cleveland Browns Stadium and was known as FirstEnergy Stadium from 2013 to 2023 before briefly reverting to its original name until 2024. The initial seating capacity was listed at 73,200 people, but following the first phase of a two-year renovation project in 2014, was reduced to the current capacity of 67,431.
New York City: New York: Wagner Seahawks Staten Island FerryHawks: Northeast Conference Atlantic League: 140: Clover Park: 7,160: Port St. Lucie: Florida: Gulf Coast League Mets New York Mets (Spring training) St. Lucie Mets: Gulf Coast League Grapefruit League Florida State League: 141: East Field Stadium: 7,000: Glens Falls: New York: Glens ...
Yankee Stadium: 54,251: New York City: New York: New York City FC. Some international matches Grass: 2009: Primarily used for baseball [126] Zions Bank Stadium: 5,000 Herriman: Utah: Real Monarchs: Artificial Turf 2018 Host of the 2020 NWSL Challenge Cup [127] [128]
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The stadium was named in honor of Don Shula, an alumnus of John Carroll University and a retired Pro Football Hall of Fame coach in the National Football League. Shula was the defensive coordinator for the Detroit Lions for the 1960-62 seasons. He was also the head coach for both the Baltimore Colts (1963-1969) and the Miami Dolphins (1970-1995).