Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Central-Columbus Raiders: Central Community College at Columbus: Columbus: Nebraska CC: Little Priest Tribal Warriors: Little Priest Tribal College: Winnebago: Iowa CC: McCook Indians: Mid-Plains Community College: McCook: Nebraska CC: North Platte Knights: North Platte: Nebraska CC: Northeast Hawks: Northeast Community College: Norfolk: Iowa ...
Columbus quickly outgrew Williams High. A new facility was built in 1898 for approximately $24,000. The building was called one of the "finest public schools to date" in Nebraska. An addition was added in 1904, and it was used as the high school until 1925 when it became Columbus Junior High School. The building was demolished in the late 1950s.
Nebraska has ranked in the top ten nationally in attendance four times since moving to Bowlin Stadium. [11] The highest recorded attendance at the stadium was on April 9, 2016, when a crowd of 2,302 watched Michigan defeat Nebraska 4–1. Bowlin Stadium is adjacent to the larger Hawks Field, which hosts Nebraska's baseball team.
Huntington Park is a baseball stadium located in Columbus, Ohio, United States. It primarily serves as the home of the Columbus Clippers of the International League, the Triple-A minor league affiliate of the Cleveland Guardians since 2009. Groundbreaking for the ballpark took place on August 2, 2007, with construction being completed in April ...
Bowlin Stadium is a softball stadium in the Haymarket District of Lincoln, Nebraska. It is less than a mile west of the University of Nebraska–Lincoln (NU) and is the home venue of the school's softball team. The thirty-two acre Haymarket Park complex, jointly financed by the city of Lincoln and NU, was completed in 2001 at a cost of $29.53 ...
Bill Davis Stadium is a baseball venue located in Columbus, Ohio, United States. The stadium is home to the Ohio State Buckeyes baseball team of the Big Ten Conference and is named for William C. "Bill" Davis, a businessman and Ohio State alumnus. The stadium has a capacity of 4,450 [3] and had a record attendance of 5,360, versus the Minnesota ...
The University of Nebraska–Lincoln announced plans to construct a new baseball and softball stadium complex on July 30, 1999. Haymarket Park broke ground on April 12, 2000, just off U.S. Route 6 and Charleston Street west of downtown Lincoln. [31]
The Columbus Pawnees were a minor league baseball team based in Columbus, Nebraska. From 1910 to 1915, Columbus teams played exclusively as members of the Class D level Nebraska State League for their six seasons of minor league play. The "Pawnees" played in the 1914 and 1915 seasons, after the team was called Columbus "Discovers" from 1910 to ...