Amon G. Carter Stadium

Amon G. Carter Stadium is an open-air football stadium on the campus of Texas Christian University in Fort Worth, Texas. It is the home stadium of the TCU Horned Frogs football team. It is named after Amon G. Carter, a prominent Fort Worth businessman, newspaper publisher, and city booster. It has several popular nicknames, the most popular being "The Carter" and "Hell's Half Acre" (a reference to the site in Fort Worth's wild west past, which was located near the stadium, as well as the difficulty opposing teams have winning in the stadium).

Amon G. Carter Stadium
"Hell's Half Acre"; "The Carter"
Stadium interior
Amon G. Carter Stadium
Location in Texas
Amon G. Carter Stadium
Location in the United States
Location2850 Stadium Drive
Fort Worth, Texas 76129
Coordinates32°42′35″N 97°22′5″W
OwnerTexas Christian University
OperatorTexas Christian University
Capacity22,000 (1930–1947)
30,500 (1948–1950)
33,000 (1950–1952)
37,000 (1953–1955)
46,083 (1956–1990)
44,008 (1991–2007)
44,358 (2008–2010)
32,000 (2011)
45,000 (2012–2019)
47,000 (2020–present)
Record attendance50,307 (TCU vs. Utah, 2009)
SurfaceGrass: 1930–1972
Astro turf: 1973–1991
Tifway 419 Bermuda Grass: 1992–present
Construction
Broke ground1929
OpenedOctober 11, 1930
Construction cost$164 million (2010–12 reconstruction)
$100 million (2020 East side expansion)
ArchitectWilliam Jasdon
HKS, Inc. (2010–12 reconstruction)
Tenants
TCU Horned Frogs (NCAA) (1930–present)
Armed Forces Bowl (NCAA) (2003–2009; 2012–present)

Between 2010 and 2012 the stadium underwent a $164 million reconstruction project. In 2019 the stadium underwent an additional $118 million East side expansion.

History

Planning and construction

In 1923, TCU received a generous donation from Mary Couts Burnett, the widow of a wealthy and well known Texas rancher. The Burnett donation constituted the egg for TCU's endowment. One condition of the Burnett donation was that a portion of it would be used for the construction of a new library, and it was decided to build the Mary Couts Burnett Library where the school's athletic field, Clark Field, was then located.

The removal of Clark Field necessitated the construction of a new field for athletic competition, especially in the sport of football. TCU played its first season of football in 1896, and since then had built a reputation of excellence garnering national attention, and joined the Southwest Conference in 1923.

In 1928, the school received a generous gift from Amon G. Carter, publisher of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Carter asked Andrew Poyar, one of the designers of Shields-Watkins Field (now Neyland Stadium) at the University of Tennessee, to create the blueprints for the structure.

Amon Carter stadium was constructed from 1929 to 1930 with an original seating capacity of 22,000. The stadium hosted its first football game on October 11, 1930, when TCU defeated the University of Arkansas.

In the 1930s under head coach Dutch Meyer, the Horned Frogs won national championships in 1935 and 1938.

Expansion

Amon Carter Stadium prior to its demolition and reconstruction
Home side after improvements, 2016
Revamped end zone, 2016

The first expansion of the stadium took place in 1948, with construction raising the capacity by 8,500 to a total of 30,500. In 1951 and 1953, 2,500 and 4,000 more seats were added which raised capacity to 37,000 seats. An upper deck, topped by a two-story press box and highlighted with a large stylized "TCU", was added in 1956. This brought the stadium's capacity to 46,083.

In 1985 and 1991, improvements were made to the seating. This involved replacing the old seats in the lower bowl with aluminum bleachers. The upper-deck seats were later replaced in the same way. This reduced the stadium capacity to 44,008 spectators.

In 1992, the artificial turf, which had been in place since 1973, was replaced with natural grass. In 2002, the David E. Bloxom, Sr. Foundation helped install a new scoreboard and videoboard.

New club seats and luxury suites were added prior to the 2008 season, increasing capacity to 44,358, and again in 2020.

Renovation/Reconstruction

In August 2010, TCU announced a $105 million renovation of the west side and north end zone of Amon G. Carter Stadium to better enhance football fans' experience, upgrade amenities, and transform the historic Fort Worth icon into the "Camden Yards" of collegiate football stadiums.

The planned renovation quickly expanded into a rebuild of the entire stadium above ground level, and partially below. Only the below-ground-level playing field and lower seating bowl were retained. Everything else, including much of the subterranean infrastructure, was rebuilt. The West-side stands were imploded on December 5, 2010, and the East-side stands were demolished during the early winter 2011. The stadium reconstruction was funded completely by donor support (no bonds or debt). The project was fully completed in 2012 at a total cost of $164 million.

In 2019 the stadium underwent an additional $118 million East side expansion.

Features

Attendance

The highest ever recorded attendance at Amon G. Carter was 50,307, which occurred in 2009 against the University of Utah.[1]

The 2012 home season was the first time an entire season was sold out at Amon G. Carter Stadium.[2]

Largest Crowds

RankDateAttendanceResult
1Nov. 14, 200950,307TCU 55, Utah 28
2Oct. 3, 201548,694TCU 50, Texas 7
3Oct. 26, 201348,212TCU 7, Texas 30
4Sept. 16, 201548,127TCU 56, SMU 37
5Sept. 10, 201648,091TCU 38, Arkansas 41 2OT
6Nov. 4, 201748,042TCU 24, Texas 7
7Nov. 8, 201448,012TCU 41, Kansas State 20
8Oct. 20, 201247,894TCU 53, Texas Tech 56 3OT
9Nov. 27, 201547,675TCU 28, Baylor 21 2OT
10Oct. 26, 201947,660TCU 37, Texas 27

Playing surface

Since 2003, the stadium's playing surface has been named W.A. "Monty & Tex" Moncrief Field, usually shortened to Moncrief Field, after W. A. "Tex" Moncrief Jr. and his father W. A. "Monty" Moncrief Sr.. The naming came following a $3 million donation by Tex to the football program.[3]

Usage

Armed Forces Bowl

Panorama of the stadium, taken during the 2007 Armed Forces Bowl

The Armed Forces Bowl, previously the Fort Worth Bowl, has been played annually at Amon Carter Stadium since 2003. The bowl game was temporarily moved, however, to SMU's Gerald Ford Stadium in Dallas for the 2010 and 2011 bowl seasons due to the reconstruction.

An earlier bowl game, the Fort Worth Classic, was played in Fort Worth at the predecessor to Amon Carter Stadium in 1921.

Date playedWinning teamLosing teamNotes
December 23, 2003Boise State [4]34TCU31notes
December 23, 2004Cincinnati32Marshall [4]14notes
December 23, 2005Kansas42Houston13notes
December 23, 2006Utah25Tulsa13notes
December 31, 2007California42Air Force36notes
December 31, 2008Houston34Air Force28notes
December 31, 2009Air Force47Houston20notes
December 30, 2010Army16SMU14notes
December 30, 2011BYU24Tulsa21notes
December 29, 2012Rice33Air Force14notes
December 30, 2013Navy24Middle Tennessee6notes
January 2, 2015Houston35Pittsburgh34notes
December 29, 2015California55Air Force36notes
December 23, 2016 Louisiana Tech 48 Navy 45 notes
December 23, 2017 Army 42 San Diego State 35 notes
December 22, 2018 No. 22 Army70Houston14notes

TCU Horned Frogs

Located on the TCU campus, Amon Carter Stadium is the home field of the TCU Horned Frogs football team and marching band.

See also

References

  1. Facer, Dirk. "TCU-Utah Football Game Sold Out". Deseret News. Archived from the original on November 24, 2009. Retrieved October 12, 2009.
  2. "TCU sells out season football tickets for first time". Retrieved May 30, 2013.
  3. http://gofrogs.cstv.com/sports/m-footbl/spec-rel/091803aaa.html%5B%5D
  4. Received a bid because the Big 12 did not have enough bowl-eligible teams to fill all of its allotted bowl slots.
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