:''For the present stadium in Foxborough, see
Gillette Stadium.''
'Foxboro Stadium' (or 'Foxborough Stadium') was an outdoor sports venue located in
Foxborough, Massachusetts. Although the official spelling of town's name is "Foxboro'ugh'", the shorter spelling was used for the stadium
[1]
The stadium was built in
1971 as Schaefer Stadium, and it was to be the home venue for the
New England Patriots of the
National Football League. The Patriots were previously the Boston Patriots of the
American Football League, which entered into an agreement to merge with the NFL in
1966 effective with the
1970 season. The Patriots had played their home games from
1963 to
1968 in
Fenway Park, home of
baseball's
Boston Red Sox, which was poorly suited to be a football venue and also had an inadequate
seating capacity (only about 40,000 seats).
Foxboro Stadium was built at an announced cost of $4,000,000, a very small amount, even at the time, for a
major sports stadium. Because of this, and also the era in which it was designed and built, it had very few amenities of the type that became commonplace at football stadiums a short time later, such as individual seating, "club seats", luxury suites, and deluxe locker rooms for the teams. As premium seating became a major source of revenue for professional sports teams, Foxboro Stadium became functionally obsolete. It also only had about 60,000 seats, among the lowest in the league
[2].
Like the majority of outdoor sports venues built in the U.S. at the time, Foxboro Stadium was designed for the use of an
artificial turf playing surface. When this practice fell out of favor in the
1990s due to the supposed higher level of injuries resulting from play on the artificial surface, the field's surface was replaced by natural grass, as it was at many other facilities. At Foxboro Stadium the replacement grass field never seemed to drain properly, resulting in the playing surface often becoming a quagmire during wet playing conditions.
Foxboro Stadium also served as the venue at times for the home football games of
Boston College, and hosted numerous other outdoor events, primarily concerts. Some concerts include
David Bowie,
New Kids on the Block,
Van Halen (as part of the 1988 Monsters of Rock tour which also featured
The Scorpions,
Dokken and
Metallica),
Aerosmith,
Pink Floyd,
U2,
Madonna,
Dave Matthews Band,
The Rolling Stones,
Grateful Dead,
Guns N' Roses (co-headlined with Metallica),
The Who and
'N Sync.
When built it was initially referred to as 'Schaefer Stadium' for the
brewery of that name in an early example of the sale of
naming rights. When this agreement expired,
Anheuser-Busch took over the rights, but instead of putting the name of one of its brands of beer on the stadium, agreed to name it 'Sullivan Stadium' in honor of the family who was at the time the majority owners of the Patriots. Only after the Sullivan family sold their majority interest in the team did it actually become known officially as Foxboro Stadium.
Foxboro Stadium was demolished after the conclusion of the
2001 season (the season in which the Patriots won their first
Super Bowl). The last game played - "
The Tuck Game" - in the stadium was played in a
snow storm, a Patriots win against the
Oakland Raiders, which famously featured an overturned call based on the
tuck rule in the final minutes. The stadium's former site is now one of the parking lots of its successor,
Gillette Stadium.
English rock bands
Genesis and
Pink Floyd performed at this venue on what turned out to be their last North American tours in 1992 and 1994 respectively to date. Pink Floyd played three sold out shows at this venue on their 1994 tour in support of their album
The Division Bell. Genesis performed here on their last tour with drummer/singer Phil Collins in support of
We Can't Dance.
The venue hosted six games in the
1994 FIFA World Cup, five in the
1999 FIFA Women's World Cup, the 1996 and 1999
MLS Cups, the inaugural
Founders Cup, as well as the
WWF King of the Ring tournament in 1985 and 1986.
Notes and references
1. Ask PFW: Winning vs. whining Patriots.com
2. Foxboro Stadium Stadiums of the NFL.
External links
★
Schaefer Stadium and The Great Flush