THREE RIVERS STADIUM
'Three Rivers Stadium' was a multi-purpose sports stadium and event facility located in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania from 1970 through 2000.
The stadium's name was derived from the junction of the Monongahela and Allegheny rivers, where they formed the Ohio River, the "Golden Triangle". The stadium was located on the north side of the confluence.
| Contents |
| Design |
| History |
| External links |
Design
The stadium's design was nearly circular, attempting to facilitate use by the Pirates and Steelers with equal accommodation. Unfortunately, as was the case with other cities in which this so-called "cookie cutter" approach was employed (Washington, New York, Houston, Atlanta, St. Louis, Oakland, San Diego, Cincinnati, and Philadelphia), the fundamentally different shapes of the playing fields made the stadium inadequate to the needs of either sport. Even by "cookie cutter" standards, the upper deck at Three Rivers (known to regular stadium-goers as "Peanut Heaven") was exceptionally high, making for steep climbs by event attendees and adding to its cavernous feel. By the 1990s, the use of multiple low-bid contractors in its construction began to show, as parts of the concrete began to turn differing shades of brown.
History
Three Rivers Stadium opened on July 16, 1970, and was home to Pittsburgh's Pirates, Steelers, and the USFL Maulers, as well as to concerts, monster truck rallies, professional wrestling shows, Billy Graham-type revivals, high school football playoffs, and other events. In all, Three Rivers Stadium hosted over 5,000 events in its 30 years of existence, but it was seen as an outdated facility in the "luxury box" and "signature stadium" era of the 21st century.
The Honus Wagner Statue outside Gate C
The Steelers fielded what was arguably the greatest NFL team of all time, culminating in four championship trophies in six years during the 1970s with wins in Super Bowl IX, Super Bowl X, Super Bowl XIII and Super Bowl XIV. No NFL team has since replicated or bettered the feat of winning four Super Bowls in six years. The Steelers, coached by Chuck Noll, featured quarterback Terry Bradshaw, running back Franco Harris, receiver Lynn Swann, and defender "Mean" Joe Greene, who anchored the "Steel Curtain." The "Immaculate Reception" occurred here, in a 1972 AFC playoff game against the Oakland Raiders. In the 1990s the Steelers, coached by Bill Cowher, again made the Super Bowl (Super Bowl XXX), only to lose to the Dallas Cowboys. One of the biggest upsets in NFL history (as well as one the worst losses in club history) occurred on January 15, 1995, when the San Diego Chargers scored a late-game goal line stand and upset the Steelers in the AFC Championship Game, 17-13, capping a horrible performance by quarterback Neil O'Donnell. A year later, on January 14, 1996, the franchise clinched its fifth conference title with a 20-16 win over the Indianapolis Colts in the AFC Championship Game, surviving a last-second Hail Mary pass attempt by the Colts' Jim Harbaugh that just barely fell incomplete. The stadium would go on to host one more conference title game, on January 11, 1998, as the Steelers fell, 24-21, to John Elway and the Denver Broncos.
For the 2000 football season, Three Rivers Stadium was the interim home for the University of Pittsburgh football team. The stadium officially shut down for good following the Steelers' 24-3 win over the Washington Redskins on December 16 of that year. Eight weeks later on February 11, 2001 Three Rivers Stadium was imploded. The Pirates moved into a baseball-specific facility, PNC Park, situated to the east of the old stadium site, along the north bank of the Allegheny River. Later that year, the Steelers, along with the University of Pittsburgh football team, moved into football-specific Heinz Field, built right next to the old stadium site to the west, along the north bank of the Ohio River.
★ Hosted 9 NLCS:1970, 1971, 1972, 1974, 1975, 1979, 1990, 1991 and 1992
★ Hosted 2 World Series:1971 and 1979
★ Hosted 18 NFL playoff games, including 7 AFC Championship Games:1972, 1975, 1978, 1979, 1994, 1995 and 1997
External links
★ Steelers Fever - Three Rivers Stadium
★ Three Rivers Stadium Statistics
★ Pittsburgh Pirates official website
★ Pittsburgh Steelers NFL Official website
★ Pirates Ballparks website
★ Three Rivers Stadium website
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