The following is a chronology of National Football League home stadiums, that is, all home stadiums of teams currently playing in the National Football League (NFL), and their locations and capacities. It contains all past and present (in bold) home stadiums used by the current 32 members of the National Football League since 1920, along with future home stadiums presently under construction (in italics immediately above the present stadium). It is ordered by the conference and division to which the team belongs.[1]
The oldest stadium currently in use as a home stadium by any NFL team is Soldier Field, home of the Chicago Bears, which was built in 1924. The current stadium with the earliest tenancy of an NFL team is Lambeau Field, home to the Green Bay Packers, who moved into the stadium in 1957. Both stadiums have undergone extensive renovations during their history. The newest NFL stadium is MetLife Stadium, the home of both the New York Giants and the New York Jets. Stadiums represent a considerable expense to a community, and thus their construction, use, and funding often enters the public discourse.[2] Also, given the perceived advantage a team gets from playing in their home stadium, particular attention is given in the media to the peculiarities of each stadium's environment. Weather, playing surface (either natural or artificial turf), and the presence or lack of a roof or dome all contribute to giving each team its home-field advantage.
Home stadiums[]
AFC | ||||||
AFC East | ||||||
Team (former names) |
Stadium (former names) |
Years Used | Capacity | Opened | Surface | City |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Buffalo Bills | Ralph Wilson Stadium Rich Stadium (1973–97) |
1973-present | 75,339[3] | 1973 | A-Turf Titan (2011-current) AstroPlay (2003-2010) AstroTurf (1973–2002) |
Orchard Park, NY |
Rogers Centre | 2008-present (1 game yearly) |
54,000 | 1989 | FieldTurf | Toronto, ON | |
War Memorial Stadium | 1960–72 | 46,500 | 1937 | Grass | Buffalo, NY | |
Miami Dolphins | Sun Life Stadium Land Shark Stadium (2009-10) Dolphin Stadium (2006–09) Dolphins Stadium (2005–06) Pro Player Stadium (1996–2004) Joe Robbie Stadium (1987–95) |
1987-present | 75,000[3] | 1987 | Grass | Miami Gardens, FL |
Miami Orange Bowl |
1966–86 | 74,476 | 1937 | Grass (1966–69) Poly-Turf (1970–76) PAT (1977–86) |
Miami, FL | |
New England Patriots (Boston Patriots 1960-70) |
Gillette Stadium CMGi Field (2002) |
2002-present | 68,000[3] | 2002 | FieldTurf (mid-2006-current) Grass (2002-mid-2006) |
Foxborough, MA |
Foxboro Stadium Sullivan Stadium (1983–89) Schaefer Stadium (1971–82) |
1971–2001 | 60,292 | 1971 | Grass (1991–2001) AstroTurf (197x–90) Poly-Turf (1971-7x)[4] | ||
Harvard Stadium | 1970 | 30,898 | 1903 | Grass | Boston, MA | |
Alumni Stadium | 1969 | 44,500 | 1957 | Grass | Chestnut Hill, MA | |
Fenway Park | 1963–68 | 33,524 | 1912 | Grass | Boston, MA | |
Nickerson Field Braves Field (1915–1953) |
1960–62 | >9,000 | 1915 | Grass | ||
New York Jets (New York Titans 1960-1962) |
MetLife Stadium New Meadowlands Stadium (2010) |
2010-present | 82,566 | 2010 | FieldTurf | East Rutherford, NJ |
Giants Stadium | 1984–2010 | 79,469 [3] | 1976 | FieldTurf (2003–10) Grass (2000–02) AstroTurf (1976–99) | ||
Shea Stadium | 1964–83 | 57,800 | 1964 | Grass | Queens, New York City | |
Polo Grounds | 1960–63 | 55,000 | 1891 | Grass | Manhattan, New York City | |
AFC North | ||||||
Team (former names) |
Stadium (former names) |
Years Used | Capacity | Opened | Surface | City |
Baltimore Ravens | M&T Bank Stadium PSINet Stadium (1999–2002) Ravens Stadium at Camden Yards (1998–2003) |
1998-present | 69,084 [3] | 1998 | Sportexe Momentum Turf (2003–present) Grass (1998–2002) |
Baltimore, MD |
Memorial Stadium | 1996–97 | 53,371 | 1950 | Grass | ||
Cincinnati Bengals | Paul Brown Stadium | 2000-present | 65,600[3] | 2000 | Field Turf (2003–present) Grass (2000–02) |
Cincinnati, OH |
Cinergy Field Riverfront Stadium (1970–96) |
1970–99 | 59,754 | 1970 | AstroTurf | ||
Nippert Stadium | 1968–69 | 35,000 | 1924 | Grass | ||
Cleveland Browns | Cleveland Browns Stadium | 1999-present | 72,300[3] | 1999 | Grass | Cleveland, OH |
Cleveland Municipal Stadium | 1946–95 | 74,400 | 1932 | Grass | ||
Pittsburgh Steelers (Pittsburgh Pirates) |
Heinz Field | 2001-present | 64,500[3] | 2001 | Grass | Pittsburgh, PA |
Three Rivers Stadium | 1970–2000 | 59,000 | 1970 | AstroTurf (1982–2000) Tartan Turf (1970-81) | ||
Pitt Stadium | 1964–69 | 56,150 | 1925 | Grass | ||
Forbes Field | 1933–63 | 35,000 | 1909 | Grass | ||
AFC South | ||||||
Team (former names) |
Stadium (former names) |
Years Used | Capacity | Opened | Surface | City |
Houston Texans | Reliant Stadium | 2002-present | 69,500[3] | 2002 | Grass | Houston, TX |
Indianapolis Colts (Baltimore Colts) |
Lucas Oil Stadium[5] | 2008-present | 63,000-75,000 | 2008 | FieldTurf | Indianapolis, IN |
RCA Dome Hoosier Dome (1984–93) |
1984–2007 | 57,980[3] | 1983 | Field Turf (2005–present) AstroTurf (1984–2004) | ||
Memorial Stadium | 1953–83 | 53,371 | 1950 | Grass | Baltimore, MD | |
Jacksonville Jaguars | EverBank Field Alltel Stadium (1996–2006) Jacksonville Municipal Stadium (1995–96, 2007–09) |
1995-present | 67,164 | 1995 | Grass | Jacksonville, FL |
Tennessee Titans (Tennessee Oilers) (Houston Oilers) |
LP Field The Coliseum (2002–05) Adelphia Coliseum (1999–2001) |
1999-present | 67,000[3] | 1999 | Grass | Nashville, TN |
Vanderbilt Stadium Dudley Field (1922–81) |
1998 | 41,000 | 1922 | AstroTurf | ||
Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium | 1997 | 62,380 | 1965 | Grass | Memphis, TN | |
Reliant Astrodome | 1968–96 | 62,439 | 1965 | AstroTurf | Houston, TX | |
Rice Stadium | 1965–67 | 70,000 | 1950 | Grass | ||
Jeppesen Stadium Robertson Stadium (1980-present) |
1960–64 | 32,000 | 1942 | Grass | ||
AFC West | ||||||
Team (former names) |
Stadium (former names) |
Years Used | Capacity | Opened | Surface | City |
Denver Broncos | Sports Authority Field at Mile High INVESCO Field at Mile High (2001–11) |
2001-present | 76,125[3] | 2001 | Grass | Denver, CO |
Mile High Stadium Bears Stadium (1960–68) |
1960–2000 | 76,273 | 1948 | Grass | ||
Kansas City Chiefs (Dallas Texans) |
Arrowhead Stadium | 1972-present | 79,409[3] | 1972 | Grass (1994–present) AstroTurf (1972–93) |
Kansas City, MO |
Municipal Stadium | 1963–71 | 47,500 | 1923 | Grass | ||
Cotton Bowl | 1960–62 | 68,252 | 1932 | Grass | Dallas, TX | |
Oakland Raiders (Los Angeles Raiders) |
Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum | 1982–94 | 101,574 | 1923 | Grass | Los Angeles, CA |
O.co Coliseum McAfee Coliseum (2004–08) Network Associates Coliseum (1999–2004) Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum (1966–99, 2008-11) |
1995-present 1966-81 |
63,146[3] | 1966 | Grass | Oakland, CA | |
Frank Youell Field | 1962–65 | 22,000 | 1962 | Grass | ||
Candlestick Park Monster Park (2004–08) San Francisco Stadium at Candlestick Point (2003–04) 3Com Park (1995–2002) Candlestick Park (1960–94) |
1960–61 | UNK (currently 64,450) | 1960 | Grass (1979–present) AstroTurf (1971–78) |
San Francisco, CA | |
Kezar Stadium | 1960 | 59,942 | 1925 | Grass | ||
San Diego Chargers (Los Angeles Chargers) |
Qualcomm Stadium Jack Murphy Stadium (1981-97) San Diego Stadium (1967–80) |
1967-present | 71,294[3] | 1967 | Grass | San Diego, CA |
Balboa Stadium | 1961–66 | UNK | 1914 | Grass | ||
Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum | 1960 | 101,574 | 1923 | Grass | Los Angeles, CA | |
NFC | ||||||
NFC East | ||||||
Team (former names) |
Stadium (former names) |
Years Used | Capacity | Opened | Surface | City |
Dallas Cowboys | Cowboys Stadium[6] | 2009-present | 80,000-100,000 | 2009 | Matrix artificial turf | Arlington, TX |
Texas Stadium | 1971–2008 | 65,675[3] | 1971 | RealGrass (2001–08) Tartan Turf (1971–80) AstroTurf (1981–2000) |
Irving, TX | |
Cotton Bowl | 1960–71 | 68,252 | 1932 | AstroTurf (1970–71) Grass (1960–69) |
Dallas, TX | |
New York Giants | MetLife Stadium New Meadowlands Stadium (2010) |
2010-present | 82,566 | 2010 | Field Turf | East Rutherford, NJ |
Giants Stadium | 1976–2009 | 79,469[3] | 1976 | Field Turf (2003–09) Grass (2000–02) AstroTurf (1976–99) | ||
Shea Stadium | 1975 | 7,800 | 1964 | Grass | Queens, New York City | |
Yale Bowl | 1973–74 | 64,269 | 1914 | Grass | West Haven, CT | |
Yankee Stadium | 1956–73 | 67,000 | 1923 | Grass | The Bronx, New York City | |
Polo Grounds | 1925–55 | 55,000 | 1891 | Grass | Manhattan, New York City | |
Philadelphia Eagles | Lincoln Financial Field | 2003-present | 68,500[3] | 2003 | Grass | Philadelphia, PA |
Veterans Stadium | 1971–2002 | 65,386 | 1971 | AstroTurf (1971–2000) NexTurf (2001–02) | ||
Franklin Field | 1958–70 | 52,593 | 1895 | AstroTurf (1969–70) Grass (1958–68) | ||
Connie Mack Stadium Shibe Park (1909–53) |
1940, 1942–57 | 23,000 | 1909 | Grass | ||
John F. Kennedy Stadium Philadelphia Municipal Stadium (1927–63) Sesquicentennial Stadium (1926) |
1936–39, 1941 | 75,000 | 1926 | Grass | ||
Baker Bowl Philadelphia Base Ball Grounds (1887–95) National League Park (1895–1913) |
1933–35 | 20,000 | 1887 | Grass | ||
Washington Redskins (Boston Redskins) (Boston Braves) |
FedEx Field Jack Kent Cooke Stadium (1997–99) |
1997-present | 80,000[3] | 1997 | Grass | Landover, MD |
RFK Stadium D.C. Stadium (1961–68) |
1961–96 | 55,672 | 1961 | Grass | Washington, DC | |
Griffith Stadium National Park (1911–20) |
1937–60 | 32,000 | 1911 | Grass | ||
Fenway Park | 1933–36 | 33,524 | 1912 | Grass | Boston, MA | |
Braves Field National League Park (1936–41) |
1932 | 40,000 | 1915 | Grass | ||
NFC North | ||||||
Team (former names) |
Stadium (former names) |
Years Used | Capacity | Opened | Surface | City |
Chicago Bears (Chicago Staleys) (Decatur Staleys) |
Soldier Field | 2003-present | 63,000[3] | 2003 | Grass | Chicago, IL |
Memorial Stadium | 2002 | 69,249 | 1923 | AstroPlay | Champaign, IL | |
Soldier Field Municipal Grant Park Stadium (1924–25) |
1971–2001 | 61,500 | 1924 | Grass (1988–2001) AstroTurf (1971–87) |
Chicago, IL | |
Wrigley Field | 1921–70 | 40,000 | 1914 | Grass | ||
Staley Field | 1920 | UNK | 1915 | Grass | Decatur, IL | |
Detroit Lions (Portsmouth Spartans) |
Ford Field | 2002-present | 65,000[3] | 2002 | Field Turf | Detroit, MI |
Pontiac Silverdome | 1975–2001 | 80,311 | 1975 | AstroTurf | Pontiac, MI | |
Tiger Stadium Briggs Stadium (1938–60) |
1938–74 | 52,416 | 1912 | Grass | Detroit, MI | |
University of Detroit Stadium | 1934–37 | 25,000 | 1928 | Grass | ||
Universal Stadium Spartan Municipal Stadium (1970-present) |
1930–33 | 8,200 | 1930 | Grass | Portsmouth, OH | |
Green Bay Packers | Lambeau Field New City Stadium (1957–65) |
1957-present | 72,922 | 1957 | Grass | Green Bay, WI |
Milwaukee County Stadium | 1953-94 (2-3 games yearly) |
53,192 | 1953 | Grass | Milwaukee, WI | |
Marquette Stadium | 1952 (2-3 games) |
15,000 | 1924 | Grass | ||
Wisconsin State Fair Park | 1934-51 (2-3 games yearly) |
UNK | 1891 | Grass | ||
City Stadium | 1926–56 | 25,000 | 1926 | Grass | Green Bay, WI | |
Bellevue Park | 1923–25 | 4,000-5,000 | 1923 | Grass | ||
Hagemeister Park | 1919–22 | UNK | 1919 | Grass | ||
Minnesota Vikings | Mall of America Field at the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome (1982–2009) |
1982–present | 64,035[3] | 1982 | UBU-Intensity Series-S5-M Synthetic Turf (2011-present) Sportexe Momentum Turf (2010) Field Turf (2004–09) AstroTurf (1987–2003) Superturf (1982–86) |
Minneapolis, MN |
Metropolitan Stadium | 1961–81 | 45,919 | 1956 | Grass | Bloomington, MN | |
NFC South | ||||||
Team (former names) |
Stadium (former names) |
Years Used | Capacity | Opened | Surface | City |
Atlanta Falcons | Georgia Dome | 1992-present | 71,149[3] | 1992 | Field Turf (2003–present) AstroTurf (1992–2002) |
Atlanta, GA |
Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium | 1966–91 | 62,000 | 1966 | Grass | ||
Carolina Panthers | Bank of America Stadium Ericsson Stadium (1996–2004) Carolinas Stadium (1994–96) |
1996-present | 73,250[3] | 1996 | Grass | Charlotte, NC |
Frank Howard Field at Memorial Stadium | 1995 | 80,301 | 1942 | Grass | Clemson, SC | |
New Orleans Saints | Louisiana Superdome | 2006-present 1975-2004 |
69,082[3] | 1975 | Sportexe Momentum Turf (2006–present) AstroPlay (2003–04) AstroTurf (1975–2003) |
New Orleans, LA |
Tiger Stadium | Four games in 2005 | 92,400 | 1924 | Grass | Baton Rouge, LA | |
Alamodome | Three games in 2005 | 65,000 | 1993 | SportField | San Antonio, TX | |
Tulane Stadium | 1967–74 | 80,985 | 1926 | Poly-Turf (1971–74) Grass (1967–70) |
New Orleans, LA | |
Tampa Bay Buccaneers | Raymond James Stadium | 1998-present | 65,657[3] | 1998 | Grass | Tampa, FL |
Houlihan's Stadium Tampa Stadium (1976–95) |
1976–97 | 74,301 | 1976 | Grass | ||
NFC West | ||||||
Team (former names) |
Stadium (former names) |
Years Used | Capacity | Opened | Surface | City |
Arizona Cardinals (Phoenix Cardinals) (St. Louis Cardinals) (Chicago Cardinals) (Racine Cardinals) (Racine Normals) (Morgan Athletic Club) |
University of Phoenix Stadium Cardinals Stadium (2006) |
2006-present | 63,000[3] | 2006 | Grass | Glendale, AZ |
Sun Devil Stadium | 1988–2005 | 73,379 | 1958 | Grass | Tempe, AZ | |
Busch Stadium (II) | 1966–87 | 49,676 | 1966 | AstroTurf (1970–87) Grass (1966–69) |
St. Louis, MO | |
Busch Stadium (I) | 1960–65 | 30,500 | 1881 | Grass | ||
Metropolitan Stadium | 1959 (2 games) |
18,600 | 1956 | Grass | Bloomington, MN | |
Soldier Field Municipal Grant Park Stadium 1924–25) |
1959 (4 games) |
61,500 | 1924 | Grass | Chicago, IL | |
Comiskey Park | 1929-58 1922-25 |
52,000 | 1910 | Grass | ||
Normal Park | 1926-28 1920-21 |
UNK | UNK | Grass | ||
St. Louis Rams (Los Angeles Rams) (Cleveland Rams) |
Edward Jones Dome Dome at America's Center (2001) Trans World Dome (1995–2001) |
1995-present | 66,000[3] | 1995 | Field Turf (2005–present); AstroTurf (1995–2004) | St. Louis, MO |
Busch Stadium (II) | 1995 | 49,676 | 1966 | AstroTurf | ||
Anaheim Stadium Angel Stadium of Anaheim (2004-present) Edison International Field of Anaheim (1997–2003) |
1980–94 | 64,593 | 1966 | Grass | Anaheim, CA | |
Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum | 1946–79 | 101,574 | 1923 | Grass | Los Angeles, CA | |
Shaw Stadium | 1938 | UNK | UNK | Grass | Cleveland, OH | |
League Park | 1942, 1944-45 1937 |
21,414 | 1891 | Grass | ||
Cleveland Municipal Stadium | 1939-41 1937 |
78,000 | 1932 | Grass | ||
San Francisco 49ers | Candlestick Park Monster Park (2004–08) San Francisco Stadium at Candlestick Point (2003–04) 3Com Park (1995–2002) Candlestick Park (1960–94) |
1971-present | 64,450[3] | 1960 | Grass (1979–present) AstroTurf (1971–78) |
San Francisco, CA |
Kezar Stadium | 1946–70 | 59,942 | 1925 | Grass | ||
Seattle Seahawks | CenturyLink Field Qwest Field (2004–11) Seahawks Stadium (2002–04) |
2002-present | 68,000[3] | 2002 | Field Turf | Seattle, WA |
Husky Stadium | 2000-01 Three games in 1994 |
72,500 | 1920 | Field Turf | ||
Kingdome | 1976–99 | 66,000 | 1976 | AstroTurf |
NOTE: The NFL plays the Pro Bowl game every year at Aloha Stadium in Honolulu, Hawaii (although the 2010 edition was played at Sun Life Stadium).
Temporary home stadiums[]
- This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
Occasionally, a team's home games are moved from their usual site to another location, usually either due to natural disasters, or to the stadium being in use for other events. The list of temporary home stadiums is ordered by the date on which the game using the temporary location was played.
This list does not include stadiums used as part of the NFL International Series since they are planned regular season games.
Date played | Stadium | Visiting Team | Home Team | Rationale |
---|---|---|---|---|
October 10, 1921 | Staley Field | Rock Island Independents | Chicago Staleys | Although the Staleys moved from Decatur, Illinois to Chicago prior to the 1921 season, they decided to play a home game in their old city and stadium.[7] |
December 18, 1932 | Chicago Stadium | Portsmouth Spartans | Chicago Bears | The 1932 NFL playoff game was moved indoors because of severe blizzards in Chicago.[8] |
October 5, 1969[9] | Grant Field | Baltimore Colts | Atlanta Falcons | A baseball playoff game hosted by the Atlanta Braves forced the Falcons to move their contest from Fulton County Stadium.[10] |
Memorial Stadium | Green Bay Packers | Minnesota Vikings | A baseball playoff game hosted by the Minnesota Twins forced the Vikings to move their contest from Metropolitan Stadium.[11] | |
September 27, 1970 | Dyche Stadium | Philadelphia Eagles | Chicago Bears | As part of a trial run. In 1970, the NFL ruled that all teams must play in stadiums that seated more than 50,000 fans, and the Bears were forced to leave Wrigley Field. Ultimately, a deal to play permanently at Dyche Stadium fell through, forcing the Bears to return to Wrigley for the remainder of the 1970 season. The team moved to Soldier Field in 1971.[12] |
September 23, 1973 | California Memorial Stadium | Miami Dolphins | Oakland Raiders | The Raiders moved their game from the Oakland Coliseum to accommodate a larger crowd to see the defending Super Bowl VII champion Dolphins.[13] |
October 22, 1989 | Stanford Stadium | New England Patriots | San Francisco 49ers | Candlestick Park, the then-home of the 49ers, was damaged by the Loma Prieta earthquake.[14] |
October 27, 2003 | Sun Devil Stadium | Miami Dolphins | San Diego Chargers | Qualcomm Stadium was being used as a major evacuation site during the Cedar Fire.[15] |
September 19, 2005 | Giants Stadium | New York Giants | New Orleans Saints | Hurricane Katrina forced the Saints out of New Orleans. The NFL decided that the Saints' first regularly scheduled home game against the Giants be played in New Jersey, with the Saints the home team in name only.[16] For the rest of the season, the Saints played three games at the Alamodome and four games at LSU's Tiger Stadium (LSU) (see above). |
December 13, 2010 | Ford Field | New York Giants | Minnesota Vikings | The Metrodome suffered severe damage on December 12 during a blizzard, in which the weight of the snow accumulated on its Teflon-coated roof tore it open.[17] Because of the short notice, the game between the Giants and the Vikings was moved to Detroit's Ford Field, in part because the Giants did not pack any cold weather gear on their trip, expecting to play indoors.[18] Because it would take longer than a week to repair the Metrodome, the Vikings' next home game against the Bears was instead held locally outdoors at TCF Bank Stadium.[19] |
December 20, 2010 | TCF Bank Stadium | Chicago Bears |
See also[]
- List of current National Football League stadiums
- Stadiums to host the Super Bowl (including future years)
- National Football League
- List of NCAA Division I FBS football stadiums
- List of NCAA Division I FCS football stadiums
- List of American football stadiums by capacity
- List of U.S. stadiums by capacity
- List of North American stadiums by capacity
- List of AstroTurf installations in the USA
- List of Canadian Football League stadiums
- List of Major League Baseball stadiums
- List of Major League Soccer stadiums
- List of Major League Lacrosse stadiums
- List of National Basketball Association arenas
- List of National Hockey League arenas
References[]
- ↑ "NFL Stadium History (1920-2000)". Maquette University Law School, Sports Law Program. 2000. http://law.marquette.edu/s3/site/images/sports/NFLSTADIUMHISTORY_2000.pdf. Retrieved 2007-04-09. note: PDF file
- ↑ "In a league of its own". The Economist. 2006-04-27. http://www.economist.com/business/displaystory.cfm?story_id=6859210. Retrieved 2006-10-18.
- ↑ 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 3.10 3.11 3.12 3.13 3.14 3.15 3.16 3.17 3.18 3.19 3.20 3.21 3.22 3.23 3.24 3.25 3.26 3.27 3.28 3.29 "Comparisons". Stadiums of the NFL: From the Past to the Future. stadiumsofnfl.com. 2007. http://www.stadiumsofnfl.com/capacity.htm. Retrieved 2007-04-09.
- ↑ Sports Illustrated - "Rug" - Scorecard - 1971-10-18
- ↑ "Colts Stadium Gets Its Name" (Press release). Colts.com. 2007-03-01. http://www.sportslogos.net/article.php?n=4936. Retrieved 2007-04-09.
- ↑ "Super Bowl 41: Reign dance" (Press release). Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. 2007-01-03. http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/07003/750960-66.stm. Retrieved 2007-04-09.
- ↑ Total Football: The Official Encyclopedia of the National Football League (First Edition ed.). 1997. p. 1639. ISBN 0-06-270170-3.
- ↑ "Pro Football Hall of Fame: The First Playoff Game". http://www.profootballhof.com/history/decades/1930s/first_playoff_game.jsp. Retrieved 2006-12-17.
- ↑ This is the only time in NFL history in which two games were moved on the same day
- ↑ Total Football: The Official Encyclopedia of the National Football League (First Edition ed.). 1997. p. 1634. ISBN 0-06-270170-3.
- ↑ Total Football: The Official Encyclopedia of the National Football League (First Edition ed.). 1997. p. 1643. ISBN 0-06-270170-3.
- ↑ "Soldier Field History". http://www.bearshistory.com/lore/soldierfieldhistory.aspx. Retrieved 2006-12-17.
- ↑ Total Football: The Official Encyclopedia of the National Football League (First Edition ed.). 1997. pp. 1634–35. ISBN 0-06-270170-3.
- ↑ "NFL History: 1981-1990". nfl.com. http://www.nfl.com/history/chronology/1981-1990. Retrieved 2006-12-17.
- ↑ "Fires move Monday night game to Tempe". nfl.com. 2003-10-26. Archived from the original on 2006-10-14. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014051835/http://www.nfl.com/news/story/6782880. Retrieved 2006-12-17.
- ↑ "Saints home opener at New York". New Orleans Times-Picayune. 2005-09-03. http://www.nola.com/katrina/pages/090305/a15.pdf. Retrieved 2007-01-12.
- ↑ "Metrodome Roof Deflates Under Weight of Snow". The New York Times. 2010-12-12. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/13/sports/football/13giants.html. Retrieved 2010-12-12.
- ↑ "Giants-Vikings moved to Ford Field". ESPN. 2010-12-13. http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=5911532. Retrieved 2010-12-13.
- ↑ "NFL confirms Bears-Vikes at TCF Bank Stadium". MSNBC. 2010-12-17. http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/40723379/ns/sports-player_news/. Retrieved 2010-12-19.
External links[]
This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Chronology of home stadiums for current National Football League teams. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with American Football Database, the text of Wikipedia is available under the GNU Free Documentation License. |