American Football Database
American Football Database
Advertisement
City Stadium
University of Richmond Stadium panoramic
Location 3201 Maplewood Avenue
Richmond, Virginia 23221
Broke ground 1929
Opened 1929
Owner City of Richmond
Surface Patriot Bermuda Grass
Construction cost $80,000
Former names City Stadium (1929–1983)
University of Richmond Stadium (1983–2010)
Tenants Richmond Spiders (NCAA) (1929–2009)
Richmond Rebels (ACFL/ConFL) (1964–1967)
Richmond Mustangs (UAFL) (1967)
Richmond Kickers (USL1) (1995–present)
Richmond Kickers Future (PDL) (2002–2008)
Richmond Kickers Destiny (WL) (2004–2009)
Capacity 22,611[1]

City Stadium is a sports stadium in Richmond, Virginia. It is owned by the City of Richmond and is located south of the Carytown district off the Downtown Expressway. The stadium was built in 1929 and seats approximately 22,000 people. It has been used by the Richmond Kickers of the United Soccer League since 1995.[2]

The stadium was used by the University of Richmond for American football from 1929 to 2009. The University of Richmond's final home football game at the stadium was played on December 5, 2009 against Appalachian State University in the quarterfinals of the Football Championship Subdivision playoffs.

From 1964 through 1967, the stadium was home to the Richmond Rebels of the Atlantic Coast Football League and the Continental Football League. The Rebels left the Continental Football League in 1967 to become the Richmond Mustangs of the United American Football League.[3][4]

University of Richmond Stadium served as the site of the NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship from 1995 to 1998. The venue broke an attendance record when 21,319[5] visited the semifinals of the 1995 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament, with matches between the Virginia Cavaliers and Duke Blue Devils, and the Portland Pilots and Wisconsin Badgers. For a time in the mid-2000s, the stadium also hosted Virginia's high school football state championship games.

Tobacco Bowl football game

Tobacco Bowl football game in 1949

Naming[]

The stadium was known as City Stadium until 1983, when it adopted the name University of Richmond Stadium or UR Stadium as part of an agreement, in which the University of Richmond agreed to lease the stadium for $1 per year in exchange for maintaining the facility. The facility's name reverted to City Stadium in 2010 when the University of Richmond ended its tenancy and moved its football games to its new on-campus E. Claiborne Robins Stadium.[6]

International Soccer Matches[]

Date Competition Team Res Team Crowd
10 Nov 1996 1998 FIFA World Cup Qualifying (CONCACAF) Flag of the United States.svg United States 2-0 File:Flag of Trinidad and Tobago.svg Trinidad and Tobago 19,312
08 Jun 2003 Friendly Flag of the United States.svg United States 2-1 New Zealand 9,116

References[]

External links[]

Coordinates: 37°32′59″N 77°29′12″W / 37.549697°N 77.486781°W / 37.549697; -77.486781

Preceded by
Richardson Stadium
Host of the College Cup
1995–1998
Succeeded by
Ericsson Stadium

Template:Richmond Kickers

Template:WL AD Stadiums Template:Richmond Sports

Template:Virginia-stadium-stub

Advertisement