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Cleveland Stokers (NASL) 1967–1968. Great Lakes Bowl (NCAA) 1947. Cleveland Stadium, commonly known as Municipal Stadium, Lakefront Stadium or Cleveland Municipal Stadium, was a multi-purpose stadium located in Cleveland, Ohio. It was one of the early multi-purpose stadiums, built to accommodate both baseball and football.
By March 1, 1997, Cleveland Municipal Stadium had been completely demolished and the debris had been removed to clear way for construction of the new stadium. One fourth of the old stadium, 5,000 cubic yards of reinforced concrete, was eventually located a half mile offshore and composed two fishing reefs each about 600 feet long, 20 to 50 feet wide, and 2 to 15 feet high.
The demolition of Cleveland Municipal Stadium officially began in November 1996 and was complete by the following spring. In the fall of 1995, Cleveland Browns owner Art Modell decided to move the city's football team to Baltimore. Angry fans began the demolition process themselves during the Browns' final home game in 1995, tearing out seats and taking other pieces of Municipal ...
Sep 12, 1999 · The stadium was demolished in November 1996. During the same year, the City of Cleveland and the NFL secured a deal to return professional football to the city by 1999. The city built a new stadium, Cleveland Browns Stadium on the site where Cleveland Municipal Stadium was located. An expansion team was awarded to the city and the Browns began ...
Cleveland, OH. Home of the Cleveland Indians for 61 years, fans of the team were ready to move out of the “Mistake by the Lake” in 1993. The idea for a new stadium in Cleveland was first mentioned in 1903. By the 1920s a 25,000 seat stadium was proposed. However, Osborn Engineering designed a much bigger stadium that could house many ...
Feb 19, 2014 · Ten years before that, the Cleveland Rams played exactly one game – the first in franchise history – at the Stadium, drawing 20,000 fans for a 28-0 loss the Detroit Lions on September 10, 1937. Because the Stadium “was too big and the rent too high,” [fn]ibid [/fn] when the Rams won their only NFL championship in 1945, all of their home ...
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Worst things first: Cleveland Municipal Stadium was an oversized sea-stained relic, with seats too far away, a field and lighting system assailed as among the worst for major sports facilities, cramped locker rooms, ancient and odious restrooms, and a fan base that, infected by the stadium’s miserable atmosphere, unbottled its rage and launched the empties toward unsuspecting players.