Alumni Memorial Field

For other uses, see Alumni Stadium (disambiguation).
Alumni Memorial Field at Foster Stadium
Alumni Memorial Field
Location North Main Street
Lexington, Virginia 24450
Coordinates 37°47′20″N 79°26′6″W / 37.78889°N 79.43500°W / 37.78889; -79.43500Coordinates: 37°47′20″N 79°26′6″W / 37.78889°N 79.43500°W / 37.78889; -79.43500
Owner Virginia Military Institute
Operator Virginia Military Institute
Capacity 10,000
Surface Bermuda Grass
Construction
Opened 1962
Renovated 2006
Construction cost $250,000
Architect HOK Sport (renovations)
Tenants
VMI Keydets football
VMI Keydets track and field

Alumni Memorial Field at Foster Stadium is a 10,000-seat multi-purpose stadium in Lexington, Virginia, United States. It opened in 1962. It is home to the Virginia Military Institute Keydets football team.

History

Alumni Memorial Field was built and completed in 1962. The cost was approximately $250,000, funded by the General Assembly of Virginia and VMI Alumni Association.[1] Fiberglass seating was installed in 1974.

In 2006, many improvements were made to the stadium. A new scoreboard with a jumbotron was added, along with new concourses, restrooms, and locker rooms. It totaled for a cost of $15 million.

Features

After renovation to the stadium in 2006, Alumni Memorial Stadium features permanent ticket booths, new concourses, restrooms, and locker rooms. It has a capacity of 10,000, with 54 rows at 173 feet high. The playing surface is Bermuda Grass.

Tradition

Before every VMI home game, the VMI Corps of Cadets marches from their barracks onto the field while the VMI Regimental Band plays "Shenandoah", along with a cannon called "Little John" firing at the start and end of the game and after every VMI score.[1]

Record crowds

On September 15, 1973, VMI fell to Navy 37-8 in the largest crowd in Alumni Memorial Field history, with an attendance of 10,000. Just three years earlier on October 31, 1970, before 2,400 spectators, VMI fell heavily to Davidson 55-21 in the smallest crowd in Alumni Memorial Field history.[2]

References

External links


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