Scott Stadium

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Carl Smith Center,
Home of David A. Harrison III Field at
Scott Stadium
Center
Location Whitehead Rd & Alderman Rd
Charlottesville, VA 22904
Opened 1931
Owner University of Virginia
Operator University of Virginia
Surface Prescription Athletic Turf
Former names
Scott Stadium (prior to 1995)
Tenants
Virginia Cavaliers (Football)
Capacity
Official: 61,500; Record: 63,701
Summer 2006
Summer 2006

The Carl Smith Center, Home of David A. Harrison III Field at Scott Stadium, located in Charlottesville, Virginia, is the home of the Virginia Cavaliers football team. It sits on the University of Virginia's West Grounds, across from first-year dorms on Alderman Road. Constructed in 1931, it is the oldest Division I football stadium in the state of Virginia. It occasionally hosts other events, such as concerts for bands that can fill an entire stadium, such as the Rolling Stones (2005) and the Dave Matthews Band (2001). It hosted the Division I NCAA Men's Lacrosse Championship in 1977 and 1982.

Contents

Known for its classical construction (with features such as the pergola) as well as its unique "grass-seating" area called The Hill, Scott Stadium is regarded as one of the best places in America to watch a college football game. The stadium, which holds 61,500, is large for a school of just 13,000 undergraduates and 6,000 graduates, but it is regularly filled to and even past capacity.

Built as a replacement for the old Lambeth Field or "Colonnades," Scott Stadium bears the name of donor and University Rector Frederic Scott, and held 25,000 spectators at opening. The stadium is considered one of the most beautiful facilities in the nation, and formerly had a view of the Blue Ridge Mountains and specifically Monticello Mountain out the south end of the stadium. An artificial turf system was installed in 1974, making impossible a long tradition of a mounted Cavalier riding into the stadium with the football team. David A. Harrison III provided a gift allowing natural grass to be reinstalled in the stadium, and the Cavalier has ridden into Scott every game since 1995. Another more unique feature of Scott Stadium is the Adventures of Cavman, which takes place a few minutes prior to kickoff, on the videoboard. In this computer generated skit, the mascot of the opposing team is causing trouble on the Grounds of UVA, and the Cavalier slays him, then rides to the stadium via the Grounds. After the skit is over, the live Cavalier rides onto the field.

The first expansion to the stadium's capacity came in 1981, when upper decks and grass hill seating allowed 41,000 fans.

Carl Smith's donations helped make the most recent contributions to Scott Stadium in 2000, filling in the upper deck and south end to allow 20,000 additional fans, and installing the pergola, state of the art lighting and gigantic audio/visual tower known as "Hoo-Vision," as well as a new lighting system placed on towers with "V's" built in. While the dramatic view of the Blue Ridge was lost in this expansion, Scott Stadium remains a sight to behold. The facility's official name, a result of this string of donations, may be the longest for a sports venue in the United States, and possibly the world.

Traditionally, males wear coats and ties and females wear sundresses to games, which is also tradition at Alabama, Auburn, Georgia, Vanderbilt University, and Ole Miss. Beginning during the 2003 season, however, head coach Al Groh called upon fans to set aside traditional attire for orange clothing. During the 2004 and 2005 seasons, many fans took to wearing orange t-shirts with slogans like "Orange Crush", "Orange Fever", "Al's Idiots" and "Sea of Orange", and abandoned the ties and sundresses altogether. See image above and notice the orange-colored student section, to the left of where the band was sitting. (There are actually two UVa bands present on Grounds: the 230-piece Cavalier Marching Band, led by a professional band director, and the much smaller Virginia Pep Band, led by fellow students, though the latter only performs outside for the tailgating crowd).

The t-shirt movement has not been welcomed by all, though, as ties and sundresses can still be easily spotted at Scott Stadium. Some have compromised by wearing ties with orange dress shirts, while creative ladies have been spotted in orange sundresses. Many students and alumni feel the "Sea of Orange" has been forced on them by Groh without any indication that it translates to results on the field (or an explanation of why ties have not held back Auburn). On the school's facebook site (a popular online social network for college students), approximately 800 students have joined a group opposing the "Sea of Orange." The Cavalier Daily, the University's daily student-published newspaper, weighed in on the debate in its September 1, 2005, lead editorial.[1] The Declaration, an alternative weekly news magazine at the University, also ran a feature story on the debate prior to the 2006 home opener.[2]

UVa entered this game with an 0-29 record against Clemson. The win was Virginia's first-ever victory over an opponent ranked in the top ten. Both goalposts came down when the fans stormed the field; the first actually fell with 48 seconds still on the clock. The win proved to be something of a watershed in UVa football history in that it set the stage for the 1990 squad to begin the season 7-0, rising to #1 in the polls for the first time. In addition, whereas UVa had gone 0-29 against Clemson prior to the 1990 game, as of 2006 UVa has gone 8-6-1 against Clemson beginning with that 1990 win.

The Yellow Jackets ended Virginia's three-week reign at #1 in the polls as they overcame a two-touchdown halftime deficit to win on Scott Sisson's 37-yard field goal with :07 left.

This nationally-televised contest was the first Thursday night game played at Scott Stadium and marked Florida State's first loss in an Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) game (after winning its first 29). In arguably the greatest victory in Virginia football history, FSU running back Warrick Dunn was stopped inches from the south end zone goal line after taking a direct snap on the game's final play. Fans stormed the field and brought down both goal posts, a feat not since repeated at Scott Stadium.

With Mack Brown's squad poised to clinch a spot in the Bowl Alliance, UVa trailed North Carolina 17-3 in the 4th quarter and the Tar Heels were driving for the knockout blow when Antwan Harris picked off a 3rd down pass and returned it 95 yards for a touchdown. Following quarterback Tim Sherman's touchdown scramble on the Hoos' next drive, kicker Rafael Garcia hit the game-winning 32-yard field goal with :39 left. In this installment of the South's Oldest Rivalry, Virginia extended North Carolina's winless drought in Scott Stadium to 15 years with the 20-17 upset.

The stadium's attendance record was set as 63,701 fans saw #18 Miami defeat #10 Virginia 31-21.[3]

Ten seasons after the 33-28 milestone, Virginia's 1995 ACC Co-Championship squad was honored in a halftime ceremony. UVa went on to win in a 26-21 upset for its first victory over FSU since the 1995 game.[4]


A panoramic view of 2003's season-opening Duke - Virginia game, attended by a then-stadium record 61,737 fans
A panoramic view of 2003's season-opening Duke - Virginia game, attended by a then-stadium record 61,737 fans


Image:UVa-selfmade-by-Uris.png
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ACADEMICS

Schools: School of Architecture (SARC/GARC) • College of Arts & Sciences (CLAS/GSAS) • School of Continuing and Professional Studies (SCED) • Darden Graduate School of Business Administration (GSBA) • McIntire School of Commerce (SCC) • Curry School of Education (SED/GED) • School of Engineering and Applied Science (SEAS/GEAS) • School of Law (LAW/GLAW) • School of Medicine (SMD) • School of Nursing (NURS/GNUR) • US Army Judge Advocate General’s School
Programs: Jefferson Scholars • Echols Scholars • Rodman Scholars
Research: Association of American UniversitiesAssociation of Universities for Research in AstronomyInstitute for Advanced Technology in the HumanitiesJapanese Text InitiativeUniversitas 21Mid Atlantic Terascale PartnershipFlexible Extensible Digital Object Repository ArchitectureApplied Research in PatacriticismNetworked Infrastructure for Nineteenth-Century Electronic ScholarshipLegionMentatReal-Time Cmix
Research publications: Journal of Law and Politics
Miscellaneous: Honor codeRare Book SchoolSemester at SeaUniversity of Virginia's College at Wise

ATHLETICS

ACCVirginia CavaliersCavalier Marching BandVirginia Pep BandtheSabreWahoosWah-hoo-wah
Rivalries: Commonwealth CupJefferson-Eppes TrophySouth's Oldest Rivalry
Current Facilities: Aquatics and Fitness Center • Birdwood Golf Course • Davenport FieldJohn Paul Jones ArenaKlöckner StadiumLake Monticello • Lannigan Track • Memorial Gym • Panorama Farms • The Park • Scott StadiumSheridan Snyder Tennis Center • Turf Field
Past Facilities: University Hall

GROUNDS

The LawnThe RangeThe RotundaThe CornerCharlottesvilleFan Mountain ObservatoryJefferson HallMcCormick Observatory • Rugby Road

STUDENT LIFE

Publications: The Cavalier Daily • Corks & Curls • The Virginia Quarterly ReviewUniversity of Virginia PressVirginia Law Weekly
Debating Societies: Jefferson Literary and Debating SocietyWashington Literary Society and Debating Union
Performing Arts: Academical Village People • Hullabahoos • New Dominions • Virginia Glee Club • Other
Residential Colleges: Brown College at Monroe Hill • Hereford College • International Residential College
Secret Societies: IMP SocietySeven SocietyZ SocietyOther

PEOPLE

Notable AlumniUniversity Presidents
Thomas JeffersonJames MadisonJames MonroeWoodrow WilsonRobert F. KennedyEdgar Allan PoeGeorgia O'KeeffeJavier SolanaPaul Tudor JonesKatie CouricTiki BarberRonde BarberRalph SampsonDawn StaleyClaudio ReynaTina Fey

OTHER

World Heritage SiteUnited Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization


Coordinates: 38°01′51.8″N, 78°30′49.9″W

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