I like Joes idea of adding some shade too. The Glazers are right, just gotta keep it maintained now.
NEW STADIUM DESIGN PLUS
In Tampa’s case, luxury boxes and club seating plus staying elite to lure more Superbowls, CFP games and mega-concerts. Patrick I like where you’re coming from, but it’s not about the longevity of reinforced concrete and steel as usual it’s about the $. Anyway, with two SB championships and one on that very field, you can’t destroy history and build another one so soon. That had a good look to it– although or course it was outdated. I actually preferred the old Tampa Stadium. Seattle’s stadium looks great, in my opinion. Plus, the shape of the stadium and the angled ends seemed pretty basic. It seems kind of Disney-like or something along those lines.
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To be honest, I never was a huge fan of RJS, not even a big fan of the ship or the cannons. “A Bucs fan could dream of a partial roof like Joe Robbie Stadium…” As someone who used to have season tickets up top on the east side, man, that a partial roof would have been so good to have. “We get a lot of people from out of town…” Yeah, too many from out of town who support the other team. I still consider our stadium as new.silly talk It’s like when I’m talking to someone about “old” and “new” music: The Beatles and the Kinks to me are old bands, while bands like Pearl Jam or the Red Hot Chili Peppers are still pretty recent to me (not exactly new), but you know what I mean. Now, something like the Astrodome or MSG, that’s different. The Colosseum in Rome can stay up for 2,000 years but we gotta always build and tear down in America.Ī stadium built in 1998, to me, is still relatively new. It’s refreshing to hear the owner of an NFL team whose stadium is starting to get gray hairs pass on the chance to bang a drum about needing a new crib.Ģ0 Responses to “Bucs Don’t See Need For A New Stadium”
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In some states, stadiums are allowed to host sportsbooks (imagine the river of revenue from that). With half of the nation’s states having legal sports betting and several others with pending legislation, it seems only a matter of time before legal sports wagering comes to Florida. Green Bay has a microbrewery inside Lambeau Field that is open year-round.Ī Bucs fan could dream of a partial roof like Joe Robbie Stadium currently has in South Florida after a recent upgrade?ĭown the road, Joe would not be surprised whatsoever if there was a sportsbook at Raymond James Stadium. Jacksonville used to have a “Bud Zone,” which was excellent for getting out of the heat but still be able to watch the game (or any other game on its many TVs). Just to spitball here, but Joe would think a bar/restaurant year-round connected to the stadium would be both wise and smart.
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But you always have to look at improving it and upgrading it and we will.”
NEW STADIUM DESIGN UPDATE
So we will keep doing things to update that stadium, to update Raymond James Stadium. The fan experience is more important than ever. “So, you always want to keep updating the stadium. We get a lot of people from out of town - always rave reviews. “The facility is in very, very good shape. “The work we did a few years ago, really was well-received,” Glazer said. That doesn’t mean upgrades won’t be in order. When asked yesterday in a Zoom press conference about The Licht House (officially known as “Raymond James Stadium”), the home of the Bucs, being an “adequate” facility “for the long-term,” Buccaneers co-chairman Joel Glazer sure didn’t sound as if the Bucs need a new stadium any time in the near future. Now, stadiums 25 years old have teams looking to move or to build a new nest. Once upon a time, when a stadium was built (you pick, football, baseball, hockey arena) it was meant to last 50 years or more.