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The stadium has been officially named GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium since March 2021, following a naming rights deal between GEHA and the Chiefs. [12] The agreement began at the start of the 2021 season and ends in January 2031 with the expiration of the leases for the Chiefs and Royals with Truman Sports Complex owner, the Jackson County ...
Only 3 of the league's 30 stadiums — Arrowhead Stadium, Lambeau Field, and Soldier Field — do not currently use a corporate-sponsored name. Though the Chiefs sold naming rights of the football field to GEHA, the team retain stadium branding under the Arrowhead name. [1]
Kauffman Stadium. Kauffman Stadium, home of Major League Baseball's Kansas City Royals, opened in early 1973 as Royals Stadium and is located adjacent to Arrowhead. The stadium's name was changed in 1993 to honor Royals founder Ewing Kauffman just months before his death. Even though the stadium is slightly older than 40 years old, it is the ...
An artist’s rendering of what the Chiefs hope to do with GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium at the Truman Sports Complex. A designer’s rendering shows a the view from an end zone suite at GEHA ...
To help fund a stadium renovation, the Chiefs have sought a 25-year renewal of the 3/8th-cent sales tax passed in 2006, as Donovan’s statement said, with no significant additions to the long ...
TODAY goes on location for "Holiday Touchdown," a new movie made in partnership with the Kansas City Chiefs and Hallmark. Christmas in July: How the Chiefs’ Arrowhead Stadium became the setting ...
The stadium opened on May 24, 2002, as O'Brien Field, [1] with a game between the Chiefs and the Kane County Cougars. [6] O'Brien Auto Team held the original naming rights to the facility. [6] In 2011, the stadium hosted to the IHSA Class 1A and 2A baseball state finals. This was the first year the games were played at the facility.
The stadium hosted the Major League Baseball All-Star Game in 1960 (first game). In the final football game played there, Municipal Stadium was the site of the longest NFL game in history, a playoff game between the Chiefs and the Miami Dolphins on Christmas Day 1971; the Chiefs moved to the new Arrowhead Stadium in 1972.