Ad
related to: jack trice stadium parking pass
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
A new video/scoreboard was installed on the north end of Jack Trice Stadium. The screen measures 36 feet high and 79.5 feet wide and has a resolution of 720 x 1,584. The new video board was completed for the 2011 football season. [11] 2015. View of Jack Trice Stadium's newly completed South End-Zone Project during a football game vs Northern Iowa.
Due to the persistence of the student body government, students, alumni, faculty and staff, and other supporters (including public figures such as Paul Newman, and Nikki Giovanni), the football stadium at Iowa State University was finally named Jack Trice Stadium in 1997. Jack Trice Stadium is currently the only Division I FBS stadium or arena ...
The stadium was originally named Cyclone Stadium, but its name was changed in 1997 to honor the school's first African-American athlete and the only ISU athlete to die from injuries suffered while competing in an athletic event, Jack Trice. The first game played in the stadium was a Cyclone victory over Air Force in September 1975.
The post Iowa State’s Jack Trice Stadium remains only major college football stadium named for a Black man appeared first on TheGrio. The stadium at Iowa State was named for Jack Trice in 1997 ...
George Trice is thankful that the tragic story of his cousin, Jack Trice, still is being told a century after he died from injuries sustained on a football field. Jack Trice, Iowa State’s first ...
The recently released trailer for "NCAA Football 25" doesn’t feature Iowa State, but here's what Cyclone fans may expect to see in the game.
The Cyclones played their home games at Jack Trice Stadium located in Ames, Iowa. Following a comeback 38–35 win against the UCF Knights on October 19, the Cyclones achieved their best start since 1938 , and a 4–0 start in Big 12 play for the first time in program history. [ 1 ]
Jack Trice Stadium (formerly Cyclone Stadium) is a stadium in Ames, Iowa. It is primarily used for college football , and is the home field of the Iowa State University Cyclones. It opened on September 20, 1975 (with a win against Air Force ), and with hillside tickets it officially has 61,500 seats.