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It is primarily used for football and soccer, and is the home field of the University of Connecticut Huskies (UConn). In 2010, it was home to the Hartford Colonials of the United Football League. The stadium, which opened in 2003, was the first stadium used primarily by an NCAA FBS (formerly Division I-A) team to open in the 21st century.
On October 13, 2014 it was announced the former UConn men’s soccer student-athlete Tony Rizza ’87 (BUS) has pledged a total of $8 million to transform the soccer complex and build a new soccer stadium on the Storrs campus. [15] The new facility will be built on the site of the current Joseph J. Morrone Stadium and will bear the same name.
This template uses <mapframe>...</mapframe> to display interactive maps of football stadia, using data supplied from the template, from Wikidata, and/or from lists defined in module subpages. The markers for each stadium have a popup window with information on the stadium (e.g. image, description, capacity, etc.).
This module is used with the template {{football map}} to simplify creation of maps with the <mapframe> tag provided by the Kartographer extension.. The template takes the same parameters as <mapframe> and adds a number of markers using a series of |stadiumN parameters that are used to general the JSON data for the markers.
Dillon Stadium was built in 1935. Formerly named Municipal Stadium, it was renamed in 1956 after James H. Dillon, the City's recreation director. [9] Dillon Stadium was the home of two minor league football teams in the 1960s and 70s: the Hartford Charter Oaks of the Atlantic Coast Football League and Continental Football League, owned by the Brewer family, and the Hartford Knights, also of ...
Arute Field is a 5,500-seat multi-purpose stadium in New Britain, Connecticut, United States.It is home to the Central Connecticut State University Blue Devils Football and Men's and Women's Lacrosse teams.
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The final game of the minor league Atlantic Coast Football League was held at the stadium, when the New England Colonials defeated the Bridgeport Jets by 41–17 in the ACFL championship game. A total of 10,176 fans attended the contest on November 23, 1973—ten years and a day after President Kennedy died, in a stadium named after him.