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Albertsons Stadium is widely known for its unusual blue playing surface, installed in 1986, while Boise State was in the Big Sky Conference. It was the first non-green playing surface (outside of painted end zones) in football history and remained the only one among NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision schools for almost 20 years.
Boise State holds a trademark on any non-green field, not just blue. Therefore, anyone (high school, college, or otherwise) must apply for a license from Boise State before installing a football field any color other than green. Boise State is one of 7 college football programs in the United States to have a non-green playing surface.
Boise State holds a trademark on any non-green field, not just blue; [5] the enforceability of such a vague trademark has been questioned. [6] It has licensed the right to use blue fields to several high schools as well as the University of New Haven, [ 7 ] and also issues free licenses to any school or team that uses a color other than blue or ...
Since 2000, Boise State has gone 158-20 at home, though some allege there’s a camouflage effect that has helped it, with the Broncos typically playing on that blue field while wearing blue ...
Sep. 13—GRAND FORKS — The UND football program will play Boise State for the first time at 11 a.m. Saturday in Idaho. Here are eight things you need to know about Boise State. Boise State ...
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Tomahawks Field was an outdoor athletic stadium in Tokyo, Japan, the home field of the Hosei Orange of the Kantoh Collegiate American Football Association.With permission, and assistance, from Boise State University, Hosei is the first university to have a blue turf playing surface granted to them under the first international licensing of the playing surface through a Boise State trademark.
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