Cowboy Ka-boom: The Demolition of Texas Stadium
An ode to Emmit, Troy, and Michael.
Texas Stadium, home to 38 seasons of the Dallas Cowboys, was blown up to rubble this weekend…by an 11 year-old boy. Casey Rogers won an essay contest and got to be the big button-pusher for the emotional demolition of the club that housed America’s Team for decades. More than 20,000 people gathered at various locations around the metroplex for perhaps the largest tailgate party to date to watch fireworks shoot over the stadium one final time. Then. the real fireworks began. and a ton of dynamite brought the near 1-million foot stadium to its knees.
Interesting enough, three large pillars swayed and leaned but failed to fall completely. Irving mayor Herbert Gears was said to have joked, “Now we’ve got Stonehenge.”
Among the viewers were Cowboy players, cheerleaders and of course, club owner Jerry Jones, who purchased the stadium for $160 million in 1989. The building was revered for the large hole in the roof, “So God could watch his team,” as most Dallasites see it.
Starting with last year’s season, the Cowboys began playing in the new stadium in Arlington worth a staggering $1.2 billion, and Irving officials decided they needed the land more than the old stadium.
The stadium was also frequently used for major concerts, and most will remember the location from a birds-eye view of the top from helicopters during events.
The state already has a 10-year lease to use the property as a staging area for a highway construction project–which proves the old Texas law: If you can’t play football in it, you can drive over it.
Construction has officially begun on the Lucky Strike lanes in San Francisco.
Jed York put a gold shovel in the ground, marking the significant move to the city.
Want to stay or get in shape, but are turned off by the chain gang (that’s you LA Fitness, Fitness First et al) – that are invariably always packed and impersonal?
On Friday night, Lagasse's Stadium at the Palazzo welcomed mixed martial artist "The Sandman" Jorge Santiago as he hosted a pre-fight party at the sports-viewing mecca.
Clyde "The Glide" Drexler stopped by Lagasse's Stadium at the Palazzo on Saturday with friend Sam Perkins to catch some of the March Madness action.
The San Francisco 49ers may be moving to a billion-dollar stadium in Santa Clara, but first the plans are going before a judge who will hear arguments regarding financing for the complex and whether it should be subject to voter approval.
San Francisco 49ers president and Haute 100 San Francisco member Jed York has said over a conference call that the new Collective Bargaining Agreement has allowed for enough extra cash to build not one, but several new stadiums – a reported 1.5% of the entire league’s salary cap, to be exact.
The San Francisco 49ers announced that the official ground-breaking date for the new stadium will be April 19.
Former San Francisco 49ers quarterback, Hall of Famer, football legend, and Haute 100 San Francisco member Joe Montana has a lot of accomplishments under his belt – and now he can add one more. The famed NFL figure was approved earlier this month by the Santa Clara City Council to start developing...
London's budget hotel obsession is bordering on the extreme with the announcement of a 600-capsule hotel to be built in the West End.