San Diego Stadium

Coordinates: 32°46′59″N 117°7′10″W / 32.78306°N 117.11944°W / 32.78306; -117.11944
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
(Redirected from
Qualcomm Stadium
)

San Diego Stadium
The Q
The Murph
Aerial view from the north in 2005
Map
San Diego is located in the United States
San Diego
San Diego
Location in the United States
San Diego is located in California
San Diego
San Diego
Location in California
Former namesSan Diego Stadium (1967–1980)
Jack Murphy Stadium (1981–1997)
Qualcomm Stadium
(1997–2011, 2012–2017)
Snapdragon Stadium (2011)
SDCCU Stadium (2017–2020)
Address9449 Friars Road
LocationSan Diego, California, U.S.
Coordinates32°46′59″N 117°7′10″W / 32.78306°N 117.11944°W / 32.78306; -117.11944
Public transit San Diego Trolley
Green Line
at Stadium
OwnerSan Diego State University
OperatorSan Diego State University
Capacity70,561 (Football, Chargers)
67,544 (Baseball)
54,000 (Football, Aztecs)
Field sizeLeft field
330 (1969)
327 (1982)
Left-center & Right-center
375 (1969)
370 (1982)
Center field
420 (1969)
410 (1973)
420 (1978)
405 (1982)
Right field
330 (1969)
327 (1982)
330 (1996)
Backstop
80 feet (1969)
75 (1982)
SurfaceBandera Bermuda Grass
Construction
Broke groundDecember 18, 1965[1]
OpenedAugust 20, 1967
ClosedMarch 2020
DemolishedDecember 2020 –
March 22, 2021
Construction cost$27.75 million
($254 million in 2023 dollars[2])
ArchitectFrank L. Hope and Associates[1]
General contractorRobertson/Larsen/Donovan[1]
Tenants
American football

San Diego State Aztecs (NCAA) (1967–2019)
San Diego Chargers (AFL/NFL) (1967–2017)
Holiday Bowl (NCAA) (1978–2019)
Poinsettia Bowl (NCAA) (2005–2016)
San Diego Fleet (AAF) (2019)

Baseball

San Diego Padres (PCL) (1968)
San Diego Padres (MLB) (1969–2003)

Soccer
San Diego Sockers (NASL) (1978–1984)
San Diego 1904 FC (NISA
) (2019)

San Diego Stadium was a multi-purpose stadium in San Diego, California.[3] The stadium opened in 1967 as San Diego Stadium and was known as Jack Murphy Stadium from 1981 to 1997. From 1997 to 2017, the stadium's naming rights were owned by Qualcomm, and the stadium was known as Qualcomm Stadium or simply The Q. The naming rights expired on June 14, 2017, and were purchased by San Diego County Credit Union, renaming the facility as SDCCU Stadium on September 19, 2017;[4] those naming rights expired in December 2020.[5] Demolition of San Diego Stadium began in December 2020, with the last freestanding section of the stadium's superstructure felled by March 22, 2021.[6]

Following the demolition of San Diego Stadium, San Diego State University purchased the land, with plans to develop the area into a west campus, now known as SDSU Mission Valley. Snapdragon Stadium opened in August 2022, anchoring its entertainment and education district. San Diego Stadium was the home of the Aztecs of San Diego State University from 1967 through 2019. One college football bowl game, the Holiday Bowl, was held in the stadium every December from 1978 through 2019. The stadium was also home to a second college bowl game, the Poinsettia Bowl, from 2005 until its discontinuation following the 2016 edition.

The stadium was the longtime home of two major league sports teams: the San Diego Chargers of the National Football League (NFL) and the San Diego Padres of Major League Baseball (MLB). The Chargers played at the stadium from 1967 through the 2016 season, after which they moved to Los Angeles to become the Los Angeles Chargers.[7] The Padres played home games at the stadium from their founding in 1969 through the 2003 season, then moved to the Petco Park in downtown San Diego in 2004.

The stadium hosted three Super Bowls: XXII in 1988, XXXII in 1998, and XXXVII in 2003. It also hosted the 1978 and 1992 Major League Baseball All-Star Games, as well as the games of the 1996 and 1998 National League Division Series, the 1984 and 1998 National League Championship Series, and the 1984 and 1998 World Series. It was the only stadium ever to host both the Super Bowl and the World Series in the same year (1998), and was one of three stadiums to host the World Series, the MLB All-Star Game, and the Super Bowl, along with the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome in Minneapolis and Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in Los Angeles.

History

Qualcomm Stadium logo (1997–2017)

In the early 1960s, local

Bob Murphy, began to build up support for a multi-purpose stadium for San Diego. In November 1965, a $27 million bond was passed allowing construction to begin on a stadium, which was designed in the Brutalist style.[8]
Construction on the stadium began one month later. When completed, the facility was named San Diego Stadium.

The stadium was the first of the square-circle "octorad" style, which was thought to be an improvement over the other multi-purpose stadiums of the time for hosting both football and baseball (the second and last of this style was the since-imploded Veterans Stadium). Despite the theoretical improvements of this style, most of the seats were still very far away from the action on the field, especially during baseball games.

The Chargers (then a member of the

JumboTron
, with a second JumboTron installed behind the opposite end zone (third base in the stadium's baseball configuration).

Exterior of then-San Diego Jack Murphy Stadium in 1984

After Jack Murphy's death in September 1980, San Diego Stadium was renamed San Diego Jack Murphy Stadium by a 6–2 vote of the San Diego City Council on January 6, 1981.[8][10] In 1983, over 9,000 bleachers were added to the lower deck on the open end of the stadium raising the capacity to 59,022.

The most substantial addition was completed in 1997, when the stadium was fully enclosed, with the exception of where the scoreboard is located. Nearly 11,000 seats were added in readiness for

Snapdragon brand.[15] The legality of the temporary name change was challenged at the time, since it was agreed to unilaterally by San Diego's mayor, without approval from the City Council and against the advice of the City Attorney.[16] The Aztecs' new stadium, built in 2022 after the demolition of SDCCU Stadium, has the permanent name of Snapdragon Stadium
.

With the departure of the Padres to

Aztec Stadium (later renamed Snapdragon Stadium, which would be completed in 2022) on an expansion part of campus on the site of the stadium and parking lot.[18]

SDCCU Stadium logo (2017–2020)

On December 27, 2019, the stadium hosted the San Diego County Credit Union Holiday Bowl, a college football bowl game between Iowa and USC (Iowa won the game), this was the final sporting event ever played at the stadium.[19] Demolition of the stadium commenced in December 2020.

Super Bowls (NFL)

Date Super Bowl NFC Champion Points AFC Champion Points Attendance
January 31, 1988 XXII Washington Redskins 42 Denver Broncos 10 73,302
January 25, 1998 XXXII Green Bay Packers 24 Denver Broncos 31 68,912
January 26, 2003 XXXVII Tampa Bay Buccaneers 48 Oakland Raiders 21 67,603

All-Star Games (MLB)

Date All-Star Game Winner Runs Loser Runs Attendance
July 11, 1978 1978 (49th) National League (NL) 7 American League (AL) 3 51,549
July 14, 1992 1992 (63rd) American League (AL) 13 National League (NL) 6 59,372

Configurations

Satellite view of then-Qualcomm Stadium in March 2003, with the trolley line at the bottom of the image.

In order to accommodate the dimensions of both football and baseball fields, the stadium was constructed with half of the lower (Field Level) level seating built of permanent concrete (in the southern quadrant of the stadium), and the other half of portable modular construction using aluminum or steel framing.

When the stadium was configured for baseball, the portable sections would be placed in the western quadrant of the stadium along the third base-left field side. Open bullpens were located along both foul lines just beyond the ends of the Field-level seats. In the Padres' final five seasons at the stadium from 1999 to 2003, the home plate area took on the shape of home plate itself (as opposed to the standard circle); this feature is seen in Detroit's Comerica Park today.[20]

In the football configuration, the portable seating sections were placed in the northern quadrant of the stadium (covering what is used as left field in the baseball configuration) to allow for the football field to be laid out east–west (along the first base/right field foul line, with the western end zone placed in the area occupied by the portable seating sections in the baseball configuration, and the eastern end zone along the right-center field wall).

Doorways were cut in the walls of the stadium in order to allow access to these seats from the tunnel below the Plaza level in both configurations (in baseball configuration, the football doors could be seen above the left field inner wall; in football configuration, the baseball doors were visible above the west end zone, opposite the scoreboard). These doors were rolling metal overhead doors, with the field side painted to match the surrounding walls facing the field.

Seating capacity

Tenants

Padres

A Padres game at San Diego Jack Murphy Stadium in 1990, before upper deck expansion.

From their inception in 1969 until the end of 2003, when they moved into Petco Park in the downtown area, the National League's San Diego Padres called the stadium home.

The field dimensions varied slightly over the years. In 1969, the distance from home plate to the left and right field wall was 330 feet (100 m), the distance to the left- and right-center field power alleys was 375 feet (114 m), and the distance from home plate to center field was 420 feet (130 m). A 19-foot (5.8 m) wall, whose top was the rim of the Plaza level, surrounded the outfield, making home runs difficult to hit. Later, an eight-foot fence was erected, cutting the distances to 327, 368, and 405 feet (123 m), respectively. In 1996, a note of asymmetry was introduced when a 19-foot (5.8 m) high scoreboard displaying out-of-town scores was erected along the right-field wall near the foul pole and deemed to be in play, and so the distances to right field and right-center field were 330 feet (100 m) and 370 feet (110 m), respectively, while the remaining dimensions remained the same.

Hall of Famer who played his entire career with San Diego. It was also before a Padres game where comedian Roseanne Barr gave her infamous rendition of "The Star-Spangled Banner" in 1990.[34]

Chargers

An NFL Chargers playoff game in 2007

The stadium was the site of the 1980 AFC Championship Game, which the "Bolts" lost to their AFC West and in-state rival, the Oakland Raiders, 34–27. The Chargers also hosted Wild Card and Divisional Playoff games in 1979, 1980, 1992, 1994, 1995, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2008 and 2009, going 5–6 in all playoff games held at the stadium. The Chargers won all their games at the stadium against the Detroit Lions (5–0—0) and Jacksonville Jaguars (4–0—0), but lost all their meetups against the Atlanta Falcons (0–6—0), Carolina Panthers (0–3—0), and Green Bay Packers (0–6—0). The Chargers moved to Dignity Health Sports Park in Carson, a suburb of Los Angeles, following the 2016 NFL season.

Aztecs

Interior of then-Qualcomm Stadium before a SDSU Aztecs football game

Since its inception, the stadium, which was approximately five miles from campus, had been the home of San Diego State University Aztecs football through the 2019 season, the final season before demolition of the stadium commenced.[35] Before the building of the stadium, they had played their games at Balboa Stadium and their small, on-campus stadium, the Aztec Bowl (which is now the site of Viejas Arena, the home of the university's basketball teams). Traditionally, the team, clad in all-black uniforms and red helmets, has played its home games at night, a tradition started during the days of former head coach Don Coryell before the stadium was even opened. There have been attempts in the past to change from "The Look", but all have been associated with subsequent poor play by the Aztecs and a return to the traditional look.

Other football games

Following the 1978 college football season, the stadium began hosting the

Power Five conference or a major independent program
.

On December 22, 2005, a second bowl game came to San Diego when the inaugural Poinsettia Bowl was played at the stadium, with Navy beating Colorado State. The Poinsettia Bowl was organized by the same organizing committee as the Holiday Bowl. It was officially discontinued after the 2016 game, as the organizing committee announced (in January 2017) that it had decided to host only one game, beginning with the 2017 season.

On October 27, 2018, the Navy Midshipmen hosted the Notre Dame Fighting Irish at the stadium for a regular season game.[36]

The stadium was the home field for the San Diego Fleet of the AAF. They played 4 home games at the then named SDCCU Stadium in February and March 2019, with a home record of 3–1, before the league folded following week 8 of the inaugural season.

CIF San Diego Section Finals for high school football were held at the stadium. These usually took place on a Friday in early December, and four games were played (with eight teams representing four separate divisions, which are determined by the enrollment sizes of the individual schools).

Soccer

The stadium was a venue for many

United States 2018 and 2022 FIFA World Cup bid
, but the United States did not win either bid for the World Cup.

The stadium also hosted several international friendlies featuring clubs such as

.

The

North American Soccer League played at the stadium from 1978 to 1983. The stadium was the venue of Soccer Bowl '82 of the North American Soccer League and Major League Soccer's 1999 All-Star Game.[39]

On January 29, 2017, the

exhibition) match against Serbia, the first ever meeting between the two teams. The match finished as a 0–0 draw.[40]

The stadium hosted two group stage matches of the 2017 CONCACAF Gold Cup.

On July 25, 2018, the stadium hosted a

Tottenham Hotspur
. Tottenham Hotspur won 4–1.

In 2019, the stadium hosted matches of National Independent Soccer Association club San Diego 1904 FC.[41]

Other sports

In October 1967, just weeks after the stadium opened, it hosted a SCCA event organized by San Diego Region. The event was not held in the stadium itself, but on a temporary course mapped out through the stadium's parking lot. In July 1968, the Region organized a SCCA National for the car park, now called the San Diego Stadium International Raceway, but the combination of a very small crowd and complaints about the noise ensured that the experiment was not repeated.[42]

The stadium also hosted rugby matches. In October 1980, the

USA played New Zealand in a rugby match televised on ESPN. With 14,000 fans in attendance, this game at the time was the largest crowd ever to watch an international rugby game in the US.[43] Old Mission Beach Athletic Club RFC
play rugby union at the adjacent mini-stadium, so-called Little Q.

The stadium was home to a round of the AMA Supercross Championship each year, usually in early February, from 1980 to 2014.[44][45] The stadium also hosted a round of Monster Jam, also ran and operated by Feld Entertainment. In 2015, both events were moved to Petco Park.[44]

ESPN held their inaugural Moto X World Championships at the stadium in April 2008,[46] and has previously used the stadium parking lot and surrounding streets as a venue in the X Games Street Luge competition.

On May 4 and 18, 2013, the stadium was used as a racecourse by the Stadium Super Trucks.[47]

Concerts on the Green

Concerts on the Green was a sports field converted into a music and entertainment venue, located on the southwest corner of the stadium parking lot. The field was originally used as a practice venue for the San Diego Chargers. After the team moved to Chargers Park about a mile north of the stadium, the area was used primarily for rugby. AEG leased the area and retrofit it into an open-air amphitheater for concerts and other entertainment shows. The venue had the capability to hold 12,500, making it the second biggest entertainment venue in the Greater San Diego area; only North Island Credit Union Amphitheatre seats more.

Non-sporting events

California wildfires of October 2007
.

Concerts

Many concerts were also held inside the stadium over the years, by famous artists of many different genres.

In 1983 rock radio station KGB 101.5 FM hosted the KGB Skyshow 8 with Uriah Heep, Eddie Money, Mötley Crüe and Def Leppard finishing the show.

Date Artist Opening act(s) Tour / Concert name Attendance Revenue Notes
August 9, 1976 ZZ Top Blue Öyster Cult
Johnny & Edgar Winter
Worldwide Texas Tour
October 7, 1981 The Rolling Stones
J. Geils Band
American Tour 1981 70,000 / 70,000 $1,050,000
October 27, 1982 The Who John Mellencamp
Loverboy
The Who Tour 1982
51,771 / 55,000 $776,565
August 22, 1989 The Who
The Who Tour 1989
40,101 / 46,500 $902,273 This concert was recorded for the live album, Join Together.
September 30, 1992 Guns N' Roses
Metallica
Body Count Guns N' Roses/Metallica Stadium Tour 42,167 / 45,938 $1,159,593
November 10, 1992 U2 Zoo TV Tour
April 14, 1994 Pink Floyd The Division Bell Tour 51,610 / 51,610 $1,594,069
June 4, 1994 Eagles Hell Freezes Over
October 17, 1994 The Rolling Stones Seal Voodoo Lounge Tour
March 22, 1995 Billy Joel
Elton John
Face to Face 1995 52,665 / 52,665 $2,350,025
April 28, 1997 U2 PopMart Tour
February 3, 1998 The Rolling Stones Santana Bridges to Babylon Tour 55,507 / 55,507 $3,220,069
July 16, 2001
*NSYNC
Eden's Crush
Samantha Mumba
Dante Thomas
PopOdyssey 38,304 / 57,555 $1,983,015
July 27, 2008 Stone Temple Pilots Black Rebel Motorcycle Club
Wolfmother
2008 Reunion Tour
September 6, 2008 Bob Dylan Never Ending Tour 2008 This concert was a part of "Concerts on the Green".
July 9, 2015 One Direction Icona Pop On the Road Again Tour 52,510 / 52,510 $4,353,534 "Spaces" was performed and "Act My Age" was added to the setlist.
May 12, 2016 Beyoncé DJ Khaled The Formation World Tour 45,885 / 45,885 $6,028,115
August 22, 2016 Guns N' Roses The Cult Not in This Lifetime... Tour 49,458 / 49,458 $5,337,634
September 22, 2017 U2 Beck
The Joshua Tree Tour 2017
54,221 / 54,221 $6,469,130
October 8, 2017 Coldplay Tove Lo
Alina Baraz
A Head Full of Dreams Tour 54,279 / 54,279 $5,955,986 Part of the show was broadcast live at a benefit concert in
Central Mexico earthquake.[49]
September 27, 2018 Beyoncé
Jay-Z
Chloe X Halle and DJ Khaled
On the Run II Tour 42,953 / 42,953 $5,445,486

In TV and movies

American Idol (season 7)
held auditions there in July 2007; a total of 30 people who auditioned there made it to the next round.

In a January 30, 2009, episode of Monk, The stadium was known as Summit Stadium in the episode Mr. Monk Makes the Playoffs with the fictitious San Francisco Condors as the home team.

Many parts of the 1979 film The Kid from Left Field were filmed in and around the stadium.

The ending to the 1978 film Attack of the Killer Tomatoes was filmed on the field, using locals as extras.

The Little Q

The Little Q was a sports field, used primarily for

College Premier Division San Diego State University
Aztec rugby team.

Big SoCal Euro

Big SoCal Euro was a gathering of European car enthusiasts. It attracts over 3,000 car lovers every year. Not only is Big SoCal Euro one of the largest all European car gatherings, but it is also one of the oldest events of its kind, established in 2002. It had been held at the stadium since 2007. The event was founded by Lon Mok of SoCalEuro.com

Other events

Billy Graham hosted a crusade at the stadium in early May 2003.

During the

Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, Arizona
.

In the 1980s and early 1990s, the San Diego County Council of the Boy Scouts of America used the stadium's concourse areas (between the rear of the grandstands and the freestanding wall which contains the entrance gates) as well as portions of the parking lots as the site of its annual Scout Fair. The San Diego County Council has since merged with the council representing Imperial County to form the Desert Pacific Council.

Sale and demolition

The stadium under demolition December 10, 2020
San Diego Stadium's demolition as of March 10, 2021

On June 30, 2020, the city of San Diego approved the sale of the stadium to San Diego State University and on August 10, 2020, the university officially took control.[50] A new stadium is under construction on the site and is anticipated to seat 35,000 and support events including SDSU football, non-football NCAA championship games, professional soccer, a future NFL team, and special events such as concerts.[51][52] Following failed efforts in 2010 and 2016 to build a new stadium in downtown San Diego's East Village,[53] San Diego State bought the entire 135 acres (55 ha), including the existing stadium, from the city for $88 million. A competing redevelopment proposal, known as SoccerCity, envisioned that stadium site could be leased from the city and redeveloped with private funding if San Diego was awarded a Major League Soccer team. The SoccerCity proposal was placed on the November 2018 ballot alongside the SDSU proposal but was defeated.[54] The entire $3.5 billion SDSU project includes housing, office, and retail space, hotels, and 80 acres of parks and open space including a 34-acre river park on city property and will be rolled out in phases over 8–10 years.[55]

The stadium was scheduled to be decommissioned following the end of the 2021 college football season while Snapdragon Stadium is constructed on the existing parking lot.[18] However, on September 15, 2020, San Diego State University announced that the stadium would be demolished in early 2021. The stadium was taken down in pieces starting in December 2020 rather than being imploded due to the California environmental law. The 2020 and 2021 seasons were played at Dignity Health Sports Park in Carson until Snapdragon Stadium's planned completion for the Fall 2022 season.[56]

On March 22, 2021, the last freestanding section of San Diego Stadium visible from Interstates 8 and 15 was felled, leaving the plaza level to be demolished.[6]

See also

References

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  5. San Diego Union-Tribune. Retrieved August 19, 2021.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link
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  7. ^ Wilson, Ryan (January 12, 2017). "Report: Chargers plan to play in 30,000-seat soccer stadium in 2017–2018". CBS Sports. Retrieved January 12, 2017.
  8. ^ .
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  34. San Diego Union Tribune. Archived from the original
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  37. San Diego Union-Tribune
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  53. U-T San Diego
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  56. ^ "FB to Play at Dignity Health Sports Park in 2021". SDSU Athletics. September 15, 2020. Retrieved September 15, 2020.

External links