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词条 Varsity Stadium
释义

  1. History

  2. New facilities

  3. 2015 Pan American Games

  4. Concerts

  5. Major events

  6. See also

  7. References

  8. External links

{{about|the stadium in Toronto|the former stadium in Vancouver|Varsity Stadium (Vancouver)}}{{use mdy dates|date=June 2013}}{{Infobox stadium
| stadium_name = Varsity Stadium
| nickname =
| image =
| location = 299 Bloor Street West, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
| coordinates = {{coord|format=dms|region:CA-ON_type:landmark_scale:2500|display=inline,title}}
| publictransit = St. George
| broke_ground =
| opened = 1898 (athletic grounds)
1911 (first stadium)
2007 (present stadium)
| expanded = 1924, 1950
| demolished = 2002 (first stadium)
| owner = University of Toronto
| operator = University of Toronto
| surface = grass (1898–2005)
Polytan Ligaturf (2006–present)
| construction_cost = $61.7 million
| architect = Craig and Madill (1929–1930)
Diamond+Schmitt Architects (2007)
| project_manager =
| main_contractors =
| tenants = Toronto Varsity Blues (U Sports) (1898–present)
Toronto Argonauts (IRFU/CFL) (1898–1907, 1916–1958)
Vanier Cup (1965–72, 1976–88)
Toronto Rifles (ConFL) (1966–1967)
Toronto City (USA) (1967)
Toronto Falcons (NPSL/NASL) (1967–68)
Toronto Metros-Croatia (NASL) (1975–78)
Toronto Blizzard (NASL/APSL) (1984, 1993)
Toronto Lynx (USL) (1997–2001)
Toronto Rush (AUDL) (2013–present)
North Toronto Nitros (L1O) (2016–present)
| seating_capacity = 500 (1898–1910)
10,500 (1911–23)
16,000 (1924–49)
21,739 (1950–2001)
1,500 (2003–05)
5,000 (2007–present)
| dimensions =
}}

Varsity Stadium is a collegiate football stadium located in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is home to the Toronto Varsity Blues, the athletic teams of the University of Toronto. Athletic events have been hosted on the site since 1898; the current stadium was built in 2007 to replace the original permanent stadium built in 1911. Varsity Stadium is also a former home of the Toronto Argonauts, and has previously hosted the Grey Cup, the Vanier Cup, the soccer semifinals of the 1976 Summer Olympics, and the final game of the North American Soccer League's 1984 Soccer Bowl series (which was also the last game played by the original NASL).

History

Canadian sprinter Percy Williams set a world record in the 100 metres with a time of 10.3 seconds at Varsity Stadium during the Canadian Track and Field Championships in 1930.[1]

Varsity Stadium has for its entire history been host to the University of Toronto's collegiate Canadian football team, the Varsity Blues. However it was, until the opening of Exhibition Stadium in 1959, the home of the Toronto Argonauts of what would become the Canadian Football League. Although it has not hosted a meaningful CFL game in almost half a century, it still holds the record for the number of times any stadium has hosted the Canadian professional football championship game, the Grey Cup. Capacity of the stadium has varied with time, but peaked at about 22,000 in the 1950s although, with the use of temporary bleachers, a record crowd of 27,425 watched the Edmonton Eskimos defeat the Montreal Alouettes 50–27 in the 1956 Grey Cup final.

During the 1976 Summer Olympics, Varsity Stadium hosted football games, and was the site of the semi-final game between Brazil and Poland.[2][3] Perhaps the most famous Canadian football game played in the Stadium was the 1950 Mud Bowl for the Grey Cup championship.

In soccer, the NASL's Toronto Metros-Croatia used Varsity Stadium through 1978, before moving to Exhibition Stadium.[4] They returned six years later as the Toronto Blizzard and again made it their home for the 1984 season.[5] On October 3, 1984, before 16,842 fans, the last game ever contested in the original North American Soccer League was played at Varsity Stadium when the Chicago Sting defeated the Blizzard 3–2 to win the deciding game of 1984 Soccer Bowl Series. The NASL would fold before the start of the next season.

In mid-1986, Varsity Stadium played host to the World Lacrosse Championships, a tournament featuring the United States, Canada, England, and Australia. The US defeated Canada in the final, 18–9.

The new Toronto Blizzard returned to Varsity in 1987 as part of the Canadian Soccer League but would move to the smaller Centennial Park Stadium as a cost-cutting move. They returned in 1993 as a member of the American Professional Soccer League but again were forced to move, this time to Lamport Stadium, again due to financial difficulties. Varsity Stadium continued to host the Canadian intercollegiate championship, the Vanier Cup (as it had been for most years from 1965–1988 [with exception of 1973–75]), but that too moved to larger quarters such as SkyDome (now known as Rogers Centre) as the popularity of the collegiate championship grew.

Canada's national soccer team played several matches at Varsity Stadium, including crucial World Cup qualifying matches versus Costa Rica in 1985 and Mexico in 1993. Friendly matches versus Germany and the Netherlands were also staged in 1994.

Minor league professional soccer team Toronto Lynx moved into the stadium in 1997, but was forced to move to Centennial Park Stadium due to the impending demolition of the historic facility.

The stadium was demolished mid-2002 after the cost of maintaining the large facility was far more than it generated in revenue. At that time, several structural sections of the stadium were being held up by temporary repairs, and the future integrity of the structure was in question. The field and track were retained after the demolition. During the demolition and re-building of the site Toronto Varsity Blues relocated to Birchmount Stadium in Scarborough, Ontario.

New facilities

From 2003 through 2005, temporary seating of about 1,500 was installed to permit the use of the field for intercollegiate games. The name Varsity Field was used from 2002 to 2006 during the period when the old stadium was demolished and the new stadium was being built.

A plan to build a new 25,000 seat multi-purpose stadium on the site in 2005 was voted down by the governing council of the University of Toronto due to concerns over its cost. The facility was then planned to be built on the grounds of York University but that too failed. At the time of its demolition, Varsity Stadium was the second largest capacity stadium in Canada with a grass field, after Commonwealth Stadium in Edmonton, Alberta (however, that stadium has since switched to an artificial playing surface).

Facilities and features built in the first phase of the stadium's reconstruction include an IAAF Class II 400m eight-lane track, artificial field turf (FIFA 2 Star rated surface by Polytan), and a winter bubble enabling use during inclement weather. The multi-use capability was one of the main reasons that the plan was passed by the governing council, as opposed to the 25,000 seat stadium. Compared to the old Varsity Stadium, the seating is closer to Varsity Arena, almost making the two structures one conjoined complex. Part of the red brick wall along Bloor Street was maintained for historic purposes, but the new facility is much more open and visible from the streets overall. The new facilities are designed by Diamond and Schmitt Architects.

Following the renovation, the Argonauts returned to the stadium, hosting their 2013 preseason game at their former home.[6] Their 2014 and 2015 preseason home games were also scheduled for the stadium.[7][8]

2015 Pan American Games

For the 2015 Pan American Games the facility hosted archery between July 14 and 18. During the games, the facility was configured to hold roughly 2,000 spectators per session. The facility also hosted the archery events of the 2015 Parapan American Games[9]

Concerts

{{unreferenced section|date=September 2016}}

The stadium has also been host to several concerts most notably the 1969 Rock 'n Roll Revival Concert, which Rolling Stone once called the second most important event in rock & roll history and resulted in a documentary movie, Sweet Toronto, and John Lennon's Live Peace In Toronto album. The performers were The Doors, Plastic Ono Band (Lennon, Yoko Ono, and Eric Clapton, with Klaus Voormann and Alan White), Bo Diddley, Chicago Transit Authority (later renamed "Chicago"), Tony Joe White, Alice Cooper, Jerry Lee Lewis, Chuck Berry, Cat Mother & the All Night Newsboys, Gene Vincent, Junior Walker & the All Stars, Little Richard, Doug Kershaw, Screaming Lord Sutch, Nucleus, Milkwood, and Whiskey Howl.

KISS performed at the stadium during their Destroyer Tour on September 6, 1976.

Rush performed at the stadium on September 2, 1979 during their Permanent Waves Warm-up Tour.

Major events

Grey Cups at Varsity Stadium
GameDateWinning teamScoreLosing teamAttendance
03|3rd}}1911|November|25}} University of Toronto Varsity Blues (3){{sort|0714|14–7}} Toronto Argonauts 13,687
06|6th}}1914|December|5}} Toronto Argonauts{{sort|1214|14–2}} University of Toronto Varsity Blues 10,500
07|7th}}1915|November|20}} Hamilton Tigers (2){{sort|0613|13–7}} Toronto Rowing Association 2,808
08|8th}}1920|December|4}} University of Toronto Varsity Blues (4){{sort|1316|16–3}} Toronto Argonauts 10,088
09|9th}}1921|December|3}} Toronto Argonauts (2){{sort|2323|23–0}} Edmonton Eskimos 9,558
11th1923|December|1}} Queen's University (2){{sort|5454|54–0}} Regina Rugby Club 8,629
12th1924|November|29}} Queen's University (3){{sort|0911|11–2}} Toronto Balmy Beach 5,978
14th1926|December|4}} Ottawa Senators (2){{sort|0310|10–7}} Toronto Varsity Blues 8,276
15th1927|November|26}} Toronto Balmy Beach{{sort|0309|9–6}} Hamilton Tigers 13,676
18th1930|December|6}} Toronto Balmy Beach (2){{sort|0511|11–6}} Regina Roughriders 3,914
22nd1934|November|24}} Sarnia Imperials{{sort|0820|20–12}} Regina Roughriders 8,900
24th1936|December|5}} Sarnia Imperials (2){{sort|0626|26–20}} Ottawa Rough Riders 5,883
25th1937|December|11}} Toronto Argonauts (4){{sort|0104|4–3}} Winnipeg Blue Bombers 11,522
26th1938|December|10}} Toronto Argonauts (5){{sort|2330|30–7}} Winnipeg Blue Bombers 18,778
28th1940|November|30}} Ottawa Rough Riders{{sort|0608|8–2}} Toronto Balmy Beach 4,998
29th1941|November|29}} Winnipeg Blue Bombers (3){{sort|0218|18–16}} Ottawa Rough Riders 19,065
30th1942|December|5}} Toronto RCAF Hurricanes{{sort|0308|8–5}} Winnipeg RCAF Bombers 12,455
31st1943|November|27}} Hamilton Flying Wildcats{{sort|0923|23–14}} Winnipeg RCAF Bombers 16,423
33rd1945|December|1}} Toronto Argonauts (6){{sort|3535|35–0}} Winnipeg Blue Bombers 18,660
34th1946|November|30}} Toronto Argonauts (7){{sort|2228|28–6}} Winnipeg Blue Bombers 18,960
35th1947|November|29}} Toronto Argonauts (8){{sort|0110|10–9}} Winnipeg Blue Bombers 18,885
36th1948|November|27}} Calgary Stampeders{{sort|0512|12–7}} Ottawa Rough Riders 20,013
37th1949|November|26}} Montreal Alouettes{{sort|1328|28–15}} Calgary Stampeders 20,087
38th1950|November|25}} Toronto Argonauts (9){{sort|1313|13–0}} Winnipeg Blue Bombers 27,101
39th1951|November|24}} Ottawa Rough Riders (4){{sort|0721|21–14}} Saskatchewan Roughriders 27,341
40th1952|November|29}} Toronto Argonauts (10){{sort|1021|21–11}} Edmonton Eskimos 27,391
41st1953|November|28}} Hamilton Tiger-Cats{{sort|0612|12–6}} Winnipeg Blue Bombers 27,313
42nd1954|November|27}} Edmonton Eskimos{{sort|0126|26–25}} Montreal Alouettes 27,328
44th1956|November|24}} Edmonton Eskimos (3){{sort|2350|50–27}} Montreal Alouettes 39,417
45th1957|November|30}} Hamilton Tiger-Cats (2){{sort|2532|32–7}} Winnipeg Blue Bombers 27,425
Vanier Cups at Varsity Stadium
GameDateWinning TeamScoreLosing Team
1stNovember 20, 1965Toronto14–7Alberta
2ndNovember 19, 1966St. F.X.40–14Waterloo Lutheran
3rdNovember 25, 1967Alberta10–9McMaster
4thNovember 22, 1968Queen's42–14Waterloo Lutheran
5thNovember 21, 1969Manitoba24–15McGill
6thNovember 21, 1970(2)}}38–11Ottawa
7thNovember 20, 1971Western15–14Alberta
8thNovember 25, 1972(2)}}20–7Waterloo Lutheran
12thNovember 19, 1976(3)}}29–13Acadia
13thNovember 19, 1977(4)}}48–15Acadia
14thNovember 18, 1978(2)}}16–3UBC
15thNovember 17, 1979Acadia34–12Western
16thNovember 29, 1980(3)}}40–21Ottawa
17thNovember 28, 1981(2)}}18–12Alberta
18thNovember 20, 1982UBC39–14Western
19thNovember 19, 1983Calgary31–21Queen's
20thNovember 24, 1984Guelph22–13Mount Allison
21stNovember 30, 1985(2)}}25–6Western
22ndNovember 22, 1986(2)}}25–23Western
23rdNovember 21, 1987McGill47–11UBC
24thNovember 19, 1988(3)}}52–23Saint Mary's
{{clear}}
1976 Summer Olympics Football Matches at Varsity Stadium
DateTeam #1ResultTeam #2RoundAttendance
July 18, 1976BRA}}0–0GDR}}Group A21,643
July 19, 1976ISR}}0–0GUA}}Group B9,500
July 21, 1976PRK}}3–1CAN}}Group D12,638
July 25, 1976BRA}}4–1ISR}}Quarter-finals18,601
July 27, 1976POL}}2–0BRA}}Semi-finals21,743

See also

  • Birchmount Stadium – City of Toronto
  • Centennial Park Stadium – City of Toronto
  • Lamport Stadium – City of Toronto
  • Monarch Park Stadium – Toronto District School Board
  • Metro Toronto Track and Field Centre – City of Toronto
  • Rosedale Field – City of Toronto
  • York Lions Stadium – York University

References

1. ^{{cite web|title=Percy Williams: World's Fastest Human|url=http://www.samuelhawley.com/percyfastesthuman.html|publisher=samuelhawley.com|accessdate=31 August 2018|author=Samuel Hawley}}
2. ^1976 Summer Olympics official report. Volume 2. pp. 226–9.
3. ^1976 Summer Olympics official report. Volume 3. pp. 227–89.
4. ^{{cite news |last=Beard |first=Randy |title=Blizzard Hope Revenge Snowballs The Rowdies|date=April 25, 1979|newspaper=Evening Independent|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=950&dat=19790425&id=bgEMAAAAIBAJ&sjid=61gDAAAAIBAJ&pg=2260,2414559&hl=en|page=1C|accessdate=July 3, 2016}}
5. ^{{cite news |last=Beard |first=Randy |title=Down 3 more teams, but NASL is stronger|date=May 4, 1984|newspaper=Evening Independent|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=950&dat=19840504&id=FMNaAAAAIBAJ&sjid=i1kDAAAAIBAJ&pg=2443,1156313&hl=en|page=6C|accessdate=July 3, 2016}}
6. ^{{citenews|title=Recap:Argos win in return to Varsity Stadium|url=http://argonauts.ca/article/recap-argos-return-to-varsity-stadium|date=2013-06-20|accessdate=2014-05-04|publisher=Toronto Argonauts|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140505060210/http://argonauts.ca/article/recap-argos-return-to-varsity-stadium|archive-date=May 5, 2014|dead-url=yes|df=mdy-all}}
7. ^{{citenews|title=Toronto Argonauts announce 2014 schedule!|date=2014-02-12|url=http://www.argonauts.ca/article/toronto-argonauts-announce-2014-schedule|accessdate=2014-05-04|publisher=Toronto Argonauts|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140223005427/http://www.argonauts.ca/article/toronto-argonauts-announce-2014-schedule|archive-date=February 23, 2014|dead-url=yes|df=mdy-all}}
8. ^{{citeweb|url=http://argonauts.ca/article/toronto-argonauts-announce-2015-game-schedule|title=TORONTO ARGONAUTS ANNOUNCE 2015 GAME SCHEDULE|date=2015-02-13|accessdate=2015-02-13|publisher=Toronto Argonauts|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150213212244/http://argonauts.ca/article/toronto-argonauts-announce-2015-game-schedule|archive-date=February 13, 2015|dead-url=yes|df=mdy-all}}
9. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.toronto2015.org/venue/varsity-stadium|title=Varsity Stadium |publisher=TO2015 |accessdate=November 16, 2014}}

External links

{{Commons category}}
  • {{official website|http://www.varsitycentre.ca}}
{{s-start-collapsible|header={{s-sta|et}}}}{{succession box
| title = Home of the
Toronto Argonauts
| years = 1898–1907
| before = Rosedale Field | after = Rosedale Field
}}{{succession box
| title = Home of the
Toronto Argonauts
| years = 1916–1958
| before = Rosedale Field
| after = Exhibition Stadium
}}{{end}}{{2015 Pan American Games venues}}{{2015 Parapan American Games venues}}{{1976 Summer Olympic venues}}{{Olympic venues football}}{{Grey Cup}}{{University of Toronto}}{{Toronto Argonauts}}{{Sport venues in Toronto}}

13 : University of Toronto buildings|Canadian Football League venues|Soccer venues in Canada|Sports venues in Toronto|Venues of the 1976 Summer Olympics|Olympic football venues|Toronto Argonauts|Multi-purpose stadiums in Canada|Venues of the 2015 Parapan American Games|North American Soccer League (1968–84) stadiums|University sports venues in Canada|Ultimate (sport) venues|College football venues

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