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Updated: October 12, 2009, (CT)
by www.LSUsports.net |
Longitude: -91°11'2"
Latitude: 30°24'43"

"It's Saturday Night in Death Valley...
and here come your Fighting Tigers of LSU."
| Top Six On-Campus Stadium Capacities | ||
| School | Stadium | Capacity |
| 1. Michigan | Michigan | 107,501 |
| 2. Penn State | Beaver | 107,282 |
| 3. Tennessee | Neyland | 104,079 |
| 4. Ohio State | Ohio | 101,568 |
| 5. Georgia | Sanford | 92,746 |
| 6. LSU | Tiger | 92,400 |
Hearing those words from public address announcer Dan Borne' as the Tigers enter the stadium brings chills to even the casual LSU football fan and sends shivers to those on the opposing sideline. Eight nights a year, Tiger Stadium becomes the fifth largest city in the state of Louisiana as over 92,000 fans pack the cathedral of college football to watch the Tigers play.
For LSU fans, there's nothing better than spending a night in Tiger Stadium. LSU home football games are events talked about year round and happenings in Tiger Stadium are passed down from generation to generation.
For opponents, however, it's another story as Tiger Stadium is an intimidating venue that has been called one of the most dreaded road playing sites in all of college football. Seating over 92,000 fans and nicknamed "Death Valley," poll after poll has proclaimed Tiger Stadium as one of the greatest sites anywhere for a college football game.
NO PLACE LIKE HOME
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| Click on the image above to view the field from your seat |
LSU enters the 2009 season having won 31 of its last 35 games in Tiger Stadium, a stretch that dates back to the start of the 2004 season and includes wins over eight top 25 teams. The Tigers won a school-record 19 straight home games from Oct. 15, 2005, through Nov. 10, 2007. LSU is 54-10 at home since the 2000 season -- including perfect home records of 7-0 in 2004 and 8-0 in 2006. Only one twice since 2000 has the Tigers lost more than one home game as LSU dropped two games in Tiger Stadium in 2001 and three last year.
LSU averaged over 92,000 fans for the third straight year in 2008, as 92,283 spectators piled into Tiger Stadium to see the Tigers play. LSU set the single-season attendance mark during the 2007 national championship campaign with an average of 92,619 fans per contest. The 2007 average marked the fifth straight year in which LSU reset the school’s home record for average attendance.
LSU recorded a 5-3 record at home in 2008, which including a 30-pioint comeback, the largest in school history, to beat Troy, 40-31, on November 15. LSU set the Tiger Stadium single-game attendance mark in 2008 as 93,039 fans welcomed back former coach Nick Saban and top-ranked Alabama. LSU fell to the Crimson Tide, 27-21, in overtime in front of what was the first crowd to top 93,000 in Tiger Stadium history.
The Tigers posted a 6-1 home mark in 2007, including a thrilling 28-24 victory on Oct. 6 over Florida that was played before a then Tiger Stadium-record crowd of 92,910 and a national primetime audience on CBS.
The 2005 season saw Tiger Stadium play host to its first Monday night game as LSU dropped an overtime thriller to Tennessee after the game was postponed two days due to Hurricane Rita. The LSU-Tennessee contest was the most-watched college football game in the history of ESPN2 as 2.77 million homes tuned in.
Due to the devastation to New Orleans and the Louisiana Superdome by Hurricane Katrina, Tiger Stadium served as the playing site for four New Orleans Saints games in 2005, as well as hosting the Tulane-Southeastern Louisiana contest. In all, 11 games (seven NCAA and four NFL) were played in Tiger Stadium during the 2005 season.
| Tiger Stadium Longest Winning Streaks | |||
| Games | Seasons | Snapped | |
| 1. | 19 | 2005-2007 | Arkansas (50-48, 3OT, Nov. 23, 2007) |
| 2. | 17 | 1935-38 | Ole Miss (20-17, Sept. 24, 1938) |
| 3. | 15 | 1971-73 | Alabama (21-7, Nov. 22, 1973) |
| 4. | 14 | 1957-60 | Baylor (7-3, Oct. 1, 1960) |
| 5. | 10 | 2003-05 | Tennessee (30-27, Sept. 26, 2005) |
Part of the lore of Tiger Stadium is the tradition of playing games at night, an idea that was introduced in 1931 against Spring Hill (a 35-0 LSU victory). In 2006, LSU celebrated its 75th year of playing night football in Tiger Stadium. Since that first night game in 1931, LSU has played the majority of its games at night and the Tigers have fared much better under the lights than during the day. Since 1960, LSU is 209-59-4 (.776) at night in Tiger Stadium compared to a 21-26-3 (.450) record during the day over that span.
LSU has averaged 76,066 spectators for each of its 327 battles in Tiger Stadium since the NCAA began compiling official attendance figures in 1957. Since the start of the NCAA's attendance compilations, LSU has finished in the nation's top 10 in average attendance in 45 of the past 52 seasons. The Tigers have drawn 24,873,600 fans since 1957.
Tiger Stadium first opened its gates to fans in the fall of 1924 as LSU hosted Tulane in the season finale. Beginning with that first game in Tiger Stadium, LSU has posted a 366-142-18 (.713) mark in Death Valley. LSU's overall home record since the start of football in 1893 is 446-163-19 (.725).
TESTIMONIALS
In 1998, Sport Magazine named Tiger Stadium "the most feared road playing site in America,” and in 1996, ESPN named LSU's pre-game party the best in all of America. Those surveys supported the previous polls by Gannett News Service in 1995, The Sporting News in 1989 and the College Football Association in 1987, that depict Tiger Stadium as the most difficult place for a visiting team to play.
| 2008 Attendance figures | |||
| Team | Games | attendance | average |
| 1. Michigan |
7 |
759,997 |
108,571 |
| 2. Penn St. |
7 |
757,775 |
108,254 |
| 3. Ohio St. |
7 |
734,830 |
104,976 |
| 4. Tennessee |
7 |
710,136 |
101,448 |
| 5. Texas |
7 |
686,324 |
98,046 |
| 6. Georgia |
6 |
556,476 |
92,746 |
| 7. LSU |
8 |
739,065 |
92,383 |
| 8. Alabama |
7 |
644,966 |
92,138 |
| 9. Florida |
7 |
633,807 |
90,544 |
| 10. Auburn |
7 |
608,402 |
86,925 |
Most recently, the Sporting News ranked Tiger Stadium as the sixth-best college football stadium in America in a poll of college football coaches and fans, while Sports Illustrated's Rick Reilly, in a column comparing college football to professional football, penned that "College football is LSU's Tiger Stadium at night." ESPN's Chris Fowler called LSU his favorite gameday experience in the Sports Illustrated's On Campus issue in 2003.
In 2002, after a 33-10 non-conference win over Miami (Ohio), UM coach Terry Hoeppner said of Tiger Stadium, "that's as exciting an environment as you can have. I thought the crowd was a factor for us because we had communication problems we haven't had at Michigan and Ohio State."
After a victory before a national television audience on ESPN in 2001, ESPN sideline reporter Adrian Karsten said, "Death Valley in Baton Rouge is the loudest stadium I've ever been in. There are very few stadiums in America worth a touchdown, but the Bayou Bengals certainly have that advantage in Tiger Stadium.”
GREAT MOMENTS
The 2007 national championship season featured some of Tiger Stadium’s most exciting moments, including a 28-24 win over Florida on Oct. 6. Top-ranked LSU overcame a 10-point fourth-quarter deficit to beat the ninth-ranked Gators in front of 92,910 fans – then the largest crowd in stadium history – and a primetime CBS national television audience. Just two weeks later, Matt Flynn connected with Demetrius Byrd on a 22-yard TD pass with one second remaining to give LSU a 30-24 victory over Auburn in a game televised by ESPN. LSU rallied from deficits of 17-7 at halftime and 24-23 with three minutes left in the contest to capture the electrifying win.
Though already considered one of the most raucous stadiums in all of college football, the 2003 season saw Tiger Stadium take it to another level during LSU's national title run, as the team, along with the fans, captivated the national media almost on a weekly basis. CBS televised Matt Mauck's last-minute game-winning pass to Skyler Green against Georgia before a crowd of 92,251, while ESPN was on hand for a dominating 31-7 victory over Auburn. The Tigers closed out the 2003 home slate with a 55-24 win over Arkansas before what was then the second-largest crowd in school history (92,213). The contest was televised to a national audience by CBS and the win propelled LSU to the SEC Championship Game.
In 2001, the Tigers clinched a berth in their first SEC Championship Game with a 27-14 victory over Auburn in the season finale in Tiger Stadium. After the contest, thousands of Tiger fans spilled onto the stadium floor to celebrate the victory.
In 2000, the goal posts came down twice. Immediately after the Tigers upset then-No. 11 ranked Tennessee 38-31 in overtime, the capacity crowd of 91,682 flowed onto the field of Tiger Stadium to celebrate the victory. Hundreds of students lined the sidelines and the back of the north end zone as the Tigers held the Vols scoreless in overtime for the victory.
The goal posts came down again in the final home game of the 2000 season as the Tigers posted a 30-28 win over Alabama, their first victory over the Crimson Tide in Tiger Stadium since 1969.
The goal posts came down for the first time in 1997 as all of America witnessed one of the most explosive nights in the history of the grand stadium when the Tigers upended No. 1-ranked Florida before a national television audience. A sea of Tiger fans swamped the floor of Tiger Stadium as both goal posts came crashing down -- a scene that was replayed countless times on college football highlight shows.
Perhaps the most famous moment in Death Valley history took place on "The Night The Tigers Moved the Earth," Oct. 8, 1988. When Tiger quarterback Tommy Hodson threw to Eddie Fuller for a winning touchdown against Auburn, the explosion of the crowd was so thunderous that it caused an earth tremor that registered on a seismograph meter in LSU's Geology Department across campus.
Then there was the night the Tigers nearly upset No. 1-ranked Southern Cal before a sellout crowd on Sept. 28, 1979. The Tigers came up short, but the crowd roared from kickoff to final gun in a game many ardent LSU followers rank as the loudest in stadium history.
And of course there was Halloween night 1959, when Billy Cannon made his famous 89-yard punt return to lead No. 1 LSU past No. 3 Ole Miss. Legend has it that families living near the campus lakes came running out of their homes in fear of the noise erupting around them.
Those are the highlights, some of which have shaped the character of this great stadium. But week in and week out each fall, a new chapter unfolds in the history of Death Valley.
HISTORY
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The original phase of construction was completed in 1924. This first phase included the east and west stands, which seated about 12,000. Seven years later (1931), the sides were extended upward to accommodate an additional 10,000 fans, raising the capacity to 22,000. In 1936, the stadium seating capacity was increased to 46,000, with the addition of 24,000 seats in the north end, making Tiger Stadium into a horseshoe configuration.
The next phase of construction took place in 1953 when the stadium's south end was closed to turn the horseshoe into a bowl, increasing the seating capacity to 67,720.
The original upper deck atop the west stands was completed in 1978, and it added 8,000 seats to the stadium's capacity. Additional seating in two club level sections, which flanked the existing press box, brought the total addition to approximately 10,000 seats and raised the stadium's capacity to approximately 78,000.
Refurbishing began on the stadium in the summer of 1985, when the east and west stands were waterproofed, and 25,000 chair back seats were added to replace the older "bench" type seats. Another phase of improvements was completed in 1987 when the north and south stands were waterproofed and newer bleachers were again installed to replace the older ones.
The playing field was moved 11 feet south in 1986 to provide more room between the back line of the North End Zone and the curvature of the stadium fence, which surrounds the field. It also put the playing area in the exact center of the arena's grassy surface.
Prior to the 1987 season, more seats were installed at the upper portion of the west lower stands in Tiger Stadium. Also, the stadium's seating arrangement was renumbered to make all seats a uniform size. The addition of bleacher seating in 1988 brought the capacity to 80,150, but the elimination of some bleacher seating after the 1994 season dropped the capacity to 80,000.
Now the seventh-largest on-campus stadium in college football, Tiger Stadium continues to provide fans with the ultimate college football experience. Ten years ago, 11,600 seats were added with the installation of the east upper deck, bringing the capacity to nearly 92,000. In addition to the new east upper deck, 70 skyboxes, called "Tiger Dens,” were built, giving Tiger fans luxury accommodations. The addition of the 11,600 seats in 2000 marked the first expansion to Tiger Stadium since 1978, when the original west upper deck was completed.
The distinctive environment of Tiger Stadium became even more pronounced in 2005 as the ambitious West Upper Deck project was virtually completed. Construction on the project -- which began immediately after LSU's home finale against Ole Miss in November of 2004 - carried a $60 million price tag and rebuilt over 3,200 special amenity seats as a well as a state-of-the-art press box to Tiger Stadium. The west side renovation, which included the removal and rebuilding of the upper deck to mirror the east side upper deck, was finished during the 2006 season.
The 2009 season will see Tiger Stadium add an 80-foot wide high-definition video board to the north endzone of the facility. Called one of the largest video boards in all of college athletics, the HD board will measure 27-feet high and 80-feet wide.
Tiger Stadium by the Numbers (through 2008)
92,910 Largest crowd in Tiger Stadium history (def. Florida, 28-24, on Oct. 6, 2007)
1,500 Old dorm rooms below the east and west stands
.714 Winning percentage after 518 games
207-59-3 Night record since 1960
89 89-yard punt return by Billy Cannon to beat Ole Miss on Halloween Night in 1959
70 Number of "Tiger Den" skybox suites on the East Upper Deck
44 Number of times the crowd has exceeded 90,000 for a game.
43 Number of years ranked in the top 10 in attendance nationally
19 Straight wins from 2005-07 to set the school record
7 Trips by ESPN's College GameDay crew
6 The sixth-largest on-campus stadium in the nation
1 Win over a No.1-ranked team (def. Florida, 28-21, in 1997)
Top 35 Tiger Stadium Crowds
| No. | Att. | Opponent | Date | Results |
| 1. | 93,039 | Alabama | Nov. 8, 2008 | Alabama, 27-21 (OT) |
| 2. | 92,910 | Florida | Oct. 6, 2007 | LSU, 28-24 |
| 3. | 92,904 | Georgia | Oct. 25, 2008 | Georgia, 52-38 |
| 4. | 92,739 | Virginia Tech | Sept. 8, 2007 | LSU, 48-7 |
| 5. | 92,710 | Mississippi St. | Sept. 27, 2008 | LSU, 34-24 |
| 6. | 92,664 | Auburn | Oct. 22, 2005 | LSU, 20-17 (OT) |
| 7. | 92,649 | Ole Miss | Nov. 22, 2008 | Ole Miss, 31-13 |
| 8. | 92,630 | Auburn | Oct. 20, 2007 | LSU, 30-24 |
| 9. | 92,606 | Arkansas | Nov. 23, 2007 | Arkansas, 50-48 (3OT) |
| 10. | 92,588 | Alabama | Nov. 11, 2006 | LSU, 28-14 |
| 11. | 92,530 | South Carolina | Sept. 22, 2007 | LSU, 28-16 |
| 12. | 92,512 | Louisiana Tech | Nov. 10, 2007 | LSU, 58-10 |
| 13. | 92,449 | Ole Miss | Nov. 18, 2006 | LSU, 23-20 (OT) |
| 14. | 92,407 | Middle Tennessee | Sept. 15, 2007 | LSU, 44-0 |
| 15. | 92,402 | Florida | Oct. 15, 2005 | LSU, 21-17 |
| 16. | 92,362 | Louisiana-Lafayette | Sept. 2, 2006 | LSU, 45-3 |
| 17. | 92,251 | Georgia | Sept. 20, 2003 | LSU, 17-10 |
| 18. | 92,221 | Arizona | Sept. 9, 2006 | LSU, 45-3 |
| 19. | 92,213 | Arkansas | Nov. 28, 2003 | LSU, 55-24 |
| 20. | 92,148 | Kentucky | Oct. 14, 2006 | LSU, 49-0 |
| 21. | 92,141 | Auburn | Dec. 1, 2001 | LSU, 27-14 |
| 22. | 92,136 | Tulane | Nov. 1, 2008 | LSU, 35-10 |
| 23. | 92,135 | Tulane | Sept. 23, 2006 | LSU, 49-7 |
| 24. | 92,127 | Arkansas | Nov. 25, 2005 | LSU, 19-17 |
| 25. | 92,103 | Troy | Nov. 15, 2008 | LSU, 40-31 |
| 26. | 92,085 | Auburn | Oct. 25, 2003 | LSU, 31-7 |
| 27. | 92,077 | Florida | Oct. 11, 2003 | UF, 19-7 |
| 28. | 92,012 | Alabama | Nov. 16, 2002 | ALA , 31-0 |
| 29. | 92,010 | Florida | Oct. 6, 2001 | UF, 44-15 |
| 30. | 91,986 | Tennessee | Sept. 26, 2005 | UT, 30-27 (OT) |
| 31. | 91,960 | Mississippi State | Sept. 30, 2006 | LSU, 48-17 |
| 32. | 91,941 | Ole Miss | Oct. 27, 2001 | OM , 35-24 |
| 33. | 91,879 | Louisiana Tech | Nov. 1, 2003 | LSU, 49-10 |
| 34. | 91,861 | Alabama | Nov. 13, 2004 | LSU, 26-10 |
| 35. | 91,828 | Oregon State | Sept. 4, 2004 | LSU, 22-21 (OT) |
LSU's Year-by-Year Record in Tiger Stadium
| Year: W-L-T | ||||
| 1924: 0-1-0 1925: 4-2-0 1926: 3-1-0 1927: 2-1-0 1928: 4-0-0 1929: 5-1-0 1930: 5-0-0 1931: 3-1-0 1932: 3-1-1 1933: 5-0-2 1934: 3-1-1 1935: 4-1-0 1936: 6-0-0 1937: 7-0-0 1938: 5-2-0 1939: 2-4-0 1940: 5-2-0 |
1941: 3-3-2 1942: 6-0-0 1943: 4-1-0 1944: 1-4-1 1945: 4-2-0 1946: 6-1-0 1947: 4-1-0 1948: 3-4-0 1949: 7-1-0 1950: 3-2-1 1951: 4-2-1 1952: 0-5-0 1953: 3-2-1 1954: 3-3-0 1955: 2-2-1 1956: 1-4-0 1957: 4-2-0 |
1958: 5-0-0 1959: 6-0-0 1960: 4-2-0 1961: 6-0-0 1962: 4-1-1 1963: 5-1-0 1964: 4-1-1 1965: 6-1-0 1966: 3-2-1 1967: 5-2-0 1968: 6-1-0 1969: 6-0-0 1970: 6-1-0 1971: 5-2-0 1972: 7-0-0 1973: 6-1-0 1974: 5-1-0 |
1975: 3-3-0 1976: 6-0-1 1977: 5-2-0 1978: 5-1-0 1979: 4-3-0 1980: 5-1-0 1981: 3-4-0 1982: 5-1-1 1983: 2-5-0 1984: 5-1-0 1985: 4-1-1 1986: 5-2-0 1987: 5-1-1 1988: 5-1-0 1989: 2-4-0 1990: 5-1-0 1991: 2-4-0 |
1992: 2-5-0 1993: 3-3-0 1994: 2-4-0 1995: 5-1-0 1996: 6-1-0 1997: 4-3-0 1998: 3-3-0 1999: 3-4-0 2000: 6-1-0 2001: 5-2-0 2002: 6-1-0 2003: 6-1-0 2004: 7-0-0 2005: 5-1-0 2006: 8-0-0 2007: 6-1-0 2008: 5-3-0 |
Tiger Stadium Overall Record:
366-142-18 (.713)
Tiger Stadium Annual Attendance (1957-2008)
| Year | G | Att. | Avg. | NCAA Rank |
| 1957 | 6 | 297,953 | 49,659 | 8 |
| 1958 | 5 | 296,576 | 59,315 | 3 |
| 1959 | 7 | 408,727 | 58,390 | 3 |
| 1960 | 6 | 318,899 | 53,150 | 7 |
| 1961 | 6 | 381,409 | 63,568 | 3 |
| 1962 | 6 | 397,701 | 66,284 | 3 |
| 1963 | 6 | 396,846 | 66,141 | 2 |
| 1964 | 6 | 380,687 | 63,448 | 4 |
| 1965 | 7 | 457,733 | 65,390 | 4 |
| 1966 | 6 | 386,098 | 64,350 | 4 |
| 1967 | 7 | 454,101 | 64,872 | 4 |
| 1968 | 6 | 396,774 | 66,129 | 5 |
| 1969 | 6 | 388,461 | 64,744 | 7 |
| 1970 | 7 | 436,823 | 62,403 | 9 |
| 1971 | 7 | 463,491 | 66,213 | 5 |
| 1972 | 7 | 470,078 | 67,154 | 7 |
| 1973 | 7 | 474,108 | 67,730 | 5 |
| 1974 | 6 | 395,587 | 65,931 | 6 |
| 1975 | 6 | 386,171 | 64,362 | 9 |
| 1976 | 7 | 452,921 | 64,703 | 7 |
| 1977 | 7 | 455,433 | 65,062 | 9 |
| 1978 | 6 | 446,392 | 74,399 | 6 |
| 1979 | 7 | 507,984 | 72,569 | 7 |
| 1980 | 6 | 444,703 | 74,617 | 7 |
| 1981 | 7 | 513,850 | 73,407 | 8 |
| 1982 | 7 | 537,012 | 76,716 | 6 |
| 1983 | 7 | 535,432 | 76,490 | 6 |
| 1984 | 6 | 467,746 | 77,958 | 6 |
| 1985 | 6 | 454,182 | 75,697 | 9 |
| 1986 | 7 | 546,129 | 78,018 | 7 |
| 1987 | 7 | 541,307 | 77,330 | 7 |
| 1988 | 6 | 464,006 | 77,334 | 7 |
| 1989 | 6 | 425,334 | 70,889 | 12 |
| 1990 | 6 | 429,480 | 71,580 | 13 |
| 1991 | 6 | 412,476 | 68,746 | 16 |
| 1992 | 7 | 470,546 | 67,221 | 13 |
| 1993 | 6 | 361,632 | 60,272 | 20 |
| 1994 | 6 | 390,741 | 65,124 | 14 |
| 1995 | 6 | 446,148 | 74,358 | 11 |
| 1996 | 7 | 556,631 | 79,519 | 8 |
| 1997 | 7 | 561,629 | 80,233 | 9 |
| 1998 | 6 | 481,739 | 80,290 | 10 |
| 1999 | 7 | 551,780 | 78,826 | 11 |
| 2000 | 7 | 614,704 | 87,815 | 5 |
| 2001 | 7 | 633,440 | 90,491 | 5 |
| 2002 | 7 | 632,147 | 90,307 | 5 |
| 2003 | 7 | 636,817 | 90,974 | 6 |
| 2004 | 7 | 638,462 | 91,209 | 6 |
| 2005 | 6 | 549,480 | 91,580 | 6 |
| 2006 | 8 | 737,696 | 92,212 | 6 |
| 2007 | 7 | 648,334 | 92,619 * | 6 |
| 2008 | 8 | 739,065 * | 92,383 | 7 |
| Total | 327 | 24,873,601 | 76,066 |
*denotes LSU record















































