Brass Monkey All American 13560 Posts user info edit post |
Well I could imagine Joel Coliseum being not so great this year. I went a couple of years ago and it was a decent atmosphere, but not great. Like I said, I really didn't know who to put at the 25 spot. Marquette is pretty good. Texas is getting there, and Texas A&M was decent this year. Mizzou has a fairly strong basketball fanbase, and they used to really rock their old building, the Hearnes Center. I saw an ESPN Classic game of Kansas @ Mizzou back when Roy was there, I think it was the 1998 game, and the crowd was loud the entire time. I haven't seen much of Mizzou's new place, Mizzou Arena. It looks like a poor man's Comcast Center though. Washington has a decent student section setup, even though it's not too large.
In regards to justifying UNC being #21, which some might think is low, I talked to this 2nd year resident today at work that went to UNC for medical school, and asked him about the Dean Dome. He said it was a great place to watch a game in terms of sightlines, but he didn't think it was all that tough of a place to play in, and said that it never got real loud in there, except for on rare occasions. 7/30/2007 6:30:56 PM |
The Dude All American 6502 Posts user info edit post |
I don't remember if you listed Gonzaga or not but they should be ranked in the top 20 7/30/2007 6:39:37 PM |
Brass Monkey All American 13560 Posts user info edit post |
I don't know about Top 20, but Gonzaga could perhaps fill the 25th spot. 7/30/2007 7:14:54 PM |
Brass Monkey All American 13560 Posts user info edit post |
1. Duke 2. Kansas 3. Maryland 4. NC State 5. Michigan State 6. Oklahoma State 7. Syracuse 8. Illinois 9. Indiana 10. Kentucky 11. Louisville 12. Stanford 13. Pitt 14. Arizona 15. Oregon 16. Rutgers 17. Iowa State 18. Wisconsin 19. Arkansas 20. Virginia 21. North Carolina 22. Cal 23. UConn 24. Florida 25. TBD
So what do you think? Also who deserves the 25 spot? Wake, Texas, Marquette, Gonzaga, Ohio State, others? Let's see how you'd rank them. Besides Gonzaga, what other teams from non-conferences should be considered? Memphis maybe? St. Joe's, while small, has a good atmosphere with an old school gym. 7/31/2007 7:27:58 PM |
Brass Monkey All American 13560 Posts user info edit post |
NFL, who ya got? 8/11/2007 9:02:18 AM |
Brass Monkey All American 13560 Posts user info edit post |
Probably some of the toughest places, in no particular, are Kansas City, Seattle, Minnesota, Washington (largest venue in the NFL), New York (Jets and Giants), Oakland (more due to the fans rather than stadium design), Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Green Bay (maniacal fans and often times freezing weather), Cleveland (b/c of the Dawg Pound), etc. 8/14/2007 6:09:56 PM |
Brass Monkey All American 13560 Posts user info edit post |
NFL by division
AFC East 1. The Meadowlands (NY Jets) - Capacity: 80,242 2. Ralph Wilson Stadium (Buffalo Bills) - Capacity: 73,967 3. Gillette Stadium (New England Patriots) - Capacity: 68,756 4. Dolphin Stadium (Miami Dolphins) - Capacity: 76,500
AFC South (what a pathetic collection of home fields) 1. RCA Dome (Indianapolis Colts) - Capacity: 60,272 2. Reliant Stadium (Houston Texans) - Capacity: 71,500 3. LP Field (Tennessee Titans) - Capacity: 68,798 4. Jacksonville Municipal Stadium (Jacksonville Jaguars) - Capacity: 67,174
AFC North 1. Cleveland Browns Stadium (Cleveland Browns) - Capacity: 73,200 2. Heinz Field (Pittsburgh Steelers) - Capacity: 64,450 3. Paul Brown Stadium (Cincinnati Bengals) - Capacity: 65,535 4. M&T Bank Stadium (Baltimore Ravens) - Capacity: 71,008
AFC West (now this is a conference) 1. Arrowhead Stadium (Kansas City Chiefs) - Capacity: 79,451 2. INVESCO Field at Mile High (Denver Broncos) - Capacity: 76,125 3. McAfee Coliseum (Oakland Raiders) - Capacity: 63,026 4. Qualcomm Stadium (San Diego Chargers) - Capacity: 71,294 9/10/2007 8:36:19 PM |
dweedle All American 77386 Posts user info edit post |
you mean AFC by division 9/10/2007 8:38:16 PM |
Jaybee1200 Suspended 56200 Posts user info edit post |
^^ I would have LP by far and away number one in the south. The team has been shit the last few years but that place has always had a rep as on of the loudest places to play 9/10/2007 9:04:22 PM |
Ernie All American 45943 Posts user info edit post |
so this is basically brass monkey's "toughest places to play based on hearsay and conjecture because i have not actually been to these places" thread? 9/10/2007 9:07:22 PM |
Brass Monkey All American 13560 Posts user info edit post |
NFC East (this division is rivaled only by the AFC West) 1. FedEx Field (Washington Redskins) - Capacity: 91,704 2. Giants Stadium (NY Giants) - Capacity: 80,242 3. Lincoln Financial Field (Philadelphia Eagles) - Capacity: 68,532 4. Texas Stadium (Dallas Cowboys) - Capacity: 65,675
NFC South (lots of potential but nowhere near cream of the crop in the NFL yet) 1. Bank of America Stadium (Carolina Panthers) - Capacity: 73,298 2. Raymond James Stadium (Tampa Bay Buccaneers) - Capacity: 66,321 3. Georgia Dome (Atlanta Falcons) - Capacity: 71,228 4. Louisiana Superdome (New Orleans Saints) - Capacity: 69,703
NFC North 1. Lambeau Field (Green Bay Packers) - Capacity: 72,515 2. Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome (Minnesota Vikings) - Capacity: 64,111 3. Soldier Field (Chicago Bears) - Capacity: 61,500 4. Ford Field (Detroit Lions) - Capacity: 65,000
NFC West 1. Qwest Field (Seattle Seahawks) - Capacity: 68,175 2. Edward Jones Dome (St. Louis Rams) - Capacity: 66,000 3. University of Phoenix Stadium (Arizona Cardinals) - Capacity: 63,400 4. Monster Park (San Francisco 49ers) - Capacity: 69,734
^well I looked into what most of the players said were the toughest places to play, and as well what I've heard the analysts say.
here's one of the things I used in deciding. http://www.profootballweekly.com/PFW/Features/NFL+Features/2004/question100904.htm
Quote : | "you mean AFC by division" |
I did the AFC first, and hoped to get the NFC in a second post right behind it.
[Edited on September 10, 2007 at 9:12 PM. Reason : ]9/10/2007 9:08:37 PM |
Ernie All American 45943 Posts user info edit post |
that article is three years old 9/10/2007 9:13:30 PM |
Brass Monkey All American 13560 Posts user info edit post |
So, it hasn't changed that much. Most of the ones mentioned (KC, Oakland, Green Bay, etc.) are still considered tops in the league.
I'll move LP Field up to two for you Jaybee, but I'm not ready to put it over the RCA Dome just yet. A lot of players have talked about how loud Indianapolis has gotten in recent years. The AFC South though kind of sucks when you look at the home fields. 9/10/2007 9:17:54 PM |
Ernie All American 45943 Posts user info edit post |
it's an absolute joke that you would put soldier field below the metrodome
vikings fans are pussies
chicago in december is colder and windier than anywhere on earth
and the bears are pretty good 9/10/2007 9:21:08 PM |
AndyMac All American 31922 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "Lincoln Financial Field (Philadelphia Eagles) - Capacity: 68,532" |
Toughest place in the world to play.
For the home team.9/10/2007 9:24:49 PM |
Brass Monkey All American 13560 Posts user info edit post |
I had a hard time judging those two. I considered putting Chicago higher than the Metrodome, but I didn't see too many things on the internet from players about Chicago being tough, unlike the Metrodome which was nicknamed "The Thunderdome" due to it's noise. Of course the new Soldier Field has only been around for a few years, and hasn't gotten the reputation that the Metrodome has over the years. I'd be happy to put Soldier Field above the Metrodome, since you are participating in this discussion. It'd be great if everyone did their own rankings and we could tally them all up for a more concise opinion. 9/10/2007 9:29:23 PM |