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Sonny Lubick Field at Hughes Stadium

Sonny Lubick Field at Hughes Stadium
October 28, 2006 - CSU vs. UNM at halftime
Halftime in October 2006
Former names Hughes Stadium (1968–2002)
Location S. Overland Trail
Fort Collins, Colorado 80526
Coordinates 40°33′44″N 105°8′30″W / 40.56222°N 105.14167°W / 40.56222; -105.14167Coordinates: 40°33′44″N 105°8′30″W / 40.56222°N 105.14167°W / 40.56222; -105.14167
Owner Colorado State University
Operator Colorado State University
Capacity 32,500 (2005–2016)
30,000 (1969–2004)
Record attendance 39,107 (vs. Utah, 1994)
Surface FieldTurf (2006–present)
natural grass (1968–2005)
Construction
Broke ground May 1967
Opened September 28, 1968
Renovated 2005
Closed November 19, 2016
Construction cost $2,800,000
Architect Aller-Lingle Architects
(2005 renovation)
Tenants
Colorado State Rams (NCAA) (1968–2016)

Sonny Lubick Field at Hughes Stadium (stadium and field name) or Hughes Stadium (name of the stadium itself) is an outdoor football stadium in Fort Collins, Colorado owned and operated by Colorado State University but located about four miles (6 km) west of the school's main campus. It was the home field of the Colorado State Rams of the Mountain West Conference from 1968 through 2016; the team is slated to move to Colorado State Stadium for the 2017 season. Future plans for Hughes Stadium are unknown but it is unlikely it will be left dormant, given away, nor developed for high density use. Hughes Stadium opened in 1968. It replaced the old Colorado Field, a 12,000-seat on-campus stadium.

Hughes Stadium sits in a natural oval bowl, with seating on three sides and an open grass berm (not open for seating) behind the south endzone. The west (home side) stands are expanded out of the bowl and capped by a press box. The stadium is named for Harry W. Hughes, the head coach for 31 seasons (1911–41) at what was then known as Colorado Agricultural.

The playing surface itself was named in 2003 in honor of then head coach Sonny Lubick. The winningest coach in school history, Lubick led the Rams for 15 seasons (1993-2007), winning six conference titles and nine bowl games.

The stadium has a seating capacity of 32,500 with club seats and 12 luxury suites, completed in 2005. The playing field, at an elevation of 5,190 feet (1,582 m) above sea level, was natural grass for the stadium's first 38 seasons; FieldTurf was installed in the summer of 2006.


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