Stallworth Stadium
29°47′33″N 94°56′22″W / 29.7926303°N 94.9394274°W
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Stallworth Stadium is a stadium in Baytown, Texas. It is primarily used for American football and soccer and is the home field of Robert E. Lee High School, Ross S. Sterling High School, and Goose Creek Memorial High School. All three schools are in the Goose Creek Consolidated Independent School District.
The stadium holds 16,500 people and opened in 1969 when Memorial Stadium (now Sultis Stadium) on the Robert E. Lee campus became too small.[1] Stallworth Stadium is on a neutral site and not on any of the three campuses in GCCISD.
On October 29, 1976, President Gerald Ford attended a game between the Robert E. Lee Ganders and the Aldine-McArthur Generals.[2] The President, on the campaign trail in Houston, stayed long enough to see the Ganders reach a 21–0 lead over the Generals en route to a 34–0 victory.
In addition, the Bayou Bowl, a high school all-star game between players from Louisiana and Texas, takes place annually at the venue. Starting in 2006, the stadium is occasionally used for middle school football games.
The stadium was also the home of the Baytown chapter of The American Cancer Society's Bay Area Relay for Life until it moved to Royal Purple Raceway, due to the GCCISD bus barn in the stadium's parking lot.
The stadium is among the largest non-collegiate fields in the state.[citation needed]
The stadium is named after Robert E. Lee High School coach Dan Stallworth.[citation needed]
Stallworth Stadium is among the largest high school football stadiums by capacity in Texas:[3]
Location | Stadium | Capacity |
---|---|---|
Mesquite | Memorial Stadium | 19,400 |
Corpus Christi | Buccaneer Stadium | 18,000 |
Baytown | Stallworth Stadium | 16,000 |
McAllen | McAllen Veterans Memorial Stadium | 13,500 |
Carrollton | Tommy Standridge Stadium | 13,000 |
Irving | Joy and Ralph Ellis Stadium | 12,500 |
Bedford | Pennington Field | 12,500 |
San Benito | Bobby Morrow Stadium | 12,000 |
Austin | Burger Stadium | 12,000 |
Denton | CH Collins Stadium | 12,000 |
Houston | Jones-Cowart Stadium | 12,000 |
Pasadena | Veterans Memorial Stadium | 12,000 |
Cypress | Cy-Fair FCU Stadium | 11,000 |
Austin | Kelly Reeves Stadium | 11,000 |
Commerce | Memorial Stadium | 11,000 |
San Antonio | Dub Farris Stadium | 10,000 |
Dallas | Forester Stadium | 10,000 |
San Antonio | Jerry Comalander Stadium | 10,000 |
Harlingen | J. Lewis Boggus Stadium | 10,000 |
Brownsville | Sams Memorial Stadium | 10,000 |
Corsicana | Tiger Stadium | 10,000 |
New Braunfels | Unicorn Stadium | 10,000 |
Waller | Waller ISD Stadium | 10,000 |
References
- ^ "Stallworth Stadium". TexasBob.com. Retrieved 25 May 2013.
- ^ "Stallworth's Top 10 at 35". The Baytown Sun. Retrieved 25 May 2013.
- ^ "Texas Football Stadium Database".