In six seasons at TCF Bank Stadium the Gophers are averaging about the same per game attendance they had in the last half dozen years at the Metrodome.
The stadium opened in 2009 as the new on-campus home for Gophers football. During six years playing in the $288.5 million outdoor facility, the Gophers are averaging 48,389 fans per game. From 2003-2008 the average at the dome was 48,950.
The lure of a new stadium and sitting outdoors boosted attendance in 2009 with all seven games selling out in the 50,805 seat facility. During the five years since, the per game averages starting with 2010 are 49,513, 47,714, 46,637, 47,797 and 47,865.
This year stadium capacity was increased to 52,525 to accommodate the Vikings who are using the facility for home games in 2014 and 2015. The Gophers didn’t sell out a single game this fall, although the announced crowd of 51,241 for Purdue came close. Minnesota has sold out only four games since 2009.
Annual attendance is impacted by several factors including the box office appeal of the Gophers and their opponents. Also factoring in are the number of tickets sold in the off-season including public and student season tickets. Other variables are ticket prices, weather and times of day for kickoffs, with mid-afternoon and evening games more popular than 11 a.m. starts.
When cold and snow arrive on game week it’s an easy decision for fence-sitting fans to stay home and watch the Gophers on high definition television. Last Saturday’s game against No. 8 ranked Ohio State might have attracted 55,000 to 60,000 at the dome but an announced crowd of 45,778 was the lowest for a Gophers’ Big Ten home game this year.
Nice weather in September and October is when TCF Bank Stadium is most attractive to fans who can not only sit outside but also enjoy the tailgating experience in nearby areas. The Gophers drew their largest consecutive crowds this year on October 11 and 18 when 49,051 watched the Northwestern game and 51,241 saw Purdue.
The Gophers played on campus and outdoors at Memorial Stadium from 1924 through 1981. The first six seasons at the dome saw a big jump in attendance with the Gophers averaging 54,898 fans. In the six prior years at Memorial Stadium the average was 40,872.
The Metrodome capacity for Gophers football was 64,172 from 1991-2008. Capacity at Memorial Stadium was 56,652 from 1970-1981.
Worth Noting
Fans concerned about cold temperatures and outdoor seating during the Prep Bowl today and tomorrow at TCF Bank Stadium have an indoor option. For $50 there is admission to the stadium’s indoor club. More at mygophersports.com/online/prep-bowl.
The Prep Bowl has four games today and three tomorrow in various classes. Among the matchups is tonight’s 7 p.m. Class 6A state title game between defending champion Eden Prairie and Totino-Grace. All games are televised on KSTC.
Among those cheering for the Gophers at Saturday’s game in Lincoln against the Cornhuskers will be University of Minnesota president Eric Kaler who is a major supporter of athletics.
The Gophers, despite their loss last Saturday to Ohio State, are still in contention to win the Big Ten’s West Division with two games remaining on their schedule. Senior defensive tackle Cameron Botticelli said the Gophers’ loss to OSU, 9-1 overall and 6-0 in the Big Ten, isn’t quickly forgotten as Minnesota prepared this week for Nebraska.
“There’s going to be a special fervor in practice this week in getting ready because of falling short on Saturday, and because of where this program can go still in the season,” he said.
The Gophers, 7-3 overall and 4-2 in the Big Ten, play a Nebraska team and West Division rival that is 8-2 and 4-2. It will be Nebraska’s last home game and the Cornhuskers will recognize their seniors as they did two years ago when they beat up on the Gophers in Lincoln by a score of 38-14.
Botticelli said the fans can be loud at Nebraska’s Memorial Stadium and he remembers the noise of two years ago. He described the energy as “electric.”
“You can feel the vibrations in your body,” he said. “That makes communication a little difficult for offenses and defenses alike. But nonetheless I feed off that energy. …”
Vikings coach Mike Zimmer on whether he learned anything about Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers earlier this season when Green Bay won 42-10: “No, I’ve played him a few times in the past. …He’s pretty steady doing what he does. He’s pretty good.”
Rodgers is the face of the Packers’ franchise and that’s a role rookie quarterback Teddy Bridgewater wants to play for the Vikings. Zimmer, whose team plays the Packers at TCF Bank Stadium on Sunday, was asked if that’s something Bridgewater can potentially achieve in his first season.
“Well, I’d be glad to let him do it instead of me,” Zimmer said. “…It’s hard for a young guy when you come in the middle of the year and you start playing but I believe he will be the face of the franchise. He can actually do all of these press conferences from now on. I’d be ecstatic to let him do them instead of me.”
St. Thomas coach Glenn Caruso has the Tommies in the Division III playoffs for the fifth time in six years. But the 8-2 Tommies will need to stage an upset in Waverly, Iowa, tomorrow to defeat 10-0 Wartburg—a team that is 2-0 against the MIAC this season with wins over both Augsburg and Bethel.
Saint John’s (9-1), the other MIAC team in the football playoffs, hosts St. Scholastica (10-0) in Collegeville tomorrow and the Johnnies are likely to win. Victories by the two MIAC schools will match them against one another on November 29. Earlier this season the Johnnies defeated St. Thomas 24-14 in front of a UST-record crowd of 12,483. This fall Saint John’s won the school’s 32nd MIAC football championship and first since 2009.
Former Gophers basketball player Austin Hollins plays for a pro team in France but is sidelined with a fractured toe, according to Mo Walker. Hollins and Walker, a Gophers senior this season, text each other.
Ex-Gopher and Minneapolis native Al Nolen is operating basketball camps and giving private lessons in the metro area, according to a Tuesday story in the Minnesota Daily. His company is the Al Nolen Elite Basketball Skills Training.
The Division III St. Thomas men’s basketball team will pursue a record 10th consecutive MIAC title this season. The Tommies are already 2-0 in nonconference games and have a 74-52 exhibition win over Division II nationally-ranked Minnesota State. Coach John Tauer’s Tommies open league play against Gustavus on December 3.
The WCHA has four men’s teams ranked in the top 20 poll of USCHO.com including No. 1 Michigan Tech. The Gophers, No. 1 before the season started, have slipped to No. 4 and are the only Big Ten team in this week’s rankings.
Tom Lynn was among the first employees of the Wild’s operations staff when the Minnesota NHL franchise started. Passionate fans of the franchise will be interested in his book, How to Bake an NHL Franchise from Scratch, the First Era of the Minnesota Wild. The book is available in paperback, Nook and Kindle formats.