"Ray Jay" "The New Sombrero" | |
Location in Florida Location in the United States | |
Address | 4201 North Dale Mabry Highway Tampa, Florida United States |
---|---|
Coordinates | 27°58′33″N 82°30′12″W / 27.97583°N 82.50333°W |
Owner | Hillsborough County |
Operator | Tampa Sports Authority |
Executive suites | 195 |
Capacity | 69,218 (2022–present) (expandable to 75,000)
Former capacity: List
|
Record attendance |
|
Surface | Tifway 419 Bermuda grass |
Construction | |
Broke ground | October 15, 1996 |
Opened | September 20, 1998 |
Construction cost | $168.5 million ($315 million in 2023)[1] |
Architect | Wagner Murray Architects Populous (then HOK Sport) |
Structural engineer | Walter P Moore Bliss and Nyitray, Inc. |
Services engineer | ME Engineers FSC-Inc.[2] |
General contractor | Manhattan Construction, Hunt/Metric Joint Venture[3] |
Tenants | |
Tampa Bay Buccaneers (NFL) (1998–present) South Florida Bulls (NCAA) (1998–present) Tampa Bay Mutiny (MLS) (1999–2001) ReliaQuest Bowl (NCAA) (1999–present) Gasparilla Bowl (NCAA) (2018–present) Tampa Bay Vipers (XFL) (2020) | |
Website | |
raymondjamesstadium.com |
Raymond James Stadium is a multi-purpose stadium in Tampa, Florida, United States. It opened in 1998 and is home to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers of the National Football League (NFL) and the University of South Florida (USF) Bulls college football program. The seating capacity for most sporting events is 69,218,[4] though it can be expanded to about 75,000 for special events with the addition of temporary seating. Raymond James Stadium was built at public expense as a replacement for Tampa Stadium and is known for the replica pirate ship located behind the seating area in the north end zone.[5] Raymond James Financial, a financial service firm headquartered in the Tampa Bay area, has held the naming rights for the stadium for the stadium's entire existence.
Besides serving as the home field for the Buccaneers and the Bulls, the facility has been the site of three Super Bowls: XXXV in 2001, XLIII in 2009, and LV in 2021, in the third of which the Buccaneers became the first team in NFL history both to play and to win a Super Bowl on their home field. In college football, Raymond James Stadium is the home of the annual Tampa Bay Bowl (since 1999) and Gasparilla Bowl (since 2018), hosted the ACC Championship Game in 2008 and 2009, and was the site of the College Football Playoff National Championship in 2017. Additionally, the stadium has hosted a wide variety of non-football events, including soccer matches, equestrian sports competitions, monster truck shows, and large concerts. It was also the site of WrestleMania 37 in April 2021.
political
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).