| Glass Bowl |
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Football at The University
of Toledo started in 1917 with an upsetting 145 to 0 loss to The University
of Detroit. For twenty years, UT football teams were moved from one stadium to
another including Armory Park, Waite Bowl, the Nebraska Avenue grounds, St.
John's field, Swayne Field and Libbey Stadium. The Rockets' stadium is know as the "Glass Bowl" in recognition of Toledo's distinction of being the glass capital of the world. The stadium was not named the "Glass Bowl" until renovations in 1946. The origin of the name dates back to 1946 and a man named Wayne Kohn, an employee of the structural engineering department of the Libbey-Owens Ford Glass Co., who suggested an annual Glass Bowl football game to be played in the Rockets' stadium. Three Toledo glass manufacturing companies developed the idea further and with the University sponsored a "Glass Bowl" stadium, which was a renovation of the then current stadium. The stone structures at the northeast and northwest corners of the Glass Bowl are called Blockhouses. In the past, the Blockhouses were used as a residence for the football players. The Rockets would stay in the west Blockhouse and the visitors would stay in the east Blockhouse. The Glass Bowl is the oldest stadium in the Mid-American Conference. Over the years there have been many renovations made to the Glass Bowl, such as switching from grass to Astroturf in October of 1974; building an electronic scoreboard in 1975; adding seats in 1972; again adding seats, a press tower, luxury boxes, and Larimer Athletic Complex in 1990, and switching to NeXturf, an artificial surface carefully modeled after natural grass, in July of 2001. The outer wall and Blockhouses are all that remain of the original Glass Bowl Stadium. |