Welcome Stadium

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Welcome Stadium
WelcomeStadiumINSIDE.jpg
Location1601 South Edwin C. Moses Boulevard
Dayton, OH 45417
Coordinates39°44′12″N 84°11′53″W / 39.73667°N 84.19806°W / 39.73667; -84.19806Coordinates: 39°44′12″N 84°11′53″W / 39.73667°N 84.19806°W / 39.73667; -84.19806
Capacity11,000[1]
Opened1949
Tenants
Dayton Flyers football (NCAA D-I) (1974–present)
Aviation Bowl (NCAA) (1961)
Dayton Dynamo (NPSL) (2016–present)
2008

Welcome Stadium is an 11,000-seat multi-purpose stadium in Dayton, Ohio, United States, owned and operated by Dayton Public Schools. Primary tenants of the facility include University of Dayton Flyers football team and the Dayton Dynamo of the National Premier Soccer League.

History[]

It opened in 1949, and is home to all of the city's high schools. Since 1974, it has also been home to the Dayton Flyers football team. It hosted the 1961 Aviation Bowl and the Ohio High School State Track and Field finals for the years 1999–2003. It hosted the USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships Men's division in 1953 and 1957 the Women's division in 1963 and 1969. It also hosts Ohio's High School (OMEA) marching band finals in late October, early November. Soccer club Dayton Dynamo were tenants.

On July 27, 2019, the stadium hosted a Cincinnati Bengals training camp. The event was part of commemorations of the National Football League's official centennial season, paying tribute to one of its charter franchises—the Dayton Triangles. The team and NFL originally aimed for the camp to be held on new turf at the Triangles' former home field, Triangle Park (site of the NFL's first game), but the construction was called off after the discovery of a "unique and sizable anomaly" on the site in an archaeological survey.[2][3][4]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Welcome Stadium Information
  2. ^ "City of Dayton calls off plans for turf field at Triangle Park". WHIO.com. Cox Media Group. May 15, 2019. Retrieved May 15, 2019.
  3. ^ "History and football: Bengals have practice in Dayton to celebrate 100 years of football". Cincinnati.com. Retrieved July 28, 2019.
  4. ^ "A.J. Green suffers apparent ankle injury as Bengals open camp". SI.com. Retrieved July 28, 2019.


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