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3afan
12-06-2005, 05:41 AM
Seats tough for high school fans to score
HP, Southlake Carroll fans face smaller venues, allotments

03:00 AM CST on Tuesday, December 6, 2005
By MATT WIXON / The Dallas Morning News


Highland Park High School fans have waited since 1957 to see their team win a state football championship. On Saturday, many might still be waiting, even if Highland Park beats Marshall for the Class 4A Division I state title.

The reason: Trinity Mother Frances Rose Stadium, the 12,000-seat facility in Tyler where the game will be played, doesn't have enough seats for all of them. Highland Park, which brought more than 11,000 fans to last Saturday's regional final, has a presale allotment this week of 5,500 tickets.

Fans of Southlake Carroll could be in a similar situation on Saturday. Carroll plays Lufkin in a Class 5A state semifinal at Homer Bryce Stadium on the campus of Stephen F. Austin State University in Nacogdoches.

That stadium has seats for 14,575 fans and can crowd in thousands more on grass seating, but Carroll's game last week against Plano attracted nearly 35,000 to Texas Stadium.

"I think if we had enough tickets, we would take 15,000 people there for the game," said Steve Kent, a Highland Park fan and member of the athletic program's booster club. "Here we are in the state championship game for the first time in 48 years, and you're saying we can only take one-third of the people?"

"It will definitely be jampacked," Carroll coach Todd Dodge said.

Why are games of such large stature being played at stadiums of small stature?

For one thing, the sites weren't determined until last weekend. In the University Interscholastic League football playoffs, the opposing coaches decide where the contest will be played. Sometimes they agree on a neutral site, and sometimes it's settled by a coin flip.

The coaches for the Carroll-Lufkin and Highland Park-Marshall games couldn't find neutral game sites that were agreeable to both sides. One possible neutral site, with plenty of seating, would have been Baylor University's Floyd Casey Stadium. But the stadium in Waco, site of last year's Carroll-Lufkin state semifinal, is booked this weekend for a "Welcome Back the Troops" celebration.

So the respective coaches determined the sites by coin flip. Winning flips for Carroll and Highland Park would have meant playing at Texas Stadium. Wins for Lufkin and Marshall would have meant playing at stadiums in East Texas.

"We flip all the time, and you have a 50-50 chance of having the game 12 miles from your place and a 50-50 chance of having it 12 miles from their place," Mr. Dodge said. "Unfortunately, there's not 60,000-seat stadiums all over the state of Texas."

Euless Trinity also lost a coin flip over the weekend, so it will play Converse Judson for the Class 5A Division I state title at 11,000-seat Round Rock ISD Stadium.

That's the smallest stadium of the three, but it might be the least crowded on Saturday. The Trinity-Judson game will be televised by Fox Sports Net Southwest, and that will keep a lot of fans at home. But the Highland Park and Carroll games won't be seen on television.

They won't be seen by every fan who wants a ticket, either. That upsets Highland Park follower Lance McIlhenny, a quarterback for the team in the 1970s.

"We're going to have 7,000 people who aren't going to be able to see the game," he said. "Kids work hard to get to this point and, for whatever goofy rule, the attendance is going to be limited. It's just too bad."

It was also inevitable, said Charles Breithaupt, UIL athletic director. He said the UIL executive committee has discussed for several years the possibility of creating permanent, rotating sites for the state football championship games. Large venues in Texas' three largest cities – Dallas, Houston and San Antonio – would switch off playing host to the title games.

But the Texas High School Coaches Association has been against it, Mr. Breithaupt said. He said that the association is adamantly opposed to anyone other than the two coaches determining the site.

"It's a control issue," he said, "but how much control do you have in a coin flip?"

And that leads to what Mr. Breithaupt calls the "$64,000 question."

"Do I want the lasting memory for kids in a state championship game to be at a high school stadium?" he said. "And what if I'm the parent of a kid in the game, and I can't get in the game?"

Danny Long, athletic director of the Tyler school district, said he doesn't expect that to happen at Rose Stadium. He said the stadium could seat as many as 17,000, and he doesn't foresee any problems.

"Everyone says this is going to be the largest crowd [at Rose Stadium] ever," he said, "but I'll believe it when I see it. Two hours is a long way to come for a football game."

But not nearly as long as a 48-year wait for a state title.

Staff writers Tim MacMahon and Dave Lance contributed to this report.

E-mail mwixon@dallasnews.com

NEED A TICKET?

Fans who want to see a high school football game this week would be wise to buy their tickets early. Here's ticket info for the three games that might be sold out if you wait too late Saturday:

HIGHLAND PARK (vs. Marshall)
Tickets available: 5,500 presale tickets
On sale: Tuesday through Thursday, 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Fri. 8:30 a.m. to noon
Location: Highlander box office
Prices: $8 adults, $5 students, $10 at gate

SOUTHLAKE CARROLL (vs. Lufkin)
Tickets available: 7,000 presale tickets
On sale: During school hours, starting noon Wednesday noon until noon Friday
Locations: Carroll and Dawson middle schools; Johnson and Durham elementary schools; Carroll High School; Carroll Senior High School
Prices: $8 adults, $6 students ($10 at gate)

EULESS TRINITY (vs. Converse Judson)
Tickets available: 5,500 presale tickets
On sale: Tuesday through Friday, 8 to 4:30 p.m.
Locations: Pennington Field box office; Euless Trinity High School (during school hours)
Prices: $8 adults, $5 students, ($10 at gate)

FILL 'ER UP
High school football fans might find it hard to get a ticket for some of the top matchups on Saturday. Highland Park, Southlake Carroll and Euless Trinity are playing at small venues that might not seat all the teams' fans. Here's a breakdown:
School Last week's attendance This week's capacity
Highland Park 21,423 (vs. Stephenville, Denton's Fouts Field) 12,000 (vs. Marshall, Tyler's Rose Stadium)
Southlake Carroll 34,783 (vs. Plano, Texas Stadium) 14,575 (vs. Lufkin, Nacogdoches' Homer Bryce Stadium)
Euless Trinity *10,000 (vs. A&M Consolidated, Waco ISD Stadium) 11,000 (vs. Converse Judson, Round Rock ISD Stadium)
*Estimated; official attendance unavailable

FootballChik98
12-06-2005, 06:31 AM
Looks like a lot of fans may not get to see their team play this weekend. There is a big discussion about this on smoaky, and the east Texas fans seem to think the metroplex teams are just mad because they are the ones having to do the traveling. In my opinion, most loyal fans are going to travel to see his/her team play no matter how far away the game is, but they may do so this week and not be able to catch the game. Unless they are fortunate enough to get the tickets early.

Aesculus gilmus
12-06-2005, 07:17 AM
If they would just let FSN televise these games, there'd be no problem. I am sure there would be no shortage of sponsors for either the one in Tyler or the one in Nacogdoches.

3afan
12-06-2005, 07:43 AM
if WHO would let FSN televise the games? Its FSNs decision, no one elses. It has to be a money making deal for them and to haul all of their equipment and people to a "remote" location is expensive.

Aesculus gilmus
12-06-2005, 09:10 AM
Sorry, I thought it was the UIL who gave the no-go on this.

neck_06
12-06-2005, 09:27 AM
thats sad that Southlake Carroll can't get a big stadium

3afan
12-06-2005, 09:37 AM
Originally posted by neck_06
thats sad that Southlake Carroll can't get a big stadium

not sure what you mean by this ..... there were several larger options besides SFA for these 2 teams - Texas Stadium, Baylor, Mesquite Memorial. As the article says, they could not agree on a neutral site so they flipped and Lufkin won the flip --- if SLC would have won they they'd have been at Texas Stadium (I dont know that for sure but its a safe assumption).

so why is it "sad that Southlake Carroll can't get a big stadium " ? :confused:

KTJ
12-06-2005, 09:45 AM
Originally posted by 3afan
not sure what you mean by this ..... there were several larger options besides SFA for these 2 teams - Texas Stadium, Baylor, Mesquite Memorial. As the article says, they could not agree on a neutral site so they flipped and Lufkin won the flip --- if SLC would have won they they'd have been at Texas Stadium (I dont know that for sure but its a safe assumption).

so why is it "sad that Southlake Carroll can't get a big stadium " ? :confused:


Baylor wasn't an option, per the article.

It sounds to me that the East Texas coches were getting po'd at having to always travel to Dallas for these types of games. So they wanted to give the D/FW coaches a taste of their own medicine. However, when Southlake and HP bring 15,000+ each and both games are SRO, it's going to get pretty hectic among the fan bases.

Aesculus gilmus
12-06-2005, 10:17 AM
It is apparently not just FSN's call. Here is the UIL regulation on this:

Section 868:RADIO AND TELEVISION CONTRACTS
(a) CONTRACT RECOMMENDATION. The UIL director may recommend a contract to UT
General Counsel for broadcasting and televising regional, quarter-final, semifinal, and final
contests for baseball, basketball, football, softball, soccer, volleyball, and marching band.
Broadcasting and televising include every nature of transmitting audio or visual whether over the
radio, television, internet, or other.
(b) RIGHTS GRANTED. The broadcasting and telecasting rights granted in the contract shall be for
both live and delayed broadcasts, and live and film telecasts of the contests. Delayed broadcasts
are defined for the purposes of this rule as beginning at least one hour after the completion of the
contest.
(c) FOOTBALL CONFERENCES COVERED. The contract for broadcasting football games for the
football season shall apply only to conferences 4A and 5A. Schools in conferences 3A, AA, A
and six-man football may make their own arrangements for football broadcasts in accordance
with the provisions of the contract forms supplied by the League office. The UIL retains the right
to arrange for telecasts of all final football games.
(d) LIVE FOOTBALL TELECAST LIMITED. Live telecasts of League football playoff games
shall be permitted if:
(1) mutual consent of the participant schools is given;
(2) the games are sold out forty-eight (48) hours prior to game time; and
(3) the UIL radio-television contract so permits.

Maroon87
12-06-2005, 11:14 AM
We should get it set up like Michigan and Pennsylvania. They have one site for all title games (Ford Field for Mich., Heinz Field for PA) and the local FSN affiliate shows 'em all. If we could ever get to an agreement on a single site for all classifications, we could do that too. We could even rotate it each year between Houston, Dallas, and S.A. so no one thinks their getting shafted on travel. And even without the TV aspect, how cool would it be to show up at the stadium on a Saturday and watch 5 title games...2 weeks in a row?

Tatum_Fan
12-06-2005, 01:28 PM
TMF Rose Stadium broke a record last Friday with the Tatum vs. Canton game. Original estimates were 12,500 Final count was around 14,000 - I guess this record won't last long :)

whtfbplaya
12-06-2005, 01:56 PM
Ill be there and after driving 4 hours you can bet Ill get in lol



SOUTHLAKE CARROLL (vs. Lufkin)
Tickets available: 7,000 presale tickets
On sale: During school hours, starting noon Wednesday noon until noon Friday
Locations: Carroll and Dawson middle schools; Johnson and Durham elementary schools; Carroll High School; Carroll Senior High School
Prices: $8 adults, $6 students ($10 at gate)
:D