Chattanooga Times Free Press

Red Wolves to play Saturday in unfinished East Ridge stadium,

Red Wolves ready to host FC Tucson

- BY GENE HENLEY STAFF WRITER

Adrive into the grounds of CHI Memorial Stadium, where the Chattanoog­a Red Wolves SC will soon become Tennessee’s first profession­al soccer team to host a match at a venue specific to that sport, reveals a lot of incomplete facilities.

The area behind what will eventually be the press box? Pure dirt. The bleachers aren’t complete. What will eventually be an executive suite — including a full-service bar and restaurant — is nowhere close to being done. Sky boxes? The party deck? Not yet.

The surroundin­gs aren’t finished, but the field is. And this evening the Red Wolves will play on it, hosting Arizona’s FC Tucson

in a USL League One match at 5 p.m.

On July 9, 2019, ground was broken for Red Wolves owner Bob Martino’s $125 million developmen­t in East Ridge that is highlighte­d by the stadium. Sean McDaniel, the team’s president and general manager, admits there were times when he questioned whether the field would be playable this season, though the team’s schedule wound up being delayed for months by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

As he saw the work being put in, though, those questions vanished.

“There were moments where I thought the vision and the dream were just that — a vision and a dream,” McDaniel said Friday. “But when I saw the dirt moving and really when I saw the turf go down, I realized we were going to play soccer here.”

When the stadium is done, it will seat 5,500 people. Due to the combinatio­n of an incomplete stadium and the need to provide space between spectators as part of coronaviru­s precaution­s, attendance for the match against Tucson, labeled as a sellout, will likely be closer to 750.

Red Wolves captain Steven Beattie played for the team last year in its debut season, when

“There were moments where I thought the vision and the dream were just that — a vision and a dream. But when I saw the dirt moving and really when I saw the turf go down, I realized we were going to play soccer here.”

– SEAN MCDANIEL, RED WOLVES PRESIDENT AND GENERAL MANAGER

home games were held at Chattanoog­a Christian School’s David Stanton Field. Any doubts he had about the fate of the new field are behind him as the Red Wolves prepare for their 2020 home debut after opening the season on the road last weekend.

“It’s a great honor for me to be able to lead the boys into battle on our home field,” Beattie said. “It’s different playing in a high school environmen­t; it’s still Chattanoog­a, but it’s not home. You want your own environmen­t, and CHI Memorial is going to be the perfect environmen­t for that.”

The Red Wolves played South Georgia Tormenta FC to a 2-2 draw last Saturday in Statesboro, a match the visitors had rallied to lead for more than 25 minutes in the second half only to concede a goal in stoppage time. So while opening a new stadium is nice for the club, first-year Red Wolves coach Jimmy Obleda hopes the young squad can put together a complete effort.

The Red Wolves had the second-best record at home in the league last season at 8-15, but that was at CCS. A new season in a new stadium will provide a chance to create a true home-field advantage.

“We look at (last week) and we’re still disappoint­ed, but I think the attitude the team showed in the end, the ability to bounce back after going down showed a lot about them,” Obleda said. “Now we’re playing at home, where you kind of have to dig your feet in the same and say, ‘This is where I’m at, and nobody is going to take anything from us here.’ I think the team’s ready; they’re excited that they’re here. They’re more than ecstatic about this opportunit­y to open up here, but there’s two things — the stadium opening and the game, and we have to be very profession­al and get the result needed.

“We want to create an environmen­t here that, that opposing teams come and kind of go, ‘Wow, that’s a tough place to come play.’ Not just because of the fans, and not because of the players and the team, but the fans that, you know, we want to create that environmen­t, that pressure that the opposing team feels from the outside, feeling that considerin­g that the stadium is close, everyone’s close, by that the opposing team can feel our fans and our supporters breathing down their neck.”

“It’s a great honor for me to be able to lead the boys into battle on our home field. It’s different playing in a high school environmen­t; it’s still Chattanoog­a, but it’s not home. You want your own environmen­t, and CHI Memorial is going to be the perfect environmen­t for that.”

– RED WOLVES CAPTAIN STEVEN BEATTIE

 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTO BY PATRICK MACCOON ?? Jimmy Obleda, center, made his debut as coach of the Chattanoog­a Red Wolves Sc with a 2-2 draw on the road last Saturday, but now the USL League One team will make its 2020 home debut by playing its first match at CHI Memorial Stadium against FC Tucson. Limited attendance will be permitted for today’s 5 p.m. match in East Ridge.
STAFF FILE PHOTO BY PATRICK MACCOON Jimmy Obleda, center, made his debut as coach of the Chattanoog­a Red Wolves Sc with a 2-2 draw on the road last Saturday, but now the USL League One team will make its 2020 home debut by playing its first match at CHI Memorial Stadium against FC Tucson. Limited attendance will be permitted for today’s 5 p.m. match in East Ridge.

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