The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

HOW GA. DOME BECAME COLLEGE FOOTBALL MECCA

Playoff semifinal to mark end of big-game tradition.

- By Tim Tucker ttucker@ajc.com

What arguably is the biggest college football game in Georgia Dome history also will be the last.

Saturday’s Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl between No. 1 Alabama and No. 4 Washington — a College Football Playoff semifinal — will cap the prominent role the Dome has played in the sport since its opening in 1992.

While best known as the home of the Falcons, the Dome will host its 152nd college football game, its 25th Peach Bowl.

The building is scheduled to be demolished next year and replaced by the $1.5 billion Mercedes-Benz Stadium, under constructi­on next door and now slated to open by August.

The Dome will be the site of at least two more Falcons games — the team’s regular-season finale against the Saints on Sunday and at least one playoff game. The building is scheduled to close in March, when a Monster Jam

trucks show is currently its last booked event.

But one big part of Georgia Dome history ends Saturday, one that shouldn’t go unnoticed.

“The Dome has helped cement Atlanta as the capital of college football,” Dome spokesman Jason Kirksey said. “This building has been the stage for so many unbelievab­le college football games over the years, it is only fitting that our last college football game is a playoff semifinal.”

Gary Stokan, president and CEO of Peach Bowl Inc., is a big fan of the Dome, which he cites as a key reason for the bowl’s growth.

“I still believe in my heart that for indoor college football facilities — and I have been to them all — the Georgia Dome has the best sight lines and is the finest in the country,” Stokan said. “I’m including (Cowboys owner) Jerry Jones’ stadium, which has all the trappings. But from the standpoint of sight lines, compactnes­s, closeto-the-field atmosphere, the Georgia Dome is better.

“I say that, but also with excitement as we look forward to what is going to be the newest and best state-ofthe-art facility in the world in August with Mercedes-Benz Stadium.”

Stokan said there are no current plans for any type of ceremony Saturday to commemorat­e the final college game in the Dome because of the bowl’s high stakes and the remaining Falcons games and other events there.

In the Dome’s first college football game Sept. 4, 1992, Clark Atlanta defeated Morris Brown 28-20.

In the building’s last college game, Alabama and Washington will vie for a berth in the national championsh­ip game, which will be Jan. 9 in Tampa.

In addition to 25 Peach Bowls, the unofficial count of 152 college football games in the Dome includes 23 SEC Championsh­ip games, 11 season-opening Chick-fil-A Kickoff games, 44 Georgia State games, 23 Atlanta Football Classics (1992-2014), seven Heritage Bowls (1993-99 seasons), two Celebratio­n Bowls (2015-16) and assorted other games.

One game was even relocated to the Georgia Dome by a hurricane: the Sugar Bowl on Jan. 2, 2006, after Hurricane Katrina’s devastatio­n forced it out of New Orleans.

Saturday’s game marks the first time the College Football Playoff, now in its third season, plays a semifinal in Atlanta. Based on that, Peach Bowl officials have labeled this the most significan­t college football game ever in the city.

An argument also could be made that several SEC Championsh­ip games in the Dome were equally significan­t, albeit without the official designatio­n of national semifinal.

Three SEC title games matched teams ranked in the top three nationally by the Associated Press poll — 2008 (No. 1 Alabama vs. No. 2 Florida), 2009 (No. 1 Florida vs. No. 2 Alabama) and 2012 (No. 2 Alabama vs. No. 3 Georgia).

Each of those three games was effectivel­y a play-in for the Bowl Championsh­ip Series title game, which determined the national championsh­ip from 1998 until the launch of the fourteam playoff in 2014. Indeed, in each of those three cases, the SEC champ went on to win the national title.

The BCS title game wa s never played in Atlanta. Next season’s College Football Playoff championsh­ip game will be at Mercedes-Benz Stadium on Jan. 8, 2018.

Alabama seems an appropriat­e team to play in the Dome’s final college game, considerin­g coach Nick Saban’s remarkable record there. He is 12-1 in the building — 9-1 as Alabama’s coach and 3-0 as LSU’s. Alabama has won eight consecutiv­e games in the building.

For the Dome staff, this weekend will be one of its busier stretches, with the Alabama-Washington and Falcons-Saints games followed by the start of the Passion 2017 Conference on Monday. Combined, the three events will bring about 200,000 people to the Dome.

“I think you could mak e the argument that this weekend is the biggest conversion in Dome history, going from a Peach Bowl semifinal game Saturday to the last Falcons regular-season game Sunday to a full concert set with stage and chairs on the floor for the Passion Conference starting Monday,” Kirksey said.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Running back Ryan Jackson and his teammates express their joy after Houston upset Florida State last season in the next-to-last Peach Bowl at the Georgia Dome.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Running back Ryan Jackson and his teammates express their joy after Houston upset Florida State last season in the next-to-last Peach Bowl at the Georgia Dome.
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Georgia offensive lineman Kenarious Gates shows his dejection after time ran out on the Bulldogs in one of the most memorable SEC Championsh­ip games at the Georgia Dome, a 32-28 Alabama victory in 2012.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Georgia offensive lineman Kenarious Gates shows his dejection after time ran out on the Bulldogs in one of the most memorable SEC Championsh­ip games at the Georgia Dome, a 32-28 Alabama victory in 2012.

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