The Denver Post

CSU KICKS OFF 2017 SEASON, UNVEILS NEW HOME

- By Kyle Fredrickso­n

FORT COLLINS» Colorado State has never commanded this spotlight before. Few college football programs will have experience­d anything like it. So why the Rams?

The first FBS kickoff of the 2017 season is in Fort Collins at 12:36 p.m. Saturday, CSU against Oregon State, in the debut of the Rams’ new $220 million, on-campus stadium. The stars aligned for a national audience on the CBS Sports Network to witness a Rams football renaissanc­e. The exposure for the university, athletics and community alone warrants excitement from third-year CSU coach Mike Bobo.

“I don’t think you could put a dollar amount on it,” he said.

“It was a lot by chance,” CSU athletic director Joe Parker added.

The short answer to how CSU positioned itself for the national stage: Oregon State was scheduled to play in Fort Collins on Sept. 23, but the way the Mountain West structured the Rams’ conference schedule, they weren’t slotted to have a bye week this fall. To balance the schedule, Parker suggested moving the game against the Pac-12’s Beavers to Zero Week. Oregon State agreed. The CBS Sports Network carried rights to the first Mountain West game of the season and picked this matchup as its opening time slot.

“Intuitivel­y, that’s a very feel-good moment,” Parker said. “You’ve got a chance to capture the attention of a nation that’s interested in college football. The people that are out there, I don’t think they have any idea what we’ve done on our campus.”

What won’t be on visible Saturday, though, is the long and arduous road that led to this moment. How a 2011 conversa- tion between CSU president Tony Frank and then-athletic director Jack Graham sparked a plan. How it brought on fierce community debate, with dissenting opinions over the merits and true costs of an on-campus stadium, to create fault lines between supporters of the venture and Hughes Stadium’s loyalists.

Among the more than 21,400 people who came to the stadium Aug. 5 for a community open house and public scrimmage was Kathy Graves, a 1986 CSU graduate and Fort Collins resident who initially didn’t mince words while seated in the west stands.

“I was anti-new stadium,” she said, “just so you know.”

Outside the north gates, the Mirenda family (Anthony, Tara and their three children) posed for a photo with their donated brick, inscribed with each name, among hundreds of others dedicated to the facility. The Mirendas, 2001 CSU graduates, will commute to games from Littleton this season, but the concerns of some locals — game-day traffic, losing tailgate space, neighborho­od infringeme­nt, the university incurring millions in debt — carry weight.

“I think it’s understand­able,” Anthony said. “But overall, just from a university standpoint and a community standpoint, I think it will be a great benefit to Fort Collins.”

Most notably, of course, is a benefit to the football team.

Most notably, of course, is a benefit to the football team.

CSU redshirt senior offensive lineman Jake Bennett recalled the Rams’ previous locker room, last updated in 2005 with a $200,000 donation from former CSU defensive end and all-pro NFL linebacker Joey Porter. It didn’t take long to show its age. Location also posed problems, because the locker room sat in the depths of Moby Arena, some 4 miles east of Hughes Stadium.

“We probably had five working shower heads in there,” Bennett said, “and four broken couches.”

The new football facilities under the on-campus stadium’s west stands are modernized and streamline­d. It’s a short walk between a state-of-the-art locker room, weight room, nutrition center, training room, practice fields and game turf.

“Everything is just so accessible that it’s made our lives a lot easier,” Bennett said. “These young guys are spoiled.”

CSU’s underclass­men were sold on the on-campus stadium project before ever setting foot inside the finished product. When Bobo’s staff welcomed an incoming prospect on an official visit, “to be totally honest,” he said, “we didn’t go to Hughes.” So, parents and recruits sat in hotel conference rooms with coaches looking through mockups of a players lounge with leather couches, the 84-footwide video board and four hydrothera­py plunge pools.

Now that the new stadium is a reality, the weight of expectatio­ns have arrived with it — especially after consecutiv­e 7-6 seasons with bowl losses under Bobo’s leadership. CSU was picked in the preseason Mountain West media poll to finish second in the Mountain Division this year. The Rams last won a conference championsh­ip in 2002.

“This facility is going to be an awesome thing to put the brand out there, the image, and when they see it full with the electricit­y on this campus, and the buzz,” Bobo said. “But as a coach and a player, you have a big responsibi­lity. When you build something like this, then your expectatio­ns are raised. We talk about that a lot with our guys.”

But will the fan support follow suit? CSU football’s best average attendance year on record was 1998, when 31,292 watched the Rams at home each week — buzz built from an 11-win season the year before. With a capacity of 41,000 at the new stadium, including 36,500 permanent seats, CSU will have an opportunit­y to set a school attendance record this season. A sold-out home opener moves the Rams in the right direction.

There undoubtedl­y will be fans at Saturday’s game like Graves who previously admitted being “anti-stadium” — despite purchasing season tickets with her husband, Todd, for this season. But much of her animosity faded soon after touring the facility.

“It’s beautiful,” she said. “I partied in the parking lot at Hughes when I was a student 30 years ago,” she added. “I’m just used to that. It’s hard, sometimes, to change.”

CSU hosted a July block party in the Sheely neighborho­od directly south of the stadium where Parker interacted with Fort Collins residents whose routines on six Saturdays this season will certainly be altered by thousands of fans pouring onto campus. Even with potential inconvenie­nces, the athletic director believes community morale for the project has improved in some of those most affected.

“I think a lot of those folks were probably against the stadium and the thought of bringing this experience close to their home, and there were a lot of people that evening who said they’ve adjusted their thoughts on it,” Parker said. “They’re probably not in the same place as they were three years ago.”

As for Bennett, the Rams’ starting center, the buildup to Saturday has felt like an eternity. Playing in front of small crowds for the public scrimmage and the freshmen welcome party has been like “dangling a carrot in front of us” for the real thing, he said. Bennett’s phone has been buzzing more than usual lately with texts from old teammates he hasn’t seen in years, all asking about tickets. But Bennett has given out all of his personal allotment. Same goes for most his teammates.

Oregon State’s arrival will mark the first football game played on the CSU campus in nearly 50 years, dating to when the 1967 team battled on Colorado Field just off College Avenue. A new generation of Rams is eager to carry that history forward Saturday.

The first kickoff in the country is for a new era of CSU football.

“You can try to picture it,” Bennett said, “but I don’t think anybody has been a part of anything quite like what’s going to happen on Saturday.”

 ??  ??
 ?? Andy Cross, The Denver Post ?? The CSU Rams are back on campus to play football for the first time since old Colorado Field in Fort Collins was last used for college games in 1967.
Andy Cross, The Denver Post The CSU Rams are back on campus to play football for the first time since old Colorado Field in Fort Collins was last used for college games in 1967.
 ?? Photos by Andy Cross, The Denver Post ?? Colorado State’s new football stadium, which debuts Saturday, includes a spiffy alumni center.
Photos by Andy Cross, The Denver Post Colorado State’s new football stadium, which debuts Saturday, includes a spiffy alumni center.
 ??  ?? The chairback seats make it clear whose stadium fans are in.
The chairback seats make it clear whose stadium fans are in.
 ??  ?? The $220 million stadium provides a great view of the foothills.
The $220 million stadium provides a great view of the foothills.

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