The Arizona Republic

Valley football fans forced to choose on busy night

- Katherine Fitzgerald DAVID WALLACE/THE REPUBLIC Kent Somers, Bob McManaman, Chris Cole, Jeff Metcalfe and Katherine Fitzgerald contribute­d to this report.

It was a busy Thursday night for sports fans in the Valley. For the first time in the regular season, the Cardinals and Arizona State football played on the same night.

The kickoffs were separated by about 40 minutes and 27 miles. With overlappin­g fan bases, a lot of people had to chose which way they’d head on the I-10 for the midweek matchup.

For many years, this overlap was not possible, as both teams shared Sun Devil Stadium. While the two schedules have overlapped during the Cardinals’ preseason, Thursday night presented a unique clash. For some fans, the choice was easy. Others grappled with the decisions -first, on which game to watch, and then on how to follow (or avoid updates) from the other.

“We’re trying not see the (ASU) score tonight,” said Barb Hammitt, who was outside State Farm Stadium sitting in an ASU chair. “We’re taping the game, and we hope they do not show the score.”

Reppin’ three sides

With the clashing colors from multiple teams, Jon and Angie Krenkel were a perfect visual representa­tion of the the scheduling conundrum.

Jon was in a Cardinals shirt; Angie in a Broncos. But both were sitting under a maroon and gold Sun Devils tent in ASU branded chairs. The two are season ticket holders at Sun Devil Stadium, but the profession­al matchup pulled them away from Tempe.

“Because the Cardinals are playing the Broncos, and (those are) our teams at home, we decided to come here,” Angie said.

Their season tickets didn’t go to waste - their son is an ASU student who was able to snag the tickets for himself and his wife. The Krenkels would be checking their phones for updates - “We won’t be able to wait” - and were DVR-ing the game as well. No matter the results of the two games, the Krenkels weren’t stressed about their profession­al teams colliding. “We’ll be fine,” Angie said.

That was one thing the divided house could both agree on.

“We’ve been married for 22 years,” Jon said.

A slower game day to start

Up to an hour before ASU’s 6 p.m. kickoff, activity around Sun Devil Stadium was significan­tly less than for a Saturday game.

There was almost no line to pass through the security gates at the stadium’s southeast plaza at 5 p.m. An ASU regular game-day volunteer speculated that the overlap with the Cardinal game, traffic concerns on a weekday and the Sun Devils’ 3-3 record contribute­d to what is projected as a crowd of 40,000. Renovated Sun Devil Stadium now seats 53,599.

The football doublehead­er worked out well for Ben Bradley and his wife Karie, who were given ASU tickets for free from friends who chose to attend the Cardinals game.

“I was surprised to see this much traffic (at 3:40 p.m.),” said Ben Bradley, attending just his second ASU game since a recent move from Kansas. “I thought we were going to be beating the traffic a little bit, but I also understand they’ve got a lot of roads blocked off too.”

On the roof of the parking structure directly south of the stadium, Jeff McKenna was setting up his tailgate around 4:15 p.m. The ear, nose and throat surgeon packed his car Monday so he would be ready to come straight to the stadium after completing work Thursday.

“We usually have 10-20 people that come to our tailgate,” McKenna said. “We try to have it every time right here. It’s a great place to have it even in the dead of summer (unlike Thursday’s 80-degree pre-game temperatur­e). University (Drive) was more busy than usual, but I got right in.

“Some football fans are siphoned off ASU, too, because they’re going to be paying attention to the Cardinals game. They may be a little more NFL people. If ASU was a little bit more successful this season, it would be busier.”

The streak stays alive

For Phoenix resident Doug Anderson, a fan of the Sun Devils and Broncos, the decision to attend Thursday’s ASU game was interestin­g, but not difficult.

He had to leave work in central Scottsdale a few hours early to beat traffic, but as an ASU season-ticket holder, Thursday’s game will be his 109th straight. There was no need for much deliberati­on.

“I wasn’t thrilled because I only get to watch about one or two (Broncos) games a year,” said Anderson while walking along Sixth Street toward Mill Avenue. “This is one I thought I could see, and then we got the Stanford game.”

Anderson said he would keep up with the Broncos’ game in Glendale, but he was not anticipati­ng a must-see affair. More than anything, he wasn’t too excited that ASU was playing on a weekday.

“I wish they wouldn’t do Thursday games,” he said. “I understand it’s national exposure on ESPN, but. … Tempe’s not exactly super well-equipped for something this dense on a weekday.”

Tailgate traditions

Friends Stephen Acevedo and Greg Cruz are Cardinals season ticket holders, so they know the drill when the Cardinals play on a weeknight: leave early.

They left their homes in Tempe at 12:45 and didn’t encounter much traffic. By 2 p.m., 3 hours and 20 minutes before kick off, they had their sun shade set up and were enjoying cold beverages on the great lawn at State Farm Stadium. “We’re veterans,” Acevedo said. Both are ASU fans but not ticket holders.

“I was kind of mad they both played on the same night,” Cruz said.

With the Cardinals kicking off before the Sun Devils, the friends hoped to catch the end of the ASU game near their homes in Tempe.

“If our wives are O.K. with it, we’re going to watch it in a bar,” Acevedo said.

An early start

ASU season-ticket holder Craig Ostrander was too prepared to set up his tailgate on Sixth Street between Forest and College avenues in Tempe.

Ostrander, who works for the City of Phoenix water department, has had the day off months in advance. So, he arrived to set up his tailgate at 6 a.m. only to find that he was the only one doing so.

“I don’t know if people are willing to put in the time and effort,” Ostrander said.

Three hours before kickoff, Ostrander’s flag-adorned tailgate was only one of three along the street, which he said is not the case on a typical Saturday game day. He was also surprised by the general lack of fans in the area.

“There’s no people. They’ve got all these special things set up around here,” said Ostrander.

gesturing to ASU-organized tailgate events on the south side of Sixth Street, “and there’s no people in them.”

A unifying force

Besides geographic proximity, there is one bond that always unites Cardinals fans and ASU fans: Pat Tillman.

With a banner recognizin­g Tillman hanging from their tent set up on the Great Lawn outside State Farm Stadium, Todd Korey and Tim Tekulve were both excited for a big night of football.

 ??  ?? Vehicle and pedestrian traffic make its way to Sun Devil Stadium for Thursday night’s Pac-12 game between Arizona State and Stanford. Across the Valley, the Cardinals hosted the Denver Broncos in an NFL game.
Vehicle and pedestrian traffic make its way to Sun Devil Stadium for Thursday night’s Pac-12 game between Arizona State and Stanford. Across the Valley, the Cardinals hosted the Denver Broncos in an NFL game.

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