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AT&T Stadium

AT&T Stadium is a retractable-roof stadium in Arlington, Texas that is home to the Dallas Cowboys NFL team. It was completed in 2009 at a cost of $1.15 billion and can seat 80,000 to 100,000 people depending on configuration. The stadium hosts other events like concerts and soccer matches and has the largest HDTV screen in the world when built.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
2K views27 pages

AT&T Stadium

AT&T Stadium is a retractable-roof stadium in Arlington, Texas that is home to the Dallas Cowboys NFL team. It was completed in 2009 at a cost of $1.15 billion and can seat 80,000 to 100,000 people depending on configuration. The stadium hosts other events like concerts and soccer matches and has the largest HDTV screen in the world when built.

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John Smitz
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© © All Rights Reserved
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Coordinates: 32°44′52″N 97°5′34″W

AT&T Stadium
AT&T Stadium is a retractable-roof stadium in Arlington,
Texas, United States. It serves as the home of the Dallas
AT&T Stadium
Cowboys of the National Football League (NFL), and was Jerry World
completed on May 27, 2009. It is also the home of the The Death Star
Cotton Bowl Classic and the Big 12 Championship Game. The Palace in Dallas
The stadium is one of eleven US venues set to host matches The Cowboys Cathedral
during the 2026 FIFA World Cup. The facility, owned by the
city of Arlington, can also be used for a variety of other
activities, such as concerts, basketball games, soccer, college
and high-school football contests, rodeos, motocross, Spartan
Races, and professional wrestling. It replaced the partially
covered Texas Stadium, which served as the Cowboys'
home from 1971 through the 2008 season.

The stadium is widely referred to as Jerry World and The


Death Star after Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones, who
originally envisioned it as a large entertainment venue.[16]
The stadium can seat around 80,000 people, but can be
reconfigured to hold around 100,000 seats[5] making it the
largest stadium in the NFL by seating capacity.[17]
Additional attendance is made possible by the Party Pass
(open areas) sections behind the seats in each end zone
Exterior, June 2020
which are positioned on a series of six elevated platforms
connected by stairways.[17][18] The record attendance for an
NFL regular season game was set in 2009 with a crowd of
105,121.[19] It also has the world's 34th-largest high-
definition video screen.
AT&T
Stadium
Construction and design
Originally estimated at $650 million, the stadium's actual
construction cost rose to $1.15 billion,[20] making it one of
the most expensive sports venues ever built. To aid Cowboys
owner and general manager, Jerry Jones, in paying the
construction costs of the new stadium, Arlington voters
approved the increase of the city's sales tax by 0.5%, the Location in Texas
hotel occupancy tax by 2%, and car rental tax by 5%. The
City of Arlington provided over $325 million (including
interest) in bonds as funding,[20][21] and Jones covered any
cost overruns. Also, the NFL provided the Cowboys with an
additional $150 million loan, following its policy for
facilitating financing for the construction of new AT&T
stadiums.[22] Stadium
To prevent the Sun's glare from interfering with any players' Location in the United States
eyesight, the vast majority of football fields are oriented
Former names Cowboys Stadium
north-south instead of east-west.[23] However, AT&T
(2009–2013)
Stadium was built with the field oriented east-west and with
large windows on the western side.[24] During afternoon Address 1 AT&T Way[1]
games, this design allows sunlight to come into the stadium Location Arlington, Texas
at an angle that can interfere with players' vision; some
Coordinates 32°44′52″N
players have complained about this problem.[24]
97°5′34″W
Lead architect on the design team at HKS Architects for the Owner City of Arlington[2][3]
project was Bryan Trubey, who has stated that the
Operator Dallas Cowboys
overarching concept for the stadium was "...that this should
not be just a stadium, but should almost be built like a civic Executive suites 342[4]
structure."[25][26] Capacity 80,000[5]
(expandable to
A pair of nearly 300 ft (91 m)-tall arches spans the length of
105,000)
the stadium dome (one of the tallest domes in the world),
anchored to the ground at each end. The new stadium also Record attendance List
includes "more than 3,000 Sony LCD displays throughout
the luxury suites, concourses, concession areas and more, Football:
offering fans viewing options that extend beyond the action 105,121
on the field".[27] It also houses a center-hung Mitsubishi September 20,
video display board that was the largest HDTV screen in the 2009
world at the time of their installation.[28] It has since been Dallas Cowboys vs.
surpassed in size by the Panasonic "Big Hoss" video board New York Giants
(218 feet (66 m) wide and 94.6 feet (28.8 m) tall) at Texas
Motor Speedway.[29] Glass doors, allowing each end zone to Basketball:
be opened, were designed and constructed by Dallas-based 108,713
Haley-Greer glass systems. February 14,
2010
The retractable roof was designed by structural engineering
2010 NBA All-
firm Walter P Moore and the systems were implemented by
Star Game
mechanization consultants Uni-Systems. The electrification
of Cowboys Stadium's retractable roof was developed by Boxing: 73,126
VAHLE, Inc.[30] These kinetic architecture fundamentals are May 8, 2021
employed to create quick conversions of the facility to Álvarez vs.
accommodate a variety of events. When the design was Saunders[6]
officially unveiled on December 12, 2006, it showed that Professional
from inside the stadium, the roof (membrane installed by
wrestling:
K Post Company of Dallas)[31] will look very similar to the
101,763
Texas Stadium roof, with its trademark hole. However, it can
be covered by the retractable roof panel to protect against the April 3, 2016
elements. WrestleMania
32[7]
The football turf field was built by Hellas Construction,
Surface Hellas Matrix Turf
which developed a special SoftTop Convertible Turf system
that has 26 interchangeable panels to allow the stadium to with Helix Soft Top
host a variety of events from concerts, dirt bike races, and artificial turf[8]
monster truck rallies to college football, basketball, and Construction
soccer games.[32]
Broke ground September 20,
2005
A Dallas Cowboys Hall of Fame is planned for the Hall of Opened May 27, 2009[15]
Fame level. The drawings also include a site for a large
Construction cost $1.3 billion[9]
sculpture northeast of the stadium, close to Randol Mill
($1.64 billion in
Road. Mayor Robert Cluck claimed to use eminent domain
as a last resort, but most of the properties refused to sell to 2021 dollars[10])
the city, indicating that the incentive program was not Architect HKS, Inc.[11]
adequate according to Glenn Sodd, an attorney representing Project manager Blue Star
some homeowners in the area. Attorney Bob Cohen, who is
Development/Jack
representing some of the property owners, said the city gave
Hill[12]
many of his clients little incentive to sell. He said he
represents the owners of some rental properties who were Structural Walter P Moore
counting on that monthly revenue for their retirement and engineer Engineers and
said most homeowners cannot afford to rebuild or buy in that Consultants
area with the incentive package.[33] An Arlington attorney Campbell &
was quoted as saying "The mayor sold out and the council Associates
went right along".[34] Consulting
Engineers, Inc.[13]
Timeline Services engineer M-E Engineers,
Inc.[14]
1994: Cowboys owner Jerry Jones proposed to
expand the 65,000-seat Texas Stadium by up to General contractor Manhattan/Rayco/3i
40,000 seats, add retractable roof panels and Tenants
install a climate-control system to make the
stadium a year-round venue for sporting events, Dallas Cowboys (NFL) (2009–present)
including the Super Bowl, concerts, and Cotton Bowl Classic (NCAA) (2010–
conventions. present)
1997–2000: The Cowboys held preliminary talks Website
with Arlington officials about building a stadium
there. The team also publicly discussed a attstadium.com (https://attstadium.com/)
$260 million plan to upgrade Texas Stadium. In
2000, the Cowboys compiled a list of potential stadium
sites, which included Grapevine, Coppell, and Arlington.
The team continued negotiating with Irving to renovate
Texas Stadium.
2001: Jones said Arlington is a leading contender for a
$500 million stadium. The primary site considered is the
2,000 acres (810 ha) Lakes of Arlington tract on Farm
Road 157. Other cities in the running included Grapevine
and Grand Prairie. In October, Jones discussed the new Interior of the stadium in 2010
stadium with the mayors of Arlington, Irving, Grapevine,
and Dallas.
2003: The Cowboys asked the Irving City
Council to extend their lease at Texas
Stadium, which was to expire at the end of
the 2008 season, on a year-to-year basis.
They narrowed their search to sites in Las
Colinas and Dallas, and state legislators filed 0:00
bills that would allow Dallas County to
increase its hotel-occupancy and car-rental
taxes to pay for a new stadium.
Video of inside the stadium
2004: In April, the Cowboys announced plans
to build a $650 million stadium at Fair Park in
Dallas. The deal required $425 million in
public financing from a 3% hotel-occupancy tax and a 6% car-rental tax. The deal fell apart in
June when Dallas County commissioners said they cannot justify asking voters to approve
the team's request for $425 million in public funding. In July, the Cowboys and Arlington
announced they are negotiating to locate the stadium near Globe Life Park (then Ameriquest
Field). In August, the Arlington City Council agreed unanimously to put before voters a tax
increase that would fund the city's $325 million portion of the project. Voters approved the tax
increase on November 2.
2005: Arlington and the Cowboys chose the site south of Randol Mill Road and east of
Collins Street for the new stadium. The city began notifying residents and property owners of
its plans to acquire their property. The Cowboys hired the HKS architectural firm to design
the stadium. Early blueprints showed 414 luxury suites and a two-panel retractable roof. The
city completed its sale of $297.9 million in bonds to pay for its portion of the construction.
Demolition of houses began November 1.
January 2006: The Cowboys hired Oklahoma-based Manhattan Construction as the general
contractor for the stadium and the city completed its land purchases, although it still faced a
number of lawsuits over land acquisition. Later that month, Tarrant County work crews began
demolition of more than 150 Arlington residences and small-business structures to make
room for the stadium.[35]
March 2006: An alliance was announced between Manhattan Construction and two general
contractors, Rayco Construction of Grand Prairie and 3i Construction of Dallas, to manage
the stadium's construction.[36]
April 2006: Excavation began by Mario Sinacola and Sons Excavating. By August, they had
moved over 1.4 million cubic yards (1,100,000 m3) of earth, shaping a 13-to-14-acre (5.3 to
5.7 ha) stadium bowl an average of 54 feet (16 m) deep.[37]
August 2006: Two construction cranes were raised on the site.
October 2006: The grass amphitheater on Randol Mill Road was leveled to make way for the
extension of Baird Farm Road.
December 2006: The stadium's structure began to go up, and on December 12, Jerry Jones
unveiled the in-depth plans and designs of the stadium to the public.
January 2007: A construction worker was injured in a 20 ft (6 m) fall.[38]
February 2007: Masonry work began.
March 2007: Heldenfels Enterprises was awarded the contract to manufacture and erect the
precast/prestressed concrete structural components and placement of them began in
April.[39]
June 2007: Work on the retractable roof, designed by Uni-Systems, started.
July 2007: Exterior facade and enclosure work began.
October 2007: The first steel arch was completed.
February 2008: The second steel arch was completed.
June 2008: Jones commissioned the world's largest
1080p HDTV,[40] to hang above field.
June 2008: An electrician was electrocuted while
working on the stadium. Two days before, three people
were injured while assembling a crane.
2009: The stadium was scheduled for "substantial
completion" in June. The artificial-turf field was brought Armed Forces Color Guard at Super
into the stadium in July. The Cowboys played their first Bowl XLV; then Cowboys Stadium
preseason home game on August 21 and their first
regular-season home game on Sunday, September 20.
May 13, 2009: Jerry Jones announced the official name of the new venue as Cowboys
Stadium.[41]
June 6, 2009: The first event was held at the stadium,
with country concert showcasing Lee Ann Womack,
Blake Shelton, Reba McEntire, and George Strait.
February 6, 2011: The 2010 NFL Season Super Bowl
was hosted at the Cowboys Stadium, which had the
Green Bay Packers defeat the Pittsburgh Steelers in
Super Bowl XLV.
July 25, 2013: Jerry Jones announced that the official
name of the venue was changed to AT&T Stadium as
part of a naming rights deal.
April 5–7, 2014: The stadium was home for the Final
Four of the 2014 NCAA Division I men's basketball
tournament. The roof open at the stadium during
January 12, 2015: The stadium served as host of the first a game between the Dallas Cowboys
championship game in the College Football Playoff era. and Chicago Bears in 2022.
Ohio State defeated Oregon, 42–20.
April 19, 2015: The stadium served as host of the 50th
Annual Academy of Country Music Awards hosted by Blake Shelton and Luke Bryan.
April 3, 2016: The stadium served as the host of WWE's WrestleMania 32.
September 26, 2016: The Stadium Club opened, which was the first public five-days-a-week
restaurant and bar located within the AT&T Stadium.[42]
April 2–3, 2022: The stadium served as the host of WWE's WrestleMania 38.

Opening
May 27, 2009: The stadium was completed and opened to the public. Ribbon cutting
ceremony includes Cowboys players (including Rayfield Wright, Troy Aikman, Emmitt Smith,
Michael Irvin, Daryl Johnston, Preston Pearson, and Chad Hennings), North Texas mayors
and various media personalities.
June 6, 2009: Country music star George Strait, along with Reba McEntire, headlined the
first event in the new stadium.[43] Opening acts included Blake Shelton and Lee Ann
Womack.
July 19, 2009: The first sporting event is held in Cowboys Stadium. Costa Rica won in the
Gold Cup Quarterfinal game versus Guadeloupe, with the first goal scored in stadium history
during the 2nd minute by Celso Borges. That match was immediately followed by a sold out
match between Mexico and Haiti, with 82,252 in attendance.
July 26, 2009: The final match of the 2009 World Football Challenge is held between
Chelsea F.C. and Club America. The London club won the match 2–0 in front of 57,229. The
event was the second sporting event held in the new stadium, but was notable as the first
event held during a severe thunderstorm.[44]
August 20, 2009: Jody Dean, a member of the Texas Radio Hall of Fame and KLUV-FM
(98.7) talk show host, will be Cowboys Stadium's public address announcer. Dean replaces
his longtime nemesis KTCK 1310 AM "The Ticket"'s George Dunham, the Hot Fry enthusiast
and former voice of Texas Stadium.[45]
August 21, 2009: The Cowboys played the Tennessee Titans in their first preseason home
game and first American football game ever played at Cowboys Stadium. The game was
nationally televised on FOX at 7 PM CDT.[46] Dallas won the game 30–10, with one play
from scrimmage blown dead when a ball punted by Titans' rookie punter A. J. Trapasso
struck the main video screen after repeatedly striking it during pregame warmups.
September 5, 2009: Brigham Young defeated Oklahoma 14–13 in the first "regular-season"
game played in the new stadium.[47]
September 20, 2009: The Cowboys played their first NFL regular-season game in the new
stadium, with former President and Texas resident George W. Bush handling the opening
coin toss. The Cowboys lost to their long-time NFC East division rivals, the New York Giants,
33–31 with Eli Manning leading them on a last-second field goal by Lawrence Tynes. It was
televised on NBC.[48] This game attracted a record-breaking crowd of 105,121.[19] After the
game, Manning signed the wall of the visitor's locker room with the message, "First win in the
New Stadium."[49]
September 28, 2009: The Cowboys got their first home regular-season win. They beat the
Carolina Panthers 21–7 with 90,588 in attendance. The game was televised on ESPN's
Monday Night Football and marked a record 42nd win for the Cowboys on that show.[50]

Naming
Although the stadium had yet to sell naming rights, many fans started referring to the project with various
nicknames such as "Jerry World",[41][51][52] the "Death Star",[53] "The Palace in Dallas" (for which
announcer Bob Costas was criticized by the Arlington mayor[54]), "Cowboys Cathedral",[55] "Jerrassic
Park" and others.[56] There was also a petition by some fans to have the stadium named after longtime
Cowboys' coach Tom Landry.

On May 13, 2009, Jerry Jones announced the official name as Cowboys Stadium.[41]

On July 25, 2013, Jerry Jones announced that the Dallas Cowboys had agreed to grant naming rights to
AT&T. The name change from Cowboys Stadium to AT&T Stadium took effect immediately.[57] The
sponsorship deal was reported to be worth about $17–19 million per year.[58] Facility Solutions Group
installed the "AT&T Stadium" letters on the top of the stadium. Signage includes two sets of letters 43 feet
(13 m) tall stretching 385 feet (117 m). The letters are made of lightweight components and aluminum and
are insulated and heated to melt ice and snow.[59]

This is AT&T's third major sports venue where it holds the naming rights. The others are AT&T Center in
San Antonio, and Jones AT&T Stadium in Lubbock.

Video board
Guinness World Records was on hand at the September 28, 2009,
game against the Carolina Panthers to award certificates to the
chairman of Mitsubishi Electric and Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry
Jones for the world's largest HD video display.[28] For basketball
events played in Cowboys Stadium, such as the 2010 NBA All-Star
Game, the video board is actually larger than the court. It has since
been surpassed in size by the screen at Charlotte Motor
Speedway[60][61] and the video boards at TIAA Bank Field.

During the debut preseason game of Cowboys Stadium on August


21, 2009, a punt by Tennessee Titans punter A. J. Trapasso hit the
175 feet (58  yd) wide screen above the field. The punt deflected
backwards and was ruled in-play until Titans coach Jeff Fisher The video board at the stadium in
informed the officials that the punt struck the scoreboard. By rule, 2022.
the down was replayed. Jerry Jones believes that Trapasso was
trying to hit the scoreboard, saying, "If you look at how you punt the football, unless you're trying to hit the
scoreboard, you punt the ball to get downfield. You certainly want to get some hangtime, but you punt the
ball to get downfield, and you sure don't punt the ball down the middle. You punt it off to the side."[62]
Whether the screen would affect an opposing team's punting strategy has been debated. For teams with
strategies centered on maximizing hang time, physicist Christopher Moore of Longwood University has
shown via computer simulation that well-kicked punts have the potential to hit the screen no matter the field
position.[63] Trapasso disputed Jones' suggestion that he was intentionally trying to hit the board, and other
NFL punters have suggested that the board may pose a problem for longer hang-time punts. The screen was
retrofitted with 16 custom winches using 11,000 feet (3,400 m) of 1.5 inches (3.8 cm) domestic galvanized
wire rope to transport the video board in time to make room for U2's massive set during their 360° Tour,
and was moved back down after the concert. The video board is also the primary attachment point for up to
370,000 pounds (170,000 kg) of concert and theatrical rigging.

On August 24, 2013, during a preseason game against the Cincinnati Bengals, Cowboys punter Chris Jones
became the second player to hit the scoreboard. He conceded a touchdown on the rekick.[64]

On January 16, 2022, during the Cowboys' Wild Card playoff game against the San Francisco 49ers,
Cowboys punter Bryan Anger became the third player to hit the video board with a kick in the third quarter,
and the first to do so in the postseason. This prompted referee Alex Kemp to explain the necessitated rekick
by rule to the crowd.[65]

On September 11, 2022, Tampa Bay Buccaneers punter Jake Camarda hit the video board, becoming the
fourth punter to do so.

Major events

NBA All-Star Weekend

On February 14, 2010, the stadium hosted the 2010 NBA All-Star Game. With an announced crowd of
108,713, the game became the highest-attended basketball game in history, setting a new Guinness World
Record. The East squad prevailed with a 141–139 victory over the West.[66]

NFL
On January 3, 2010, the Cowboys defeated the
Philadelphia Eagles in a 24–0 shutout to win the NFC
East division title and complete the first ever back-to-
back shutouts in franchise history.[67]
On January 9, 2010, the Cowboys hosted their first
playoff game in the new stadium, again playing the
Eagles. Dallas won 34–14, breaking their infamous 13-
year playoff win drought.
Cowboys playing at the stadium
On February 6, 2011, the stadium hosted Super Bowl
XLV in which the Green Bay Packers defeated the
Pittsburgh Steelers, 31–25. Others bidding for the game's location were the University of
Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Arizona and Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, Indiana.[68]
The Cowboys attempted to increase its capacity to 105,000 seats in hopes of setting the
record for attendance at a Super Bowl. In a last-minute rush to add seats during one of the
area's notorious ice storms, 7 construction workers were injured by ice sliding off of the
stadium roof.[69] Hours before kickoff, over 1,200 seats were blocked off in the interest of
safety; according to a police officer in the affected area, the seats hadn't been finished in time
for the fire marshal to inspect them.[70] Approximately 800 people were given other seats
inside the stadium, thus costing the NFL any chance of setting the Super Bowl attendance
record (the final figure of 103,219 came 766 short of the record set in Super Bowl XIV).
However, about 400 people were unable to be seated and were given a letter from the NFL
that could be exchanged for three times the face value of the ticket. Those people were also
given the option to either watch on a TV in one of the stadium's lounges, where they would
be unable to see the field in person, or watch on screens outside the stadium. The NFL also
announced that those 400 people would receive free tickets to the next year's Super Bowl.
On February 9, 2011, the first lawsuit was filed against the NFL and Jerry Jones.[71] In 2018,
the stadium hosted the 2018 NFL Draft.

College football

College Football Playoff National Championship

January 12, 2015: The (4) Ohio State Buckeyes defeated the (2) Oregon Ducks 42–20,
before a crowd of 85,689 in the inaugural 2015 College Football Playoff National
Championship.

Big 12 Championship Game

AT&T Stadium was the site of the 2009 and 2010 Big 12
Championship Games, the last two held prior to the 2010–13 Big
12 Conference realignment. On December 5, 2009, the Texas
Longhorns defeated the Nebraska Cornhuskers 13–12 in the 2009
Big 12 Championship Game, the first to be held in the stadium with
attendance announced at 76,211.[72] The following year, on
December 4, 2010, the Oklahoma Sooners and Nebraska
Cornhuskers rekindled their rivalry as the Sooners won 23–20 in
the final Big 12 Championship game until the 2017 season. The University of Texas marching band
stadium was scheduled to host the games through the 2013 season, during the Big 12 Championship
but the realignment of the Big 12 Conference to 10 teams meant game
they were not allowed to host a championship game because of
NCAA rules requiring conferences to have at least 12 teams divided
into two divisions in order to stage a championship game.[73][74] However, the NCAA would later change
its rules and allow a conference championship game regardless of the number of members of said
conference.

Cotton Bowl Classic


January 2, 2010: In the first bowl game played at the stadium, the Ole Miss Rebels defeated
the Oklahoma State Cowboys, 21–7 in the 74th installment of the AT&T Cotton Bowl Classic.
Attendance was 77,928 and was the third largest attendance of any preceding Cotton Bowl
game. With Oklahoma State having played in the Cotton Bowl, all Big 12 South Teams have
played at least one game in the Cowboys Stadium.[75]
January 7, 2011: In the 75th installment of the AT&T Cotton Bowl Classic, the LSU Tigers by
a score of 41–24 defeated the Texas A&M Aggies with an outstanding attendance of 83,514
making it the second largest attendance in Cotton Bowl history. LSU finished with an 11–2
record and Texas A&M finished 9–4 making it their 49th meeting all time.
January 6, 2012: The Arkansas Razorbacks defeated Kansas State Wildcats, 29–16.
Attendance was 80,956, currently the third-highest attendance in Cotton Bowl history. During
the game, Arkansas receiver Joe Adams returned a punt 51 yards for a touchdown, which
was the first punt return for a touchdown in the Cotton Bowl since former Arkansas
Razorback Lance Alworth returned a punt 49 yards for a touchdown in a 7–6 loss to Duke in
1961. The win also propelled the Razorbacks to a #5 ranking in the final AP poll and gave
them their first 11-win season since joining the Southeastern Conference in 1991. Kansas
State ended the season with a 10–3 record and ranked #15 in the final AP poll.
January 4, 2013: The (10) Texas A&M Aggies defeated the (12) Oklahoma Sooners 41–13 to
finish the season with an 11–2 record. Johnny Manziel rushed for 229 yards (on just 17
carries) during the game, a Cotton Bowl record and national bowl record for a quarterback,
rushing for two touchdowns and throwing for two more. Manziel totaled 516 total yards also a
Cotton Bowl Classic record. Though the halftime score was 14–13 Texas A&M, the Aggies
went on to score 27 unanswered second half points to win the game. The game's attendance
of 87,025 is the second highest in Cotton Bowl Classic history, behind the 2009 game
between Mississippi-Texas Tech at 88,175.
January 3, 2014: The (9) Missouri Tigers defeated the (13) Oklahoma State Cowboys 41–31
in front of an attendance of 72,690.
January 1, 2015: The (7) Michigan State Spartans rallied from a 20-point deficit to defeat the
(4) Baylor Bears 42–41 in front of an attendance of 71,464. This was the first Cotton Bowl
Classic game to be featured as one of the "New Year's Six" bowls of the College Football
Playoff.
January 2, 2017: The (8) Wisconsin Badgers defeated the (15) Western Michigan Broncos in
front of 59,615.
December 29, 2017: The (5) Ohio State Buckeyes defeated the (8) USC Trojans by a score
of 24–7 in front of 67,510.
December 29, 2018: The (2) Clemson Tigers defeated the (3) Notre Dame Fighting Irish 30–
3 in front of 72,183.

Rose Bowl
January 1, 2021: The (1) Alabama Crimson Tide defeated the (4) Notre Dame Fighting Irish
31–14 in front of 18,373. This game was the first since 1942 that the Rose Bowl was not
played in Pasadena, California; prompted by restrictions due to the COVID-19
pandemic.[76][77]

Advocare Classic
September 5, 2009: The (20) Brigham Young University Cougars and (3) Oklahoma Sooners
played the first college football game in the new stadium, with the Cougars upsetting the
Sooners, 14–13, in front of 75,437 spectators. So BYU holds the distinction of being the first
college team to win a game in the stadium, and the team to win the first (non-preseason)
game in the stadium.[78]
September 4, 2010: (6) TCU defeated (24) Oregon State 30–21, before a crowd of 46,138, in
a season-opening encounter between ranked teams.[79]
September 3, 2011: (4) LSU defeated (3) Oregon 40–27, before a crowd of 87,711 in the
third installment of the Cowboys Classic.
September 1, 2012: Defending 2011 champion (2) Alabama defeated (8) Michigan 41–14,
before a crowd of 90,413 in the fourth installment of the Cowboys Classic.
August 31, 2013: (12) LSU defeated (20) TCU 37–27, before a crowd of 80,230 in the fifth
installment of the Cowboys Classic.
August 30, 2014: Defending 2013 champion (1) Florida State defeated unranked Oklahoma
State 37–31, before a crowd of 61,521 in the sixth installment of the Cowboys Classic.
August 31, 2019: (16) Auburn defeated the Oregon Ducks 27-21, after rallying from a 15
point deflict in the 3rd quarter, and scoring the winning touchdown with 9 seconds left.

Southwest Classic

The Arkansas Razorbacks vs. Texas A&M Aggies football rivalry, which began in 1903, was renewed in
2009 as the Southwest Classic, and was played at Cowboys Stadium from 2009 through 2011. In 2012,
Texas A&M joined Arkansas in the Southeastern Conference, and the series reverted to the schools' home
fields, Kyle Field in College Station, Texas for the 2012 game and Donald W. Reynolds Razorback
Stadium in Fayetteville, Arkansas in 2013. The Southwest Classic returned to AT&T Stadium in 2014 and
will remain there through at least 2024.

The 2020 game was moved from Arlington to College Station due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

October 3, 2009: Cowboys owner Jerry Jones watched his alma mater, the Arkansas
Razorbacks, defeat the Texas A&M Aggies 47–19 in the first of ten games called the
Southwest Classic to be played at the stadium.[80]
October 9, 2010: The Arkansas Razorbacks jumped out to an early 21–7 lead, and held on to
defeat the Texas A&M Aggies, 24–17.[81]
October 1, 2011: The Arkansas Razorbacks rallied from an 18-point halftime deficit to defeat
the Texas A&M Aggies 41–38.
September 27, 2014: The Texas A&M Aggies rallied from a deficit to force overtime and then
scored the only TD for the 35–28 win to defeat the Arkansas Razorbacks.
September 26, 2015: Texas A&M rallied from a fourth quarter deficit for the second straight
year versus Arkansas, beating the Razorbacks 28–21 in OT.
September 24, 2016: After being tied at halftime, the Aggies dominated the second half to
defeat the Razorbacks 45–24.
September 25, 2021: Arkansas snaps 9-game losing streak against the Aggies, defeating
Texas A&M 20–10 and going 4-0 for the first time since 2003.

Texas Farm Bureau Insurance Shootout

In 2009, the Big 12 Conference game between the Baylor Bears and Texas Tech Red Raiders was held at
Cowboys Stadium, the first time in the series the match-up was held on a neutral site. The game was the
highest attended in the series' history, with 71,964 in attendance.[82]

After the 2010 game was held at the Cotton Bowl in Fair Park, Dallas during the State Fair of Texas, the
series returned to AT&T Stadium for the 2011 and 2012 games. The series' neutral site contract at AT&T
Stadium could continue until 2014.[83]

Basketball
December 19, 2009: In the first college basketball game at the stadium, before a crowd of
38,052, the Texas Longhorns defeated the defending national champion North Carolina Tar
Heels, 103–90.[84]
March 2013: 2013 NCAA Tournament South Regional featuring 3 games with the winner of
the third going to the NCAA men's Final Four[85]
2014: 2014 NCAA men's Final Four[86]
2030: NCAA Men's Final Four

Soccer
July 19, 2009 – Cowboys Stadium hosted two matches
in the quarterfinal round of the 2009 CONCACAF Gold
Cup. Costa Rica defeated Guadeloupe, 5–1. Mexico shut
out Haiti, 4–0 in front of 85,000 fans.
The stadium being set up for Texas
July 17, 2010 – On July 17, 2010, two of the top vs. North Carolina game
professional soccer clubs in Mexico – Club America and
San Luis F.C. – met in a friendly at Cowboys Stadium.
Club America made its second appearance at Cowboys Stadium. In 2009, Club America
played Chelsea FC in the World Football Challenge in front of 57,229 fans at Cowboys
Stadium.[87]
June 5, 2011 – Cowboys Stadium hosted the opening matches of the 2011 CONCACAF
Gold Cup. Costa Rica defeated Cuba 5–0 in the opener, while Mexico defeated El Salvador
5–0 in the nightcap in front of 80,108 fans.
August 6, 2011 – 2011 World Football Challenge; Club America vs FC Barcelona; score 2–0
in front of 60,087 fans.
June 3, 2012 – Cowboys Stadium hosted a soccer match in which Mexico played against 5-
time world cup champions Brazil. Mexico defeated Brazil 2–0 with goals from Giovani dos
Santos and Javier Hernández.
July 24, 2013 – Cowboys Stadium hosted the semifinals matches of the 2013 CONCACAF
Gold Cup. United States defeated Honduras 3–1 and Panama defeated Mexico 2–1. It was
the last event at the venue using the name Cowboys Stadium, and was the first appearance
of the U.S. soccer team at this stadium.
July 22, 2017 – 2017 CONCACAF Gold Cup semi-final. United States defeated Costa Rica
2–0.
July 31, 2018 – 2018 International Champions Cup; AS Roma defeated FC Barcelona 4–2
July 10, 2021 – 2021 CONCACAF Gold Cup group stage. Mexico draws with Trinidad and
Tobago 0–0.
July 25, 2021 – 2021 CONCACAF Gold Cup quarter-final. United States defeated Jamaica
1–0.

2026 FIFA World Cup

AT&T Stadium will host multiple matches during the 2026 FIFA World Cup, which will be organized and
hosted across the United States, Canada and Mexico. In September 2022, it was reported that the stadium
might be hosting the final.[88] The stadium will undergo renovations in the years prior to the start of the
tournament.[89]

Boxing

The stadium has hosted multiple world championship boxing fights since its opening, as the large capacity
and retractable roof make it an ideal venue for boxing events throughout the year. Many of the sport's
biggest stars including Manny Pacquiao and Canelo Álvarez have headlined championship bouts there.
March 13, 2010 - The Event: Before a crowd of 50,994, Manny Pacquiao recorded a
unanimous decision over Joshua Clottey to retain his WBO welterweight title.
November 13, 2010 – The Eighth Wonder of the World: In front of 41,734 fans, Manny
Pacquiao defeated Antonio Margarito to win the WBC super welterweight title. In doing so,
he made history in becoming the first fighter to win world titles in 8 different weight classes.
September 17, 2016 – Before a crowd of 51,420, Canelo Álvarez defeated Liam Smith by
knockout in round nine to win the WBO light middleweight title. The event broke the then-
AT&T Stadium attendance record for boxing.[90]
March 16, 2019 - Before a crowd of 47,525, Errol Spence Jr. defended his IBF welterweight
title in his 12-round shutout of undefeated four-division world champion Mikey Garcia on Fox
Sports PPV.[91]
December 5, 2020 - In front of 16,978 fans due to covid restrictions, Errol Spence Jr.
defeated Danny García by unanimous decision in 12 rounds.
May 8, 2021 - Face The Fearless: In front of a crowd of 73,126 which broke the all-time
attendance record for a boxing event at an indoor venue in the United States, Canelo
Álvarez unified the WBA (Super), WBC and WBO super-middleweight titles when he beat
undefeated two-division world champion Billy Joe Saunders by eighth-round corner
retirement.[92]
April 15, 2022 - In front of a crowd of 40,828 Errol Spence Jr unified the WBA (Super), WBC
and IBF welterweight titles when he beat Yordenis Ugas by tenth round knockout.

WrestleMania

AT&T Stadium hosted WWE's WrestleMania 32 on April 3, 2016. It was the third WrestleMania to be
hosted in Texas. The area also hosted activities throughout the region for the week-long celebration leading
up to WrestleMania itself. 101,763 people attended the event breaking the previous WrestleMania
attendance record set at WrestleMania III.[93]

On April 2 and 3, 2022, the stadium hosted WrestleMania 38.[94]

Supercross
AT&T Stadium has hosted a round of the AMA Supercross Championship since 2010, replacing Texas
Stadium which had been host since 1975.[95]

Concerts

Opening Tour / Concert


Date Artist Attendance Revenue Notes
act(s) name

2009
Reba Very first concert
McEntire at the stadium
June 6, George [96] 60,188 /
Blake Shelton $5,340,005 Stadium project
2009 Strait
Lee Ann 60,188[97] was not finished
Womack yet

Honor Society
Jonas Brothers Stadium project
June 20, Jonas Jessie James
World Tour — — was not finished
2009 Brothers Jordin Sparks
2009 yet
Wonder Girls

August 19, Paul Summer Live 35,903 / Stadium project


— $5,054,620
2009 McCartney '09 35,903 complete
To make room for
the large claw-
shaped stage, the
October 70,766 / video board was
U2 Muse U2 360° Tour $6,664,880 raised 25 feet (7.6
12, 2009 70,766
m) and was not
used during the
concert[98]
2011

Zac Brown
Band
April 16, Kenny Goin' Coastal 46,551 /
Billy $4,173,338
2011 Chesney Tour 47,256
Currington
Uncle Kracker

Needtobreathe
October 8, Speak Now 55,451 / B.o.B was the
Taylor Swift Charlie $4,337,062
2011 World Tour 55,451 special guest.
Worsham
2012

Kenny Grace Potter


June 9, Chesney and the Brothers of the 47,269 /
$4,421,768
2012 Tim Nocturnals Sun Tour 50,425
McGraw Jake Owen

2013
Eli Young
Kenny
May 11, Band No Shoes 47,269 /
Chesney $4,421,768
2013 Kacey Nation Tour 50,425
Eric Church
Musgraves

Ed Sheeran
Austin
May 25, 53,020 /
Taylor Swift Mahone The Red Tour $4,589,266
2013 53,020
Florida
Georgia Line

2014
Jason Aldean,
Kenny Chesney,
Eric Church,
Ronnie Dunn,
Vince Gill, Faith
The Cowboy
June 7, George Martina 104,793 / Hill, Alan Jackson,
Rides Away $18,194,374
2014 Strait McBride 104,793 Miranda Lambert,
Tour
Lee Ann Womack,
and Asleep at the
Wheel joined Strait
for his "last show
ever"
May 25, Beyoncé On the Run 41,463 /
— $5,050,479
2014 Jay-Z Tour 41,463

July 22, One Where We Are 51,074 /


Jamie Scott $4,517,012
2014 Direction Tour 51,074

2015
50th Academy
April 19,
— — of Country 70,252 —
2015
Music Awards

June 6, The Rolling 47,535 /


— Zip Code Tour $9,294,552
2015 Stones 47,535

Ellie Goulding was


a special guest.
Vance Joy
October The 1989 62,630 / They performed
Taylor Swift Shawn $7,396,733
17, 2015 World Tour 62,630 Goulding's 2015 hit
Mendes
Love Me Like You
Do.
2016

May 9, The Formation 42,235 /


Beyoncé DJ Khaled $5,954,775
2016 World Tour 42,235

August 3, Guns N' Not in This 39,015 /


The Cult $4,786,948
2016 Roses Lifetime... Tour 43,449
August 27, Alessia Cara A Head Full of 52,538 /
Coldplay $5,679,031
2016 Bishop Briggs Dreams Tour 52,538

Chris
Stapleton
October Kill the Lights 41,638 /
Luke Bryan Little Big $3,613,825
22, 2016 Tour 45,000
Town
Dustin Lynch

2017

Performers

Demi
Lovato
The
March 25, A Concert For Randy Travis was
Band — — $2,000,000
2017 Perry The Causes a special guest
Jake
Owen
Cole
Swindell

May 26, The The Joshua 49,087 /


U2 $6,044,330
2017 Lumineers Tree Tour 2017 49,087
Avenged
Sevenfold
June 16, WorldWired 45,860 /
Metallica Local H $5,481,881
2017 Tour 45,860
Mix Master
Mike
2018

Thomas Rhett The Trip


May 19, Kenny 46,274 /
Old Dominion Around The $3,770,669
2018 Chesney 48,625
Brandon Lay Sun Tour

September Beyoncé Chloe X Halle On the Run II 41,626 /


$5,713,125
11, 2018 Jay-Z DJ Khaled Tour 41,626
Maren Morris was
the special guest
at the first show.
October 5, Taylor and Maren
2018 performed "The
Middle". Sugarland
were the special
guests on the
Camila Taylor Swift's second show. They
105,002 /
Taylor Swift Cabello Reputation $15,006,157 performed their
105,002
Charli XCX Stadium Tour collaboration with
Swift
"Babe".[99][100]
October 6, Netflix also
2018 captured the night
for their Reputation
Tour Film on
Netflix.

October Snow Patrol 46,249 / [101]


Ed Sheeran ÷ Tour $4,528,561
27, 2018 Lauv 46,249
2019

Performers
Meek Mill
Pharrell
Williams
Rae
Sremmurd
Jaden Smith
Dominic Fike
November Post Doja Cat Posty Fest
2, 2019 Malone Yella Beezy
Tyla Yaweh
Saint Jhn
Iann Dior
Beach Fossils
Snowy
Maj
Kerwin Frost
G-Eazy

2022
Matt Rossi The Garth
July 30, Garth [102]
Trisha Brooks TBA TBA
2022 Brooks
Yearwood Stadium Tour

After Hours til


August 14, The Snoh Aalegra 49,783 / [103][104]
Dawn Stadium $8,043,625
2022 Weeknd Mike Dean 49,783
Tour
September World's Hottest 54,637 /
Bad Bunny Alesso $12,384,432
9, 2022 Tour 54,637
2023

March 31, Muna


2023 Gayle

April 1,
Taylor Swift Beabadoobee The Eras Tour TBA TBA
2023
Gracie
April 2, Abrams
2023

Billy Joel &


April 8, Two Icons,
Stevie —
2023 One Night
Nicks

Pantera
August 18,
Mammoth -
2023
WVH M72 World
Metallica TBA TBA
Five Finger Tour
August 20,
Death Punch -
2023
Ice Nine Kills

September Renaissance
Beyoncé —
21, 2023 World Tour

Other events
September 5, 2009 – Led by a strong defensive effort and quarterback Max Hall's 329 yards
passing, No. 20 BYU defeated No. 3 Oklahoma 14–13 in the first college game played in the
new Dallas Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas.
September 7, 2009 – The first high school football game played at Cowboys Stadium was
between Euless Trinity and Bingham (Utah). Trinity won, 42–21.[105]
November 12, 2009 – The first Texas high school football playoff game played at Cowboys
Stadium was between Bowie High School (Arlington, Texas) and Richland High School
(North Richland Hills; Texas).[106]
February 2010 – The Professional Bull Riders hosted the Dickies Iron Cowboy Invitational in
February 2010.[107]
February 2010 – The first MDA Muscle Walk in the Dallas-Fort Worth area took place. This
event was held annually, having returned in 2011, 2012, and 2013. That event has since
moved to Globe Life Park in Arlington (formerly Rangers Ballpark) starting in 2014.

February 27, 2010 – The stadium hosted its first Monster


Jam event with 11 trucks. This event is now held annually,
having returned in 2011 and scheduled for 2012.
June 30, 2011 – The final round of the 2011 US Women's
Open in bowling was played at Cowboys Stadium,[108] with
Leanne Hulsenberg winning.
Dec. 7 – 17, 2011 – Cowboys Stadium hosted all the Texas
11-man football state championships for the first time. It was
also the first time all 11-man state championships were held Several participants walk at the
in one location. 2013 DFW MDA Muscle Walk;
February 2011 – The Professional Bull Riders hosted the then known as Cowboys
Stadium.
Dickies Iron Cowboy Invitational in February 2011.[109]
February 2012 – The Professional Bull Riders hosted the Dickies Iron Cowboy Invitational in
February 2012.[110]
February 2013 – The Professional Bull Riders hosted the Dickies Iron Cowboy Invitational in
February 2013.[111]
February 11, 2013 – American Sniper Chris Kyle's memorial ceremony proceeded by a 200-
mile (320 km) procession across Texas.
February 2013 – The Professional Bull Riders hosted the Dickies Iron Cowboy Invitational in
February 2014.[112]
February 2014 – The inaugural The American Rodeo was held.[113]
April 26, 2014 – AT&T Stadium hosted the senior prom of South Garland High School.
June 27–29, 2014 – International Assembly of Jehovah's Witnesses
July 6, 2014 – Semi-pro football (EFL) held its first indoor Pro Bowl game.
July 25–27, 2014 – International Assembly of Jehovah's Witnesses
February 2015 – The Professional Bull Riders hosted the Choctaw Casino Resort Iron
Cowboy in February 2015.[114]
February 2015 – The American Rodeo was held.[113]
March 7, 2015 – The 2015 AT&T American Cup, an FIG World Cup event, is held at the
stadium.
June 20, 2015 – AT&T Stadium hosted thousands of Spartans for Reebok's Spartan Race.
January 12, 2016 – The world premiere of 13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi was
attended by over 30,000 people and shown on the giant high-definition screen.[115][116]
February 2016 – The Professional Bull Riders hosted the Choctaw Casino Resort Iron
Cowboy in February 2016.[117]
February 2016 – The American Rodeo was held.[113]
March 6, 2016 – Greg Laurie's Harvest America took place at the stadium. It is considered
the largest evangelical event ever. Special guests included Chris Tomlin, Lecrae, MercyMe,
and Switchfoot.
April 3, 2016 – WrestleMania 32, the premier event of the professional wrestling organization
WWE, was held.
February 2017 – The Professional Bull Riders hosted the Choctaw Casino Resort Iron
Cowboy in February 2017.[118]
February 2017 – The American Rodeo was held.[113]
February 2018 – The Professional Bull Riders hosted the WinStar World Casino and Resort
Iron Cowboy in 2018.[119]
February 2018 – The American Rodeo was held.[113]
February 2019 – The third PBR Global Cup took place at AT&T Stadium.
February 2020 – The fourth PBR Global Cup was held.
November 2020 – The annual PBR World Finals took place at AT&T Stadium after being
moved from Las Vegas due to Nevada state restrictions stemming from the COVID-19
pandemic.[120]
April 2–3, 2022 – WrestleMania 38 was held.

Concessions and merchandising


On October 20, 2008, Cowboys owner Jones and New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner
announced a joint business venture called Legends Hospitality Management LLC which would operate the
concessions and merchandising sales at the new Cowboys stadium in Arlington, Texas, and at the new
Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, New York, along with the stadiums of the Yankees' minor league affiliates.
Former Pizza Hut President Michael Rawlings will run the company from its new headquarters in Newark,
New Jersey. The company was also backed by Wall Street investment firm Goldman Sachs and Dallas
private equity firm CIC Partners LP.[121][122][123]

Art collection
The Jones family commissioned 18 contemporary artists to create site-specific artworks for the stadium. The
stadium features paintings, sculptures, and installations by Franz Ackermann, Doug Aitken, Ricci Albenda,
Mel Bochner, Daniel Buren, Olafur Eliasson, Teresita Fernandez, Wayne Gonzales, Terry Haggerty,
Trenton Doyle Hancock, Jacqueline Humphries, Jim Isermann, Annette Lawrence, Dave Muller, Gary
Simmons, and Lawrence Weiner.[124][125][126]

In 2013, the stadium acquired Sky Mirror, a sculpture by Anish Kapoor. It sits in a plaza outside the east
end of the stadium.[127]

Transportation

Parking

The fees for premium parking at Dallas Cowboys games are


estimated at $75 per game, based on season ticket holder parking
charges.[128] The fees to park at major concerts and other sporting
events will be nearly $40 per space at the new stadium.[129] A
shuttle operates between the T&P Station and AT&T Stadium for all
Cowboys regular season and postseason games and selected college
football games,[130] which averages approximately 900 riders per
game.[130] For special events like Super Bowl XLV parking prices
can increase to as much as $990.[131]
Parking at AT&T Stadium for a
Dallas Cowboys game in 2022.
Public transit

The stadium was only accessible via the Metro Arlington Xpress (MAX) bus system; a 0.4 mi (0.64 km)
walk from the Collins and Andrews stop which connected with the Trinity Rail Express (TRE) station at
CentrePort/DFW Airport. The bus system was an experimental program which commenced in April 2013
and was replaced by a ride-sharing service in December 2017.

See also
History of the Dallas Cowboys
Globe Life Field
List of tallest domes

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External links
Official website (https://www.att.com)

Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=AT%26T_Stadium&oldid=1136876704"

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