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Perspective has a lot to do with why Michigan Stadium doesn't look so big at a glance. In reality the stadium is so huge that the pictures have to be taken from much further away in order to fit the whole bowl into the photo, so it doesn't always look so imposing from areal photos. If you go back and look at arial photos of Michigan Stadium you'll notice a small-looking arena next door. That's actually a 15,000 seat basketball arena it just appears dwarfed next to Michigan Stadium. I've been lucky to go to many Michigan games, being in that stadium is an incredible experience
So for Camp Randall Stadium home of the Wisconsin Badgers that building at one end of the stadium is the UW Field House. Its a 10k seat arena that used to host the school basketball and volleyball teams. The basketball teams moved to a new arena in 1998 but volleyball is still played there.
What is better about Big 10 football is that it is played--at least for most of the second half of the season--in REAL football weather--where you compete against the elements as well as your opponents. Nothing better than a blustery snow game.
Camp Randall in WI is the most historic. It was the largest staging area for Wisconsin troops during the Civil War. Over 70K soldiers were trained there.
Including the 2nd, 6th and 7th regiments which comprised a large portion of the famed Iron Brigade. Camp Randall was also a prisoner of war camp. Some Confederate soldiers died there and are buried nearby, the northern most confederate cemetary.
There used to be 10 teams in the Big Ten. Same with the Big 12 having 12 teams. With the conference realignment in the past decade or so, there's a different amount of teams in each conference than when they were formed.
Not sure who this guy was ranking the stadiums but as he even said, Nebraska Memorial Stadium, the one you guys first liked, really is rated the #1 stadium by ESPN, and (a sports magazine which I cannot remember the name of), and is called "The Cathedral of all Stadiums." While on vacation through the USA we took a tour (bc the Nebraska Capitol building is also rated #1 so we had to see these beauties) and it really is the best. Absolutely phenomenal.
One thing that is interesting about OSU's horseshoe, is that before it was renovated is that it also was a dormitory. My cousin's daughter was among the last group of students who lived in the dorm. She had to move to another dorm thanks to renovation. Even though it grates me to correct the "narrator" being an OSU fan, but the Michigan stadium is known as "The Big House"
Big Ten stadiums are among the oldest in college football. Michigan once had plans to add an upper deck (which would be insane) but for some reason never did. Michigan stadium once squeezed over 115,000 in there for a game.
Think of the conference names as "brands", The Big-10 was made up of ten schools back in the day. But as TV revenue increased exponentially, many schools changed conferences and some independents, for example Penn State, decided in would be in their better financial interest to join a conference. The most conference names had been trademarked by then. Thus they retained their names.
Michigan Stadium seats so many people because they give you like a 16" spot on an aluminum bleacher to cram yourself. If you've got a fat guy on either side of you, forget about it. The most uncomfortable venue I've ever watched a sporting event at. Although the atmosphere is incredible, apart from the drunken hall of fame coach sitting 2 rows down from you who second guesses every play call and could definitely run the team better.
Love your channel guys. Yes the boxes you see are a mix of luxury seating and press areas. The press areas will be on the side that the midfield logo faces
Crowd noise is very important for the home team in American Football, because the defense is typically just reacting to the offensive formation with flexible plans set in place, whereas the offense needs to communicate very specific information to all players when something about the play is altered. As a result, when your team is on defense, you try to get the crowd all pumped up so that the offense can’t hear and either messes up the play or someone mishears the timing of the “snap” (the play start) and jumps early, causing a penalty.
As an SEC fan I can agree. The Big 10 has a much deeper history and tradition background though. Michigan is known and "The Big House." If you get a chance look into the history of college football rivalries. You will be in for a treat.
Big 12 and maybe Pac 12 have some really nice stadiums. (And just so no one starts into a tirade, SEC is not pronounced "seck", it's always ess-ee-see. Great vid and GO BUCKS!)
You should look up the old big ten logo for when they had 11 teams. There was a hidden 11 in negative space and I just love that kid of attention to detail.
Generally speaking, college stadiums are on campus except for some schools in dense urban areas. Ohio State has a huge number of sports facilities on campus; they compete in more intercollegiate sports than any other university and most have dedicated venues. OSU could almost host the Olympics though they'd need to build a velodrome.
Others have mentioned press boxes and luxury suites, but those same boxes often have rooms for both team's offensive and defensive coordinators to help with playcalling. These coaches are right under the head coach in the org chart but above the position-specific assistant coaches (quarterback coach, wide receiver coach, etc.). The coordinators have radio headsets to talk back and forth with the head coach about what they are seeing from up top and what type of plays they think should be called. Not sure about college, but in the NFL a quarterback and linebacker typically wear an ear piece to communicate the plays being called to the other players on the field.
@@DNReacts To add to what Mario said, its not always a coordinator up in the box, but there are always coaches from offense and defense. Some coordinators like being on the field so they can talk with the players, so then they will have one or more of the position coaches (and other staff members) in the box relaying down what they are seeing. Its all really a matter of preference for coaches, but every team takes advantage of having that higher viewpoint. And that goes for lower levels too. Its why you will often see one side with a tall stand and the other with a much smaller. They need to build one side high for the box for coaches, so they might as well build the seating that high as well. And that goes all the way down to high school. You will often see high schools with one big metal stands with a coaches box and then the other side having stands that can only fit a few dozen people.
In college, on the field players are not mic'd up. All communications from the coach to the players are done with either running the play onto the field by a replacement player, hand signals or signs.
The Big10 is the oldest established intercollegiate conference in the US. Established in the 1890’s and consisting of 10 teams for nearly a century. University of Chicago departed and they added Michigan State in 1950. They wouldn’t have an 11th team until Penn State joined in 1990. Since then TV revenue (markets) has driven expansion. The Big10 kept its historical name despite their expansion. They have added teams in the New York (Rutgers) and Los Angeles (Soon to be USC and UCLA) to grab hold of the 3 biggest TV markets in the US, already having Chicago established. A name change every time they add a new team would be crazy. Example: 1990 - Big11. 2011 -Big12(already a Big12, that doesn’t work). 2014 - Big14. 2024 - Big16. And there’s already talk of expanding again up to 20 teams. This doesn’t mention the brand recognition that comes from a century plus of being known as the BigTen Conference.
So if no one has said it yet, Michigan is called "The Big House". And it is the 3rd largest sporting venue in the world. Only two cricket stadiums in India hold more people. Great vid.
The Big 10 has been around generations. The name became a brand, so they can't change it and would refuse if anyone tried to compel them to. They'll actually grow to 16 teams in 2024. Even then, they won't change it and American college sports fans wouldn't want them to. Additionally, the Big 12 currently has 10 teams, will have 14 teams in 2023-24, then down to 12 starting in 2024-25. BUT, they may expand again and get to anywhere from 14 to 20 teams. Since they're a relatively younger conference (founded in 1996), at that point, they may rebrand.
The building at the end of Camp Randall Stadium is where the basketball team originally played their games. It's called The Fieldhouse. They now play at The Kohl Center.
I know it's a bit long, but there's a video called "The CRAZIEST college football season of all-time" which covers the 2007 college football season. It's about 20 minutes, so I understand if that's too long for the channel, but it's extremely interesting and informative.
Hi Max, we’re actually thinking about doing this one. Hopefully everyone won’t mind it’s longer. We’ve had a lot suggesting we take a look at this. Would be one of the longest watches we’ve done so far, but we’re happy to do it when we can get it into the schedule.
For Wisconsin, Camp Randall, that building is the old field house. It was used as a base for the civil war. The field house was converted into an arena for basketball and volleyball. Eventually we built our own arena for that called the Kohl center which most college programs cant even touch.
I went to Indiana and I'm from Columbus, so I'm familiar with both IU and Ohio State's stadiums. Putting Indiana ahead of Penn State is absurd. I love my Hooisers but the stadium experience leaves something to be desired. One of the reasons I feel in love with Indiana is the huge number of beautiful limestone buildings. Its a spectacular campus, but not a good football school. Basketball though...
SEC and Big 10: huge stadiums; high quality college football played in them Pac 12: smaller, but in GORGEOUS settings NFL: smaller, but 1/2 of them are LUXURIOUS (and w/DISTINCT designs)
Went to school at Wisconsin and spent a lot of time at Camp Randall. The house-like building at the end of the field is called, surprisingly, the Field House. It's where they play the basketball games.
Those building located in the stadium are the visitors and home team locker rooms, gameday training and medical rooms, player lounges, weight rooms, dining areas, athletic offices, and gameday HIGHSCOOL ATHLETES recruiting....those the university are targeting for scholarships to play for the school .......and VIP areas for alums/ donors on gameday.
Most college stadiums are on campus, exceptions being a few schools in big cities where space is a luxury. Presently 4 college teams share a stadium with the city's NFL team, for the same reason of lack of space to build their own stadium. Pitt, Miami, South Florida (Tampa) and UNLV (Las Vegas).
Coaches up in the Press Box too ! Unique to AFB coaches use the birds eye view to call down plays or information to the coaches on the sidelines. Notice they wear headset on the field. Even stories of signal stealing from the eyes in the ski ..
I guess it wouldn't be considered a "stadium" but regarding capacity, the largest sports venue would be the Indianapolis Motor Speedway @ 257,327 (permanent seats) - 400,000 grand total
The Hospital is next to the Football Stadiums because the Children who are there have Cancer, and by being close to the Hospital ,.it give the family and the kids something to look forward to ,and let the kids and the family know people out there care about them and give them hope!
Yes the University of Iowa Wave is amazing! The fact the narrator on the original video said it's annoying actually makes me angry. If you can't stop eating a hotdog for 1 minute at the end of the 1st quarter to wave to sick kids without grumbling about it, you've got issues.
Not only is University of Michigan stadium the largest college stadium in the country, it's the largest stadium period. It all so holds the top five spots for largest college crowds ever.
Context for Maryland’s stadium (UMD College Park grad), MD was in the ACC (Atlantic Coast Conference) forever until jumping ship to the B10, so historically it’s been more focused on basketball and lacrosse. Also used to be “Byrd Stadium” but he wasn’t open to racial equality back in the day. The horseshoe layout is bc there’s no room to build, it sits on campus.
FYI, Beaver Stadium is about to undergo a massive renovation that will reduce seating to about 102k. They Will replace almost all of the bleacher seats with chair-back seating. As for the SEC, I guess you have to choose your priorities. They are a great football conference, but if you need a heart surgeon I suggest a big ten grad.
The majority of the stadiums are built on campus property that is in/connected to the campus. There are times however, a school with break/buy ground and build a new stadium “away” from the campus grounds.
When building these stadiums the cost of the land, materials and construction often will choose to place an athletics facility joined to it for cost reasons, those are the buildings you see at the end of the field, Cardinal Stadium here in Louisville has that design.
Calling “The Big House” the “Large House” has to be the most unfunny joke I’ve ever heard in my life. I don’t know if is the accent, monotone, or just the whole delivery itself 😂😂😂😂
Watching USA vs. Great Britain in World Baseball Classic right now, so more reasons for you to learn the sport. One of the top Major league prospects is on your team.
The next conference I think you should take a look at is the Pac 12 conference. A lot of people always go straight to the ACC and the big 12 after looking at the SEC and Big Ten, which don’t get me wrong they’re all nice, but I think the Pac 12 is often times overlooked.
@@areguapiri isn’t that what I wrote? I looked at my sentence. I wrote the big 12. I suggested that they look at the Pac 12, and then I mention that most RUclipsrs go straight for the ACC and the big 12.
As a Minnesota Alum, I fully expected Huntington Bank Stadium to be 14th lmao! I mean, it's newer and pretty nicely built; but on gameday, for atmosphere alone, I wouldn't put it higher than 8-10.
It's always a different perspective when the stadiums are full of fans. They look better. Many college football stadiums are right on campus, and students and fans can walk to the stadiums. ...Also, for many college stadiums, the building you see right behind one of the endzones is a "field house" for locker rooms, offices, etc. for the players and coaches.
He joked about the beaver on the stadium but it’s actually a mountain lion. You guys might be more familiar with the name of puma or cougar, same thing. Penn State teams are called the Nittany lions, which is a name that pays homage to the mountain lions that used to roam in the area around Mount Nittany, a mountain just outside town. And if you’re wondering what Nittany is it is a word derived from a Native American language.
I love it when a foreigner talks about American College Football ... lol The Ohio State University stadium is called "The Shoe" - as it was built in the shape of a horseshoe - but the open end has been built in but you still the feel of a horseshoe. Go Buckeyes!
Well done. You guys are great. The narrator? Not so much. Not buying his knowledge, opinion, or humor. For example, the joke about calling it the Big 10 was lame and cries out for explanation. And, it's not the "large" house. It's the "big" house.
Half of Big Tens schools are just academic schools with terrible athletic programs. And bringing USC and UCLA alone will back fire if they can’t get OR/Wash
The buildings next to stadiums are called "field houses": en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Field_house They are for indoor sports as well as support infrastructure (locker rooms, equipment storage, coaches' offices, etc.)
We all feel a little bit lied to. It is understandable in a way. 50 years ago a college would rarely change conference. Then some conferences disappeared & jumping to another conference became not so 'uncommon'. The numbered conferences were doomed to be myth. And should probably rename in the future. I don't normally care about stadiums but since this video is about that, I would go SEC also. Actually the quality of food, parking, facilities, & tailgating are more important in a smaller stadium to me. You can keep your mega stadiums.
Thanks for this, yeah we had to side with SEC. PAC-12 probably next although I’ll have to check the requests to see which conference has the next most requests
People who understand well the scale of the fan bases will tell you that Ohio State v Michigan is the biggest rivalry in American sports, college or pro included.
I am biased, as a Penn State alumni I still think Beaver Stadium should be top 3 depending on the criteria. Only Ohio State and Michigan come close to atmosphere. Got a suggestion for your baseball education, the top 10 Home Runs, and any list without Joe Carter is invalid (as much as it still pains me to see it 30 years later)
I agree, I also felt Penn State were hard done by in this list! We’ll try to pick a list C Teal, but can’t guarantee Joe Carter unless you have a link for us with him in it 😅
The Big Ten did have ten teams until about 1990. By then the brand had stuck enough that when Penn State was added as an 11th team, they decided to just keep the name. The Big XII is similar, though they stayed at 12 teams until 2011. There was a brief period where the Big XII had ten teams and the Big Ten had 12, and many jokes were made about it. Of the five I've been to in the conference, I think I would rank them: 1) Minnesota. Small but very nice (it's easily the newest of the bunch). 2) Michigan. As big as it is, it still manages to be cramped. But it gets points for sheer size. 3) Michigan State. Nothing special about it, but there isn't a bad seat in the house. 4) Illinois. Nicer exterior than Michigan State, but the interior is kind of weirdly designed. There are seats under the upper deck on the east sideline where the view is at least partly obstructed, and I don't really like the gap at the corners around the north stand. 5) Northwestern. Very small, and the corner seats are awful because they're facing the wrong way.
Most college stadiums are on the college campus they are right there with all the other academic buildings and other athletic fields. Also, these colleges are huge. Sone have 40 thousand enrollment. Some even more.
@@DNReacts a small school in college football could still have 10 to 15 thousand students. In the states people remain attached to their schools until death. People also donate millions of dollars to their schools.
As an IU fan I was pretty shocked to see our stadium get so much love because it's not known for its atmosphere. To be fair though that's likely more to do with the fact that we suck every year rather than the stadium itself lol
If you guys think these college stadiums are crazy, watch a compilation of the best high school football stadiums in the USA. 14-18 year olds playing in front of thousands of people on a weekly basis. Even crazier conceptually than college football
Not sure if you're aware yet. Two more schools will be joining the Big Ten at the start of the Fall semester. They will be coming from the Pac 12 and are U.S.C. (University of Southern California) , and U.C.L.A. (University of California in Los Angeles). This is happening because the West Coast schools don't get much exposure in the Eastern 2/3 of the country. Many times the games don't start until 11:00pm in the Eastern Time Zone. The same issue will be present as they play in the Big 10. But, they'll be playing 9 games against teams from the East.
One of the most miserable times I’ve had was at Spartan Stadium. It had snowed about a foot and the wind was howling. But the tickets were free so 🤷♂️
Nah, I'm a Hawkeye from Iowa and there's no doubt the SEC historically spent more on football than other conferences. We actually reduced our capacity by about 8K for one renovation. It made the seats better, but that would just never happen in the SEC. They would find more money and make it bigger while making it better.
next should be the BIG 12 (though their top 2 schools are moving to the SEC very soon). After that PAC 12 (who is losing their top 2 historic stadiums as 2 of their teams are moving to the BIG 10 very soon). Lastly the ACC (which has 2 or 3 great ones, but probably the smallest average seating of the "Power 5" conferences.
Watch The Rivalry its a documentary on Ohio State vs. Meatchicken football. I grew up in Ohio on the Meatchicken borderline. Watch the video and see the hard corp fan bases of both schools. INSANE
The BIG 10 has 14 teams because of the colleges forming super conferences. It’s what almost happened in European soccer with the super league that they tried to form between the diff countries. That’s been going on in college football for the last 20 years. Teams leaving conferences for money. In college football, the SEC is the strongest most powerful conference in all of College football. They have the most money they can steal and buy any team they want and have done so already.
The names of the conferences have been around so long they didn’t change it. The PAC 10 changed to the PAC 12 but even they now have 14 teams I think lol
The Big 12 used to be the Big 8 when I was a kid and it didn't have a single school from Texas! Now that Oklahoma and Texas are moving to the SEC, I'm not sure how many teams will be in the conference. GO POKES!
It may have been only #6 but Because Memorial stadium is number 1 in at least 1 category. 389 consecutive sellouts dating back to 1962. Current capacity is 85,458. Every. Single. Game.
His regular video on the stadiums, where he doesn’t rank them, he actually gives a much better tour of the stadiums and a little bit more history. I’ve not actually been to any of these stadiums, but I personally would rank Beaver Stadium a lot higher.
SEC is properly pronounced by its individual letters S-E-C with "The" in front--"The S-E-C" (never "SEC" :)--same with The ACC), and it has been a bit better than the Big-10 for the last decade, give or take, though not every year. However, the Big-10 is better in most of the other collegiate sports including basketball, wrestling--REAL wrestling (check out Penn State wrestling, especially).
Most college stadiums are right on campus. A few are across the street, but since the whole area supports the university, they are basically on campus. Most big US schools have huge campus's that can take an hour or sometimes 2 hours to walk across. Some are even bigger than that.
@@shawnanderson6313 First off, it is not always a straight walk. Second, I went to a big school that had a fairly small campus at campus at 300 acres. It was a rectangle, but closer to a square. It would take me about about 20 minutes to go all the way across campus. From the off campus apts or the row it took me about 30 minutes to the football stadium. Stadium was all the way on the south part of campus and apts were the to the north. But a campus walk was about 20 minutes. I travel to see many football games. It took me about an hour to walk from the top to bottom of Ohio State. I walked Stanford's campus which is really large. It is several thousand acres. We walk for like 2 hours one day, but you go even further out. Now the main central part was like an 1 hour and 1.5 hours or so. But it keeps going. Those are the only 3 that I remember specifically. But I have walked some very long distances as I have seen many football games in many stadiums. I always will take a couple of walks on all of the campuses when I go to my games. Usually the walk will be about 45 minutes up to about 2 hours, but a a few were longer. Once in a while, it would be like 20 minutes on a smaller campus. Go walk some a 1500 to 5000 acre campuses and see for yourself. I remember some of these schools as being as big or even a lot bigger than Ohio state U. U Minnesota, Texas A and M, Michigan State, Penn St, U Michigan, Army/WestPoint, Duke, Mississippi st, Ole Miss, Uconn, U Oklahoma, U Florida, U Illinois, Indiana U. to name a few that I remember.
The reason why the Big Ten conference does not have 10 teams is primarily because of conference realignment. Originally, much like the big 12, the Big Ten originally had 10 schools. Over the years, the revenue that the schools are bringing from TV deals would attract some schools to various conferences for various reasons. Other schools who were independent decided it was in their best interest to join a conference, so they join the nearest geographic one. Starting in two years, there will actually be two more schools added to the Big Ten conference, USC and UCLA. They will be leaving the PAC 12, which will still be named the Pac 12, but will only have 10 schools, in 2024. Additionally, the big 12 conference currently only has 10 teams. They have four new teams joining the conference this upcoming year, so they will, for one year, at least, have 14 teams. Then in 2024 Texas and Oklahoma will be leaving for the SEC, so the big 12 will once again have 12 schools.
8:30 The University of Nebraska holds the distinction of the longest consecutive streak of home sell-out games in college football, as well as the longest sell-out streak in any American college or professional sport, in terms of actual time. No ticket has gone unsold for a Nebraska home game since 1962. Given the team's futility in recent years (they were once a powerhouse, and are now a joke), that record speaks volumes about Nebraska fans' loyalty *AND* their meek acceptance of bad football. Disclaimer: I'm a Nebraskan. My father took me to my first game in 1977. I have many fond memories of this stadium. However, I refuse to remain devoted to a team which has long since given up on being any better than mediocre. ("Mediocre" is a generous description. They've been horrible for years).
Wow!! If that right Kent; that is insane! Every ticket sold since 1962. Makes me wonder if that’s some kind of record. Thanks for this comment, had a great read
@@DNReacts The COVID year might have broken the streak, now that I think about it. Truthfully, I'm not certain whether it was counted, for purposes of record keeping. Still, when Nebraska plays at home at any other time, 90,000 fans show up every Saturday afternoon. Not bad for a state 50% larger than England with a population half that of Wales.
I don't like this guy. He doesn't know American football, the history of the schools and the architectural history of the school that ties into the stadium - which he knows nothing about. I don't like him. Many times he's using Giggle Earth sites which are sometimes old, but also when the field (or sradium) is under construction. I don't like this guy and his reviews is our college stadiums.
Don't hold back, MCM. Tell us whether you like him or not. LOL!! He is trying to use his dry wit & it won't be everyone's cup of tea. Truthfully I think some of his quips fall flat too. But I have watched some of his stuff. It is alright. Maybe you could start a much better stadium critique channel & DN Reacts could do reviews of it.
The ACC, Atlantic Coast Conference, has had national champions and good football. I like to think it's the best overall conference, not only does it have good football, it is Dominating in Basketball.
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Perspective has a lot to do with why Michigan Stadium doesn't look so big at a glance. In reality the stadium is so huge that the pictures have to be taken from much further away in order to fit the whole bowl into the photo, so it doesn't always look so imposing from areal photos. If you go back and look at arial photos of Michigan Stadium you'll notice a small-looking arena next door. That's actually a 15,000 seat basketball arena it just appears dwarfed next to Michigan Stadium. I've been lucky to go to many Michigan games, being in that stadium is an incredible experience
So for Camp Randall Stadium home of the Wisconsin Badgers that building at one end of the stadium is the UW Field House. Its a 10k seat arena that used to host the school basketball and volleyball teams. The basketball teams moved to a new arena in 1998 but volleyball is still played there.
Thank you Lee, appreciate this info, great read!
Should definitely do a reaction to Wisconsin volleyball 😂
@@Barfarve 👀
Michigan's stadium is called "The Big House".
Thank you for letting us know. Seen a few comments saying the narrator got this wrong!
@DN Reacts Narrator wasn't wrong, he was just trolling. I believe you lot would say "taking the piss?"
@thevoxdeus I figured as much, but just wanted to make sure they knew the real name.
@@SistaSol Yep, I got you
Also, how could it NOT be ranked #1???
〽️〽️〽️
Beaver Stadium at #5 is a crime. It is arguably the best atmosphere in college football.
What is better about Big 10 football is that it is played--at least for most of the second half of the season--in REAL football weather--where you compete against the elements as well as your opponents. Nothing better than a blustery snow game.
Camp Randall in WI is the most historic. It was the largest staging area for Wisconsin troops during the Civil War. Over 70K soldiers were trained there.
Wow, thanks for this info Rath! Appreciate it
Including the 2nd, 6th and 7th regiments which comprised a large portion of the famed Iron Brigade. Camp Randall was also a prisoner of war camp. Some Confederate soldiers died there and are buried nearby, the northern most confederate cemetary.
There used to be 10 teams in the Big Ten. Same with the Big 12 having 12 teams. With the conference realignment in the past decade or so, there's a different amount of teams in each conference than when they were formed.
Then once USC and UCLA are added it will then be 16 teams.
I've been to Ohio Stadium & the Big House. The atmosphere of a Big 10 football game is breath taking. O-H-I-O
Not sure who this guy was ranking the stadiums but as he even said, Nebraska Memorial Stadium, the one you guys first liked, really is rated the #1 stadium by ESPN, and (a sports magazine which I cannot remember the name of), and is called "The Cathedral of all Stadiums." While on vacation through the USA we took a tour (bc the Nebraska Capitol building is also rated #1 so we had to see these beauties) and it really is the best. Absolutely phenomenal.
One thing that is interesting about OSU's horseshoe, is that before it was renovated is that it also was a dormitory. My cousin's daughter was among the last group of students who lived in the dorm. She had to move to another dorm thanks to renovation. Even though it grates me to correct the "narrator" being an OSU fan, but the Michigan stadium is known as "The Big House"
Big Ten stadiums are among the oldest in college football. Michigan once had plans to add an upper deck (which would be insane) but for some reason never did. Michigan stadium once squeezed over 115,000 in there for a game.
Think of the conference names as "brands", The Big-10 was made up of ten schools back in the day. But as TV revenue increased exponentially, many schools changed conferences and some independents, for example Penn State, decided in would be in their better financial interest to join a conference. The most conference names had been trademarked by then. Thus they retained their names.
Thank you for this Will, makes sense. Appreciate the info
Michigan Stadium seats so many people because they give you like a 16" spot on an aluminum bleacher to cram yourself. If you've got a fat guy on either side of you, forget about it. The most uncomfortable venue I've ever watched a sporting event at. Although the atmosphere is incredible, apart from the drunken hall of fame coach sitting 2 rows down from you who second guesses every play call and could definitely run the team better.
I agree 100% 👍
tbf that's most big college stadiums.
Michigan may take that a little further than most, but many (most?) do the same thing.
Love your channel guys. Yes the boxes you see are a mix of luxury seating and press areas. The press areas will be on the side that the midfield logo faces
Thank you Steven! Appreciate the support. Thanks for this context.
Crowd noise is very important for the home team in American Football, because the defense is typically just reacting to the offensive formation with flexible plans set in place, whereas the offense needs to communicate very specific information to all players when something about the play is altered. As a result, when your team is on defense, you try to get the crowd all pumped up so that the offense can’t hear and either messes up the play or someone mishears the timing of the “snap” (the play start) and jumps early, causing a penalty.
This is why Beaver Stadium is notorious. The acoustics in there for some reason are deafening.
As an SEC fan I can agree. The Big 10 has a much deeper history and tradition background though. Michigan is known and "The Big House." If you get a chance look into the history of college football rivalries. You will be in for a treat.
Big 12 and maybe Pac 12 have some really nice stadiums.
(And just so no one starts into a tirade, SEC is not pronounced "seck", it's always ess-ee-see. Great vid and GO BUCKS!)
Thank you Casey, appreciate this. My track record with pronunciations isn’t great 😅
SEC is above and beyond any other conference. It just means more.
Seck sounds better
You should look up the old big ten logo for when they had 11 teams. There was a hidden 11 in negative space and I just love that kid of attention to detail.
Love this James. Just Googled the Logo and saw how they embedded the 11. That’s quality!
Generally speaking, college stadiums are on campus except for some schools in dense urban areas. Ohio State has a huge number of sports facilities on campus; they compete in more intercollegiate sports than any other university and most have dedicated venues. OSU could almost host the Olympics though they'd need to build a velodrome.
Others have mentioned press boxes and luxury suites, but those same boxes often have rooms for both team's offensive and defensive coordinators to help with playcalling. These coaches are right under the head coach in the org chart but above the position-specific assistant coaches (quarterback coach, wide receiver coach, etc.). The coordinators have radio headsets to talk back and forth with the head coach about what they are seeing from up top and what type of plays they think should be called. Not sure about college, but in the NFL a quarterback and linebacker typically wear an ear piece to communicate the plays being called to the other players on the field.
This is great, thanks for the info Mario
@@DNReacts To add to what Mario said, its not always a coordinator up in the box, but there are always coaches from offense and defense. Some coordinators like being on the field so they can talk with the players, so then they will have one or more of the position coaches (and other staff members) in the box relaying down what they are seeing.
Its all really a matter of preference for coaches, but every team takes advantage of having that higher viewpoint. And that goes for lower levels too. Its why you will often see one side with a tall stand and the other with a much smaller. They need to build one side high for the box for coaches, so they might as well build the seating that high as well. And that goes all the way down to high school. You will often see high schools with one big metal stands with a coaches box and then the other side having stands that can only fit a few dozen people.
In college, on the field players are not mic'd up. All communications from the coach to the players are done with either running the play onto the field by a replacement player, hand signals or signs.
The Big10 is the oldest established intercollegiate conference in the US. Established in the 1890’s and consisting of 10 teams for nearly a century. University of Chicago departed and they added Michigan State in 1950. They wouldn’t have an 11th team until Penn State joined in 1990. Since then TV revenue (markets) has driven expansion. The Big10 kept its historical name despite their expansion. They have added teams in the New York (Rutgers) and Los Angeles (Soon to be USC and UCLA) to grab hold of the 3 biggest TV markets in the US, already having Chicago established. A name change every time they add a new team would be crazy. Example: 1990 - Big11. 2011 -Big12(already a Big12, that doesn’t work). 2014 - Big14. 2024 - Big16. And there’s already talk of expanding again up to 20 teams. This doesn’t mention the brand recognition that comes from a century plus of being known as the BigTen Conference.
So if no one has said it yet, Michigan is called "The Big House". And it is the 3rd largest sporting venue in the world. Only two cricket stadiums in India hold more people. Great vid.
The second biggest is actually in North Korea not India.
How are race tracks not included in sporting venues? The Indianapolis Motor Speedway seats over 400,000
@@ericm9029 Nobody knows the true seating capacity at that North Korean stadium since western journalists are kept away.
Its actually called the out-house because of its similarities to a toilet bowl and the product of their athletic programs
@@Gdogg-wu5kp theyre just a cluster of moveable stands, they arent stadiumsZ
The Big 10 has been around generations. The name became a brand, so they can't change it and would refuse if anyone tried to compel them to. They'll actually grow to 16 teams in 2024. Even then, they won't change it and American college sports fans wouldn't want them to. Additionally, the Big 12 currently has 10 teams, will have 14 teams in 2023-24, then down to 12 starting in 2024-25. BUT, they may expand again and get to anywhere from 14 to 20 teams. Since they're a relatively younger conference (founded in 1996), at that point, they may rebrand.
The building at the end of Camp Randall Stadium is where the basketball team originally played their games. It's called The Fieldhouse. They now play at The Kohl Center.
Thanks for this info Darrin! Appreciate it
as a Michigan fan the stadium in person is just massive and photos do not give it justice.
I know it's a bit long, but there's a video called "The CRAZIEST college football season of all-time" which covers the 2007 college football season. It's about 20 minutes, so I understand if that's too long for the channel, but it's extremely interesting and informative.
Hi Max, we’re actually thinking about doing this one. Hopefully everyone won’t mind it’s longer. We’ve had a lot suggesting we take a look at this. Would be one of the longest watches we’ve done so far, but we’re happy to do it when we can get it into the schedule.
@@DNReacts Please do. That season was absolutely nuts and most likely nothing of the kind will happen again in our lifetimes.
For Wisconsin, Camp Randall, that building is the old field house. It was used as a base for the civil war. The field house was converted into an arena for basketball and volleyball. Eventually we built our own arena for that called the Kohl center which most college programs cant even touch.
I went to Indiana and I'm from Columbus, so I'm familiar with both IU and Ohio State's stadiums. Putting Indiana ahead of Penn State is absurd. I love my Hooisers but the stadium experience leaves something to be desired. One of the reasons I feel in love with Indiana is the huge number of beautiful limestone buildings. Its a spectacular campus, but not a good football school. Basketball though...
SEC and Big 10: huge stadiums; high quality college football played in them
Pac 12: smaller, but in GORGEOUS settings
NFL: smaller, but 1/2 of them are LUXURIOUS (and w/DISTINCT designs)
Went to school at Wisconsin and spent a lot of time at Camp Randall. The house-like building at the end of the field is called, surprisingly, the Field House. It's where they play the basketball games.
Those building located in the stadium are the visitors and home team locker rooms, gameday training and medical rooms, player lounges, weight rooms, dining areas, athletic offices, and gameday HIGHSCOOL ATHLETES recruiting....those the university are targeting for scholarships to play for the school .......and VIP areas for alums/ donors on gameday.
Michigan is called the "Big House"! Surprised no one corrected it yet! 🤷♂️
Most college stadiums are on campus, exceptions being a few schools in big cities where space is a luxury. Presently 4 college teams share a stadium with the city's NFL team, for the same reason of lack of space to build their own stadium. Pitt, Miami, South Florida (Tampa) and UNLV (Las Vegas).
Coaches up in the Press Box too !
Unique to AFB coaches use the birds eye view to call down plays or information to the coaches on the sidelines.
Notice they wear headset on the field.
Even stories of signal stealing from the eyes in the ski ..
Thanks Robert, appreciate this info!
I guess it wouldn't be considered a "stadium" but regarding capacity, the largest sports venue would be the Indianapolis Motor Speedway @ 257,327 (permanent seats) - 400,000 grand total
The Horseshoe at night is an Elite atmosphere. But also Penn State, Wisconsin and Michigan they are all places to experience a night game at.
The Hospital is next to the Football Stadiums because the Children who are there have Cancer, and by being close to the Hospital ,.it give the family and the kids something to look forward to ,and let the kids and the family know people out there care about them and give them hope!
Yes the University of Iowa Wave is amazing! The fact the narrator on the original video said it's annoying actually makes me angry. If you can't stop eating a hotdog for 1 minute at the end of the 1st quarter to wave to sick kids without grumbling about it, you've got issues.
Not only is University of Michigan stadium the largest college stadium in the country, it's the largest stadium period. It all so holds the top five spots for largest college crowds ever.
The Wisconsin stadium the building on the endzone is called the field house and used to be where the Badgers played basketball.
Context for Maryland’s stadium (UMD College Park grad), MD was in the ACC (Atlantic Coast Conference) forever until jumping ship to the B10, so historically it’s been more focused on basketball and lacrosse.
Also used to be “Byrd Stadium” but he wasn’t open to racial equality back in the day.
The horseshoe layout is bc there’s no room to build, it sits on campus.
Michigan stadiums nickname is not the large house. It is the Big House, the reason I know is, I am from Michigan and Michigan wolverine fan💯👊
IMichigan Wolverines stadium is called "The Big House"
FYI, Beaver Stadium is about to undergo a massive renovation that will reduce seating to about 102k. They Will replace almost all of the bleacher seats with chair-back seating.
As for the SEC, I guess you have to choose your priorities. They are a great football conference, but if you need a heart surgeon I suggest a big ten grad.
The majority of the stadiums are built on campus property that is in/connected to the campus. There are times however, a school with break/buy ground and build a new stadium “away” from the campus grounds.
When building these stadiums the cost of the land, materials and construction often will choose to place an athletics facility joined to it for cost reasons, those are the buildings you see at the end of the field, Cardinal Stadium here in Louisville has that design.
Thank you for this Titus. Great info!
Calling “The Big House” the “Large House” has to be the most unfunny joke I’ve ever heard in my life. I don’t know if is the accent, monotone, or just the whole delivery itself 😂😂😂😂
Northwestern's stadium replaced the old stone Dyche Stadium that was there when I was going to school. Michigan's stadium is known as "The Big House".
Watching USA vs. Great Britain in World Baseball Classic right now, so more reasons for you to learn the sport. One of the top Major league prospects is on your team.
The next conference I think you should take a look at is the Pac 12 conference. A lot of people always go straight to the ACC and the big 12 after looking at the SEC and Big Ten, which don’t get me wrong they’re all nice, but I think the Pac 12 is often times overlooked.
The Big 12!
@@areguapiri isn’t that what I wrote? I looked at my sentence. I wrote the big 12. I suggested that they look at the Pac 12, and then I mention that most RUclipsrs go straight for the ACC and the big 12.
I’m not sure I can take the guy seriously in rating since he can’t look up something as simple as what a stadium is called. It’s the BIG HOUSE!
Thank you for the context, appreciate it!
As a Minnesota Alum, I fully expected Huntington Bank Stadium to be 14th lmao! I mean, it's newer and pretty nicely built; but on gameday, for atmosphere alone, I wouldn't put it higher than 8-10.
That’s the field house behind camp Randall, where we play volleyball (shoutout wisco volleyball)
It's always a different perspective when the stadiums are full of fans. They look better. Many college football stadiums are right on campus, and students and fans can walk to the stadiums.
...Also, for many college stadiums, the building you see right behind one of the endzones is a "field house" for locker rooms, offices, etc. for the players and coaches.
He joked about the beaver on the stadium but it’s actually a mountain lion. You guys might be more familiar with the name of puma or cougar, same thing. Penn State teams are called the Nittany lions, which is a name that pays homage to the mountain lions that used to roam in the area around Mount Nittany, a mountain just outside town. And if you’re wondering what Nittany is it is a word derived from a Native American language.
I love it when a foreigner talks about American College Football ... lol The Ohio State University stadium is called "The Shoe" - as it was built in the shape of a horseshoe - but the open end has been built in but you still the feel of a horseshoe. Go Buckeyes!
I live about 5-10 mins from penn states beaver stadium. I can hear the crowd from outside my door during some games
Well done. You guys are great. The narrator? Not so much. Not buying his knowledge, opinion, or humor. For example, the joke about calling it the Big 10 was lame and cries out for explanation. And, it's not the "large" house. It's the "big" house.
Thank you TB. Really appreciate the support! Maybe DN Reacts should try their own narration of these (once we have the knowledge needed of course 😅)
Half of Big Tens schools are just academic schools with terrible athletic programs. And bringing USC and UCLA alone will back fire if they can’t get OR/Wash
Didn't he pronounce Purdue as perjue?Perdue? Also not having Ryan field as the worst shows how wrong he is, Ryan field is notorious for how bad it is.
As an Ohio State fan, Michigan not being second (arguably first) is a travesty.
I'm an Ohio State fan but Minnesota has the best stadium in the conference
The buildings next to stadiums are called "field houses": en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Field_house
They are for indoor sports as well as support infrastructure (locker rooms, equipment storage, coaches' offices, etc.)
Thank you Nick! I’ll have a read of the link
We all feel a little bit lied to. It is understandable in a way. 50 years ago a college would rarely change conference. Then some conferences disappeared & jumping to another conference became not so 'uncommon'. The numbered conferences were doomed to be myth. And should probably rename in the future. I don't normally care about stadiums but since this video is about that, I would go SEC also. Actually the quality of food, parking, facilities, & tailgating are more important in a smaller stadium to me. You can keep your mega stadiums.
Thanks for this, yeah we had to side with SEC. PAC-12 probably next although I’ll have to check the requests to see which conference has the next most requests
People who understand well the scale of the fan bases will tell you that Ohio State v Michigan is the biggest rivalry in American sports, college or pro included.
By the way, the conference is not called "SEC " it is pronounced by the individual letters S-E-C for South Eastern Conference.
Him calling it the Large House made me instantly loathe him.
I am biased, as a Penn State alumni I still think Beaver Stadium should be top 3 depending on the criteria. Only Ohio State and Michigan come close to atmosphere. Got a suggestion for your baseball education, the top 10 Home Runs, and any list without Joe Carter is invalid (as much as it still pains me to see it 30 years later)
I agree, I also felt Penn State were hard done by in this list! We’ll try to pick a list C Teal, but can’t guarantee Joe Carter unless you have a link for us with him in it 😅
@DN Reacts 99% of the top 10 videos on Home Runs will have it. It is almost universally regarded as a top 5.
The Big Ten did have ten teams until about 1990. By then the brand had stuck enough that when Penn State was added as an 11th team, they decided to just keep the name. The Big XII is similar, though they stayed at 12 teams until 2011. There was a brief period where the Big XII had ten teams and the Big Ten had 12, and many jokes were made about it.
Of the five I've been to in the conference, I think I would rank them:
1) Minnesota. Small but very nice (it's easily the newest of the bunch).
2) Michigan. As big as it is, it still manages to be cramped. But it gets points for sheer size.
3) Michigan State. Nothing special about it, but there isn't a bad seat in the house.
4) Illinois. Nicer exterior than Michigan State, but the interior is kind of weirdly designed. There are seats under the upper deck on the east sideline where the view is at least partly obstructed, and I don't really like the gap at the corners around the north stand.
5) Northwestern. Very small, and the corner seats are awful because they're facing the wrong way.
Most college stadiums are on the college campus they are right there with all the other academic buildings and other athletic fields. Also, these colleges are huge. Sone have 40 thousand enrollment. Some even more.
This is crazy Gregory! The College local to me has around 700 enrolments each year in comparison!!
@@DNReacts a small school in college football could still have 10 to 15 thousand students. In the states people remain attached to their schools until death. People also donate millions of dollars to their schools.
As an IU fan I was pretty shocked to see our stadium get so much love because it's not known for its atmosphere. To be fair though that's likely more to do with the fact that we suck every year rather than the stadium itself lol
If you guys think these college stadiums are crazy, watch a compilation of the best high school football stadiums in the USA. 14-18 year olds playing in front of thousands of people on a weekly basis. Even crazier conceptually than college football
Nebraska Cornhusker has the longest consecutive sold out games than any other College team. A total of 389 games or 60 years
Not sure if you're aware yet. Two more schools will be joining the Big Ten at the start of the Fall semester. They will be coming from the Pac 12 and are U.S.C. (University of Southern California) , and U.C.L.A. (University of California in Los Angeles). This is happening because the West Coast schools don't get much exposure in the Eastern 2/3 of the country. Many times the games don't start until 11:00pm in the Eastern Time Zone. The same issue will be present as they play in the Big 10. But, they'll be playing 9 games against teams from the East.
Thank you for this Darrin. Had seen someone mention in a previous video about some changes happening but appreciate the info!
you guys should check out the iowa wave tradition, one of the best in all of sports
One of the most miserable times I’ve had was at Spartan Stadium. It had snowed about a foot and the wind was howling. But the tickets were free so 🤷♂️
Nah, I'm a Hawkeye from Iowa and there's no doubt the SEC historically spent more on football than other conferences. We actually reduced our capacity by about 8K for one renovation. It made the seats better, but that would just never happen in the SEC. They would find more money and make it bigger while making it better.
next should be the BIG 12 (though their top 2 schools are moving to the SEC very soon). After that PAC 12 (who is losing their top 2 historic stadiums as 2 of their teams are moving to the BIG 10 very soon). Lastly the ACC (which has 2 or 3 great ones, but probably the smallest average seating of the "Power 5" conferences.
Watch The Rivalry its a documentary on Ohio State vs. Meatchicken football. I grew up in Ohio on the Meatchicken borderline. Watch the video and see the hard corp fan bases of both schools. INSANE
The BIG 10 has 14 teams because of the colleges forming super conferences. It’s what almost happened in European soccer with the super league that they tried to form between the diff countries. That’s been going on in college football for the last 20 years. Teams leaving conferences for money. In college football, the SEC is the strongest most powerful conference in all of College football. They have the most money they can steal and buy any team they want and have done so already.
There used to be 10 teams. Just like there used to be 12 big 12 teams
Thank you Mike!
The names of the conferences have been around so long they didn’t change it. The PAC 10 changed to the PAC 12 but even they now have 14 teams I think lol
The Big 12 used to be the Big 8 when I was a kid and it didn't have a single school from Texas! Now that Oklahoma and Texas are moving to the SEC, I'm not sure how many teams will be in the conference. GO POKES!
Little fact: the big 10 pac 12 and big 12 did have the corresponding number of teams as their name but now none of them do. Lol
It may have been only #6 but Because Memorial stadium is number 1 in at least 1 category. 389 consecutive sellouts dating back to 1962. Current capacity is 85,458. Every. Single. Game.
That’s crazy! Thanks for the info 😀
Iowa Kinnick Stadium is awesome. Fans are right on top of the players yellling at them. Only 2 feet between the stands and the players.
Wow! 2ft is so so close! Can imagine the atmosphere
Michigan’s stadium is M Bighouse, not large house. And we hate Ohio st. One of the oldest rivalries in college football!
His regular video on the stadiums, where he doesn’t rank them, he actually gives a much better tour of the stadiums and a little bit more history. I’ve not actually been to any of these stadiums, but I personally would rank Beaver Stadium a lot higher.
SEC is properly pronounced by its individual letters S-E-C with "The" in front--"The S-E-C" (never "SEC" :)--same with The ACC), and it has been a bit better than the Big-10 for the last decade, give or take, though not every year. However, the Big-10 is better in most of the other collegiate sports including basketball, wrestling--REAL wrestling (check out Penn State wrestling, especially).
Michigan along with having the largest capacity is perfectly symmetrical.
You gents always put a smile on my face. It’s cool watching your reaction to what we Americans sometimes take for granted.
Thanks Marco! 😀
I'm a Big Ten guy, being from Iowa. But, there's not question that the S.E.C. has the better stadiums for atmosphere
Check out the Pac 12 next. I think the have the most unique and picturesque collection of stadiums in the country.
Thanks for the suggestion!
Ross-Ade Stadium just went through a major renovation
Very nice, thanks for the heads up. Will give it a search 🙏
The guy’s humor kind of misses deadpan and skips over into unfunny, but Michigan’s stadium is called “The Big House”
Most college stadiums are right on campus. A few are across the street, but since the whole area supports the university, they are basically on campus. Most big US schools have huge campus's that can take an hour or sometimes 2 hours to walk across. Some are even bigger than that.
2 Hours really ? I mean the average person walk about 5 mph. You saying there are campus that are 10 miles wide ? Which campus is that huge ?
@@shawnanderson6313 First off, it is not always a straight walk. Second, I went to a big school that had a fairly small campus at campus at 300 acres. It was a rectangle, but closer to a square. It would take me about about 20 minutes to go all the way across campus. From the off campus apts or the row it took me about 30 minutes to the football stadium. Stadium was all the way on the south part of campus and apts were the to the north. But a campus walk was about 20 minutes. I travel to see many football games. It took me about an hour to walk from the top to bottom of Ohio State. I walked Stanford's campus which is really large. It is several thousand acres. We walk for like 2 hours one day, but you go even further out. Now the main central part was like an 1 hour and 1.5 hours or so. But it keeps going. Those are the only 3 that I remember specifically. But I have walked some very long distances as I have seen many football games in many stadiums. I always will take a couple of walks on all of the campuses when I go to my games. Usually the walk will be about 45 minutes up to about 2 hours, but a a few were longer. Once in a while, it would be like 20 minutes on a smaller campus. Go walk some a 1500 to 5000 acre campuses and see for yourself. I remember some of these schools as being as big or even a lot bigger than Ohio state U. U Minnesota, Texas A and M, Michigan State, Penn St, U Michigan, Army/WestPoint, Duke, Mississippi st, Ole Miss, Uconn, U Oklahoma, U Florida, U Illinois, Indiana U. to name a few that I remember.
The reason why the Big Ten conference does not have 10 teams is primarily because of conference realignment. Originally, much like the big 12, the Big Ten originally had 10 schools. Over the years, the revenue that the schools are bringing from TV deals would attract some schools to various conferences for various reasons. Other schools who were independent decided it was in their best interest to join a conference, so they join the nearest geographic one. Starting in two years, there will actually be two more schools added to the Big Ten conference, USC and UCLA. They will be leaving the PAC 12, which will still be named the Pac 12, but will only have 10 schools, in 2024. Additionally, the big 12 conference currently only has 10 teams. They have four new teams joining the conference this upcoming year, so they will, for one year, at least, have 14 teams. Then in 2024 Texas and Oklahoma will be leaving for the SEC, so the big 12 will once again have 12 schools.
Next year there will be 16 teams in "The Big Ten", with USC & UCLA joining.
8:30
The University of Nebraska holds the distinction of the longest consecutive streak of home sell-out games in college football, as well as the longest sell-out streak in any American college or professional sport, in terms of actual time.
No ticket has gone unsold for a Nebraska home game since 1962. Given the team's futility in recent years (they were once a powerhouse, and are now a joke), that record speaks volumes about Nebraska fans' loyalty *AND* their meek acceptance of bad football.
Disclaimer: I'm a Nebraskan. My father took me to my first game in 1977. I have many fond memories of this stadium. However, I refuse to remain devoted to a team which has long since given up on being any better than mediocre. ("Mediocre" is a generous description. They've been horrible for years).
Wow!! If that right Kent; that is insane! Every ticket sold since 1962. Makes me wonder if that’s some kind of record. Thanks for this comment, had a great read
@@DNReacts
The COVID year might have broken the streak, now that I think about it. Truthfully, I'm not certain whether it was counted, for purposes of record keeping.
Still, when Nebraska plays at home at any other time, 90,000 fans show up every Saturday afternoon. Not bad for a state 50% larger than England with a population half that of Wales.
Teams have changed conferences over the years and the names were never updated.
Michigan is the biggest buy not the loudest because of the way its build. It's build outward instead of upward.
Yeah we’ve noticed this a lot Bernard. Makes the atmospheres we’ve seen all the more impressive, knowing most the stadiums have that fanned out effect
React to the Ohio state and Michigan rivalry
Added to the list thanks Daniel
I don't like this guy. He doesn't know American football, the history of the schools and the architectural history of the school that ties into the stadium - which he knows nothing about. I don't like him. Many times he's using Giggle Earth sites which are sometimes old, but also when the field (or sradium) is under construction. I don't like this guy and his reviews is our college stadiums.
Thanks MCM. Appreciate this. Maybe we should try to do our own DN Reacts Stadiums reviews when we’ve got enough knowledge ourselves 😀
Don't hold back, MCM. Tell us whether you like him or not. LOL!! He is trying to use his dry wit & it won't be everyone's cup of tea. Truthfully I think some of his quips fall flat too. But I have watched some of his stuff. It is alright. Maybe you could start a much better stadium critique channel & DN Reacts could do reviews of it.
@@hardtackbeans9790 I agree ,terrible choice for an narrator.His style is all wrong for american sports.
The ACC, Atlantic Coast Conference, has had national champions and good football. I like to think it's the best overall conference, not only does it have good football, it is Dominating in Basketball.
Thanks for this Titus. Think it’s between ACC and PAC12 (from memory) as to which conference is up next
The Big 12 is cool.
@@areguapiri the Big 12 Was cool, they've been hemorrhaging teams lately.