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Today we visit the University of Missouri and their amazing Faurot Field at Memorial Stadium! History: Faurot Field at Memorial Stadium, nicknamed “The Zou,” is the University of Missouri’s primary football venue in Columbia, Missouri, and home to the Missouri Tigers since 1926. With a current capacity of 62,621, it is the third-largest sports facility in Missouri. The stadium was dedicated as a memorial to 112 alumni and students who died in World War I. Built in a natural valley south of campus, the original 25,000-seat horseshoe-shaped structure featured a track and grass field. The north end’s grassy berm became home to the iconic Rock “M,” created in 1927 from leftover construction stones by freshman students. The “M” remains a central tradition, protected from pranks and maintained through annual whitewashing by new students. Seniors often take a rock from it after their final home game. Other traditions include the “MIZ-ZOU” chant, which began in 1976, and the historic post-upset practice of carrying goalposts to Harpo’s bar. The stadium has hosted not only college games but also Missouri high school championships and, until 2012, the local “Providence Bowl” rivalry game. Expansions began in 1949 with double-decked grandstands, completed in phases by 1965. In 1978, the south end zone was enclosed with 10,800 permanent seats, raising capacity to about 75,000. Playing surfaces evolved from grass to Omniturf (1985), which proved unpopular, back to grass in 1995, and later to FieldTurf (2003) and AstroTurf (2021). Permanent lighting was installed in 1996, enabling regular night games. A Diamond Vision scoreboard debuted in 1997, replaced by larger high-definition boards in 2009 and 2014. In 2000, a 15-story press box and luxury suite tower opened. Leading up to Missouri’s 2012 entry into the SEC, the field design was updated, premium seating added, and Marching Mizzou relocated. From 2013–14, the press box was renovated, the Rock M hill moved closer to the field, and an east-side upper deck added over 6,000 seats. A major $89 million south end zone overhaul finished in 2019 brought new suites, clubs, locker rooms, training facilities, and fan amenities, reducing capacity to its present level. In 2023, the Board of Curators approved a $250 million north end zone renovation to be completed for the stadium’s 100th anniversary in 2026. This will include a new video board, premium seating, LED lighting with light-show capability, improved concourses, a Rock M Club, and a smaller but upgraded general admission hill. Capacity will rise to about 65,000. Faurot Field has seen some of the largest crowds in Missouri sports history, with its record of 75,298 set in 1980 against Penn State. Other notable attendances came during the late 1970s and early ’80s, often topping 72,000. Since renovations in the 2010s, top modern crowds have reached over 71,000, including SEC matchups against Georgia and Arkansas in 2014. Beyond football, the venue has hosted concerts, most notably a 1994 Rolling Stones show that helped fund the return to natural grass. Faurot Field stands as a blend of history, tradition, and modernization—anchored by the Rock M, the roar of “MIZ-ZOU,” and nearly a century of Missouri football heritage. Thank you for watching and please Like, Subscribe, & Comment on where to head to next! Music Song: The Way It Burns (Instrumental Version) Artist: Jesse Lawrence Courtesy Of: https://www.epidemicsound.com Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faurot_...