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Riggs Field Coordinates 34°40′54″N 82°50′20″W / 34.68167°N 82.83889°W / 34.68167; -82.83889Coordinates: 34°40′54″N 82°50′20″W / 34.68167°N 82.83889°W / 34.68167; -82.83889 Opened 1915 Owner Clemson University Operator Clemson University Surface Grass Capacity 6500 Tenants Clemson Tigers (NCAA) (1915-present) Riggs Field is a 6,500-capacity soccer-specific stadium located in Clemson, South Carolina. The stadium is home to the Clemson Tigers men's and women's soccer teams. It has also hosted the NCAA Men's Soccer Championship in 1987. The stadium opened for soccer in 1987. Previous to this, it hosted a variety of the school's athletic teams, including the football team from 1915 to 1941. It is named after Walter Riggs, the former coach of the football team and president of Clemson Agricultural College of South Carolina (1910-1924). [1] As first laid out in 1915, the football field, surrounded by a cinder track was at the east end of Riggs Field, tennis courts were in the center section, and the baseball diamond was at the west end of the space. A new baseball field was later laid out on an area of campus separate from the previous sports complex, and expanded tennis facilities replaced the former diamond. Riggs Field now generally only refers to the eastern portion where the football team played until 1941. The cinder track was eliminated during the remodelling as a soccer venue. It is now referred to as "Historic Riggs Field". Riggs Field in pop culture The original configuration of the track and former football stadium, sans bleachers, was featured in a long scene in the latter portion of the 1974 Burt Lancaster movie The Midnight Man, filmed in part at Clemson University in 1973. References ^ Grubb, C. Alan, "The Master Executive Walter Merritt Riggs, 1910-1924", McKale, Donald M., and Reel, Jerome V., editors, "Tradition: A History of the Clemson Presidency", Mercer University Press, Macon, Georgia, 1988, Library of Congress card number 87-31382, ISBN 0-86554-296-1. External links Information at Clemson athletics v · d · eClemson University Academics Schools and Institutes: Clemson University Graduate School • Clemson University International Center for Automotive Research • Calhoun Honors College Athletics ACC • Tiger Rag • Baseball (2010 • Coach • Stadium) • Basketball (2009-10 • Coach • Coliseum) • Football (2009 • Coach • Stadium) • Soccer (Coach) • Rugby • Carolina-Clemson rivalry • Clemson Tigers Sports Network • O'Rourke–McFadden Trophy • Riggs Field • South Carolina-Clemson brawl • The Bowden Bowl • Textile Bowl Campus Clemson College Sheep Barn • Fort Hill • Fike Recreation Center • City of Clemson • Hanover House • Images • Johnstone Hall • Lee and Lowry Hall • South Carolina Botanical Garden • Old Stone Church and Cemetery • Student life Spittoono • Clemson Area Transit • WSBF-FM • ESSO Club • Crescent Amtrak • Lake Hartwell People Alumni • Thomas Green Clemson • John C. Calhoun • Benjamin Tillman v · d · eCurrent Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) soccer and lacrosse stadiums Cobb Stadium (Miami) • Fetzer Field† & Henry Stadium† (North Carolina) • Klöckner Stadium† (Virginia) • Koskinen Stadium† (Duke) • Ludwig Field & Byrd Stadium† (Maryland)  • Method Road Soccer Stadium & WakeMed Soccer Park (NC State) • Newton Campus Soccer Field (Boston College) • Riggs Field (Clemson) • Seminole Soccer Complex (Florida State) • Spry Stadium (Wake Forest) • Virginia Tech Lacrosse and Soccer Stadium† (Virginia Tech) † - Lacrosse stadium This article about a sports venue in South Carolina is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.v · d · e