Ranking the toughest road environments to play in after the Big Ten’s new additions
Welcome to a new era of college football, and a new era in the Big Ten. Nowadays when we go through the conference for recruiting rankings or power rankings there are 18 programs to address, not 14.
Eventually, that number will grow again and it will take days to make it to the end. But 18 is still manageable, especially when there is a material change in the ranking.
That’s the case here with the best stadium gameday environments in the conference. USC, UCLA, Oregon and Washington all bring strong football teams to the mix, but where are their home venues ranked amongst the rest of the Big Ten?
A necessary note: I considered ranking Northwestern’s Ryan Field No. 1 on this list solely due to the grass length and high school atmosphere. But I thought better. So here is every Big Ten home venue ranked by gameday atmosphere:
Ryan Field (Northwestern)
Capacity: 47,130
Built: 1926
It’s a high school football stadium.
L.A Memorial Coliseum (USC)
Capacity: 77,500
Built: 1923
It’s a tough place to play when USC is really rolling. But even given the team’s star power in the past and pedigree, the place is rarely full and struggles to get loud.
This changes if Lincoln Riley brings the program back to Pete Carroll-era energy.
Rose Bowl Stadium (UCLA)
Capacity: 89,702
Built: 1922
It’s the best venue in college football, by far. The problem is: nobody goes to UCLA games.
SHI Stadium (Rutgers)
Capacity: 52,454
Built: 1994
Rutgers doesn’t have much history in this building, or success for that matter. The toughest part here is having to travel to New Jersey.
Memorial Stadium (Indiana)
Capacity: 52,626
Built: 1960
It’s a tough ranking when the most notable night game moments there are Ohio State blowing the doors off an Indiana team. The fans want the team to be competitive, but it just isn’t.
Huntington Bank Stadium (Minnesota)
Capacity: 50,805
Built: 2009
My most vivid memory from this stadium, aside from Jack Coan absolutely shredding the Gophers in 2019, is Vikings K Blair Walsh missing the 25-yard field goal to lose a playoff game. It’s a weird venue without much identity.
SECU Stadium (Maryland)
Capacity: 54,000
Built: 1950
File this under the ‘Indiana’ category of “I don’t know, not much good history there. But it looks like a lot of fun when the team is competitive.” Was a legit venue last year for the near-upset against Ohio State.
Memorial Stadium (Illinois)
Capacity: 60,670
Built: 1923
The place has some juice when Illinois is good, given there isn’t much else happening in Champaign. Bielema has a chance to make it a really scary place to play.
Ross-Ade Stadium (Purdue)
Capacity: 57,236
Built: 1924
I think this is an underrated venue, especially when the Spoilermakers are living up to the name.
Michigan Stadium (Michigan)
Capacity: 107,601
Built: 1927
Absolutely the single most overrated stadium in the country. It’s just big, that’s it. Plus half the crowd is sitting in a different zip code. This isn’t the modern marvel Michigan fans make it out to be.
Husky Stadium (Washington)
Capacity: 70,083
Built: 1920
Conference realignment stinks. But one positive: watching Big Ten teams travel to Seattle to visit this gem. It’s a legit atmosphere for every big game.
Memorial Stadium (Nebraska)
Capacity: 90,000
Built: 1923
Given the ongoing sellout streak with is completely fraudulent, I will challenge myself to say positive things about this venue.
It’s massive and it’s loud (when Nebraska is relevant, which hasn’t been the case for a decade). It will be a tough place to play when Matt Rhule gets things going.
Spartan Stadium (Michigan State)
Capacity: 75,005
Built: 1923
The Mark D’Antonio-era Spartan Stadium was a nightmare to visit. It’s a great home venue when things are going well…especially for its in-state rivalry game.
Camp Randall Stadium (Wisconsin)
Capacity: 80,321
Built: 1895
It’s a shame Wisconsin’s night games have been meaningless blowouts against out-of-conference opponents (likely to change this year when Ohio State visits). The building gets rocking when *insert star running back* plows forward for seven yards and a first down.
Autzen Stadium (Oregon)
Capacity: 54,000
Built: 1967
It’s a small stadium for Big Ten standards, but it’s an absolute nightmare to visit. This and Washington should be bucket list trips for Big Ten fans in the coming years.
Kinnick Stadium (Iowa)
Capacity: 69,250
Built: 1929
Probably my favorite venue in college football. No matter how inept Iowa’s offense is, Kinnick is always rocking. Add the stakes of a big-time game and a full day to tailgate in Iowa City, and it’s one of the best atmospheres in the country.
Ohio Stadium (Ohio State)
Capacity: 102,780
Built: 1922
Ohio Stadium is both massive and loud, and it also helps the Buckeyes are among the nation’s best every season. An absolute nightmare location to be a visiting team.
Beaver Stadium (Penn State)
Capacity: 102,780
Built: 1922
My case is made by the video below. Thanks for your time.
thinking about penn state fans being so loud they forced michigan to call a timeout on the first play of the game god i love this sport
— Sam Richmond (@samrichmondBR) August 31, 2022