In 1984, UC learned that Nippert Stadium was structurally unsound. The concrete was crumbling and cracking. Some seating areas were even roped off from fans and students. The team played just four home games in 1984, and two of those were played downtown at Riverfront Stadium. The university shelled out $250,000 to simply bring the facility up to a safe standard for spectators, a “quick fix” that included basic painting and patching and allowed UC another five years before more serious steps would need to be taken.
NIPPERT STADIUM: A HISTORY
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Historic James Gamble Nippert Memorial Stadium has been home to Cincinnati Bearcats football for more than a century. It’s named for Jimmy Nippert, a center on the 1923 team who died after complications from an injury suffered during a game against ancient enemy Miami (OH). The tragedy birthed a stadium. This origin—the passing of a Bearcat martyr—has been the bedrock for a winding and storied history that has seen Cincinnati football through days of obscurity and nights on primetime; a season in Division 2, and a top-10 finish.
It’s been called “The Wrigley Field of College Football.” Its cozy confines are anything but for opponents, as the stadium’s location, in a hole in the middle of the university’s Clifton campus, traps any and all noise produced by its capacity crowds of 40,000.
When UC officially completed it in 1924, fans and alumni dared to dream that it could be a home for decades to come. None of them could have imagined that it would be standing as the university celebrates its 200th birthday.
Nippert Stadium’s story is an arduous one, and it started in 1885.
![Carson Field [UC Libraries]](https://ohvarsity.cincyreigns.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/Nippert-1901.png)































