[Husker] Memorial Stadium Question

George Rapp george.rapp at gmail.com
Sat Jul 14 18:48:31 CDT 2012


Scott -

Row C is located in the former box seating areas of the East and West
stadiums.  There are four rows of benches, with A being closest to field
level.

If you're in the East Stadium (sections 1-11), you're right behind the
Nebraska bench; in the West (sections 21-31), obviously, you're behind the
visitors' bench.  On the Nebraska side, you can often hear the coaches'
instructions and -- uh, admonitions -- to their players; the defensive team
meets right in front of the Section 4 seats, between the north 20 and 30
yard lines.  The Pelini brothers, in particular, were often quite easy to
hear ... 8^)

These seats used to suck pond water - from my family's seats in Section 4,
anything south of the 50 yard line was effectively a rumor, because you
can't really see yard lines from that angle - but HuskerVision has
 remedied that.  On the other hand, because all the concession vendors walk
along the apron directly in front of the box seating area, you don't have
to wait in the concession lines - they'll just bring everything to you.

George

On Sat, Jul 14, 2012 at 6:48 PM, Scott and Wendy Buffington <
buffsn09 at gmail.com> wrote:

> My loving wife has given me a trip to the Nebraska/Wisconsin game on
> September 29 for my birthday. We're in the process of finding tickets and I
> have a question about the seating at Memorial Stadium. What does "Row C"
> mean as opposed to "Row 47" in the seating charts on ticket buying sites?
>
> --
> Scott and Wendy Buffington
> Jefferson, GA
> _______________________________________________
> husker site list
> husker at tssi.com
> http://romaine.tssi.com/mailman/listinfo/husker
>



-- 
George Rapp  (Pataskala, OH) Home: george.rapp -- at -- gmail.com
Work: george.rapp -- at -- hp.com (or) george.rapp.ctr -- at -- dfas.mil

A wise and frugal government, which shall restrain men from injuring
one another, which shall leave them otherwise free to regulate their
own pursuits of industry and improvement, and shall not take from the
mouth of labor the bread it has earned. This is the sum of
good government... - Thomas Jefferson, First Inaugural Address


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