Stevens Stadium

Soccer stadium in Santa Clara, California, United States


title: "Stevens Stadium" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["sports-venues-in-santa-clara-county,-california", "defunct-college-football-venues", "santa-clara-broncos-baseball", "santa-clara-broncos-football", "santa-clara-broncos-soccer", "santa-clara-university-buildings-and-structures", "rugby-union-stadiums-in-california", "college-football-venues-in-california", "baseball-venues-in-california", "soccer-venues-in-california", "sports-in-santa-clara,-california", "fc-gold-pride", "san-jose-earthquakes", "women's-professional-soccer-stadiums", "former-major-league-soccer-stadiums", "sports-venues-in-the-san-francisco-bay-area", "buildings-and-structures-in-santa-clara,-california", "1962-establishments-in-california", "sports-venues-completed-in-1962"] description: "Soccer stadium in Santa Clara, California, United States" topic_path: "sports" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stevens_Stadium" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Soccer stadium in Santa Clara, California, United States ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox venue"]

FieldValue
nameStevens Stadium
nicknameBuck Shaw Field
imageBuck Shaw Stadium field 9.JPG
captionView of the stadium in 2010
address500 El Camino Real
locationSanta Clara University
Santa Clara, California, U.S.
public_transitSanta Clara Station
coordinates
mapframeyes
mapframe-zoom15
pushpin_mapUSA#California
pushpin_map_captionLocation in the United States##Location in California
pushpin_labelSanta Clara
pushpin_reliefyes
former_namesBuck Shaw Stadium
(1962–2015)
broke_ground1961
opened
ownerSanta Clara University
operatorSanta Clara University
surfaceNatural grass
construction_cost$4 million (2008 upgrades)
($ in )
tenants{{plainlist
seating_capacitySoccer:
10,525 (2008–2015)
7,000 (2015–present)
dimensions74 by
website
::

| name = Stevens Stadium | nickname = Buck Shaw Field | image = Buck Shaw Stadium field 9.JPG | image_size = | caption = View of the stadium in 2010 | address = 500 El Camino Real | location = Santa Clara University Santa Clara, California, U.S. | public_transit = Santa Clara Station | coordinates = | mapframe = yes | mapframe-zoom = 15 | pushpin_map = USA#California | pushpin_map_caption= Location in the United States##Location in California | pushpin_mapsize = | pushpin_label = Santa Clara | pushpin_relief = yes | former_names = Buck Shaw Stadium (1962–2015) | broke_ground = 1961 | opened = | owner = Santa Clara University | operator = Santa Clara University | surface = Natural grass | construction_cost = $4 million (2008 upgrades) ($ in ) | architect = | tenants ={{plainlist|

The former home of the San Jose Earthquakes of Major League Soccer, the stadium's capacity was increased in the winter of 2007 from a capacity of 6,800 to 10,300. It was named "Buck Shaw Stadium" up until a renovation was done in 2015.

History

Multi sport

Buck Shaw Stadium opened its gates for the first time on September 22, 1962 when it hosted a football game between UC Davis and Santa Clara. Named for Lawrence T. "Buck" Shaw, a former football coach of the SCU Broncos, the playing surface still retains his name to the present day, being named "Buck Shaw Field". The stadium was used for football games until 1992 and baseball games until 2005.

In summer of 1981 the stadium was the main venue for the 1981 World Games, an international multi-sport event.With a simple ceremony, a touch of pageantry and... By JOE SARGIS at UPI Sports

During the 1994 FIFA World Cup, the stadium was the official practice field of the Brazil soccer team. The Brazilians won the World Cup that year. It also played host to the Romanian national team for their practice prior to that year's quarterfinal match.

Stevens Stadium set a record for highest attendance at a women's outdoor collegiate sporting event in 1996. The 1996 NCAA Division I women's soccer tournament semifinals and finals were played at Buck Shaw, which had its capacity temporarily expanded to 8,800 seats and sold out both days of the tournament. The championship game attendance record was broken the following year in 1997 at UNCG Soccer Stadium in Greensboro, North Carolina.

Soccer-only

In 2005, the venue was converted from a multipurpose facility to a soccer-only facility when the dugouts, baseball infield, and baseball backstop were permanently removed. The name was changed to "Stevens Stadium" following a renovation project in 2015; the project was funded by a $7.7 million donation from alumna Mary Stevens and her husband Mark.

The stadium is the current location of the commencement ceremonies for the university. The site was first used for the undergraduate commencement on Saturday, June 9, 2001.

thumb|left|The stadium during a San Jose Earthquakes match in 2010. The franchise used Stevens Stadium as home venue until 2014, when they moved to Avaya Stadium On October 26, 2007, the San Jose Earthquakes of Major League Soccer announced that they would play a majority of their home games during the 2008 season at the stadium. Upgrades such as additional seating and bathrooms were added to the stadium in order for it to comply with MLS standards and funded by the Earthquakes organization over the last part 2008. The capacity was increased from 6,800 seats to 10,300 seats. In addition, the field was moved closer to the existing grandstand, with a small section removed from section 107 to accommodate the shift. The Santa Clara practice field between the Leavey Center and Stevens was replaced with an "Italgrass" artificial turf surface.

Drainage improvements were also made to the stadium's field in concert with the field crown being removed to produce a flat pitch. A new video scoreboard was added along with additional concession and merchandising stands. General facilities were also modernized or improved including the addition of new lighting, a TV press box, new sound system, and an additional grandstand on the stadium's west side. The new grandstand included all of the seating additions made to the stadium. About half of the new grandstand included tip up seating. Overall, the enhancements cost around $4 million.

After the Earthquakes departed for their new Avaya Stadium, the university undertook an improvement project that removed the original east side press box from the stadium as well as the Earthquakes temporary bleachers on the west side of the stadium. In their place a new smaller permanent west side grandstand, press box and entry plaza were installed. Capacity of the stadium was reduced back to 7,000 permanent seats as a result.

In 2009, the stadium also hosted FC Gold Pride, one of the seven charter teams of Women's Professional Soccer. However, Gold Pride moved to Castro Valley High School, and then Pioneer Stadium in Hayward, for the 2010 season.

In 2021, the stadium hosted the College Cup final that determinated the winner the 2021 NCAA Division I women's soccer tournament. In that match, Florida State defeated BYU by penalty shoot-out to win their third NCAA national title. scored the goal for the 4–3 win on penalties that gave Florida State its third national title.

800px|center|thumb|Buck Shaw Stadium before an Earthquakes game in September 2008

Other sports events

Rugby

The stadium has also hosted several international rugby union matches. In 2006, Buck Shaw hosted three pool matches in the Churchill Cup competition, becoming the first U.S. venue to host matches in that tournament (all matches in the 2003–2005 editions had been in Canada).

In May 2009 the stadium again hosted an international rugby match, with 10,000 fans turning out to watch the game between the United States and Ireland.

International matches

::data[format=table]

DateHomeScoreOpponentCompetitionAttendanceRef.
June 3, 200613–28****2006 Churchill Cup3,700title=CHURCHILL CUP , Pool A - Santa Clara, 3 June 2006, 14:00 local, 21:00 GMT
June 8, 20066–74NZL Māori All Blacks2006 Churchill Cup3,562
June 10, 2006Māori All Blacks NZL27–62006 Churchill Cup
July 1, 2006****91–02007 Rugby World Cup qualifyingtitle=Rugby World Cup Qualifier 2007
May 31, 200910–27****2009 Setanta Challenge Cup10,000title=USA 10-27 Ireland
::

References

References

  1. "Buck Shaw Stadium - SanJose.com".
  2. (17 October 2014). "Earthquakes bid farewell to Buck Shaw Stadium".
  3. "Completed Projects - Campus Projects - Planning & Projects - University Operations - Santa Clara University".
  4. Kennedy, Paul. (December 3, 2021). "Women's College Cup: Back at it, six months later". [[Soccer America]].
  5. (2013). "Women's Soccer Division I". [[NCAA]].
  6. "Stevens Stadium - Buck Shaw Field". [[Santa Clara Broncos]].
  7. Freedman, Jonah. (2007-10-26). "Quakes 2.0 finally have a home". Sports Illustrated.
  8. Almond, Elliott. (December 16, 2009). "Gold Pride moving from Buck Shaw to Cal State East Bay". [[The Mercury News]].
  9. [https://seminoles.com/news/2021/12/7/soccer-national-champs SOCCER CROWNED NATIONAL CHAMPIONS FOR THE THIRD TIME] on Seminoles.com, 7 Dec 2021
  10. [https://www.si.com/soccer/2021/12/07/florida-state-beats-byu-penalty-kicks-win-national-championship Florida State Beats BYU in Penalty Kicks to Win Women's Soccer National Title] on ''Sports Illustrated'', 7 Dec 2021
  11. [https://www.tallahassee.com/story/sports/college/fsu/2021/12/06/florida-state-fsu-soccer-seminoles-national-championship-title-mark-krikorian-byu-penalty-kicks/8883555002/ Sweet revenge! Florida State soccer wins third national title over BYU in penalty kicks] by Curt Weiler on the ''Tallahassee Democrat'', 6 Dec 2021
  12. ESPN Scrum, United States v. Ireland, May 31, 2009, http://www.espnscrum.com/scrum/rugby/match/91196.html
  13. "CHURCHILL CUP , Pool A - Santa Clara, 3 June 2006, 14:00 local, 21:00 GMT".
  14. "CHURCHILL CUP , Pool A - Santa Clara, 7 June 2006, 19:30 local, 02:30 GMT +1d".
  15. "Rugby World Cup Qualifier 2007".
  16. (31 May 2009). "USA 10-27 Ireland".
  17. "USA 10-27 Ireland".
  18. "Ireland battle past Eagles".

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

sports-venues-in-santa-clara-county,-californiadefunct-college-football-venuessanta-clara-broncos-baseballsanta-clara-broncos-footballsanta-clara-broncos-soccersanta-clara-university-buildings-and-structuresrugby-union-stadiums-in-californiacollege-football-venues-in-californiabaseball-venues-in-californiasoccer-venues-in-californiasports-in-santa-clara,-californiafc-gold-pridesan-jose-earthquakeswomen's-professional-soccer-stadiumsformer-major-league-soccer-stadiumssports-venues-in-the-san-francisco-bay-areabuildings-and-structures-in-santa-clara,-california1962-establishments-in-californiasports-venues-completed-in-1962