Farewell to an era: Mosaic Stadium's final season begins - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 05:04 AM | Calgary | -11.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Saskatchewan

Farewell to an era: Mosaic Stadium's final season begins

The last football game, the last beer and hotdog, the last outdoor event: The 2016 season at Mosaic Stadium in Regina will be the last for the facility which is being replaced with a new $278-million stadium.

Site will undergo redevelopment after old stadium is torn down

Football fans gathered Saturday at Mosaic Stadium, the Taylor Field site, for the launch of the facility's farewell season. (Brian Rodgers/CBC)

The last football game, the last beer and hotdog, the last outdoor event: The 2016 season at Mosaic Stadium in Regina will be the last for the facility which is being replaced with a new $278-million stadium.

In just a few months, Mosaic Stadium at Taylor Field will be a place recalled as a memory.

"My best memory here would've been the 2013 Grey Cup," Jeremy Boutin, a fan of the Saskatchewan Roughriders, said Saturday at a city event for the old stadium. "I always remember the time that Henry Burris missed a snap and the 'Henry' chants after that were the loudest I've ever heard this stadium. It was just great."

Boutin was among several hundred people at Saturday's ceremony to honour the stadium's history, which included a field level barbecue.

"It's great being down here looking up and finding our seats in the crowd," Boutin said of the vantage point. "Seeing what it's like to be Darian [Durant, the Riders' quarterback] or some of the legends that we've had playing here and see what they see, feel what they feel. It's just great."

The stadium site will be developed as a new neighbourhood, to be named after Taylor Field, with an estimated 700 residences.

The Riders play their first pre-seasongame of the farewell season on June 11.

Jeremy Boutin enjoyed experiencing Mosaic Stadium from the vantage point of being on the football field. (Brian Rodgers/CBC)

With files from CBC's Brian Rodgers