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Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium

Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium, commonly known as RFK Stadium and originally known as District of Columbia Stadium, is a defunct multi-purpose stadium in Washington, D.C. It is located about two miles (3 km) due east of the U.S. Capitol building, near the west bank of the Anacostia River and next to the D.C. Armory. Opened in 1961, it was owned by the federal government until 1986.[4]

Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium
RFK
RFK Stadium from the east in 1988,
looking towards the U.S. Capitol
Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium
Location within the District of Columbia
Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium
Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium (the United States)
Former namesDistrict of Columbia Stadium
(1961–1969)
Address2400 East Capitol Street SE
LocationWashington, D.C.
Coordinates38°53′24″N 76°58′19″W / 38.890°N 76.972°W / 38.890; -76.972
Public transit Washington Metro
at Stadium–Armory
Metrobus: 96, 97, B2, D6
OwnerDistrict of Columbia
OperatorEvents DC
CapacityBaseball:
43,500 (1961)
45,016 (1971)
45,596 (2005)
Football or soccer:
56,692 (1961)
45,596 (2005–2019)
20,000 (2012–2017, MLS)
Field sizeFootball: 120 yd × 53.333 yd (110 m × 49 m)
Soccer: 110 yd × 72 yd (101 m × 66 m)
Baseball:
Left field: 335 ft (102 m)
Left-center: 380 ft (116 m)
Center field: 410 ft (125 m)
Right-center: 380 ft (116 m)
Right field: 335 ft (102 m)
Backstop: 54 ft (16 m)
SurfaceTifGrand Bermuda grass[1]
Construction
Broke groundJuly 8, 1960[2]
OpenedOctober 1, 1961
(63 years ago)
Closed2019
Demolished2023–
Construction cost$24 million
($235 million in 2022 dollars[3])
ArchitectGeorge Leighton Dahl, Architects and Engineers, Inc.
Structural engineerOsborn Engineering Company
Services engineerEwin Engineering Associates
General contractorMcCloskey and Co.
Tenants
Washington Redskins (NFL) 1961–1996
George Washington Colonials (NCAA) 1961–1966
Washington Senators (MLB) 1962–1971
Washington Whips (USA / NASL) 1967–1968
Howard Bison (NCAA) 1974–1976
Washington Diplomats (NASL) 1974, 1977–1981
Team America (NASL) 1983
Washington Federals (USFL) 1983–1984
Washington Diplomats (ASL/APSL) 1988–1990
D.C. United (MLS) 1996–2017
Washington Freedom (WUSA) 2001–2003
Washington Nationals (MLB) 2005–2007
Military Bowl (NCAA) 2008–2012
Website
eventsdc.com/Venues/RFKStadium.aspx

RFK Stadium was home to a National Football League (NFL) team, two Major League Baseball (MLB) teams, five professional soccer teams, two college football teams, a bowl game, and a USFL team. It hosted five NFC Championship games, two MLB All-Star Games, men's and women's World Cup matches, nine men's and women's first-round soccer games of the 1996 Olympics, three MLS Cup matches, two MLS All-Star games, and numerous American friendlies and World Cup qualifying matches. It hosted college football, college soccer, baseball exhibitions, boxing matches, a cycling race, an American Le Mans Series auto race, marathons, and dozens of major concerts and other events.

RFK was one of the first major stadiums designed to host both baseball and football. Although other stadiums already served this purpose, such as Cleveland Stadium (1931) and Baltimore's Memorial Stadium (1950), RFK was one of the first to employ what became known as the circular "cookie-cutter" design.

It is owned and operated by Events DC (the successor agency to the DC Armory Board), a quasi-public organization affiliated with the city government, under a lease that runs until 2038 from the National Park Service, which owns the land,[5] though as of November 2023 there is in U.S. Congress an active bill,[6] which has yet to reach the full House for a vote, to extend the lease by 99 years.[7]

In September 2019, Events DC officials announced plans to demolish the stadium due to maintenance costs.[8] In September 2020, the cost was estimated at $20 million.[9] Demolition began in 2023.[10][11]

History edit

Planning edit

The idea of a stadium at this location originated in 1930 when plans were developed by the "Allied Architects of Washington, in cooperation with the Fine Arts and National Capital Park and Planning Commissions and the Board of Trade."[12] Plans were further developed in 1932 when the Roosevelt Memorial Association (RMA) proposed a National Stadium for the site[13] and Allied Architects, a group of local architects organized in 1925 to secure large-scale projects from the government, made designs for it.[14] A "National Stadium" in Washington was an idea that had been pursued since 1916, when Congressman George Hulbert of New York proposed the construction of a 50,000-seat stadium at East Potomac Park for the purpose of attracting the 1920 Olympics. It was thought that such a stadium could attract Davis Cup tennis matches, polo tournaments and the annual Army-Navy football game. A later effort by DC Director of Public Buildings and Parks Ulysses S. Grant III and Congressman Hamilton Fish of New York sought to turn the National Stadium into a 100,000-seat memorial to Theodore Roosevelt, suitable for hosting inaugurations, possibly on the National Mall or Theodore Roosevelt Island. This attracted the attention of the RMA, which suggested the East Capital location. This would allow the Lincoln Memorial, then under construction west of the Capitol, and the Roosevelt memorial to become bookend monuments to the two great Republican presidents. The effort lost steam when Congress chose not to fund the stadium in time to move the 1932 Olympics from Los Angeles.[15]

The idea of a stadium gained support in 1938, when Senator Robert Reynolds of North Carolina pushed for the creation of a municipal outdoor stadium within the District, citing the "fact that America is the only major country not possessing a stadium with facilities to accommodate the Olympic Games". The following year a model of the proposed stadium, to be located near the current site of RFK Stadium, was presented to the public. By 1941, the National Capital Planning Commission had begun buying property for a stadium, purchasing the land between East Capitol, C, 19th and 21st NE.[16] A few years later, on December 20, 1944, Congress created a nine-man National Memorial Stadium Commission to study the idea.[17] They intended the stadium to be a memorial to the veterans of the World Wars. The commission wrote a report recommending that a 100,000-seat stadium be built near the site of RFK in time for the 1948 Olympics, but it failed to get funding.[18]

Ignored in the early 1950s, a new stadium again drew interest in 1954. Congressman Charles R. Howell of New Jersey proposed legislation to build a stadium, again with hopes of attracting the Olympics. He pushed for a report, completed in 1956 by the National Capital Planning Commission entitled "Preliminary Report on Sites for National Memorial Stadium", which identified the "East Capitol Site" to be used for the stadium. In September 1957, "The District of Columbia Stadium Act" was introduced and authorized a 50,000-seat stadium to be used by the Senators and Redskins at the Armory site. It was signed into law by President Eisenhower on July 29, 1958, with an estimated cost of $7.5 to $8.6 million.[17] The lease for the stadium was signed by the D.C. Armory Board and the Department of the Interior on December 12, 1958. The stadium, the first major multisport facility built for both football and baseball, was designed by George Dahl, Ewin Engineering Associates (since 1954 part of what became Volkert, Inc.) and Osborn Engineering. Groundbreaking for the $24 million venue was in 1960 on July 8, and construction proceeded over the following 14 months.[19] The existing venue for baseball (and football) in Washington was Griffith Stadium, about four miles (6 km) northwest.

While Redskins' owner George Preston Marshall was pleased with the stadium, Senators' owner Calvin Griffith was not. It wasn't where he wanted it to be (he had preferred to play at a site in Washington's Northwest Quadrant) and he'd have to pay rent and let others run the parking and concessions. The Senators' attendance figures had suffered after the arrival of the Baltimore Orioles in 1954 and Griffith then grew to prefer the less racially-defined demographics and profit potential of the Minnesota market.[20] In 1960, when the American League granted the city of Minneapolis an expansion team, Griffith proposed that he be allowed to move his team to Minneapolis-Saint Paul and give the expansion team to Washington. Upon league approval, the team moved to Minnesota after the 1960 season and Washington fielded a "new Senators" team, entering the junior circuit in 1961 with the Los Angeles Angels.[17]

Opening edit

The stadium opened in autumn 1961 as District of Columbia Stadium (often shortened to D.C. Stadium). The new venue opened for football even though construction was not completed until the following spring.[21]

Its first official event was an NFL regular season game on October 1, ten days after the final MLB baseball game at Griffith Stadium. The Redskins lost that game to the New York Giants 24–21 before 36,767 fans, including President John F. Kennedy.[22] This was slightly more than the attendance record at Griffith Stadium of 36,591 on October 26, 1947 (in a game vs the Bears).[17][22]

At a college football game labeled the "Dedication Game," the stadium was dedicated on October 7. George Washington University became the first home team to win at the stadium with a 30–6 defeat of VMI.[19][23]

Its first sell-out came on November 23, 1961, for the first of what were to be annual Thanksgiving Day high-school football games between the D.C. public school champion and the D.C. Catholic school champion: Eastern defeated St. John's 34–14.[24][25]

 
President Kennedy throws the first pitch of the 1962 baseball season at D.C. Stadium

The first Major League Baseball game was played on April 9, 1962, after two exhibition games against the Pirates had been cancelled. President Kennedy threw out the ceremonial first pitch in front of 44,383 fans, who watched the Senators defeat the Detroit Tigers 4–1 and Senators shortstop Bob Johnson hit the first home run.[26][27] The previous Washington baseball attendance record was 38,701 at Griffith Stadium on October 11, 1925, at the fourth game of the World Series, and was the largest ever for a professional sports event in Washington.[28] The previous largest baseball opening day figure had been 31,728 (on April 19, 1948).[17]

When it opened, D.C. Stadium hosted the Redskins, the Senators, and the GWU Colonials football team, all of whom had previously used Griffith Stadium: the GWU Colonials shut down their football team at the end of the 1966 season, while the Senators moved to Dallas-Fort Worth at the end of the 1971 season, and became the Texas Rangers, playing in Arlington Stadium.

Early years edit

In 1961, Washington Redskins owner George Preston Marshall refused to integrate his team, but President Kennedy forced his hand by refusing to allow the team to play in the stadium, which was on Federal land, unless he desegregated the organization. In 1962, Marshall relented and drafted a black player, Ernie Davis. Davis was traded, but Marshall eventually hired five African-American players for the Redskins 1962 roster, and became the last NFL owner to integrate.[29]

In 1961 and 1962, D.C. Stadium hosted the annual city title game, matching the D.C. Public Schools champion and the titleholder for the Washington Catholic Athletic Conference, played before capacity crowds on Thanksgiving Day. The November 22, 1962, game between St. John's, a predominantly white school in Northwest D.C., and Eastern, a majority-black school just blocks from the stadium, ended in a racially motivated riot.[30][31]

In 1964, the stadium emerged as an element in the Bobby Baker bribery scandal. Don B. Reynolds, a Maryland insurance businessman, made a statement in August 1964 which he claimed that Matthew McCloskey, a former Democratic National Committee chairman and Kennedy's ambassador to Ireland, paid a $25,000 kickback through Reynolds and at the instruction of Baker to the Kennedy-Johnson campaign as payback for the stadium construction contract.[32] Baker later went to jail for tax fraud, and the FBI investigated the awarding of the stadium contract, although McCloskey was never charged.[33]

Renaming the stadium edit

The stadium was renamed in January 1969 for U.S. Senator and presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy,[34] who had been assassinated in Los Angeles seven months earlier. The announcement was made by Secretary of the Interior Stewart Udall on January 18, in the last days of the Johnson Administration.[35][36] The dedication ceremony at the stadium was held several months later on June 7.[36][37]

Senators depart edit

The Senators' final game was at RFK on Thursday night, September 30, 1971,[38] with less than 15,000 in attendance.[39] Rains from Hurricane Ginger threatened the event,[38] but the game proceeded. Fan favorite Frank "Hondo" Howard hit a home run (RFK's last until 2005) in the sixth inning to spark a four-run rally to tie the game; the Senators scored two more in the eighth to go up 7–5, but the game was forfeited (9–0) to the Yankees after unruly fans stormed the field with two outs in the top of the ninth.[17][38] Subsequent efforts to bring baseball back to RFK, including an attempt to attract the San Diego Padres in 1973,[40][41][42] and a plan to have the nearby Baltimore Orioles play eleven home games there in 1976, all failed.[43] The former was derailed by lease issues with the city in San Diego,[42] and the latter was shot down by commissioner Bowie Kuhn, who had planned to expand the league with four teams (aiming for Seattle, New Orleans, Toronto and Washington that would see an 14-team NL and AL).[44][45] The expansion for 1977 was later reduced to two teams to be placed in the American League with Toronto and Seattle, and the next wasn't until 1993 (speculation for expansion had started as early as 1989 with Washington as a city in mind, but it proved fruitless). In the mid-1990s RFK was planned to be the home of the yet-to-be-named Washington team, a charter franchise of the United League (UL) which was planned to be a third league of Major League Baseball (MLB).

For much of the 1970s and 1980s, RFK was primarily known as the home of the Redskins, where they played during their three Super Bowl championship seasons. It also hosted several short-lived professional soccer teams and in 1983–1984 the Washington Federals of the USFL. In 1980, it hosted the Soccer Bowl, the championship game of the NASL.

D.C. United moves in, Redskins move out, Nationals come and go edit

Major changes to the stadium came in 1996. Following the success of hosting matches in the 1994 World Cup and 1996 Summer Olympics, RFK became home to one of the charter teams of the new Major League Soccer. On April 20, 1996, it played host to the first home match of D.C. United, a 2–1 loss to the LA Galaxy.

However, later that year the stadium hosted the Redskins' final home game in Washington, D.C. After nearly a decade of negotiating for a new stadium with Mayors Sharon Pratt Kelly and Marion Barry, abandoning them in 1992 and 1993 in search of a suburban site and then having a 1994 agreement collapse in the face of neighborhood complaints, environmental concerns and a dispute in Congress (over what some members viewed as the team's racially insensitive name and the use of federal land for private profit), Jack Kent Cooke decided to move his team to Maryland.[46][47][48] On December 22, 1996, the Redskins won their last game at RFK Stadium 37–10 over the Dallas Cowboys, reprising their first win there in 1961, before 56,454, the largest football crowd in stadium history. The Redskins then moved east to FedExField in 1997, leaving D.C. United as the stadium's only major tenant for much of the next decade, though from 2001 to 2003 they were joined by the Washington Freedom of the short-lived Women's United Soccer Association.

After hosting 16 exhibition games after the Senators' departure, baseball returned to RFK temporarily in 2005.[49] That year the National League's newly renamed Washington Nationals made it their home while a new permanent home, Nationals Park, was constructed. On April 14, 2005, before a crowd of 45,496 including President Bush and MLB Commissioner Bud Selig, the Nationals beat the Arizona Diamondbacks 5–3 victory in their first game at RFK. President George W. Bush, formerly a part-owner of the Texas Rangers (the former Senators), threw out the first pitch becoming the last president, and the first since Richard Nixon, to do so in RFK Stadium.[19] Bush threw a ball saved by former Senators pitcher Joe Grzenda from that teams ill-fated final home game—the ball Grzenda would have pitched to Yankee second baseman Horace Clarke when fans rioted and forced the forfeit. The last MLB game at RFK, a 5–3 Nationals win over the Phillies, was played on September 23, 2007, and in 2008 the Nationals moved to their new stadium.

The last team leaves edit

In 2008, RFK was once again primarily the host of D.C. United, though it also hosted a college football bowl game, the Military Bowl, from 2008 to 2012, before it moved in 2013 to Navy–Marine Corps Memorial Stadium in Annapolis, Maryland.[50] On July 25, 2013, the District of Columbia and D.C. United announced a tentative deal to build a $300 million, 20,000–25,000-seat stadium at Buzzard Point.[51][52] Groundbreaking on the new soccer stadium, Audi Field, occurred in February 2017, and on October 22, 2017, RFK hosted its last MLS match, a 2–1 D.C. United loss to the New York Red Bulls.[53]

Demolition edit

On September 5, 2019, Events DC announced plans to demolish the stadium by 2021. Officials said the decision would save $2 million a year on maintenance and $1.5 million a year on utilities.[8] One year later, they hired a contractor to oversee the demolition, which was expected to begin in 2022 and cost $20 million.[9] In July 2022, Events DC announced that the removal of hazardous materials had begun and would "take several months," and that demolition would "be completed by the end of 2023."[54] In the same month, several fires occurred inside the stadium. The District of Columbia Fire and Emergency Medical Services Department firefighters and emergency workers responded and extinguished them. They indicated that the fires were in "below grade levels". No injuries were reported, and cause of the fires is currently unknown.[55][56] In November 2022, a sale of stadium seats was announced ahead of the 2023 demolition.[57][58] The deteriorating stadium had also been featured in the YouTube videos of several known urban explorers who trespassed through the site.[citation needed] As of October 2023, crews have begun gutting areas of the site, though structural demolition has not begun.[59][10][11]

Name edit

The stadium opened in October 1961 named the District of Columbia Stadium, but the media quickly shortened that to D.C. Stadium and sometimes, in the early days, as "Washington Stadium".[60] On January 18, 1969, in the last days of the Johnson Administration, Secretary of the Interior Stewart Udall announced that the stadium would be renamed Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium, in Kennedy's honor.[36][34] The official renaming ceremony was held on June 7,[36][37] but by then many had already been referring to it as "RFK Stadium" or simply "RFK".[17] Coincidentally, following the death of John F. Kennedy in 1963, the Armory Board had directed that the stadium be renamed for him,[61] but the plan faltered when a few weeks later the Philadelphia city council passed a bill renaming Philadelphia Stadium as "John F. Kennedy Stadium".[62]

Robert Kennedy was not without connection to the stadium; as attorney general in the early 1960s, his Justice Department played a role in the Redskins' racial integration.[63] Along with Udall, Kennedy threatened to revoke the team's lease at the federally owned stadium until it promised to sign African American players.[63][64] His brother John attended the first event there and threw out the first pitch. In 2008, a nearby bridge was renamed for Ethel Kennedy, Robert Kennedy's wife.

On April 14, 2005, just before the Nationals' home opener, the D.C. Sports and Entertainment Commission announced an agreement with the Department of Defense under which the military would pay the city about $6 million for naming rights and the right to place recruiting kiosks and signage in the stadium. In return, the stadium would be dubbed "Armed Forces Field at RFK Stadium".[65] This plan was dropped within days, however, after several prominent members of Congress questioned the use of public funds for a stadium sponsorship.[66]

Similar proposals to sell the naming rights to the National Guard,[65] ProFunds (a Bethesda, Maryland investment company),[66] and Sony[67] were formed and discarded in 2005 and 2006.

Tenants edit

Washington Redskins (1961–1996) edit

RFK Stadium was home to the Washington Redskins for 36 seasons, from 1961 through 1996. The football field was aligned northwest to southeast, along the first baseline.

The Redskins' first game in D.C. Stadium was its first event, a 24–21 loss to the New York Giants on October 1, 1961. The first win in the stadium came at the end of the season on December 17, over its future archrival, the struggling second-year Dallas Cowboys. The Redskins played 266 regular-season games at RFK, compiling a 173–102–3 (.628) record, including an impressive 11–1 record in the playoffs.[68]

In its twelfth season, RFK hosted its first professional football playoff game on Christmas Eve 1972, a 16–3 Redskins' win over the Green Bay Packers. It was the city's first postseason game in three decades, following the NFL championship game victory in 1942. The stadium hosted the NFC Championship Game five times (1972, 1982, 1983, 1987, and 1991), 2nd only to Candlestick Park, and the Redskins won them all. They are the only team to win five NFC titles at the same stadium. In the subsequent Super Bowls, Washington won three (XVII, XXII, XXVI).

The Redskins' last game at the stadium was a victory, as 56,454 saw a 37–10 win over the division champion Cowboys on December 22, 1996.[69][70]

D.C. United (1996–2017) edit

 
RFK Stadium during a D.C. United soccer match in March 2009

D.C. United of Major League Soccer played over 400 matches at RFK Stadium from the team's debut in 1996 until 2017, when they moved to a new stadium. During that time, RFK hosted three MLS Cup finals, including the 1997 match won by D.C. United. At RFK, they compiled a 228–113–75 (.638) record, winning more games at RFK than any team other than the Senators.

With its new stadium, Audi Field, opening in 2018, D.C. United played its final game at RFK on October 22, 2017, completing 22 seasons at the stadium, during which the team won four league titles.[71][72] At the time, RFK Stadium was the longest-used stadium in MLS and the only one left from the league's debut season. When they shared the stadium with the Nationals from 2005 to 2007, the playing surface and the dimensions of the field that resulted from baseball use drew criticism. D.C. United's departure left RFK with no professional sports tenant; however, after moving to Audi Field, D.C. United continued to use the outer practice fields at RFK for training and leased locker room and basement space there.[68]

Washington Senators (1962–1971) edit

 
D.C. Stadium in 1963, looking west

The Washington Senators of the American League played at RFK Stadium from 1962 through 1971. They played their first season in 1961 at Griffith Stadium.

In its ten seasons as the Senators' home field, RFK Stadium was known as a hitters' park, aided by the stagnant heat (and humidity) of Washington summers. Slugger Frank Howard, (6 ft 7 in (2.01 m), 255 lb (116 kg)), hit a number of "tape-measure" home runs, a few of which landed in the center field area of the upper deck. The seats he hit with his home runs are painted white, rather than the gold of the rest of the upper deck. Howard came to the Senators from the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1965. He hit the Senators' final RFK homer, in the sixth inning on September 30, 1971. With two outs in the top of the ninth,[73] a fan riot turned a 7–5 Senators lead over the New York Yankees into a 9–0 forfeit loss, the first in the majors in 17 years.[74][75]

These Senators' only winning season came in 1969 at 86–76 (.531); they never made the postseason. They had a home record at RFK of 363–441 (.451), representing the most games, wins, and losses by any team at RFK in any sport. The stadium hosted the All-Star Game twice, in 1962 (first of two) and 1969, both won by the visiting National League. Presidents Kennedy, Johnson and Nixon all attended games there. President Johnson was scheduled to throw out the first pitch in 1968, but the opening game was delayed following the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., so Vice President Hubert Humphrey got the privilege.[76] President Nixon was to throw out the first ball at the 1969 game to celebrate baseball's centennial, but it was postponed due to rain and so Nixon chose instead to greet the Apollo 11 astronauts. Vice President Spiro Agnew filled in.[77]

Washington Diplomats (1974–1981, 1988–1990) edit

Between 1974 and 1990, three soccer teams played at RFK under the name Washington Diplomats. In 1974, two Maryland businessmen purchased the rights to the Baltimore Bays of the semi-professional American Soccer League, moved the team to the District and renamed it the Washington Diplomats. They signed a lease calculating that an average of 12,000 spectators would allow them to break even. Despite white flight, owners thought that recent completion of the Beltway, the stadium's 12,000 parking spaces and future completion of a Metro station would facilitate attendance. Games were scheduled for Saturday and prices were set low. The Diplomats inaugural game was on May 4 with an attendance of 10,175; Mayor Walter Washington ceremonially kicked off the game, but the Dips lost 5–1 to the defending NASL champion Philadelphia Atoms. Attendance dropped throughout the season.[78]

In 1975, the Diplomats were informed that the recently installed natural turf at RFK would not be ready for opening day, so they scheduled their first two home games that season for W.T. Woodson High School in Fairfax, Virginia. After the games attracted more than 10,000 fans each, the Diplomats moved most of their home games to Woodson, but then moved the last five back to RFK once soccer superstar Pelé was added to the roster of the New York Cosmos. Pelé was so popular that the 1975 Cosmos-Diplomats match broke the NASL attendance record at 35,620.[79] Even with the success of the Cosmos game, attendance declined again and before the 1976 season the Diplomats announced that they had scheduled every home game, except the one against the Cosmos, at Woodson. During the season, they moved that game to Woodson.[78]

After averaging 5,963 at Woodson, the Diplomats decided to ramp up their marketing and move back to RFK in 1977. The team changed everything from the uniforms to the cheerleaders, but the team's disappointing on-the-field performance hurt attendance (a ~31,000 fan game against Pelé and the Cosmos notwithstanding). In 1978, attendance continued to fall, even though the Dips made the playoffs. Success on the field during the 1978 and 1979 seasons (including a franchise-best 19 wins in '79) did not translate to ticket sales and even with a negligible amount of revenue from "indoor Dips" games at the D.C. Armory during the offseason, the franchise continued to lose money.[78]

In 1980, they signed Dutch international superstar Johan Cruyff, the Pelé of the Potomac, from the Los Angeles Aztecs. Needing 20,000 fans per game to break even, they managed to attract 24,000 for the opener and a District record 53,351 for the game against the Pelé-less Cosmos (the fifth-largest soccer crowd at RFK ever), but the team failed to break-even financially. After racking up debts of $5 million, the first incarnation of the Dips folded.[78]

Three months later, the Detroit Express announced a move to D.C. for 1981, and that they would also be the Diplomats. They had trouble attracting fans; and soon folded.

The Diplomats of the NASL, racked up an impressive 60–29 (.674) record at RFK, the best winning percentage of any RFK home team, and were 1–1 in the playoffs.[80][78]

In 1987, a new soccer team also called the Washington Diplomats, was formed. They played at RFK, and sometimes at the RFK auxiliary field, for three seasons as part of the ASL and then the APSL. They won the ASL Championship in 1988 but often drew fewer than 1000 fans. In 1990 they finished last in the Southern Division of the APSL East, were unable to pay the rent and folded in October 1990.[81][82] Over the course of 4 seasons they were 18–15 (.545) at RFK, and 2–0 at the RFK auxiliary field.

George Washington Colonials (1961–1966) edit

The other team to move from Griffith to D.C. Stadium was the George Washington University Colonials college football team. The stadium was dedicated during the October 7, 1961, game against VMI, the first college football game there, which GWU won 30–6. The Colonials were forced to play their first three games on the road to allow the stadium to be completed. In the following years, because the Senators had priority, GWU waited until October (when baseball season was over) to schedule games. From 1961 to 1964 they played road games in September, and in 1965 and 1966 they played at high school stadiums in Arlington and Alexandria, Virginia.[23][19][83][84]

The Colonials had no real success at D.C. Stadium. GWU was 22–35 (.386) during its D.C. Stadium years and never posted a winning record. The Colonials weren't much better at D.C. Stadium where their record was 11–13 (.458), facing off against Army twice and against a Liberty Bowl-bound West Virginia in 1964 (all losses).[85] Perhaps their biggest win was the 1964 upset of Villanova, which came to Washington with a 6–1 record. Sophomore quarterback Garry Lyle, the school's last NFL draftee, led the Colonials to a 13–6 win.[86]

The final George Washington football game to date, and the last at D.C. Stadium, came on Thanksgiving Day, November 24, 1966, when the team lost to Villanova, 16–7.[87]

After the season was over, GW President Dr. Lloyd H. Elliott chose to reevaluate GW's football program.[88] On December 19, 1966, head coach Jim Camp, conference coach of the year, resigned citing the uncertainty. The next day, a member of the Board of Trustees announced that the school would drop football.[89] On January 19, 1967, the decision became official.[90] GW decided to use the football program's funding to eventually build the Charles E. Smith Center for the basketball team.[90] Poor game attendance and the expense, estimated at $254,000 during the 1966 season, contributed to the decision. Former GW player Harry Ledford believed that most people were unwilling to drive on Friday nights to D.C. Stadium, which was perceived as an unsafe area and lacked rail transit. Maryland and Virginia were nationally competitive teams that drew potential suburban spectators away from GW.[91]

Washington Nationals (2005–2007) edit

After playing as the Montreal Expos from 1969 to 2004, the Expos franchise moved to Washington, D.C., to become the Washington Nationals for the 2005 season. The Nationals played their first three seasons (20052007) at RFK, then moved to Nationals Park in 2008. While the Nationals played at RFK, it was the fourth-oldest active stadium in the majors, behind Fenway Park, Wrigley Field and Yankee Stadium.[92]

During the Nationals' three seasons there, RFK then became known as a pitchers' park. While Frank Howard hit at least 44 home runs for three straight seasons at RFK for the second Washington Senators franchise from 1968 through 1970, the 2005 Nationals had only one hitter with more than 15 home runs, José Guillén with 24. However, in his lone season with the team in 2006, Alfonso Soriano hit 46 home runs.

During their three seasons at RFK, the Nationals failed to make the playoffs or post a winning record. They went 41–40 at home in 2005 and 2006 and 40–41 in 2007 to finish with a 122–121 (.502) record at RFK.

Howard Bison (1970–2016) edit

No team has a longer history with RFK Stadium than the Howard Bison football team, who played there 42 times over nearly 46 years (the Detroit Tigers are 2nd by ~8 months, having played their first game there April 9, 1962, and their last on June 20, 2007). Between their first game in 1970 and last, in 2016, they earned a 22–17–3 (.560) record, winning more games at RFK than any other college football program.

Looking to play on a bigger stage than Howard Stadium, they began scheduling games at RFK. Howard's first RFK game was a 24–7 victory over Fisk on October 24, 1970.[93] From 1974 to 1976, Howard played all but one of their home games at RFK and in 1977 they played half their home games there.[94] After the 1977 season they returned to Howard Stadium, but continued to play their annual homecoming game at RFK through 1985. After the 1985 season, Howard Stadium was refurbished and renamed, and for the next 7 years, Howard played all of their home games there.

In 1992 they returned to RFK for a game against Bowie State that was marked by taunting and a game-ending scuffle.[95] From 1993 to 1999 Howard played at least one game a year at RFK including the Greater Washington Urban League Classic, at one point called the Hampton-Howard Classic, against Hampton from 1994 to 1999. In 2000 that game moved to Giants Stadium and Howard spent more than a decade away from RFK.

Starting in 2011 and through the 2016 season, Howard played in the Nation's Football Classic at RFK, matching up against Morehouse at first and then Hampton again.[96] In 2017, Events DC announced that they would discontinue the Classic and thus the last Bison game at RFK Stadium was a 34–7 loss to Hampton on September 16, 2016.[97][98]

Washington Freedom (2001–2003) edit

For three seasons, RFK was home to the Women's United Soccer Association team, the Washington Freedom. On April 14, 2001, the Freedom defeated the Bay Area CyberRays 1–0 in WUSA's inaugural match before 34,198 fans, the largest crowd in WUSA history and the largest crowd to watch a women's professional sports event in DC history (the largest crowd for a women's sporting event was 45,946 for the 1996 women's Olympic soccer tournament, also at RFK). Over three years, the Freedom racked up a 15–9–6 record at RFK and finished as one of the league's top teams. They came in 2nd in 2002 and won the league's Founder's Cup in 2003. They played all of their home games at RFK, except for one in 2001 at Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium in Annapolis to avoid the Washington Grand Prix. Their last game at RFK as part of WUSA was on August 2, 2003, when they defeated the San Jose Cyber Rays. They won the final Founder's Cup in August 2003 and returned to RFK a few days later – minus the players who were playing in the 2003 Women's World Cup – for a victory celebration with the fans, which would be their final WUSA event at RFK. WUSA suspended operation the next month. Their victory in the Founders Cup means that the Freedom won both the first and last games in WUSA history. For a time, their championship banner hung in RFK, but when the Nationals moved in, the banner was moved to the Maryland Soccerplex.

The Freedom continued, first as an exhibition team called the Washington Freedom Soccer Club, and then as a member of the W-League and the Women's Professional Soccer league in 2006. Their home stadium was the Maryland Soccerplex, but they continued to play a few games at RFK. In 2004 they played an exhibition against Nottingham Forest, which they won 8–0.[99] They returned on June 22, 2008, in a W-League match, which they won 5–0, against the Richmond Kickers Destiny that was part of a doubleheader with DC United.[100] In 2009, the Freedom moved to the WPS and while they continued to play most of their home games in Maryland, they played 3 of 10 home games at RFK in 2009 and one game there in 2010.[101][102] In the years after WUSA suspended operations, the Freedom went 5–0–1 at RFK, bringing their combined RFK total to 20–9–7 (.653). After the 2010 season, the Freedom's owners had had enough and sold the team to Dan Borislow, owner of the phone service MagicJack. He moved them to Boca Raton, Florida for the team's last season. The Freedom's final game at RFK was a 3–1 victory over Saint Louis Athletica on May 1, 2010.

Washington Whips (1967–68) edit

In 1967, D.C. Stadium became the home of its first professional soccer team, the Washington Whips. They played 23 regular-season games at D.C. Stadium over 16 months, putting together a 13–5–5 (.674) home record as well as losing an exhibition against Pelé and his standout Brazilian club Santos FC, for a total RFK record of 13–6–5 (.646).[103] 20,189 fans attended the Santos exhibition, more than three times as large as a typical Whips match, making it the most heavily attended soccer game in DC history at the time. The game was heavily promoted in the local press and the Whips, who were struggling to attract fans to their regular matches, provided additional incentive through a "Meet Pelé" contest.[78]

RFK served as the venue for the inaugural match of the United Soccer Association (USA), a May 26, 1967, match between the Whips and the Cleveland Stokers, won by the Stokers.[78]

In their first season, the Whips were one of the league's top teams and they were staffed by the Aberdeen Football Club of the Scottish Football League or the Aberdeen Dons. They finished 5–2–5, good enough to win the Eastern Division and play for the USA Championship against the Los Angeles Wolves.

The owners estimated that they needed to attract 16,000 fans per game, but they never broke 10,000 and averaged only 6,200. Towards the end of the 1967 season, the Whips resorted to organizing British Isles sporting contests such as cricket, hurling, and rugby before games in hopes of luring expatriates.[78]

In 1968, to stay viable, they negotiated a reduction in the lease payment and reduced admission prices by one-third; among other discounts. The USA merged with the National Professional Soccer League to form the new North American Soccer League. Despite problems on and off the field, the team found itself in a battle for a playoff spot and towards the end of the season crowds swelled to as much as 14,227 in what proved to be the deciding match for the NASL Atlantic Division title. This September 7, 1968, match against the Atlanta Chiefs was the last for the Whips at D.C. Stadium. That season, the team went 15–10–7 drawing an average of 6,586 fans. After a tour of Europe, the Whips folded in October 1968.[78]

Washington Federals (1983–1984) edit

Washington's only USFL team, the Washington Federals, played two seasons at RFK and during that time, they had the league's worst record each season, and, in 1984, the lowest per-game attendance. For the opening game, 38,000 fans showed up to see the return of former Redskins coach George Allen, the coach of the Chicago Blitz, in a game the Federals lost, 28–7. But attendance quickly dropped off, with as few as 7,303 showing up for a late-season game against the Boston Breakers. The team went 4–14 in 1983 and 3–15 in 1984, averaging 7,700 fans.

With six games remaining in the 1984 season, owner Berl Bernhard sold the team to Florida real estate developer Woody Weiser. In the off-season, that deal fell through. Donald Dizney bought the team, moved it to Orlando and renamed it the Renegades.

After going 7–29 (.194) overall, and 5–18 (.217) at RFK, the Federals ended their run with a 20–17 win over the New Orleans Breakers on June 24, 1984.

Team America (1983) edit

Team America was a professional version of the United States men's national soccer team which played like a franchise in the North American Soccer League (NASL) during the 1983 season. The team played its home games at RFK Stadium and was intended by the NASL and the United States Soccer Federation to build fan support for the league and create a cohesive and internationally competitive national team. However, the team finished in last place drawing 12,000 fans per game.

Team America played 19 games at RFK. In those games they went 5–10 in NASL matches and tied three friendlies against Watford F.C. (from the United Kingdom), FC Dinamo Minsk (from the Soviet Union), and Juventus F.C. (from Italy) for a final record of 5–10–3 (.361).

The team's attendance averaged 19,952 through the first seven home matches,[104] including the 50,108 who attended a match vs. Fort Lauderdale that featured a free Beach Boys concert. Losses led to declining attendance as the season wore on. Attendance averaged 13,002 for the entire 1983 season, having played only a single season.[105]

Design edit

The stadium's design was circular, attempting to facilitate both football and baseball. It was the first to use the so-called "cookie-cutter" concept, an approach also used in Philadelphia, New York, Houston, Atlanta, St. Louis, San Diego, Cincinnati, Oakland, and Pittsburgh.

While the perimeter of the stadium is circular, the front edge of the upper and lower decks form a "V" shape in deference to the baseball configuration. The rows of seating in the upper and lower decks follow the "V" layout, and the discrepancy between the shapes of the inner and outer rings permits more rows of seats to be inserted along the foul lines than at home plate and in the outfield. As a result, the height of the outside wall rises and falls in waves, and this is echoed in the roof, resulting in a "butterfly" appearance when seen at ground level from the west. This feature is unique among the circular stadiums of the 1960s.

The upper deck is cantilevered so that there are no columns from the lower deck obstructing views there.[106] Such a design is less compatible with the later demand for luxury boxes, due to weight; in contrast, FedExField has columns that obstruct views.[107] The design at RFK allowed the upper deck to shake when fans stomped in unison.[108]

In 1961, the stadium represented a new level of luxury. It offered 50,000 seats, each 22 inches (56 cm) wide (at a time when the typical seat was only 15–16 in (38–41 cm)), air-conditioned locker rooms and a lounge for player's wives. It had a machine-operated tarpaulin to cover the field, yard-wide aisles, and ramps that made it possible to empty the stadium in just 15 minutes. The ticket office was connected to the ticket windows by pneumatic tubes. The press boxes could be enclosed and expanded for big events. The stadium had a holding cell for drunks and brawlers. It had 12,000 parking spaces and was served by 300 buses. It had lighting that was twice as bright as Griffith Stadium.[21]

It was not ideal for either sport, due to the different geometries of the playing fields. As the playing field dimensions for football and baseball vary greatly, seating had to accommodate the larger playing surface. This would prove to be the case at nearly every multi-purpose/cookie-cutter stadium.

As a baseball park, RFK was a target of scorn from baseball purists, largely because it was one of the few stadiums with no lower-deck seats in the outfield. The only outfield seats were in the upper deck, above a high wall. According to Sporting News publications in the 1960s, over 27,000 seats—roughly 60% of the listed capacity of 45,000 for baseball—were in the upper tier or mezzanine levels. The lower-to-upper proportion improved for the Redskins with end-zone seats. The first ten rows of the football configuration were nearly at the field level, making it difficult to see over the players. The baseball diamond was aligned due east (home plate to center field), and the football field ran along the first baseline (northwest to southeast).

 
Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium, Washington DC
 
Panoramic view in 2012, from the west corner (home plate to center field, due east)

A complex conversion was necessary, at a cost of $40,000 each time, to change the stadium from a football configuration to baseball and back again; in its final form, this included rolling the third-base lower-level seats into the outfield along a buried rail, dropping the hydraulic pitcher's mound 3 feet (0.9 m) into the ground, and laying sod over the infield dirt. Later facilities were designed so the seating configuration could be changed more quickly and at a lower cost. The conversion was required several times per year during the Senators' joint tenancy with the Redskins (1962–71) but became much more frequent during the Nationals/D.C. United era; in 2005, the conversion was made over twenty times.

Originally the seats located behind the stadium's third-base dugout were removed for baseball games and put back in place when the stadium was converted to the football (and later soccer) configuration. When these sections were in place, RFK seated approximately 56,000. With the Nationals' arrival in 2005, this particular segment of the stands was permanently removed to facilitate the switch between the baseball and soccer configurations. These seats were not restored following the Nationals' move to Nationals Park, leaving the stadium's seating capacity at approximately 46,000. The majority of the upper-deck seats normally were not made available for D.C. United matches, so the stadium's reduced capacity normally was not problematic for the club.

During the years when the stadium was without baseball (1972–2004), the rotating seats remained in the football configuration. If an exhibition baseball game was scheduled, the left-field wall was only 250 feet (76 m) from home plate, and a large screen was erected in left field for some games.

 
View east from the Washington Monument, with RFK Stadium in the background (behind the U.S. Capitol). FedExField is visible at the top left corner.

Some of RFK's quirks endear the venue to fans and players.[citation needed] The large rolling bleacher section is less stable than other seating, allowing fans to jump in rhythm to cause the whole area to bounce. Also, despite its small size (it never seated more than 58,000), because of the stadium's design and the proximity of the fans to the field when configured for football, the stadium was extremely loud when the usual sell-out Redskins crowds became vocal. Legend has it that Redskins head coach George Allen would order a large rolling door in the side of the stadium to be opened when visiting teams were attempting field goals at critical moments in games so that a swirling wind from off the Potomac and Anacostia rivers might interfere with the flight of the kicked ball.

Since the stadium is on a direct sightline with the Washington Monument and the U.S. Capitol, light towers were not allowed; instead, arc lights were placed on its curved, dipping roof.

Events D.C.—the city agency which operates RFK Stadium—began a strategic planning process in November 2013 to study options for the future of the stadium, its 80 acres (32 ha) campus and the nonmilitary portions of the adjacent D.C. Armory. Events D.C. said one option to be studied was demolition within a decade, while another would be the status quo. The strategic planning process also included the design and development of options. The agency said that RFK Stadium has generated $4 million to $5 million a year in revenues since 1997, which did not cover operating expenses.[109] In August 2014, Events D.C. chose the consulting firm of Brailsford & Dunlavey to create the master plan.[110]

Seating capacity edit

Dimensions edit

 
Satellite view of the stadium in pre-2005 soccer configuration; the darker red seats at the northwest end (north is up on this image) were not part of the subsequent setup

The dimensions of the baseball field were 335 feet (102 m) down the foul lines, 380 feet (116 m) to the power alleys and 408 feet (124 m) to center field during the Senators' time. The official distances when the Nationals arrived were identical, except for two additional feet to center field. After complaints from Nationals hitters it was discovered in July 2005 that the fence had actually been put in place incorrectly, and it was 394.74 feet (120.3 m) to the power alleys in left; 395 feet (120 m) to the right-field power alley; and 407.83 feet (124.3 m) to center field. The section of wall containing the 380-foot (116 m) sign was moved closer to the foul lines to more accurately represent the distance shown on the signs but no changes were made to the actual dimensions.

The approximate elevation of the playing field is 10 feet (3.0 m) above sea level.

Sports events edit

Baseball edit

 
A Washington Nationals game at RFK, June 2005

Two major league teams called RFK home, the Senators (1962–71) and the Nationals (2005–07). In between, the stadium hosted an assortment of exhibition games, old-timer games, and at least one college baseball exhibition game. In addition, from 1988 to 1991 the RFK auxiliary field served as the home stadium of the George Washington Colonials college baseball team, and hosted some Howard University and Interhigh League and D.C. Interscholastic Athletic Association championship baseball games.

  • April 9, 1962: The Washington Senators defeated the Detroit Tigers 4–1 in the first baseball game played at D.C. Stadium. President John F. Kennedy – the brother of the stadium's future namesake, then-United States Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy – threw out the ceremonial first pitch.
  • July 10, 1962: With 45,480 in attendance, D.C. Stadium hosted its first All-Star Game, the first of two during the 1962 season. President Kennedy threw out the first pitch and the National League won 3–1.
  • June 12, 1967: The Senators defeated the Chicago White Sox 6–5 in the longest night game to date in major league history.[126] The 22-inning game lasted 6 hours and 38 minutes and ended at 2:43 a.m. EDT.[127]
  • April 7, 1969: With President Richard Nixon and about 45,000 on hand on Monday afternoon, rookie manager Ted Williams made his debut with the Senators, an 8–4 loss to the New York Yankees.[128][129][130]
  • June 7, 1969: The stadium was renamed for Robert Kennedy on January 18; while the Senators were away at Minnesota, the rededication ceremony was held.[36][37]
  • July 23, 1969: The stadium hosted its second and last All-Star Game, a National League 9–3 victory before 45,259. Postponed by a rainout the night before, the game was on Wednesday afternoon,[131][132] the final MLB All-Star Game to conclude during daylight. President Nixon was scheduled to throw out the first pitch the evening before;[133] because of the postponement, he missed the game to personally greet the returning Apollo 11 crew aboard the USS Hornet.[134] Vice President Spiro Agnew threw out the first pitch.[135]
  • September 30, 1971: In the Senators' final game (on a Thursday night), they led the New York Yankees 7–5 with two outs in the top of the ninth. After an obese teenager ran onto the field, picked up first base, and ran off, fans stormed the field and tore up bases, grass patches, and anything else for souvenirs. Washington forfeited the game, 9–0,[39][136] the first forfeit in the majors in seventeen years.[39] It was the last MLB home game at RFK until 2005.
  • July 19, 1982: At the first Cracker Jack Old Timers Baseball Classic exhibition game, attended by nearly thirty thousand, 75-year-old Hall of Famer Luke Appling hit a home run against the National League's Warren Spahn.[137][138][139][140] Although he had a .310 lifetime batting average, Appling only hit 45 home runs in 20 seasons. However, because the stadium had not been fully reconfigured, it was just 260 feet (79 m) to the left-field foul pole, far shorter than normal, and Spahn applauded him as he rounded the bases. Five more Cracker Jack All Star games were hosted at RFK,[141] until summer construction at RFK in 1988 moved it north to Buffalo.[142][143] During that time, Hall of Famers and stars such as Joe Dimaggio, Bob Feller, Stan Musial, Hank Aaron, Willie Mays, Sandy Koufax, Roger Maris, Whitey Ford, and Washington favorite Frank Howard would take the field. There was even a conversation about allowing then-Vice President George H. W. Bush, who'd captained Yale's College World Series team, to play one year.[144]
  • April 5, 1987: RFK Stadium hosted an exhibition game between the Philadelphia Phillies and the New York Mets, the first MLB game played in Washington, D.C., since a pair of exhibition games in 1972. The game was a sell-out, with 45,614 tickets sold, and a crowd of 38,437 actually attended on a cold, rainy afternoon. Mets pitcher Sid Fernandez threw a one-hitter, and the Mets won, 1–0.[145][146]
  • April 3, 1988: The Mets and Orioles met at RFK for an exhibition game watched by 36,123 as the Mets won 10–7 off a three-run homer by Darryl Strawberry.[147]
  • April 2, 1989: The Cardinals and Orioles met at RFK for an exhibition game watched by 37,204 as the Orioles won 7–6 in the 10th inning.[148]
  • May 6, 1989: George Washington University defeated the Soviet national baseball team 20–1.[149]
  • April 7, 1990: The Cardinals and Orioles met at RFK for an exhibition game watched by 21,298 as the Orioles won 11–10.[150]
  • April 6–7, 1991: The Red Sox and Orioles played a pair of exhibition games at RFK. The first was watched by 37,458 as the Orioles won 4–1. The Stadium was in its baseball configuration for the first time since September 30, 1971.[151] 43,624 watched the Orioles lose the 2nd game 6–5, and Vice President Dan Quayle threw out the first pitch.[152]
  • April 4–5, 1992: The Red Sox and Orioles met at RFK for an exhibition game watched by 20,551 as the Sox won 4–3. The next day the Red Sox played the Phllies at RFK in a game watched by 16,823.[153][154]
  • April 3, 1998: The Orioles and Mets met for an exhibition game.[155]
  • April 2 and 4, 1999: Montreal Expos and St. Louis Cardinals met in a pair of exhibition games. The stadium was restored to its full baseball configuration for the first time since the 1991 exhibition. Rumors already swirled then that the Expos could soon call RFK home, a possibility that came to pass after the 2004 season.[156]
  • April 3, 2005: The Washington Nationals (formerly the Montreal Expos) lost to the Mets 4–3 in an exhibition game before a paid crowd of 25,453 in their first game in Washington. It was the first MLB home game at RFK since 1971. Mayor Anthony Williams threw out the first pitch.[157]
  • April 14, 2005: The Washington Nationals defeated the Arizona Diamondbacks 5–3 before a crowd of 45,596 in their first regular season game in Washington.[158][159] President George W. Bush threw out the first pitch,[158][160] and Washington swept the three-game series to improve to 8–4.[161] It is the largest baseball crowd at RFK ever, and the largest ever home crowd for the Nationals.
  • June 18, 2006: Nationals third baseman Ryan Zimmerman, who became known as "Mr. Walk-Off" for his penchant for hitting game-ending home runs, hit his first walk-off home run off New York Yankees pitcher Chien-Ming Wang in the bottom of the ninth inning for a 3–2 Nats victory.[162]
  • September 16, 2006: The Nationals' Alfonso Soriano stole second base in the first inning against the Milwaukee Brewers and became the fourth player to hit 40 home runs and steal 40 bases in a season.[163]
  • September 23, 2007: The Nationals defeated the Philadelphia Phillies 5–3 before 40,519 in the final major league game played at RFK Stadium.[164] The win gave the Nationals an overall home record of 122–121 (.502) in three seasons at the stadium.

The last winning pitcher in any baseball game at RFK was Luis Ayala of the Nationals, the last runner to score was Chase Utley of the Phillies and the last home run was also hit by Chase Utley the day before off Tim Redding.[citation needed]

Football edit

RFK was the home of two professional football teams, two college football teams, a bowl game and more than one college all-star game. It hosted neutral-site college football games, various HBCU games, and high school regular season and championship games.[165]

Professional football edit

  • November 27, 1966: The Washington Redskins beat the New York Giants 72–41. The 113 combined points are the most ever scored in an NFL game.
  • December 14, 1969: The Redskins defeat the New Orleans Saints 17–14 in what would be Vince Lombardi's last victory. The Redskins would lose the next week at Dallas, and Lombardi would die just before the start of the 1970 season.
  • November 20, 1972: RFK Stadium hosts its first Monday Night Football game. The Washington Redskins defeat the Atlanta Falcons 24–13.
  • December 31, 1972, the Redskins defeat the Dallas Cowboys 26–3 in the NFC Championship Game to earn a trip to Super Bowl VII.
  • October 8, 1973: In a Monday Night Football game, Redskins safety Ken Houston stops Cowboys' running back Walt Garrison at the goal line as time expired to secure a win.
  • December 17, 1977: The Redskins defeat the Los Angeles Rams 17–14 in what would be head coach George Allen's final game with the team.
  • October 25, 1981: The Redskins narrowly beat the New England Patriots 24–22 to earn head coach Joe Gibbs his first win at RFK Stadium.
  • October 17, 1982: First NFLPA's all-star games during the 1982 NFL strike[166]
  • January 22, 1983: The stadium physically shakes as a capacity crowd of 54,000 chants "We Want Dallas" taunting the hated Cowboys in the NFC Championship Game. The Redskins go on to defeat the Cowboys 31–17 to earn a trip to Super Bowl XVII where they beat the Miami Dolphins 27–17 to claim the franchise's first Super Bowl win.
  • March 6, 1983: The Washington Federals of the United States Football League play their first game, losing to the Chicago Blitz 28-7 before 38,007 fans at RFK stadium in the USFL's first nationally televised game.[167] The Federals never draw more than 15,000 fans again.[167]
  • September 5, 1983: Redskins' rookie cornerback Darrell Green chases down Cowboys' running back Tony Dorsett from behind to prevent him from scoring. However, the Redskins ended up losing late in the fourth quarter.
  • May 6, 1984: The Washington Federals play their final game, losing in overtime to the Memphis Showboats at RFK Stadium before 4,432 fans, the smallest crowd in USFL history.[167]
  • November 18, 1985: Giants' linebacker Lawrence Taylor sacks Redskins' quarterback Joe Theismann, severely breaking his leg and ending his NFL career. Backup quarterback Jay Schroeder comes in and leads the Redskins to a 23–21 victory on Monday Night Football.
  • January 17, 1988: Cornerback Darrell Green knocks down a Wade Wilson pass at the goal line to clinch a victory over the Minnesota Vikings in the NFC Championship game. The Redskins go on to defeat the Denver Broncos 42–10 in Super Bowl XXII.
  • January 4, 1992: In pouring rain, the Redskins beat the Atlanta Falcons 24–7 in the Divisional round of the playoffs. After a touchdown scored by Redskins fullback Gerald Riggs with 6:32 remaining in the fourth quarter, the fans shower the field with the free yellow seat cushions given to them when they entered the stadium.
  • January 12, 1992: The Redskins beat the Detroit Lions 41–10 in the NFC Championship Game earning a trip to Super Bowl XXVI where they beat the Buffalo Bills 37–24. This was the last time the RFK held a post-season game.
  • December 13, 1992: Redskins' head coach Joe Gibbs coaches what would be his last win at RFK Stadium. The Redskins defeat the Cowboys 20–17.
  • September 6, 1993: RFK Stadium hosts its last Monday Night Football game as the Redskins open their season by defeating the Dallas Cowboys 35–16.
  • December 22, 1996: The Redskins won their last game in the stadium, defeating their arch-rivals, the Dallas Cowboys, 37–10. A capacity crowd of 56,454 fans watched the game, tying the football record set against the Detroit Lions in 1995. It was the last professional football game played at RFK. In a halftime ceremony, several past Redskins greats were introduced, wearing replicas of the jerseys of their time. After the game, fans storm the field and rip up chunks of grass as souvenirs. In the parking lot, fans are seen walking away with the stadium's burgundy and gold seats.
Records edit

Bowl games edit

HBCU games edit

  • October 24, 1970 – First Howard University game at RFK, a 24–7 victory over Fisk.
  • September 30, 1972 – Grambling beat Prairie View, 38–12.
  • Timmie Football Classic (1974-1975) Grambling vs. Morgan State[169]
  • November 4, 1978 – Tennessee State vs North Carolina-Central faced off in an attempted reboot of the Capitol Classic, though renamed "A Touch of Greatness".[170]
  • Nation's Capital Football Classic (1991) – Delaware State defeated Jackson State 37–34[171]
  • September 16, 2016 – The last Howard University game at RFK, a 34–7 loss to Hampton.

College All-Star Games edit

  • U.S. Bowl (1962) – A college all-star game that lasted only one season. Galen Hall was the game's only MVP.[172]
  • Freedom Bowl All-Star Classic (1986)[173]
  • All-America Classic (1993)[174]

Neutral site games for local colleges edit

  • October 17, 1965: Navy beat Pitt, 12–0.[175]
  • October 17, 1970: In their 4th ever meeting, Air Force beat Navy 26–3.[176]
  • November 4, 1972: Kentucky State defeated Federal City 26–8, in the only football game by a UDC school.[177]
  • October 4, 1975: Navy beat Air Force, 17–0.[178]
  • November 11, 1995: Virginia Tech clinched a share of the Big East title with a win over Temple.[179]
  • November 11, 2000: Salisbury defeated Frostburg State, 18–8 to win the 2nd Regents Cup.[180]
  • November 10, 2001: In the only college football game at RFK to go into overtime, Frostburg State beat Salisbury 30–24 to win the 3rd Regents Cup.[181]
  • September 30, 2017: Harvard defeated Georgetown, 41–2 in what may be the last college football game at RFK.[182]

High schools edit

RFK has occasionally hosted high school football games, but never has done so regularly.[183] On August 14, 2018, DC Events announced the DC Events Kickoff Classic, a football tripleheader featuring six Washington, D.C., high schools, with games between Dunbar and Maret, Archbishop Carroll and Woodrow Wilson, and Friendship Collegiate Academy and H. D. Woodson.[183] The first Classic was held on September 15, 2018, and the second, only a double-header, was the following year.[183][184][185] The 2019 Classic represented the last official event in the stadium, coming days after the announcement that the stadium would be razed and months before the coronavirus pandemic.[citation needed] On September 14, 2019 the final game of any sport at RFK Stadium saw Friendship Collegiate defeat H.D. Woodson, 34–6 to win the Clash of Ward 7 Titans trophy. The last touchdown scored at RFK was on a pass from Collegiate's Dyson Smith to Taron Riddick.[186]

Soccer edit

 
D.C. United after their win in the 2004 MLS Eastern Conference finals

Although not designed for soccer, RFK Stadium, starting in the mid-1970s, became a center of American soccer, rivaled only by the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California, in terms of its history as a soccer venue.[68] It is the only facility in the world to have hosted the FIFA World Cup (in 1994), the FIFA Women's World Cup (in 2003), Olympic group stages for men and women (in 1996), the MLS Cup (in 1997, 2000, and 2007), the North American Soccer League's Soccer Bowl (in 1980) and CONCACAF Champions' Cup matches (in 1988 and 1998).[68] The United States men's national soccer team played more of its matches at RFK stadium than at any other site,[68] and D.C. United played 347 regular-season matches there.

In addition to being the home stadium of DC United, the Diplomats, the Freedom, the Whips and Team America, RFK also hosted three friendly Washington Darts games in 1970.[187]

Notable soccer dates at the stadium include:

  • May 26, 1967: Professional soccer's debut game at D.C. Stadium is also the inaugural game of the new United Soccer Association. 9,403 fans show up to watch the Washington Whips lose 2–1 to the Cleveland Stokers.[188]
  • July 14, 1968: Pelé's D.C. Stadium debut, before a District record soccer crowd of 20,189 fans. Pelé's and the Santos FC squad defeated the Washington Whips 3 to 1.
  • September 7, 1968: In a de facto Atlantic Division championship game, the Whips lost to the Atlanta Chiefs before 14,227 fans, the largest, non-exhibition home crowd in Whips history. It would be the last Whips game at D.C. Stadium.
  • September 19, 1970: In what would be the largest crowd to ever watch a Washington Darts match, 13,878 fans come to RFK to watch them take on Pelé and his Santos squad. They lost 7–4. The Darts also lost their two other RFK matches, against Hertha Berlin and Coventry City the prior May.[189]
  • May 4, 1974: The Washington Diplomats play their first game at RFK, a 5–1 loss to the Philadelphia Atoms. 10,145 fans attend.
  • June 29, 1975: A District record 35,620 fans show up to see Pelé in his first game in DC with the New York Cosmos as they take on the Washington Diplomats. Cosmos wins 9–2.
  • August 6, 1977: Playing for the New York Cosmos, Pelé plays his final regular-season game in the North American Soccer League, facing the Washington Diplomats at RFK Stadium. He scores the Cosmos' only goal, but the Diplomats upset the Cosmos 2-1 before 31,283 fans.[190]
  • October 6, 1977: The United States men's national soccer team plays its first match at the stadium versus China.
  • August 19, 1979: The Diplomats drop their first-ever home playoff game to the Los Angeles Aztecs 4–1.
  • June 1, 1980: In a nationally televised game, before a then District record crowd of 53,351 – the largest ever for NASL game in DC – the Diplomats lose a controversial game to the Cosmos, 2–1.[191][192]
  • August 27, 1980: The Diplomats top the Los Angeles Aztecs 1–0 in the only home playoff victory in the franchise's NASL history.
  • September 21, 1980: In the Soccer Bowl '80, before a crowd of 50,768, the New York Cosmos defeat the Fort Lauderdale Strikers, 3–0.
  • August 16, 1981: The Washington Diplomats of the NASL play their last game at RFK, a 5–1 victory over the Toronto Blizzard.
  • April 23, 1983: Team America, a Washington, D.C.-based NASL franchise, plays its first game, defeating the Seattle Sounders 1–0 at RFK Stadium.[193]
  • June 14: 1983: 50,108 fans come to watch Team America play Fort Lauderdale followed a Beach Boys concert. The largest NASL crowd in RFK history saw Team America win 2–1 after a shootout.
  • September 3, 1983: Team America plays its last game, a 2–0 loss to the Fort Lauderdale Strikers at RFK Stadium. The team folds after a single season, leaving Washington, D.C., without a professional soccer franchise until 1988.[193]
  • June 7, 1987: In the final game of the US Ambassador Cup tournament, the newly formed Washington Diplomats tie Honduras National Team to win the cup in front of 5,117 fans.[194]
  • April 17, 1988: In the first professional soccer game in DC in over 4 years, the new Washington Diplomats lost 2–1 to the New Jersey Eagles in front of a crowd of just 2,451.[195]
  • June 28, 1988: The Washington Diplomats lose to Monarcas Morelia 2–1 in the first of a two-game second-round series between the teams as part of the CONCACAF Champions' Cup. The second game, two days later, would also result in a 2–1 loss.[196]
  • August 13, 1988: In their first-ever home playoff game in the ASL, the Diplomats top the New Jersey Eagles, 4–1.
  • August 21, 1988: In the first game of the 1988 American Soccer League finals, the Washington Diplomats defeat the Fort Lauderdale Strikers 5-3 before 5,745 fans at RFK Stadium. The Diplomats will defeat the Strikers again at Fort Lauderdale, Florida, for a surprising American Soccer League championship in the league's first season.
  • June 29, 1989: The Diplomats host the ASL All-Star game, losing to the All-Stars 2–1 in front of a crowd of 4,375.[197]
  • June 24, 1990: In their last game at RFK Stadium, the Diplomats lose to the Maryland Bays 4–2. Because of conflicts with concerts, they played their last two home games at RFK Stadium's auxiliary field, losing their last one 4–0 to the Miami Freedom on July 22, 1990.[81] Professional soccer would not return to RFK Stadium for more than five years.
  • June 13, 1993: a record-setting crowd of 54,118 show up to watch England tie Brazil 1–1 in the US Cup.[192]
  • August 21, 1993: A.C. Milan defeats Torino F.C. 1–0 to win their second consecutive Supercoppa Italiana.
  • June 28, 1994: 53,186 fans show up to watch Italy and Mexico during the World Cup in what becomes the 6th highest attendance soccer match in RFK history.[192]
  • June 29, 1994: Saeed Al-Owairan of the Saudi Arabia national football team sprints the length of the field and weaves through a maze of Belgium national football team players to score a stunning individual goal, giving Saudi Arabia a 1–0 upset victory over Belgium in Group F of the FIFA 1994 World Cup. The goal later is voted the sixth-greatest FIFA World Cup goal of the 20th century. The win helps Saudi Arabia to advance to the second round of the FIFA World Cup for the first time.[198][199]
  • July 2, 1994: The 1994 FIFA World Cup concludes its play in RFK as Spain defeats Switzerland 3–0 in the Round of Sixteen (RFK had earlier hosted four group-play games).
  • June 18, 1995: In the U.S. Cup the United States defeats Mexico 4–0, with goals by Roy Wegerle (3' min), Thomas Dooley (25th min), John Harkes (36' min) and Claudio Reyna (67' min).
  • April 20, 1996: D.C. United plays its first game at RFK Stadium, losing 2–1 to the LA Galaxy.
  • July 21, 1996: 45,946 fans show up to watch a group play match between Norway and Brazil in the 1996 Olympics Women's Soccer tournament. It is the largest crowd for women's sports in Washington history. Two other women's Olympic matches were played in RFK as part of the Atlanta Olympics.
  • July 24, 1996: RFK hosted the final match for the US men's side in the 1996 Olympics Men's Soccer tournament. 58,012 spectators, the largest crowd in RFK history, watched the men tie Portugal 1–1, which was not enough to advance as they needed a win. Five other men's Olympic matches were played in RFK as part of the Atlanta Olympics.[200][192][201]
  • October 30, 1996: Ten days after winning the first Major League Soccer title, D.C. United defeats the Rochester Raging Rhinos 3–1 in the U.S. Open Cup final, achieving the first "double" in the modern American soccer era.
  • October 26, 1997: D.C. United defeats the Colorado Rapids 2–1 to win their second consecutive MLS Cup. 57,431 fans attend, the 2nd largest soccer crowd in DC history, and the largest for a professional league match.[192]
  • August 16, 1998: D.C. United defeats CD Toluca of Mexico 1–0 to win the CONCACAF Champions' Cup, becoming the first American team to do so and marking their first victory in an international tournament.
  • October 15, 2000: the Kansas City Wizards defeat the Chicago Fire 1–0 to win their first MLS Cup.
  • April 11, 2001: D.C. United defeats Arnett Gardens 2–1 in the second leg of the CONCACAF Giants Cup quarterfinals.
  • April 14, 2001: The Washington Freedom defeats the Bay Area CyberRays 1–0 in the inaugural match of the Women's United Soccer Association.
  • September 1, 2001: 54,282 people, the largest ever for a world cup qualifier at RFK, show up to watch the USA men vs. Honduras.[192]
  • August 3, 2002: In the MLS All-Star Game, a team of MLS players defeat the U.S. Men's National Team 3–2. D.C. United midfielder Marco Etcheverry is named MVP.
  • July 30, 2003: Ronaldinho makes his debut for FC Barcelona against A.C. Milan in a pre-season tour of the United States. Ronaldinho had a goal and an assist as Barcelona defeated defending European champion Milan 2–0 in an exhibition game that drew 45,864 to RFK Stadium.[202][203]
  • August 2, 2003: The Washington Freedom defeat the San Jose Cyber Rays in their last game at RFK as part of WUSA. The win clinches them a playoff spot and the Freedom go on to win the last Founder's Cup, which is awarded to the winner of the post-season playoff.
  • September 21, 2003: RFK hosts the 2003 FIFA Women's World Cup opening ceremonies and first match. RFK would host six matches during the tournament.
  • April 3, 2004: Freddy Adu debuts with D.C. United at RFK with a capacity soccer crowd of 24,603.[204] At age 14, Adu was, and still is, the youngest player to play in MLS.
  • November 6, 2004: D.C. United win the Eastern Conference final by tying the New England Revolution 3–3 and advancing on penalty kicks in what is generally regarded as one of the greatest games in MLS history. They would go on to defeat the Kansas City Wizards 3–2 in the MLS Cup.
  • July 31, 2004: RFK Stadium hosts its second and last MLS All-Star Game. The East beats the West 3–2.
  • August 9, 2007: David Beckham debuts for the MLS Los Angeles Galaxy, losing to home team D.C. United before a sellout crowd of 46,686 fans, the fourth largest to watch MLS at RFK Stadium.
  • September 2, 2009: Seattle Sounders FC defeats D.C. United 2–1 in the 2009 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup Final. This marked the first of Seattle's record-tying three consecutive Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup titles.
  • October 23, 2010: Jaime Moreno scores on a penalty kick in his final game as a D.C. United player to retire as the all-time leading scorer in MLS history. United would lose the match, 3–2, to Toronto FC.
  • May 1, 2010: The Washington Freedom's last game at RFK, a 3–1 victory over Saint Louis Athletica
  • June 19, 2011: Quarterfinal of 2011 CONCACAF Gold Cup, USA vs. Jamaica. US defeats Jamaica 2–0 and moves onto the semi-final. In the second game of the double header El Salvador played Panama to a 1–1 tie. Panama won in a shoot out in front of 46,000 people.
  • June 2, 2013: The United States defeated No. 2 ranked Germany 4–3 in a friendly commemorating the 100th anniversary of the U.S. Soccer Federation.[205]
  • September 3, 2014: RFK hosts a triple-header on the first day of the group stage of the Central American Cup USA 2014[206]
  • October 20, 2014: The United States women's national soccer team defeats the Haiti women's national football team 6–0 in the 2014 CONCACAF Women's Championship, which also acts as a qualifying tournament for the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup.
  • March 1, 2016: Querétaro eliminated D.C. United from the CONCACAF Champions League with a 1–1 tie, the last of four Champions League matches at RFK during the 2015–2016 season.[207]
  • October 22, 2017: In front of 41,418 fans (the highest attendance at the stadium since David Beckham's debut game), the New York Red Bulls beat D.C. United 2–1 in United's last match at RFK Stadium.[72]
  • June 10, 2018: Alianza del El Salvador defeated Olimpia de Honduras 3–1 in a friendly
  • March 25, 2019: El Salvador defeated Peru 2–0 in a friendly.[208]
  • June 2, 2019: El Salvador defeated Haiti 1–0 in a pre-Gold Cup friendly.[209]

College soccer edit

RFK hosted at least two college soccer games, once when Maryland moved their game there due to wet field conditions at Ludwig Field and again for a scheduled game following their national championship season. It has hosted several other Maryland games at the auxiliary field.

  • November 8, 1997: Maryland Terps defeated Ohio State 2–1[210]
  • April 20, 2009: Maryland lost to Wake Forest 3–1.[211]

United States men's national team matches edit

The United States men's national soccer team has played more games at RFK Stadium than any other stadium.[212] At times it was suggested that due to the nature of RFK and its quirkiness that it would be a suitable national stadium if US Soccer were ever to seek one out.[213][214] Several prominent members of the national team have scored at RFK, including Brian McBride, Cobi Jones, Eric Wynalda, Joe-Max Moore, Clint Dempsey, Michael Bradley, and Landon Donovan. Winners are listed first.

Date Competition Team Score Team Attendance
October 6, 1977 Friendly   China 1–1   United States Unknown
May 12, 1990   AFC Ajax 1–1 18,245
October 19, 1991   North Korea 2–1   United States 16,351
May 30, 1992 1992 U.S. Cup   United States 3–1   Republic of Ireland 35,696
October 13, 1993 Friendly   Mexico 1–1   United States 23,927
June 18, 1995 1995 U.S. Cup   United States 4–0   Mexico 38,615
October 8, 1995 Friendly 4–3   Saudi Arabia 10,216
June 12, 1996 1996 U.S. Cup   Bolivia 2–0   United States 19,350
November 3, 1996 1998 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONCACAF)   United States 2–0   Guatemala 30,082
October 3, 1997   Jamaica 1–1   United States 51,528
May 30, 1998 Friendly   Scotland 0–0   United States 46,037
June 13, 1999   United States 1–0   Argentina 40,119
June 3, 2000 2000 U.S. Cup 4–0   South Africa 16,570
September 3, 2000 2002 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONCACAF) 1–0   Guatemala 51,556
September 1, 2001   Honduras 3–2   United States 54,282
May 12, 2002 Friendly   United States 2–1   Uruguay 30,413
November 17, 2002 2–0   El Salvador 25,390
October 13, 2004 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONCACAF) 6–0   Panama 22,000
October 11, 2008 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONCACAF) 6–1   Cuba 20,249
July 8, 2009 2009 CONCACAF Gold Cup 2–1   Honduras 26,079
October 14, 2009 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification (CONCACAF)   Costa Rica 2–2   United States 36,243
June 19, 2011 2011 CONCACAF Gold Cup   United States 2–0   Jamaica 45,424
June 2, 2013 US Soccer Centennial Match 4–3   Germany 47,359
September 4, 2015 Friendly 2–1   Peru 28,896
October 11, 2016   United States 1–1   New Zealand 9,012

1994 FIFA World Cup matches edit

Date Time (UTC−5) Team No. 1 Res. Team No. 2 Round Attendance
1994-06-19 16:00   Norway 1-0   Mexico Group E 52,395
1994-06-24 19:30   Netherlands 2-1   Saudi Arabia Group F 50,535
1994-06-25 12:30   Italy 1-1   Mexico Group E 52,535
1994-06-29 12:30   Belgium 0-1   Saudi Arabia Group F 52,959
1994-07-02 16:30   Spain 3-0    Switzerland Round of 16 53,121

1996 Summer Olympics edit

Date Time (UTC−5) Team No. 1 Res. Team No. 2 Round Attendance
1996-07-20 15:00   Portugal 2-0   Tunisia Group A 34,796
1996-07-21 12:00   South Korea 1-0   Ghana Group C 45,946
1996-07-21 15:00   Norway 2-2   Brazil Group F 45,946
1996-07-22 19:30   Argentina 1-1   Portugal Group A 25,811
1996-07-23 18:30   Norway 3-2   Germany Group F 28,000
1996-07-23 21:00   Ghana 3-2   Italy Group C 27,849
1996-07-24 19:30   United States 1-1   Portugal Group A 58,012
1996-07-25 18:30   Norway 4-0   Japan Group F 30,237
1996-07-25 21:00   Mexico 1-1   Ghana Group C 30,237

Boxing edit

Late on May 22, 1993, 9,000 saw Riddick Bowe record a second-round knockout over Jesse Ferguson to retain his WBA heavyweight title.[215][216][217] On the same day Roy Jones recorded a unanimous decision over Bernard Hopkins to capture the vacant IBF middleweight title.

Motor sports edit

 
Track map.

Lap records The official race lap records at the Grand Prix of Washington D.C. are listed as:

On July 21, 2002, the Grand Prix of Washington, D.C., was run over a 1.66-mile (2.67 km) temporary circuit laid out in the RFK stadium parking lot. The 140-lap race was the American Le Mans Series' first event in the District of Columbia, and the city's first major motor sports event in 80 years.[219]

Before the race, residents living near the stadium expressed concerns about traffic, parking, and the noise the lengthy event would create. Two months before the race, The Washington Post reported that District officials had ignored laws and regulations requiring an environmental impact assessment for the race, and that Le Mans officials had lied to the city about noise levels.[220] After the race, American Le Mans officials reneged on a promise to remove the Jersey barriers outlining the racecourse, leaving the unsightly structures in the parking lots for removal at the city's expense.[221] When the American Le Mans organization tried to hold a second race at RFK in 2003, outraged residents forced D.C. officials to cancel the city's 10-year lease with the company. No more races were ever held.[222][223]

The venue saw a return to racing in 2014 with the Global Rallycross Championship. Much like most of the circuits for GRC at the time, the track was a temporary circuit laid out across the stadium's parking lot. Patrik Sandell won the first race, and the event returned for 2 more years.[224]

Cycling edit

The final stage of the 1992 Tour DuPont was a 14.7-mile (23.7 km) time trial from RFK to Rock Creek Park and back. Greg LeMond came in third for the stage and won the Tour, the last major win of his career.[225][226] He won $50,000 and a kiss from Mayor Sharon Pratt Kelly.[227] Steve Hegg won the stage.[228]

Rugby edit

Rugby union edit

On June 2, 2018, Wales national rugby union team played the South Africa national rugby union team at RFK Stadium. It was "Wales' fifth test on US soil, the previous four outings all against the United States national rugby union team.[229] " Wales ran out winners 22–20 in front of a crowd of 21,357.[230]

Date Winner Score Opponent Competition Attendance
June 2, 2018   Wales 22―20   South Africa 2018 Wales Americas tour 21,357

Rugby league edit

Date Winner Score Opponent Competition Attendance
March 17, 1995   Ireland 24–22   United States Saint Patrick's Day Test -
March 17, 1996   Ireland A 26–6 -

Concerts edit

The Grateful Dead performed here on 6/9/73, 6/10/73, 7/6/86, 7/7/86, 7/12/89, 7/13/89, 7/12/90, 6/14/91, 6/20/92, 6/25/93, 6/26/93, 7/16/94, 7/17/94, 6/24/95, and 6/25/95.

The Rolling Stones opened their 1994 Voodoo Lounge tour here with shows 8/1/94 and 8/3/94.

Michael Jackson and The Jacksons performed here in May 1974 and September 1984.

The Beatles performed a concert here in August 1966.

Pink Floyd performed a concert here on June 1, 1988, as part of their A Momentary Lapse of Reason Tour and two concerts on July 9 and 10, 1994, as part of their The Division Bell Tour.

Genesis performed here on May 26, 1987, as part of their Invisible Touch Tour, and on May 19, 1992, as part of their We Can't Dance Tour.

Metallica and Guns N' Roses performed here on July 17, 1992, as part of their Stadium Tour.

From 1993 to 1999 and from 2001 to 2004, rock radio station WHFS held its annual HFStival rock concert at RFK Stadium.

On July 4, 2015, the Foo Fighters held their 20th-anniversary concert at RFK Stadium.

List of concerts

Other events edit

  • 1961: More than 47,000 packed the then-new D.C. Stadium on Thanksgiving Day for the City Title football game.[241] The stadium hosted the city's interhigh championship game every year until the 1990s.[242]
  • July 3, 1986 Jim Crockett Promotions NWA Wrestling Show The Great American Bash on Tour; Attendance 6,300
  • May 26–27, 1995: 52,000 men attended a two-day Promise Keepers event.
  • November 27, 1997: At an event called "Blessings '97", Reverend Sun Myung Moon and his wife, Hak Ja Han Moon, officiated over a mass wedding that drew 40,000 people, including 2,500 Unification Church couples who consented to arranged marriages.[243]
  • On April 29, 2000, during the Millennium March on Washington, the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) hosted a star-studded concert at RFK stadium titled Equality Rocks, which was also captured in documentary form and aired on MTV stations.[244]
  • On January 19, 2009, the day before the presidential inauguration, a Day of Service for Our Military was held at RFK Stadium as a part of the Martin Luther King Jr. National Day of Service. This was a joint operation by Serve DC and Operation Gratitude. At this event, 12,000 volunteers assembled more than 80,000 care packages for American troops overseas.[245]
  • June 26, 2015: RFK hosted the opening ceremony for the 2015 Police and Fire Games.[246]

In film edit

The stadium was featured in the climax of the 2014 film X-Men: Days of Future Past. In the film, the stadium is damaged when Magneto uses his powers to place it as a barricade around the White House. At the end of the film, a newspaper article announces the stadium is to begin reconstruction.[247] (RFK is shown being prepped for a baseball game; however, the movie is set in 1973, two years after the Senators left for Texas.)

Washington Hall of Stars edit

See also Washington Nationals Ring of Honor, Washington DC Sports Hall of Fame

During the Redskins' tenure, the Washington Hall of Stars was displayed on a series of white-and-red signs hung in a ring around the stadium's mezzanine, honoring D.C. sports greats from various sports. With the reconfiguration of the stadium, it was replaced by a series of dark-green banners over the center-field and right-field fences in order to make room for out-of-town scoreboards and advertising signage. There are 15 separate panels honoring 82 figures. Nationals Park also hosts a smaller version of the display.

To the right of Panel 15 were four banners honoring D.C. United's MLS Cup wins: 1996, 1997, 1999 and 2004. To the right of these banners was D.C. United's "Tradition of Excellence" banner, which honors John Harkes and Marco Etcheverry. To the left of those banners were four banners honoring D.C. United's MLS Supporters Shield wins: 1997, 1999, 2006 and 2007. Those moved to Audi Field with D.C. United.

Public transportation edit

RFK Stadium sits 0.5 miles (0.80 km) from the Stadium-Armory station of the Washington Metro. The station is served by the Blue, Orange, and Silver Lines. It is also served directly by Metrobus lines B2, D6, 96 and 97.

References edit

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  193. ^ a b
robert, kennedy, memorial, stadium, confused, with, john, kennedy, stadium, philadelphia, john, kennedy, stadium, bridgeport, commonly, known, stadium, originally, known, district, columbia, stadium, defunct, multi, purpose, stadium, washington, located, about. Not to be confused with John F Kennedy Stadium Philadelphia or John F Kennedy Stadium Bridgeport Robert F Kennedy Memorial Stadium commonly known as RFK Stadium and originally known as District of Columbia Stadium is a defunct multi purpose stadium in Washington D C It is located about two miles 3 km due east of the U S Capitol building near the west bank of the Anacostia River and next to the D C Armory Opened in 1961 it was owned by the federal government until 1986 4 Robert F Kennedy Memorial StadiumRFKRFK Stadium from the east in 1988 looking towards the U S CapitolRobert F Kennedy Memorial StadiumLocation within the District of ColumbiaShow map of the District of ColumbiaRobert F Kennedy Memorial StadiumRobert F Kennedy Memorial Stadium the United States Show map of the United StatesFormer namesDistrict of Columbia Stadium 1961 1969 Address2400 East Capitol Street SELocationWashington D C Coordinates38 53 24 N 76 58 19 W 38 890 N 76 972 W 38 890 76 972Public transitWashington Metro at Stadium Armory Metrobus 96 97 B2 D6OwnerDistrict of ColumbiaOperatorEvents DCCapacityBaseball 43 500 1961 45 016 1971 45 596 2005 Football or soccer 56 692 1961 45 596 2005 2019 20 000 2012 2017 MLS Field sizeFootball 120 yd 53 333 yd 110 m 49 m Soccer 110 yd 72 yd 101 m 66 m Baseball Left field 335 ft 102 m Left center 380 ft 116 m Center field 410 ft 125 m Right center 380 ft 116 m Right field 335 ft 102 m Backstop 54 ft 16 m SurfaceTifGrand Bermuda grass 1 ConstructionBroke groundJuly 8 1960 2 OpenedOctober 1 1961 63 years ago Closed2019Demolished2023 Construction cost 24 million 235 million in 2022 dollars 3 ArchitectGeorge Leighton Dahl Architects and Engineers Inc Structural engineerOsborn Engineering CompanyServices engineerEwin Engineering AssociatesGeneral contractorMcCloskey and Co TenantsWashington Redskins NFL 1961 1996George Washington Colonials NCAA 1961 1966Washington Senators MLB 1962 1971Washington Whips USA NASL 1967 1968Howard Bison NCAA 1974 1976Washington Diplomats NASL 1974 1977 1981Team America NASL 1983Washington Federals USFL 1983 1984Washington Diplomats ASL APSL 1988 1990D C United MLS 1996 2017Washington Freedom WUSA 2001 2003Washington Nationals MLB 2005 2007Military Bowl NCAA 2008 2012Websiteeventsdc wbr com wbr Venues wbr RFKStadium wbr aspxRFK Stadium was home to a National Football League NFL team two Major League Baseball MLB teams five professional soccer teams two college football teams a bowl game and a USFL team It hosted five NFC Championship games two MLB All Star Games men s and women s World Cup matches nine men s and women s first round soccer games of the 1996 Olympics three MLS Cup matches two MLS All Star games and numerous American friendlies and World Cup qualifying matches It hosted college football college soccer baseball exhibitions boxing matches a cycling race an American Le Mans Series auto race marathons and dozens of major concerts and other events RFK was one of the first major stadiums designed to host both baseball and football Although other stadiums already served this purpose such as Cleveland Stadium 1931 and Baltimore s Memorial Stadium 1950 RFK was one of the first to employ what became known as the circular cookie cutter design It is owned and operated by Events DC the successor agency to the DC Armory Board a quasi public organization affiliated with the city government under a lease that runs until 2038 from the National Park Service which owns the land 5 though as of November 2023 update there is in U S Congress an active bill 6 which has yet to reach the full House for a vote to extend the lease by 99 years 7 In September 2019 Events DC officials announced plans to demolish the stadium due to maintenance costs 8 In September 2020 the cost was estimated at 20 million 9 Demolition began in 2023 10 11 Contents 1 History 1 1 Planning 1 2 Opening 1 3 Early years 1 4 Renaming the stadium 1 5 Senators depart 1 6 D C United moves in Redskins move out Nationals come and go 1 7 The last team leaves 1 8 Demolition 2 Name 3 Tenants 3 1 Washington Redskins 1961 1996 3 2 D C United 1996 2017 3 3 Washington Senators 1962 1971 3 4 Washington Diplomats 1974 1981 1988 1990 3 5 George Washington Colonials 1961 1966 3 6 Washington Nationals 2005 2007 3 7 Howard Bison 1970 2016 3 8 Washington Freedom 2001 2003 3 9 Washington Whips 1967 68 3 10 Washington Federals 1983 1984 3 11 Team America 1983 4 Design 4 1 Seating capacity 4 2 Dimensions 5 Sports events 5 1 Baseball 5 2 Football 5 2 1 Professional football 5 2 1 1 Records 5 2 2 Bowl games 5 2 3 HBCU games 5 2 4 College All Star Games 5 2 5 Neutral site games for local colleges 5 2 6 High schools 5 3 Soccer 5 3 1 College soccer 5 3 2 United States men s national team matches 5 3 3 1994 FIFA World Cup matches 5 3 4 1996 Summer Olympics 5 4 Boxing 5 5 Motor sports 5 6 Cycling 5 7 Rugby 5 7 1 Rugby union 5 7 2 Rugby league 6 Concerts 7 Other events 8 In film 9 Washington Hall of Stars 10 Public transportation 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksHistory editPlanning edit The idea of a stadium at this location originated in 1930 when plans were developed by the Allied Architects of Washington in cooperation with the Fine Arts and National Capital Park and Planning Commissions and the Board of Trade 12 Plans were further developed in 1932 when the Roosevelt Memorial Association RMA proposed a National Stadium for the site 13 and Allied Architects a group of local architects organized in 1925 to secure large scale projects from the government made designs for it 14 A National Stadium in Washington was an idea that had been pursued since 1916 when Congressman George Hulbert of New York proposed the construction of a 50 000 seat stadium at East Potomac Park for the purpose of attracting the 1920 Olympics It was thought that such a stadium could attract Davis Cup tennis matches polo tournaments and the annual Army Navy football game A later effort by DC Director of Public Buildings and Parks Ulysses S Grant III and Congressman Hamilton Fish of New York sought to turn the National Stadium into a 100 000 seat memorial to Theodore Roosevelt suitable for hosting inaugurations possibly on the National Mall or Theodore Roosevelt Island This attracted the attention of the RMA which suggested the East Capital location This would allow the Lincoln Memorial then under construction west of the Capitol and the Roosevelt memorial to become bookend monuments to the two great Republican presidents The effort lost steam when Congress chose not to fund the stadium in time to move the 1932 Olympics from Los Angeles 15 The idea of a stadium gained support in 1938 when Senator Robert Reynolds of North Carolina pushed for the creation of a municipal outdoor stadium within the District citing the fact that America is the only major country not possessing a stadium with facilities to accommodate the Olympic Games The following year a model of the proposed stadium to be located near the current site of RFK Stadium was presented to the public By 1941 the National Capital Planning Commission had begun buying property for a stadium purchasing the land between East Capitol C 19th and 21st NE 16 A few years later on December 20 1944 Congress created a nine man National Memorial Stadium Commission to study the idea 17 They intended the stadium to be a memorial to the veterans of the World Wars The commission wrote a report recommending that a 100 000 seat stadium be built near the site of RFK in time for the 1948 Olympics but it failed to get funding 18 Ignored in the early 1950s a new stadium again drew interest in 1954 Congressman Charles R Howell of New Jersey proposed legislation to build a stadium again with hopes of attracting the Olympics He pushed for a report completed in 1956 by the National Capital Planning Commission entitled Preliminary Report on Sites for National Memorial Stadium which identified the East Capitol Site to be used for the stadium In September 1957 The District of Columbia Stadium Act was introduced and authorized a 50 000 seat stadium to be used by the Senators and Redskins at the Armory site It was signed into law by President Eisenhower on July 29 1958 with an estimated cost of 7 5 to 8 6 million 17 The lease for the stadium was signed by the D C Armory Board and the Department of the Interior on December 12 1958 The stadium the first major multisport facility built for both football and baseball was designed by George Dahl Ewin Engineering Associates since 1954 part of what became Volkert Inc and Osborn Engineering Groundbreaking for the 24 million venue was in 1960 on July 8 and construction proceeded over the following 14 months 19 The existing venue for baseball and football in Washington was Griffith Stadium about four miles 6 km northwest While Redskins owner George Preston Marshall was pleased with the stadium Senators owner Calvin Griffith was not It wasn t where he wanted it to be he had preferred to play at a site in Washington s Northwest Quadrant and he d have to pay rent and let others run the parking and concessions The Senators attendance figures had suffered after the arrival of the Baltimore Orioles in 1954 and Griffith then grew to prefer the less racially defined demographics and profit potential of the Minnesota market 20 In 1960 when the American League granted the city of Minneapolis an expansion team Griffith proposed that he be allowed to move his team to Minneapolis Saint Paul and give the expansion team to Washington Upon league approval the team moved to Minnesota after the 1960 season and Washington fielded a new Senators team entering the junior circuit in 1961 with the Los Angeles Angels 17 Opening edit The stadium opened in autumn 1961 as District of Columbia Stadium often shortened to D C Stadium The new venue opened for football even though construction was not completed until the following spring 21 Its first official event was an NFL regular season game on October 1 ten days after the final MLB baseball game at Griffith Stadium The Redskins lost that game to the New York Giants 24 21 before 36 767 fans including President John F Kennedy 22 This was slightly more than the attendance record at Griffith Stadium of 36 591 on October 26 1947 in a game vs the Bears 17 22 At a college football game labeled the Dedication Game the stadium was dedicated on October 7 George Washington University became the first home team to win at the stadium with a 30 6 defeat of VMI 19 23 Its first sell out came on November 23 1961 for the first of what were to be annual Thanksgiving Day high school football games between the D C public school champion and the D C Catholic school champion Eastern defeated St John s 34 14 24 25 nbsp President Kennedy throws the first pitch of the 1962 baseball season at D C StadiumThe first Major League Baseball game was played on April 9 1962 after two exhibition games against the Pirates had been cancelled President Kennedy threw out the ceremonial first pitch in front of 44 383 fans who watched the Senators defeat the Detroit Tigers 4 1 and Senators shortstop Bob Johnson hit the first home run 26 27 The previous Washington baseball attendance record was 38 701 at Griffith Stadium on October 11 1925 at the fourth game of the World Series and was the largest ever for a professional sports event in Washington 28 The previous largest baseball opening day figure had been 31 728 on April 19 1948 17 When it opened D C Stadium hosted the Redskins the Senators and the GWU Colonials football team all of whom had previously used Griffith Stadium the GWU Colonials shut down their football team at the end of the 1966 season while the Senators moved to Dallas Fort Worth at the end of the 1971 season and became the Texas Rangers playing in Arlington Stadium Early years edit In 1961 Washington Redskins owner George Preston Marshall refused to integrate his team but President Kennedy forced his hand by refusing to allow the team to play in the stadium which was on Federal land unless he desegregated the organization In 1962 Marshall relented and drafted a black player Ernie Davis Davis was traded but Marshall eventually hired five African American players for the Redskins 1962 roster and became the last NFL owner to integrate 29 In 1961 and 1962 D C Stadium hosted the annual city title game matching the D C Public Schools champion and the titleholder for the Washington Catholic Athletic Conference played before capacity crowds on Thanksgiving Day The November 22 1962 game between St John s a predominantly white school in Northwest D C and Eastern a majority black school just blocks from the stadium ended in a racially motivated riot 30 31 In 1964 the stadium emerged as an element in the Bobby Baker bribery scandal Don B Reynolds a Maryland insurance businessman made a statement in August 1964 which he claimed that Matthew McCloskey a former Democratic National Committee chairman and Kennedy s ambassador to Ireland paid a 25 000 kickback through Reynolds and at the instruction of Baker to the Kennedy Johnson campaign as payback for the stadium construction contract 32 Baker later went to jail for tax fraud and the FBI investigated the awarding of the stadium contract although McCloskey was never charged 33 Renaming the stadium edit The stadium was renamed in January 1969 for U S Senator and presidential candidate Robert F Kennedy 34 who had been assassinated in Los Angeles seven months earlier The announcement was made by Secretary of the Interior Stewart Udall on January 18 in the last days of the Johnson Administration 35 36 The dedication ceremony at the stadium was held several months later on June 7 36 37 Senators depart edit The Senators final game was at RFK on Thursday night September 30 1971 38 with less than 15 000 in attendance 39 Rains from Hurricane Ginger threatened the event 38 but the game proceeded Fan favorite Frank Hondo Howard hit a home run RFK s last until 2005 in the sixth inning to spark a four run rally to tie the game the Senators scored two more in the eighth to go up 7 5 but the game was forfeited 9 0 to the Yankees after unruly fans stormed the field with two outs in the top of the ninth 17 38 Subsequent efforts to bring baseball back to RFK including an attempt to attract the San Diego Padres in 1973 40 41 42 and a plan to have the nearby Baltimore Orioles play eleven home games there in 1976 all failed 43 The former was derailed by lease issues with the city in San Diego 42 and the latter was shot down by commissioner Bowie Kuhn who had planned to expand the league with four teams aiming for Seattle New Orleans Toronto and Washington that would see an 14 team NL and AL 44 45 The expansion for 1977 was later reduced to two teams to be placed in the American League with Toronto and Seattle and the next wasn t until 1993 speculation for expansion had started as early as 1989 with Washington as a city in mind but it proved fruitless In the mid 1990s RFK was planned to be the home of the yet to be named Washington team a charter franchise of the United League UL which was planned to be a third league of Major League Baseball MLB For much of the 1970s and 1980s RFK was primarily known as the home of the Redskins where they played during their three Super Bowl championship seasons It also hosted several short lived professional soccer teams and in 1983 1984 the Washington Federals of the USFL In 1980 it hosted the Soccer Bowl the championship game of the NASL D C United moves in Redskins move out Nationals come and go edit Major changes to the stadium came in 1996 Following the success of hosting matches in the 1994 World Cup and 1996 Summer Olympics RFK became home to one of the charter teams of the new Major League Soccer On April 20 1996 it played host to the first home match of D C United a 2 1 loss to the LA Galaxy However later that year the stadium hosted the Redskins final home game in Washington D C After nearly a decade of negotiating for a new stadium with Mayors Sharon Pratt Kelly and Marion Barry abandoning them in 1992 and 1993 in search of a suburban site and then having a 1994 agreement collapse in the face of neighborhood complaints environmental concerns and a dispute in Congress over what some members viewed as the team s racially insensitive name and the use of federal land for private profit Jack Kent Cooke decided to move his team to Maryland 46 47 48 On December 22 1996 the Redskins won their last game at RFK Stadium 37 10 over the Dallas Cowboys reprising their first win there in 1961 before 56 454 the largest football crowd in stadium history The Redskins then moved east to FedExField in 1997 leaving D C United as the stadium s only major tenant for much of the next decade though from 2001 to 2003 they were joined by the Washington Freedom of the short lived Women s United Soccer Association After hosting 16 exhibition games after the Senators departure baseball returned to RFK temporarily in 2005 49 That year the National League s newly renamed Washington Nationals made it their home while a new permanent home Nationals Park was constructed On April 14 2005 before a crowd of 45 496 including President Bush and MLB Commissioner Bud Selig the Nationals beat the Arizona Diamondbacks 5 3 victory in their first game at RFK President George W Bush formerly a part owner of the Texas Rangers the former Senators threw out the first pitch becoming the last president and the first since Richard Nixon to do so in RFK Stadium 19 Bush threw a ball saved by former Senators pitcher Joe Grzenda from that teams ill fated final home game the ball Grzenda would have pitched to Yankee second baseman Horace Clarke when fans rioted and forced the forfeit The last MLB game at RFK a 5 3 Nationals win over the Phillies was played on September 23 2007 and in 2008 the Nationals moved to their new stadium The last team leaves edit In 2008 RFK was once again primarily the host of D C United though it also hosted a college football bowl game the Military Bowl from 2008 to 2012 before it moved in 2013 to Navy Marine Corps Memorial Stadium in Annapolis Maryland 50 On July 25 2013 the District of Columbia and D C United announced a tentative deal to build a 300 million 20 000 25 000 seat stadium at Buzzard Point 51 52 Groundbreaking on the new soccer stadium Audi Field occurred in February 2017 and on October 22 2017 RFK hosted its last MLS match a 2 1 D C United loss to the New York Red Bulls 53 Demolition edit On September 5 2019 Events DC announced plans to demolish the stadium by 2021 Officials said the decision would save 2 million a year on maintenance and 1 5 million a year on utilities 8 One year later they hired a contractor to oversee the demolition which was expected to begin in 2022 and cost 20 million 9 In July 2022 Events DC announced that the removal of hazardous materials had begun and would take several months and that demolition would be completed by the end of 2023 54 In the same month several fires occurred inside the stadium The District of Columbia Fire and Emergency Medical Services Department firefighters and emergency workers responded and extinguished them They indicated that the fires were in below grade levels No injuries were reported and cause of the fires is currently unknown 55 56 In November 2022 a sale of stadium seats was announced ahead of the 2023 demolition 57 58 The deteriorating stadium had also been featured in the YouTube videos of several known urban explorers who trespassed through the site citation needed As of October 2023 update crews have begun gutting areas of the site though structural demolition has not begun 59 10 11 Name editThe stadium opened in October 1961 named the District of Columbia Stadium but the media quickly shortened that to D C Stadium and sometimes in the early days as Washington Stadium 60 On January 18 1969 in the last days of the Johnson Administration Secretary of the Interior Stewart Udall announced that the stadium would be renamed Robert F Kennedy Memorial Stadium in Kennedy s honor 36 34 The official renaming ceremony was held on June 7 36 37 but by then many had already been referring to it as RFK Stadium or simply RFK 17 Coincidentally following the death of John F Kennedy in 1963 the Armory Board had directed that the stadium be renamed for him 61 but the plan faltered when a few weeks later the Philadelphia city council passed a bill renaming Philadelphia Stadium as John F Kennedy Stadium 62 Robert Kennedy was not without connection to the stadium as attorney general in the early 1960s his Justice Department played a role in the Redskins racial integration 63 Along with Udall Kennedy threatened to revoke the team s lease at the federally owned stadium until it promised to sign African American players 63 64 His brother John attended the first event there and threw out the first pitch In 2008 a nearby bridge was renamed for Ethel Kennedy Robert Kennedy s wife On April 14 2005 just before the Nationals home opener the D C Sports and Entertainment Commission announced an agreement with the Department of Defense under which the military would pay the city about 6 million for naming rights and the right to place recruiting kiosks and signage in the stadium In return the stadium would be dubbed Armed Forces Field at RFK Stadium 65 This plan was dropped within days however after several prominent members of Congress questioned the use of public funds for a stadium sponsorship 66 Similar proposals to sell the naming rights to the National Guard 65 ProFunds a Bethesda Maryland investment company 66 and Sony 67 were formed and discarded in 2005 and 2006 Tenants editWashington Redskins 1961 1996 edit RFK Stadium was home to the Washington Redskins for 36 seasons from 1961 through 1996 The football field was aligned northwest to southeast along the first baseline The Redskins first game in D C Stadium was its first event a 24 21 loss to the New York Giants on October 1 1961 The first win in the stadium came at the end of the season on December 17 over its future archrival the struggling second year Dallas Cowboys The Redskins played 266 regular season games at RFK compiling a 173 102 3 628 record including an impressive 11 1 record in the playoffs 68 In its twelfth season RFK hosted its first professional football playoff game on Christmas Eve 1972 a 16 3 Redskins win over the Green Bay Packers It was the city s first postseason game in three decades following the NFL championship game victory in 1942 The stadium hosted the NFC Championship Game five times 1972 1982 1983 1987 and 1991 2nd only to Candlestick Park and the Redskins won them all They are the only team to win five NFC titles at the same stadium In the subsequent Super Bowls Washington won three XVII XXII XXVI The Redskins last game at the stadium was a victory as 56 454 saw a 37 10 win over the division champion Cowboys on December 22 1996 69 70 D C United 1996 2017 edit nbsp RFK Stadium during a D C United soccer match in March 2009D C United of Major League Soccer played over 400 matches at RFK Stadium from the team s debut in 1996 until 2017 when they moved to a new stadium During that time RFK hosted three MLS Cup finals including the 1997 match won by D C United At RFK they compiled a 228 113 75 638 record winning more games at RFK than any team other than the Senators With its new stadium Audi Field opening in 2018 D C United played its final game at RFK on October 22 2017 completing 22 seasons at the stadium during which the team won four league titles 71 72 At the time RFK Stadium was the longest used stadium in MLS and the only one left from the league s debut season When they shared the stadium with the Nationals from 2005 to 2007 the playing surface and the dimensions of the field that resulted from baseball use drew criticism D C United s departure left RFK with no professional sports tenant however after moving to Audi Field D C United continued to use the outer practice fields at RFK for training and leased locker room and basement space there 68 Washington Senators 1962 1971 edit nbsp D C Stadium in 1963 looking westThe Washington Senators of the American League played at RFK Stadium from 1962 through 1971 They played their first season in 1961 at Griffith Stadium In its ten seasons as the Senators home field RFK Stadium was known as a hitters park aided by the stagnant heat and humidity of Washington summers Slugger Frank Howard 6 ft 7 in 2 01 m 255 lb 116 kg hit a number of tape measure home runs a few of which landed in the center field area of the upper deck The seats he hit with his home runs are painted white rather than the gold of the rest of the upper deck Howard came to the Senators from the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1965 He hit the Senators final RFK homer in the sixth inning on September 30 1971 With two outs in the top of the ninth 73 a fan riot turned a 7 5 Senators lead over the New York Yankees into a 9 0 forfeit loss the first in the majors in 17 years 74 75 These Senators only winning season came in 1969 at 86 76 531 they never made the postseason They had a home record at RFK of 363 441 451 representing the most games wins and losses by any team at RFK in any sport The stadium hosted the All Star Game twice in 1962 first of two and 1969 both won by the visiting National League Presidents Kennedy Johnson and Nixon all attended games there President Johnson was scheduled to throw out the first pitch in 1968 but the opening game was delayed following the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr so Vice President Hubert Humphrey got the privilege 76 President Nixon was to throw out the first ball at the 1969 game to celebrate baseball s centennial but it was postponed due to rain and so Nixon chose instead to greet the Apollo 11 astronauts Vice President Spiro Agnew filled in 77 Washington Diplomats 1974 1981 1988 1990 edit Between 1974 and 1990 three soccer teams played at RFK under the name Washington Diplomats In 1974 two Maryland businessmen purchased the rights to the Baltimore Bays of the semi professional American Soccer League moved the team to the District and renamed it the Washington Diplomats They signed a lease calculating that an average of 12 000 spectators would allow them to break even Despite white flight owners thought that recent completion of the Beltway the stadium s 12 000 parking spaces and future completion of a Metro station would facilitate attendance Games were scheduled for Saturday and prices were set low The Diplomats inaugural game was on May 4 with an attendance of 10 175 Mayor Walter Washington ceremonially kicked off the game but the Dips lost 5 1 to the defending NASL champion Philadelphia Atoms Attendance dropped throughout the season 78 In 1975 the Diplomats were informed that the recently installed natural turf at RFK would not be ready for opening day so they scheduled their first two home games that season for W T Woodson High School in Fairfax Virginia After the games attracted more than 10 000 fans each the Diplomats moved most of their home games to Woodson but then moved the last five back to RFK once soccer superstar Pele was added to the roster of the New York Cosmos Pele was so popular that the 1975 Cosmos Diplomats match broke the NASL attendance record at 35 620 79 Even with the success of the Cosmos game attendance declined again and before the 1976 season the Diplomats announced that they had scheduled every home game except the one against the Cosmos at Woodson During the season they moved that game to Woodson 78 After averaging 5 963 at Woodson the Diplomats decided to ramp up their marketing and move back to RFK in 1977 The team changed everything from the uniforms to the cheerleaders but the team s disappointing on the field performance hurt attendance a 31 000 fan game against Pele and the Cosmos notwithstanding In 1978 attendance continued to fall even though the Dips made the playoffs Success on the field during the 1978 and 1979 seasons including a franchise best 19 wins in 79 did not translate to ticket sales and even with a negligible amount of revenue from indoor Dips games at the D C Armory during the offseason the franchise continued to lose money 78 In 1980 they signed Dutch international superstar Johan Cruyff the Pele of the Potomac from the Los Angeles Aztecs Needing 20 000 fans per game to break even they managed to attract 24 000 for the opener and a District record 53 351 for the game against the Pele less Cosmos the fifth largest soccer crowd at RFK ever but the team failed to break even financially After racking up debts of 5 million the first incarnation of the Dips folded 78 Three months later the Detroit Express announced a move to D C for 1981 and that they would also be the Diplomats They had trouble attracting fans and soon folded The Diplomats of the NASL racked up an impressive 60 29 674 record at RFK the best winning percentage of any RFK home team and were 1 1 in the playoffs 80 78 In 1987 a new soccer team also called the Washington Diplomats was formed They played at RFK and sometimes at the RFK auxiliary field for three seasons as part of the ASL and then the APSL They won the ASL Championship in 1988 but often drew fewer than 1000 fans In 1990 they finished last in the Southern Division of the APSL East were unable to pay the rent and folded in October 1990 81 82 Over the course of 4 seasons they were 18 15 545 at RFK and 2 0 at the RFK auxiliary field George Washington Colonials 1961 1966 edit The other team to move from Griffith to D C Stadium was the George Washington University Colonials college football team The stadium was dedicated during the October 7 1961 game against VMI the first college football game there which GWU won 30 6 The Colonials were forced to play their first three games on the road to allow the stadium to be completed In the following years because the Senators had priority GWU waited until October when baseball season was over to schedule games From 1961 to 1964 they played road games in September and in 1965 and 1966 they played at high school stadiums in Arlington and Alexandria Virginia 23 19 83 84 The Colonials had no real success at D C Stadium GWU was 22 35 386 during its D C Stadium years and never posted a winning record The Colonials weren t much better at D C Stadium where their record was 11 13 458 facing off against Army twice and against a Liberty Bowl bound West Virginia in 1964 all losses 85 Perhaps their biggest win was the 1964 upset of Villanova which came to Washington with a 6 1 record Sophomore quarterback Garry Lyle the school s last NFL draftee led the Colonials to a 13 6 win 86 The final George Washington football game to date and the last at D C Stadium came on Thanksgiving Day November 24 1966 when the team lost to Villanova 16 7 87 After the season was over GW President Dr Lloyd H Elliott chose to reevaluate GW s football program 88 On December 19 1966 head coach Jim Camp conference coach of the year resigned citing the uncertainty The next day a member of the Board of Trustees announced that the school would drop football 89 On January 19 1967 the decision became official 90 GW decided to use the football program s funding to eventually build the Charles E Smith Center for the basketball team 90 Poor game attendance and the expense estimated at 254 000 during the 1966 season contributed to the decision Former GW player Harry Ledford believed that most people were unwilling to drive on Friday nights to D C Stadium which was perceived as an unsafe area and lacked rail transit Maryland and Virginia were nationally competitive teams that drew potential suburban spectators away from GW 91 Washington Nationals 2005 2007 edit After playing as the Montreal Expos from 1969 to 2004 the Expos franchise moved to Washington D C to become the Washington Nationals for the 2005 season The Nationals played their first three seasons 2005 2007 at RFK then moved to Nationals Park in 2008 While the Nationals played at RFK it was the fourth oldest active stadium in the majors behind Fenway Park Wrigley Field and Yankee Stadium 92 During the Nationals three seasons there RFK then became known as a pitchers park While Frank Howard hit at least 44 home runs for three straight seasons at RFK for the second Washington Senators franchise from 1968 through 1970 the 2005 Nationals had only one hitter with more than 15 home runs Jose Guillen with 24 However in his lone season with the team in 2006 Alfonso Soriano hit 46 home runs During their three seasons at RFK the Nationals failed to make the playoffs or post a winning record They went 41 40 at home in 2005 and 2006 and 40 41 in 2007 to finish with a 122 121 502 record at RFK Howard Bison 1970 2016 edit No team has a longer history with RFK Stadium than the Howard Bison football team who played there 42 times over nearly 46 years the Detroit Tigers are 2nd by 8 months having played their first game there April 9 1962 and their last on June 20 2007 Between their first game in 1970 and last in 2016 they earned a 22 17 3 560 record winning more games at RFK than any other college football program Looking to play on a bigger stage than Howard Stadium they began scheduling games at RFK Howard s first RFK game was a 24 7 victory over Fisk on October 24 1970 93 From 1974 to 1976 Howard played all but one of their home games at RFK and in 1977 they played half their home games there 94 After the 1977 season they returned to Howard Stadium but continued to play their annual homecoming game at RFK through 1985 After the 1985 season Howard Stadium was refurbished and renamed and for the next 7 years Howard played all of their home games there In 1992 they returned to RFK for a game against Bowie State that was marked by taunting and a game ending scuffle 95 From 1993 to 1999 Howard played at least one game a year at RFK including the Greater Washington Urban League Classic at one point called the Hampton Howard Classic against Hampton from 1994 to 1999 In 2000 that game moved to Giants Stadium and Howard spent more than a decade away from RFK Starting in 2011 and through the 2016 season Howard played in the Nation s Football Classic at RFK matching up against Morehouse at first and then Hampton again 96 In 2017 Events DC announced that they would discontinue the Classic and thus the last Bison game at RFK Stadium was a 34 7 loss to Hampton on September 16 2016 97 98 Washington Freedom 2001 2003 edit For three seasons RFK was home to the Women s United Soccer Association team the Washington Freedom On April 14 2001 the Freedom defeated the Bay Area CyberRays 1 0 in WUSA s inaugural match before 34 198 fans the largest crowd in WUSA history and the largest crowd to watch a women s professional sports event in DC history the largest crowd for a women s sporting event was 45 946 for the 1996 women s Olympic soccer tournament also at RFK Over three years the Freedom racked up a 15 9 6 record at RFK and finished as one of the league s top teams They came in 2nd in 2002 and won the league s Founder s Cup in 2003 They played all of their home games at RFK except for one in 2001 at Navy Marine Corps Memorial Stadium in Annapolis to avoid the Washington Grand Prix Their last game at RFK as part of WUSA was on August 2 2003 when they defeated the San Jose Cyber Rays They won the final Founder s Cup in August 2003 and returned to RFK a few days later minus the players who were playing in the 2003 Women s World Cup for a victory celebration with the fans which would be their final WUSA event at RFK WUSA suspended operation the next month Their victory in the Founders Cup means that the Freedom won both the first and last games in WUSA history For a time their championship banner hung in RFK but when the Nationals moved in the banner was moved to the Maryland Soccerplex The Freedom continued first as an exhibition team called the Washington Freedom Soccer Club and then as a member of the W League and the Women s Professional Soccer league in 2006 Their home stadium was the Maryland Soccerplex but they continued to play a few games at RFK In 2004 they played an exhibition against Nottingham Forest which they won 8 0 99 They returned on June 22 2008 in a W League match which they won 5 0 against the Richmond Kickers Destiny that was part of a doubleheader with DC United 100 In 2009 the Freedom moved to the WPS and while they continued to play most of their home games in Maryland they played 3 of 10 home games at RFK in 2009 and one game there in 2010 101 102 In the years after WUSA suspended operations the Freedom went 5 0 1 at RFK bringing their combined RFK total to 20 9 7 653 After the 2010 season the Freedom s owners had had enough and sold the team to Dan Borislow owner of the phone service MagicJack He moved them to Boca Raton Florida for the team s last season The Freedom s final game at RFK was a 3 1 victory over Saint Louis Athletica on May 1 2010 Washington Whips 1967 68 edit In 1967 D C Stadium became the home of its first professional soccer team the Washington Whips They played 23 regular season games at D C Stadium over 16 months putting together a 13 5 5 674 home record as well as losing an exhibition against Pele and his standout Brazilian club Santos FC for a total RFK record of 13 6 5 646 103 20 189 fans attended the Santos exhibition more than three times as large as a typical Whips match making it the most heavily attended soccer game in DC history at the time The game was heavily promoted in the local press and the Whips who were struggling to attract fans to their regular matches provided additional incentive through a Meet Pele contest 78 RFK served as the venue for the inaugural match of the United Soccer Association USA a May 26 1967 match between the Whips and the Cleveland Stokers won by the Stokers 78 In their first season the Whips were one of the league s top teams and they were staffed by the Aberdeen Football Club of the Scottish Football League or the Aberdeen Dons They finished 5 2 5 good enough to win the Eastern Division and play for the USA Championship against the Los Angeles Wolves The owners estimated that they needed to attract 16 000 fans per game but they never broke 10 000 and averaged only 6 200 Towards the end of the 1967 season the Whips resorted to organizing British Isles sporting contests such as cricket hurling and rugby before games in hopes of luring expatriates 78 In 1968 to stay viable they negotiated a reduction in the lease payment and reduced admission prices by one third among other discounts The USA merged with the National Professional Soccer League to form the new North American Soccer League Despite problems on and off the field the team found itself in a battle for a playoff spot and towards the end of the season crowds swelled to as much as 14 227 in what proved to be the deciding match for the NASL Atlantic Division title This September 7 1968 match against the Atlanta Chiefs was the last for the Whips at D C Stadium That season the team went 15 10 7 drawing an average of 6 586 fans After a tour of Europe the Whips folded in October 1968 78 Washington Federals 1983 1984 edit Washington s only USFL team the Washington Federals played two seasons at RFK and during that time they had the league s worst record each season and in 1984 the lowest per game attendance For the opening game 38 000 fans showed up to see the return of former Redskins coach George Allen the coach of the Chicago Blitz in a game the Federals lost 28 7 But attendance quickly dropped off with as few as 7 303 showing up for a late season game against the Boston Breakers The team went 4 14 in 1983 and 3 15 in 1984 averaging 7 700 fans With six games remaining in the 1984 season owner Berl Bernhard sold the team to Florida real estate developer Woody Weiser In the off season that deal fell through Donald Dizney bought the team moved it to Orlando and renamed it the Renegades After going 7 29 194 overall and 5 18 217 at RFK the Federals ended their run with a 20 17 win over the New Orleans Breakers on June 24 1984 Team America 1983 edit Team America was a professional version of the United States men s national soccer team which played like a franchise in the North American Soccer League NASL during the 1983 season The team played its home games at RFK Stadium and was intended by the NASL and the United States Soccer Federation to build fan support for the league and create a cohesive and internationally competitive national team However the team finished in last place drawing 12 000 fans per game Team America played 19 games at RFK In those games they went 5 10 in NASL matches and tied three friendlies against Watford F C from the United Kingdom FC Dinamo Minsk from the Soviet Union and Juventus F C from Italy for a final record of 5 10 3 361 The team s attendance averaged 19 952 through the first seven home matches 104 including the 50 108 who attended a match vs Fort Lauderdale that featured a free Beach Boys concert Losses led to declining attendance as the season wore on Attendance averaged 13 002 for the entire 1983 season having played only a single season 105 Design editThe stadium s design was circular attempting to facilitate both football and baseball It was the first to use the so called cookie cutter concept an approach also used in Philadelphia New York Houston Atlanta St Louis San Diego Cincinnati Oakland and Pittsburgh While the perimeter of the stadium is circular the front edge of the upper and lower decks form a V shape in deference to the baseball configuration The rows of seating in the upper and lower decks follow the V layout and the discrepancy between the shapes of the inner and outer rings permits more rows of seats to be inserted along the foul lines than at home plate and in the outfield As a result the height of the outside wall rises and falls in waves and this is echoed in the roof resulting in a butterfly appearance when seen at ground level from the west This feature is unique among the circular stadiums of the 1960s The upper deck is cantilevered so that there are no columns from the lower deck obstructing views there 106 Such a design is less compatible with the later demand for luxury boxes due to weight in contrast FedExField has columns that obstruct views 107 The design at RFK allowed the upper deck to shake when fans stomped in unison 108 In 1961 the stadium represented a new level of luxury It offered 50 000 seats each 22 inches 56 cm wide at a time when the typical seat was only 15 16 in 38 41 cm air conditioned locker rooms and a lounge for player s wives It had a machine operated tarpaulin to cover the field yard wide aisles and ramps that made it possible to empty the stadium in just 15 minutes The ticket office was connected to the ticket windows by pneumatic tubes The press boxes could be enclosed and expanded for big events The stadium had a holding cell for drunks and brawlers It had 12 000 parking spaces and was served by 300 buses It had lighting that was twice as bright as Griffith Stadium 21 It was not ideal for either sport due to the different geometries of the playing fields As the playing field dimensions for football and baseball vary greatly seating had to accommodate the larger playing surface This would prove to be the case at nearly every multi purpose cookie cutter stadium As a baseball park RFK was a target of scorn from baseball purists largely because it was one of the few stadiums with no lower deck seats in the outfield The only outfield seats were in the upper deck above a high wall According to Sporting News publications in the 1960s over 27 000 seats roughly 60 of the listed capacity of 45 000 for baseball were in the upper tier or mezzanine levels The lower to upper proportion improved for the Redskins with end zone seats The first ten rows of the football configuration were nearly at the field level making it difficult to see over the players The baseball diamond was aligned due east home plate to center field and the football field ran along the first baseline northwest to southeast nbsp Robert F Kennedy Memorial Stadium Washington DC nbsp Panoramic view in 2012 from the west corner home plate to center field due east A complex conversion was necessary at a cost of 40 000 each time to change the stadium from a football configuration to baseball and back again in its final form this included rolling the third base lower level seats into the outfield along a buried rail dropping the hydraulic pitcher s mound 3 feet 0 9 m into the ground and laying sod over the infield dirt Later facilities were designed so the seating configuration could be changed more quickly and at a lower cost The conversion was required several times per year during the Senators joint tenancy with the Redskins 1962 71 but became much more frequent during the Nationals D C United era in 2005 the conversion was made over twenty times Originally the seats located behind the stadium s third base dugout were removed for baseball games and put back in place when the stadium was converted to the football and later soccer configuration When these sections were in place RFK seated approximately 56 000 With the Nationals arrival in 2005 this particular segment of the stands was permanently removed to facilitate the switch between the baseball and soccer configurations These seats were not restored following the Nationals move to Nationals Park leaving the stadium s seating capacity at approximately 46 000 The majority of the upper deck seats normally were not made available for D C United matches so the stadium s reduced capacity normally was not problematic for the club During the years when the stadium was without baseball 1972 2004 the rotating seats remained in the football configuration If an exhibition baseball game was scheduled the left field wall was only 250 feet 76 m from home plate and a large screen was erected in left field for some games nbsp View east from the Washington Monument with RFK Stadium in the background behind the U S Capitol FedExField is visible at the top left corner Some of RFK s quirks endear the venue to fans and players citation needed The large rolling bleacher section is less stable than other seating allowing fans to jump in rhythm to cause the whole area to bounce Also despite its small size it never seated more than 58 000 because of the stadium s design and the proximity of the fans to the field when configured for football the stadium was extremely loud when the usual sell out Redskins crowds became vocal Legend has it that Redskins head coach George Allen would order a large rolling door in the side of the stadium to be opened when visiting teams were attempting field goals at critical moments in games so that a swirling wind from off the Potomac and Anacostia rivers might interfere with the flight of the kicked ball Since the stadium is on a direct sightline with the Washington Monument and the U S Capitol light towers were not allowed instead arc lights were placed on its curved dipping roof Events D C the city agency which operates RFK Stadium began a strategic planning process in November 2013 to study options for the future of the stadium its 80 acres 32 ha campus and the nonmilitary portions of the adjacent D C Armory Events D C said one option to be studied was demolition within a decade while another would be the status quo The strategic planning process also included the design and development of options The agency said that RFK Stadium has generated 4 million to 5 million a year in revenues since 1997 which did not cover operating expenses 109 In August 2014 Events D C chose the consulting firm of Brailsford amp Dunlavey to create the master plan 110 Seating capacity edit Baseball Years Capacity1962 1970 43 500 111 1971 2004 45 016 111 Years Capacity2005 2007 45 596 111 Football Years Capacity1961 1964 49 219 112 1965 1969 50 000 113 1970 50 415 114 1971 53 041 115 1972 53 039 116 1973 54 381 117 1974 54 395 118 1975 1976 55 004 119 1977 1979 55 031 120 1980 1983 55 045 121 1984 55 431 122 1985 1991 55 750 123 1992 2004 56 454 124 Soccer Years Capacity1996 2004 56 4542005 2017 46 000 125 nbsp South exterior in August 2017 Dimensions edit nbsp Satellite view of the stadium in pre 2005 soccer configuration the darker red seats at the northwest end north is up on this image were not part of the subsequent setupThe dimensions of the baseball field were 335 feet 102 m down the foul lines 380 feet 116 m to the power alleys and 408 feet 124 m to center field during the Senators time The official distances when the Nationals arrived were identical except for two additional feet to center field After complaints from Nationals hitters it was discovered in July 2005 that the fence had actually been put in place incorrectly and it was 394 74 feet 120 3 m to the power alleys in left 395 feet 120 m to the right field power alley and 407 83 feet 124 3 m to center field The section of wall containing the 380 foot 116 m sign was moved closer to the foul lines to more accurately represent the distance shown on the signs but no changes were made to the actual dimensions The approximate elevation of the playing field is 10 feet 3 0 m above sea level Sports events editBaseball edit nbsp A Washington Nationals game at RFK June 2005Two major league teams called RFK home the Senators 1962 71 and the Nationals 2005 07 In between the stadium hosted an assortment of exhibition games old timer games and at least one college baseball exhibition game In addition from 1988 to 1991 the RFK auxiliary field served as the home stadium of the George Washington Colonials college baseball team and hosted some Howard University and Interhigh League and D C Interscholastic Athletic Association championship baseball games April 9 1962 The Washington Senators defeated the Detroit Tigers 4 1 in the first baseball game played at D C Stadium President John F Kennedy the brother of the stadium s future namesake then United States Attorney General Robert F Kennedy threw out the ceremonial first pitch July 10 1962 With 45 480 in attendance D C Stadium hosted its first All Star Game the first of two during the 1962 season President Kennedy threw out the first pitch and the National League won 3 1 June 12 1967 The Senators defeated the Chicago White Sox 6 5 in the longest night game to date in major league history 126 The 22 inning game lasted 6 hours and 38 minutes and ended at 2 43 a m EDT 127 April 7 1969 With President Richard Nixon and about 45 000 on hand on Monday afternoon rookie manager Ted Williams made his debut with the Senators an 8 4 loss to the New York Yankees 128 129 130 June 7 1969 The stadium was renamed for Robert Kennedy on January 18 while the Senators were away at Minnesota the rededication ceremony was held 36 37 July 23 1969 The stadium hosted its second and last All Star Game a National League 9 3 victory before 45 259 Postponed by a rainout the night before the game was on Wednesday afternoon 131 132 the final MLB All Star Game to conclude during daylight President Nixon was scheduled to throw out the first pitch the evening before 133 because of the postponement he missed the game to personally greet the returning Apollo 11 crew aboard the USS Hornet 134 Vice President Spiro Agnew threw out the first pitch 135 September 30 1971 In the Senators final game on a Thursday night they led the New York Yankees 7 5 with two outs in the top of the ninth After an obese teenager ran onto the field picked up first base and ran off fans stormed the field and tore up bases grass patches and anything else for souvenirs Washington forfeited the game 9 0 39 136 the first forfeit in the majors in seventeen years 39 It was the last MLB home game at RFK until 2005 July 19 1982 At the first Cracker Jack Old Timers Baseball Classic exhibition game attended by nearly thirty thousand 75 year old Hall of Famer Luke Appling hit a home run against the National League s Warren Spahn 137 138 139 140 Although he had a 310 lifetime batting average Appling only hit 45 home runs in 20 seasons However because the stadium had not been fully reconfigured it was just 260 feet 79 m to the left field foul pole far shorter than normal and Spahn applauded him as he rounded the bases Five more Cracker Jack All Star games were hosted at RFK 141 until summer construction at RFK in 1988 moved it north to Buffalo 142 143 During that time Hall of Famers and stars such as Joe Dimaggio Bob Feller Stan Musial Hank Aaron Willie Mays Sandy Koufax Roger Maris Whitey Ford and Washington favorite Frank Howard would take the field There was even a conversation about allowing then Vice President George H W Bush who d captained Yale s College World Series team to play one year 144 April 5 1987 RFK Stadium hosted an exhibition game between the Philadelphia Phillies and the New York Mets the first MLB game played in Washington D C since a pair of exhibition games in 1972 The game was a sell out with 45 614 tickets sold and a crowd of 38 437 actually attended on a cold rainy afternoon Mets pitcher Sid Fernandez threw a one hitter and the Mets won 1 0 145 146 April 3 1988 The Mets and Orioles met at RFK for an exhibition game watched by 36 123 as the Mets won 10 7 off a three run homer by Darryl Strawberry 147 April 2 1989 The Cardinals and Orioles met at RFK for an exhibition game watched by 37 204 as the Orioles won 7 6 in the 10th inning 148 May 6 1989 George Washington University defeated the Soviet national baseball team 20 1 149 April 7 1990 The Cardinals and Orioles met at RFK for an exhibition game watched by 21 298 as the Orioles won 11 10 150 April 6 7 1991 The Red Sox and Orioles played a pair of exhibition games at RFK The first was watched by 37 458 as the Orioles won 4 1 The Stadium was in its baseball configuration for the first time since September 30 1971 151 43 624 watched the Orioles lose the 2nd game 6 5 and Vice President Dan Quayle threw out the first pitch 152 April 4 5 1992 The Red Sox and Orioles met at RFK for an exhibition game watched by 20 551 as the Sox won 4 3 The next day the Red Sox played the Phllies at RFK in a game watched by 16 823 153 154 April 3 1998 The Orioles and Mets met for an exhibition game 155 April 2 and 4 1999 Montreal Expos and St Louis Cardinals met in a pair of exhibition games The stadium was restored to its full baseball configuration for the first time since the 1991 exhibition Rumors already swirled then that the Expos could soon call RFK home a possibility that came to pass after the 2004 season 156 April 3 2005 The Washington Nationals formerly the Montreal Expos lost to the Mets 4 3 in an exhibition game before a paid crowd of 25 453 in their first game in Washington It was the first MLB home game at RFK since 1971 Mayor Anthony Williams threw out the first pitch 157 April 14 2005 The Washington Nationals defeated the Arizona Diamondbacks 5 3 before a crowd of 45 596 in their first regular season game in Washington 158 159 President George W Bush threw out the first pitch 158 160 and Washington swept the three game series to improve to 8 4 161 It is the largest baseball crowd at RFK ever and the largest ever home crowd for the Nationals June 18 2006 Nationals third baseman Ryan Zimmerman who became known as Mr Walk Off for his penchant for hitting game ending home runs hit his first walk off home run off New York Yankees pitcher Chien Ming Wang in the bottom of the ninth inning for a 3 2 Nats victory 162 September 16 2006 The Nationals Alfonso Soriano stole second base in the first inning against the Milwaukee Brewers and became the fourth player to hit 40 home runs and steal 40 bases in a season 163 September 23 2007 The Nationals defeated the Philadelphia Phillies 5 3 before 40 519 in the final major league game played at RFK Stadium 164 The win gave the Nationals an overall home record of 122 121 502 in three seasons at the stadium The last winning pitcher in any baseball game at RFK was Luis Ayala of the Nationals the last runner to score was Chase Utley of the Phillies and the last home run was also hit by Chase Utley the day before off Tim Redding citation needed Football edit RFK was the home of two professional football teams two college football teams a bowl game and more than one college all star game It hosted neutral site college football games various HBCU games and high school regular season and championship games 165 Professional football edit November 27 1966 The Washington Redskins beat the New York Giants 72 41 The 113 combined points are the most ever scored in an NFL game December 14 1969 The Redskins defeat the New Orleans Saints 17 14 in what would be Vince Lombardi s last victory The Redskins would lose the next week at Dallas and Lombardi would die just before the start of the 1970 season November 20 1972 RFK Stadium hosts its first Monday Night Football game The Washington Redskins defeat the Atlanta Falcons 24 13 December 31 1972 the Redskins defeat the Dallas Cowboys 26 3 in the NFC Championship Game to earn a trip to Super Bowl VII October 8 1973 In a Monday Night Football game Redskins safety Ken Houston stops Cowboys running back Walt Garrison at the goal line as time expired to secure a win December 17 1977 The Redskins defeat the Los Angeles Rams 17 14 in what would be head coach George Allen s final game with the team October 25 1981 The Redskins narrowly beat the New England Patriots 24 22 to earn head coach Joe Gibbs his first win at RFK Stadium October 17 1982 First NFLPA s all star games during the 1982 NFL strike 166 January 22 1983 The stadium physically shakes as a capacity crowd of 54 000 chants We Want Dallas taunting the hated Cowboys in the NFC Championship Game The Redskins go on to defeat the Cowboys 31 17 to earn a trip to Super Bowl XVII where they beat the Miami Dolphins 27 17 to claim the franchise s first Super Bowl win March 6 1983 The Washington Federals of the United States Football League play their first game losing to the Chicago Blitz 28 7 before 38 007 fans at RFK stadium in the USFL s first nationally televised game 167 The Federals never draw more than 15 000 fans again 167 September 5 1983 Redskins rookie cornerback Darrell Green chases down Cowboys running back Tony Dorsett from behind to prevent him from scoring However the Redskins ended up losing late in the fourth quarter May 6 1984 The Washington Federals play their final game losing in overtime to the Memphis Showboats at RFK Stadium before 4 432 fans the smallest crowd in USFL history 167 November 18 1985 Giants linebacker Lawrence Taylor sacks Redskins quarterback Joe Theismann severely breaking his leg and ending his NFL career Backup quarterback Jay Schroeder comes in and leads the Redskins to a 23 21 victory on Monday Night Football January 17 1988 Cornerback Darrell Green knocks down a Wade Wilson pass at the goal line to clinch a victory over the Minnesota Vikings in the NFC Championship game The Redskins go on to defeat the Denver Broncos 42 10 in Super Bowl XXII January 4 1992 In pouring rain the Redskins beat the Atlanta Falcons 24 7 in the Divisional round of the playoffs After a touchdown scored by Redskins fullback Gerald Riggs with 6 32 remaining in the fourth quarter the fans shower the field with the free yellow seat cushions given to them when they entered the stadium January 12 1992 The Redskins beat the Detroit Lions 41 10 in the NFC Championship Game earning a trip to Super Bowl XXVI where they beat the Buffalo Bills 37 24 This was the last time the RFK held a post season game December 13 1992 Redskins head coach Joe Gibbs coaches what would be his last win at RFK Stadium The Redskins defeat the Cowboys 20 17 September 6 1993 RFK Stadium hosts its last Monday Night Football game as the Redskins open their season by defeating the Dallas Cowboys 35 16 December 22 1996 The Redskins won their last game in the stadium defeating their arch rivals the Dallas Cowboys 37 10 A capacity crowd of 56 454 fans watched the game tying the football record set against the Detroit Lions in 1995 It was the last professional football game played at RFK In a halftime ceremony several past Redskins greats were introduced wearing replicas of the jerseys of their time After the game fans storm the field and rip up chunks of grass as souvenirs In the parking lot fans are seen walking away with the stadium s burgundy and gold seats Records edit Most passing yards and passing TDs at RFK career Sonny Jurgenson 12 985 yards 108 TDs Most rushing yards and rushing TDs at RFK career John Riggins 3448 yards 32 TDs Most receiving yards at RFK career Art Monk 6329 yards Most receiving TDs at RFK career Charley Taylor 42 TDs Most passing yards game Boomer Esiason 522 yards October 11 1996 Most passing TDs game Mark Rypien 6 TDs October 11 1991 Highest quarterback rating game Dan Marino 150 4 February 9 1994 Most rushing yards career Gerald Riggs 3448 yards 32 TDs Most rushing TDs game tie Earnest Byner Dick James Terry Allen Joe Morris John Riggins Duane Thomas 3 Most receiving yards game Anthony Allen 255 yards 1987 Most receiving TDs game tie Anthony Allen Gary Clark Michael Irvin Keith Jackson Del Shofner 3Bowl games edit December 20 2008 Wake Forest defeats Navy 29 19 in the inaugural EagleBank Bowl before a crowd of 28 777 in the first bowl game to be played in Washington D C December 29 2009 UCLA defeats Temple 30 21 before a crowd of 23 072 in the second annual EagleBank Bowl December 29 2010 Maryland defeats East Carolina 51 20 before a crowd of 38 062 in the 2010 Military Bowl formerly the EagleBank Bowl Great fan turnout from both universities set a bowl attendance record in Maryland coach Ralph Friedgen s final game December 28 2011 Toledo defeats Air Force 42 41 before a crowd of 25 042 in the 2011 Military Bowl December 27 2012 In the last Military Bowl hosted at RFK Stadium San Jose State defeats Bowling Green 29 20 in the 2012 Military Bowl before a crowd of 17 835 the lowest bowl attendance figure since the 2005 Hawaii Bowl had only 16 134 attendees 168 Beginning in 2013 Navy Marine Corps Memorial Stadium in Annapolis Maryland replaced RFK Stadium as the site of the Military Bowl HBCU games edit October 24 1970 First Howard University game at RFK a 24 7 victory over Fisk September 30 1972 Grambling beat Prairie View 38 12 Timmie Football Classic 1974 1975 Grambling vs Morgan State 169 November 4 1978 Tennessee State vs North Carolina Central faced off in an attempted reboot of the Capitol Classic though renamed A Touch of Greatness 170 Nation s Capital Football Classic 1991 Delaware State defeated Jackson State 37 34 171 September 16 2016 The last Howard University game at RFK a 34 7 loss to Hampton College All Star Games edit U S Bowl 1962 A college all star game that lasted only one season Galen Hall was the game s only MVP 172 Freedom Bowl All Star Classic 1986 173 All America Classic 1993 174 Neutral site games for local colleges edit October 17 1965 Navy beat Pitt 12 0 175 October 17 1970 In their 4th ever meeting Air Force beat Navy 26 3 176 November 4 1972 Kentucky State defeated Federal City 26 8 in the only football game by a UDC school 177 October 4 1975 Navy beat Air Force 17 0 178 November 11 1995 Virginia Tech clinched a share of the Big East title with a win over Temple 179 November 11 2000 Salisbury defeated Frostburg State 18 8 to win the 2nd Regents Cup 180 November 10 2001 In the only college football game at RFK to go into overtime Frostburg State beat Salisbury 30 24 to win the 3rd Regents Cup 181 September 30 2017 Harvard defeated Georgetown 41 2 in what may be the last college football game at RFK 182 High schools edit RFK has occasionally hosted high school football games but never has done so regularly 183 On August 14 2018 DC Events announced the DC Events Kickoff Classic a football tripleheader featuring six Washington D C high schools with games between Dunbar and Maret Archbishop Carroll and Woodrow Wilson and Friendship Collegiate Academy and H D Woodson 183 The first Classic was held on September 15 2018 and the second only a double header was the following year 183 184 185 The 2019 Classic represented the last official event in the stadium coming days after the announcement that the stadium would be razed and months before the coronavirus pandemic citation needed On September 14 2019 the final game of any sport at RFK Stadium saw Friendship Collegiate defeat H D Woodson 34 6 to win the Clash of Ward 7 Titans trophy The last touchdown scored at RFK was on a pass from Collegiate s Dyson Smith to Taron Riddick 186 Soccer edit nbsp D C United after their win in the 2004 MLS Eastern Conference finalsMain articles D C United Washington Freedom soccer United States men s national soccer team and United States women s national soccer team Although not designed for soccer RFK Stadium starting in the mid 1970s became a center of American soccer rivaled only by the Rose Bowl in Pasadena California in terms of its history as a soccer venue 68 It is the only facility in the world to have hosted the FIFA World Cup in 1994 the FIFA Women s World Cup in 2003 Olympic group stages for men and women in 1996 the MLS Cup in 1997 2000 and 2007 the North American Soccer League s Soccer Bowl in 1980 and CONCACAF Champions Cup matches in 1988 and 1998 68 The United States men s national soccer team played more of its matches at RFK stadium than at any other site 68 and D C United played 347 regular season matches there In addition to being the home stadium of DC United the Diplomats the Freedom the Whips and Team America RFK also hosted three friendly Washington Darts games in 1970 187 Notable soccer dates at the stadium include May 26 1967 Professional soccer s debut game at D C Stadium is also the inaugural game of the new United Soccer Association 9 403 fans show up to watch the Washington Whips lose 2 1 to the Cleveland Stokers 188 July 14 1968 Pele s D C Stadium debut before a District record soccer crowd of 20 189 fans Pele s and the Santos FC squad defeated the Washington Whips 3 to 1 September 7 1968 In a de facto Atlantic Division championship game the Whips lost to the Atlanta Chiefs before 14 227 fans the largest non exhibition home crowd in Whips history It would be the last Whips game at D C Stadium September 19 1970 In what would be the largest crowd to ever watch a Washington Darts match 13 878 fans come to RFK to watch them take on Pele and his Santos squad They lost 7 4 The Darts also lost their two other RFK matches against Hertha Berlin and Coventry City the prior May 189 May 4 1974 The Washington Diplomats play their first game at RFK a 5 1 loss to the Philadelphia Atoms 10 145 fans attend June 29 1975 A District record 35 620 fans show up to see Pele in his first game in DC with the New York Cosmos as they take on the Washington Diplomats Cosmos wins 9 2 August 6 1977 Playing for the New York Cosmos Pele plays his final regular season game in the North American Soccer League facing the Washington Diplomats at RFK Stadium He scores the Cosmos only goal but the Diplomats upset the Cosmos 2 1 before 31 283 fans 190 October 6 1977 The United States men s national soccer team plays its first match at the stadium versus China August 19 1979 The Diplomats drop their first ever home playoff game to the Los Angeles Aztecs 4 1 June 1 1980 In a nationally televised game before a then District record crowd of 53 351 the largest ever for NASL game in DC the Diplomats lose a controversial game to the Cosmos 2 1 191 192 August 27 1980 The Diplomats top the Los Angeles Aztecs 1 0 in the only home playoff victory in the franchise s NASL history September 21 1980 In the Soccer Bowl 80 before a crowd of 50 768 the New York Cosmos defeat the Fort Lauderdale Strikers 3 0 August 16 1981 The Washington Diplomats of the NASL play their last game at RFK a 5 1 victory over the Toronto Blizzard April 23 1983 Team America a Washington D C based NASL franchise plays its first game defeating the Seattle Sounders 1 0 at RFK Stadium 193 June 14 1983 50 108 fans come to watch Team America play Fort Lauderdale followed a Beach Boys concert The largest NASL crowd in RFK history saw Team America win 2 1 after a shootout September 3 1983 Team America plays its last game a 2 0 loss to the Fort Lauderdale Strikers at RFK Stadium The team folds after a single season leaving Washington D C without a professional soccer franchise until 1988 193 June 7 1987 In the final game of the US Ambassador Cup tournament the newly formed Washington Diplomats tie Honduras National Team to win the cup in front of 5 117 fans 194 April 17 1988 In the first professional soccer game in DC in over 4 years the new Washington Diplomats lost 2 1 to the New Jersey Eagles in front of a crowd of just 2 451 195 June 28 1988 The Washington Diplomats lose to Monarcas Morelia 2 1 in the first of a two game second round series between the teams as part of the CONCACAF Champions Cup The second game two days later would also result in a 2 1 loss 196 August 13 1988 In their first ever home playoff game in the ASL the Diplomats top the New Jersey Eagles 4 1 August 21 1988 In the first game of the 1988 American Soccer League finals the Washington Diplomats defeat the Fort Lauderdale Strikers 5 3 before 5 745 fans at RFK Stadium The Diplomats will defeat the Strikers again at Fort Lauderdale Florida for a surprising American Soccer League championship in the league s first season June 29 1989 The Diplomats host the ASL All Star game losing to the All Stars 2 1 in front of a crowd of 4 375 197 June 24 1990 In their last game at RFK Stadium the Diplomats lose to the Maryland Bays 4 2 Because of conflicts with concerts they played their last two home games at RFK Stadium s auxiliary field losing their last one 4 0 to the Miami Freedom on July 22 1990 81 Professional soccer would not return to RFK Stadium for more than five years June 13 1993 a record setting crowd of 54 118 show up to watch England tie Brazil 1 1 in the US Cup 192 August 21 1993 A C Milan defeats Torino F C 1 0 to win their second consecutive Supercoppa Italiana June 28 1994 53 186 fans show up to watch Italy and Mexico during the World Cup in what becomes the 6th highest attendance soccer match in RFK history 192 June 29 1994 Saeed Al Owairan of the Saudi Arabia national football team sprints the length of the field and weaves through a maze of Belgium national football team players to score a stunning individual goal giving Saudi Arabia a 1 0 upset victory over Belgium in Group F of the FIFA 1994 World Cup The goal later is voted the sixth greatest FIFA World Cup goal of the 20th century The win helps Saudi Arabia to advance to the second round of the FIFA World Cup for the first time 198 199 July 2 1994 The 1994 FIFA World Cup concludes its play in RFK as Spain defeats Switzerland 3 0 in the Round of Sixteen RFK had earlier hosted four group play games June 18 1995 In the U S Cup the United States defeats Mexico 4 0 with goals by Roy Wegerle 3 min Thomas Dooley 25th min John Harkes 36 min and Claudio Reyna 67 min April 20 1996 D C United plays its first game at RFK Stadium losing 2 1 to the LA Galaxy July 21 1996 45 946 fans show up to watch a group play match between Norway and Brazil in the 1996 Olympics Women s Soccer tournament It is the largest crowd for women s sports in Washington history Two other women s Olympic matches were played in RFK as part of the Atlanta Olympics July 24 1996 RFK hosted the final match for the US men s side in the 1996 Olympics Men s Soccer tournament 58 012 spectators the largest crowd in RFK history watched the men tie Portugal 1 1 which was not enough to advance as they needed a win Five other men s Olympic matches were played in RFK as part of the Atlanta Olympics 200 192 201 October 30 1996 Ten days after winning the first Major League Soccer title D C United defeats the Rochester Raging Rhinos 3 1 in the U S Open Cup final achieving the first double in the modern American soccer era October 26 1997 D C United defeats the Colorado Rapids 2 1 to win their second consecutive MLS Cup 57 431 fans attend the 2nd largest soccer crowd in DC history and the largest for a professional league match 192 August 16 1998 D C United defeats CD Toluca of Mexico 1 0 to win the CONCACAF Champions Cup becoming the first American team to do so and marking their first victory in an international tournament October 15 2000 the Kansas City Wizards defeat the Chicago Fire 1 0 to win their first MLS Cup April 11 2001 D C United defeats Arnett Gardens 2 1 in the second leg of the CONCACAF Giants Cup quarterfinals April 14 2001 The Washington Freedom defeats the Bay Area CyberRays 1 0 in the inaugural match of the Women s United Soccer Association September 1 2001 54 282 people the largest ever for a world cup qualifier at RFK show up to watch the USA men vs Honduras 192 August 3 2002 In the MLS All Star Game a team of MLS players defeat the U S Men s National Team 3 2 D C United midfielder Marco Etcheverry is named MVP July 30 2003 Ronaldinho makes his debut for FC Barcelona against A C Milan in a pre season tour of the United States Ronaldinho had a goal and an assist as Barcelona defeated defending European champion Milan 2 0 in an exhibition game that drew 45 864 to RFK Stadium 202 203 August 2 2003 The Washington Freedom defeat the San Jose Cyber Rays in their last game at RFK as part of WUSA The win clinches them a playoff spot and the Freedom go on to win the last Founder s Cup which is awarded to the winner of the post season playoff September 21 2003 RFK hosts the 2003 FIFA Women s World Cup opening ceremonies and first match RFK would host six matches during the tournament April 3 2004 Freddy Adu debuts with D C United at RFK with a capacity soccer crowd of 24 603 204 At age 14 Adu was and still is the youngest player to play in MLS November 6 2004 D C United win the Eastern Conference final by tying the New England Revolution 3 3 and advancing on penalty kicks in what is generally regarded as one of the greatest games in MLS history They would go on to defeat the Kansas City Wizards 3 2 in the MLS Cup July 31 2004 RFK Stadium hosts its second and last MLS All Star Game The East beats the West 3 2 August 9 2007 David Beckham debuts for the MLS Los Angeles Galaxy losing to home team D C United before a sellout crowd of 46 686 fans the fourth largest to watch MLS at RFK Stadium September 2 2009 Seattle Sounders FC defeats D C United 2 1 in the 2009 Lamar Hunt U S Open Cup Final This marked the first of Seattle s record tying three consecutive Lamar Hunt U S Open Cup titles October 23 2010 Jaime Moreno scores on a penalty kick in his final game as a D C United player to retire as the all time leading scorer in MLS history United would lose the match 3 2 to Toronto FC May 1 2010 The Washington Freedom s last game at RFK a 3 1 victory over Saint Louis Athletica June 19 2011 Quarterfinal of 2011 CONCACAF Gold Cup USA vs Jamaica US defeats Jamaica 2 0 and moves onto the semi final In the second game of the double header El Salvador played Panama to a 1 1 tie Panama won in a shoot out in front of 46 000 people June 2 2013 The United States defeated No 2 ranked Germany 4 3 in a friendly commemorating the 100th anniversary of the U S Soccer Federation 205 September 3 2014 RFK hosts a triple header on the first day of the group stage of the Central American Cup USA 2014 206 October 20 2014 The United States women s national soccer team defeats the Haiti women s national football team 6 0 in the 2014 CONCACAF Women s Championship which also acts as a qualifying tournament for the 2015 FIFA Women s World Cup March 1 2016 Queretaro eliminated D C United from the CONCACAF Champions League with a 1 1 tie the last of four Champions League matches at RFK during the 2015 2016 season 207 October 22 2017 In front of 41 418 fans the highest attendance at the stadium since David Beckham s debut game the New York Red Bulls beat D C United 2 1 in United s last match at RFK Stadium 72 June 10 2018 Alianza del El Salvador defeated Olimpia de Honduras 3 1 in a friendly March 25 2019 El Salvador defeated Peru 2 0 in a friendly 208 June 2 2019 El Salvador defeated Haiti 1 0 in a pre Gold Cup friendly 209 College soccer edit RFK hosted at least two college soccer games once when Maryland moved their game there due to wet field conditions at Ludwig Field and again for a scheduled game following their national championship season It has hosted several other Maryland games at the auxiliary field November 8 1997 Maryland Terps defeated Ohio State 2 1 210 April 20 2009 Maryland lost to Wake Forest 3 1 211 United States men s national team matches edit The United States men s national soccer team has played more games at RFK Stadium than any other stadium 212 At times it was suggested that due to the nature of RFK and its quirkiness that it would be a suitable national stadium if US Soccer were ever to seek one out 213 214 Several prominent members of the national team have scored at RFK including Brian McBride Cobi Jones Eric Wynalda Joe Max Moore Clint Dempsey Michael Bradley and Landon Donovan Winners are listed first Date Competition Team Score Team AttendanceOctober 6 1977 Friendly nbsp China 1 1 nbsp United States UnknownMay 12 1990 nbsp AFC Ajax 1 1 18 245October 19 1991 nbsp North Korea 2 1 nbsp United States 16 351May 30 1992 1992 U S Cup nbsp United States 3 1 nbsp Republic of Ireland 35 696October 13 1993 Friendly nbsp Mexico 1 1 nbsp United States 23 927June 18 1995 1995 U S Cup nbsp United States 4 0 nbsp Mexico 38 615October 8 1995 Friendly 4 3 nbsp Saudi Arabia 10 216June 12 1996 1996 U S Cup nbsp Bolivia 2 0 nbsp United States 19 350November 3 1996 1998 FIFA World Cup qualification CONCACAF nbsp United States 2 0 nbsp Guatemala 30 082October 3 1997 nbsp Jamaica 1 1 nbsp United States 51 528May 30 1998 Friendly nbsp Scotland 0 0 nbsp United States 46 037June 13 1999 nbsp United States 1 0 nbsp Argentina 40 119June 3 2000 2000 U S Cup 4 0 nbsp South Africa 16 570September 3 2000 2002 FIFA World Cup qualification CONCACAF 1 0 nbsp Guatemala 51 556September 1 2001 nbsp Honduras 3 2 nbsp United States 54 282May 12 2002 Friendly nbsp United States 2 1 nbsp Uruguay 30 413November 17 2002 2 0 nbsp El Salvador 25 390October 13 2004 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification CONCACAF 6 0 nbsp Panama 22 000October 11 2008 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification CONCACAF 6 1 nbsp Cuba 20 249July 8 2009 2009 CONCACAF Gold Cup 2 1 nbsp Honduras 26 079October 14 2009 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification CONCACAF nbsp Costa Rica 2 2 nbsp United States 36 243June 19 2011 2011 CONCACAF Gold Cup nbsp United States 2 0 nbsp Jamaica 45 424June 2 2013 US Soccer Centennial Match 4 3 nbsp Germany 47 359September 4 2015 Friendly 2 1 nbsp Peru 28 896October 11 2016 nbsp United States 1 1 nbsp New Zealand 9 0121994 FIFA World Cup matches edit Date Time UTC 5 Team No 1 Res Team No 2 Round Attendance1994 06 19 16 00 nbsp Norway 1 0 nbsp Mexico Group E 52 3951994 06 24 19 30 nbsp Netherlands 2 1 nbsp Saudi Arabia Group F 50 5351994 06 25 12 30 nbsp Italy 1 1 nbsp Mexico Group E 52 5351994 06 29 12 30 nbsp Belgium 0 1 nbsp Saudi Arabia Group F 52 9591994 07 02 16 30 nbsp Spain 3 0 nbsp Switzerland Round of 16 53 1211996 Summer Olympics edit Date Time UTC 5 Team No 1 Res Team No 2 Round Attendance1996 07 20 15 00 nbsp Portugal 2 0 nbsp Tunisia Group A 34 7961996 07 21 12 00 nbsp South Korea 1 0 nbsp Ghana Group C 45 9461996 07 21 15 00 nbsp Norway 2 2 nbsp Brazil Group F 45 9461996 07 22 19 30 nbsp Argentina 1 1 nbsp Portugal Group A 25 8111996 07 23 18 30 nbsp Norway 3 2 nbsp Germany Group F 28 0001996 07 23 21 00 nbsp Ghana 3 2 nbsp Italy Group C 27 8491996 07 24 19 30 nbsp United States 1 1 nbsp Portugal Group A 58 0121996 07 25 18 30 nbsp Norway 4 0 nbsp Japan Group F 30 2371996 07 25 21 00 nbsp Mexico 1 1 nbsp Ghana Group C 30 237Boxing edit Late on May 22 1993 9 000 saw Riddick Bowe record a second round knockout over Jesse Ferguson to retain his WBA heavyweight title 215 216 217 On the same day Roy Jones recorded a unanimous decision over Bernard Hopkins to capture the vacant IBF middleweight title Motor sports edit nbsp Track map Lap records The official race lap records at the Grand Prix of Washington D C are listed as Category Time Driver Vehicle DateGrand Prix Circuit 2 673 km 2002 LMP900 1 03 883 218 Rinaldo Capello Audi R8 2002 Grand Prix of Washington D C LMP675 1 07 332 218 Jon Field MG Lola EX257 2002 Grand Prix of Washington D C GT1 GTS 1 09 802 218 Andy Pilgrim Chevrolet Corvette C5 R 2002 Grand Prix of Washington D C GT 1 12 921 218 Timo Bernhard Porsche 911 GT3 RS 996 2002 Grand Prix of Washington D C On July 21 2002 the Grand Prix of Washington D C was run over a 1 66 mile 2 67 km temporary circuit laid out in the RFK stadium parking lot The 140 lap race was the American Le Mans Series first event in the District of Columbia and the city s first major motor sports event in 80 years 219 Before the race residents living near the stadium expressed concerns about traffic parking and the noise the lengthy event would create Two months before the race The Washington Post reported that District officials had ignored laws and regulations requiring an environmental impact assessment for the race and that Le Mans officials had lied to the city about noise levels 220 After the race American Le Mans officials reneged on a promise to remove the Jersey barriers outlining the racecourse leaving the unsightly structures in the parking lots for removal at the city s expense 221 When the American Le Mans organization tried to hold a second race at RFK in 2003 outraged residents forced D C officials to cancel the city s 10 year lease with the company No more races were ever held 222 223 The venue saw a return to racing in 2014 with the Global Rallycross Championship Much like most of the circuits for GRC at the time the track was a temporary circuit laid out across the stadium s parking lot Patrik Sandell won the first race and the event returned for 2 more years 224 Cycling edit The final stage of the 1992 Tour DuPont was a 14 7 mile 23 7 km time trial from RFK to Rock Creek Park and back Greg LeMond came in third for the stage and won the Tour the last major win of his career 225 226 He won 50 000 and a kiss from Mayor Sharon Pratt Kelly 227 Steve Hegg won the stage 228 Rugby edit Rugby union edit On June 2 2018 Wales national rugby union team played the South Africa national rugby union team at RFK Stadium It was Wales fifth test on US soil the previous four outings all against the United States national rugby union team 229 Wales ran out winners 22 20 in front of a crowd of 21 357 230 Date Winner Score Opponent Competition AttendanceJune 2 2018 nbsp Wales 22 20 nbsp South Africa 2018 Wales Americas tour 21 357Rugby league edit Date Winner Score Opponent Competition AttendanceMarch 17 1995 nbsp Ireland 24 22 nbsp United States Saint Patrick s Day Test March 17 1996 nbsp Ireland A 26 6 Concerts editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Robert F Kennedy Memorial Stadium news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Grateful Dead performed here on 6 9 73 6 10 73 7 6 86 7 7 86 7 12 89 7 13 89 7 12 90 6 14 91 6 20 92 6 25 93 6 26 93 7 16 94 7 17 94 6 24 95 and 6 25 95 The Rolling Stones opened their 1994 Voodoo Lounge tour here with shows 8 1 94 and 8 3 94 Michael Jackson and The Jacksons performed here in May 1974 and September 1984 The Beatles performed a concert here in August 1966 Pink Floyd performed a concert here on June 1 1988 as part of their A Momentary Lapse of Reason Tour and two concerts on July 9 and 10 1994 as part of their The Division Bell Tour Genesis performed here on May 26 1987 as part of their Invisible Touch Tour and on May 19 1992 as part of their We Can t Dance Tour Metallica and Guns N Roses performed here on July 17 1992 as part of their Stadium Tour From 1993 to 1999 and from 2001 to 2004 rock radio station WHFS held its annual HFStival rock concert at RFK Stadium On July 4 2015 the Foo Fighters held their 20th anniversary concert at RFK Stadium List of concertsThe Beatles August 15 1966 with The Ronettes performed in front of 32 164 fans two weeks later they played their last ever concert at San Francisco s Candlestick Park 231 The Allman Brothers Band September 20 1970 and June 9 10 1973 with The Grateful Dead The Rolling Stones July 4 1972 with Stevie Wonder and Martha and the Vandellas September 24 25 1989 with The Living Colour and August 1 and 3 1994 with The Counting Crows The Jackson 5 May 13 1974 The New Riders of the Purple Sage May 19 1974 with Leon Russell Aerosmith Lynyrd Skynyrd Nazareth amp Ted Nugent May 30 1976 Yes June 13 1976 The Beach Boys June 12 1983 The Jacksons performed 2 concerts on September 21 22 1984 during their Victory Tour in front of 90 000 in total attendance of both dates Bruce Springsteen amp The E Street Band August 5 1985 The Grateful Dead July 6 7 1986 with Bob Dylan and Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers July 12 13 1989 with Bruce Hornsby amp The Range July 12 1990 with Edie Brickell amp New Bohemians June 14 1991 with Dwight Yoakam June 20 1992 with The Steve Miller Band June 25 26 1993 with Sting and Dada July 16 17 1994 with Traffic and June 24 25 1995 with Bob Dylan the 1995 shows occurring weeks before Jerry Garcia s death on August 9 1995 were among the final ten shows played by the band 232 Genesis May 26 1987 and May 19 1992 Madonna July 2 1987 with Level 42 U2 September 20 1987 with Little Steven amp The Disciples of Soul Due to rain Bono fell and dislocated his shoulder while running around during Exit He managed to finish the show though he wore a sling for the encore and was rushed to a hospital afterwards 233 August 15 16 1992 with Primus and The Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy and May 26 1997 with The Fun Lovin Criminals Pink Floyd June 1 1988 and July 9 10 1994 The Monsters of Rock Festival June 10 1988 The Who July 6 7 1989 Paul McCartney July 4 and 6 1990 New Kids on the Block The Magic Summer Tour July 17 1990 performed in front of 42 000 fans Metallica amp Guns N Roses July 17 1992 with Faith No More The HFStival July 3 1993 May 14 1994 June 3 1995 June 1 1996 May 31 1997 May 16 1998 September 25 1999 May 27 28 2001 May 25 26 2002 May 24 2003 and May 22 2004 Elton John amp Billy Joel July 20 1994 The Eagles September 13 1994 with Sheryl Crow The Vans Warped Tour July 27 1997 July 31 1998 and July 27 1999 Sheryl Crow October 23 1997 The Tibetan Freedom Concert June 13 14 1998 The first day is cut short after several fans were struck by lightning during Herbie Hancock s set 234 Blink 182 June 15 1998 George Strait Country Music Festival Tour May 15 1999 The Chemical Brothers September 25 1999 with Everclear and Bush The LGBT Millennium March on Washington Equality Rocks Concert April 30 2000 NSYNC July 10 2000 with Sisqo and P nk and August 13 2001 with Amanda Christina Milian and Meredith Edwards The Dave Matthews Band July 19 2000 with Ben Harper and The Innocent Criminals and Ozomatli and June 9 2001 with Angelique Kidjo and Macy Gray The United We Stand What More Can I Give Concert October 21 2001 hosted by Michael Jackson as a memorial to the victims of the September 11 attacks 235 Korean American Peace Festival June 28 2003 with BoA NRG Baby V O X Young nam Cho Choi Yoo na ko Patti Kim Shinhwa Gun mo Kim Jo Sung mo Fly to the Sky Sul Woon Do ko Lee Sun hee Cha Tae hyun Se7en Yu jin Eugene Kim and Jo Yeong Nam 236 237 238 239 240 The National ShamrockFest March 10 2007 March 15 2008 March 14 2009 March 13 2010 March 12 2011 March 24 2012 and March 16 2013 The BLOCKtoberFest October 6 2007 The DC101 Chili Cook Off Concerts May 16 2009 May 22 2010 May 21 2011 May 12 2012 and May 4 2013 The DAYGLOW Jam September 30 2011 and September 29 2012 The Spring Jam Festival June 2 2012 T I T Pain Young Jeezy Lloyd amp B o B July 4 2012 The Trillectro Music Festival August 23 2014 Foo Fighters 20th Anniversary Blowout July 4 2015Other events edit1961 More than 47 000 packed the then new D C Stadium on Thanksgiving Day for the City Title football game 241 The stadium hosted the city s interhigh championship game every year until the 1990s 242 July 3 1986 Jim Crockett Promotions NWA Wrestling Show The Great American Bash on Tour Attendance 6 300 May 26 27 1995 52 000 men attended a two day Promise Keepers event November 27 1997 At an event called Blessings 97 Reverend Sun Myung Moon and his wife Hak Ja Han Moon officiated over a mass wedding that drew 40 000 people including 2 500 Unification Church couples who consented to arranged marriages 243 On April 29 2000 during the Millennium March on Washington the Human Rights Campaign HRC hosted a star studded concert at RFK stadium titled Equality Rocks which was also captured in documentary form and aired on MTV stations 244 On January 19 2009 the day before the presidential inauguration a Day of Service for Our Military was held at RFK Stadium as a part of the Martin Luther King Jr National Day of Service This was a joint operation by Serve DC and Operation Gratitude At this event 12 000 volunteers assembled more than 80 000 care packages for American troops overseas 245 June 26 2015 RFK hosted the opening ceremony for the 2015 Police and Fire Games 246 In film editThe stadium was featured in the climax of the 2014 film X Men Days of Future Past In the film the stadium is damaged when Magneto uses his powers to place it as a barricade around the White House At the end of the film a newspaper article announces the stadium is to begin reconstruction 247 RFK is shown being prepped for a baseball game however the movie is set in 1973 two years after the Senators left for Texas Washington Hall of Stars editSee also Washington Nationals Ring of Honor Washington DC Sports Hall of FameDuring the Redskins tenure the Washington Hall of Stars was displayed on a series of white and red signs hung in a ring around the stadium s mezzanine honoring D C sports greats from various sports With the reconfiguration of the stadium it was replaced by a series of dark green banners over the center field and right field fences in order to make room for out of town scoreboards and advertising signage There are 15 separate panels honoring 82 figures Nationals Park also hosts a smaller version of the display Panel 1 furthest to the left when viewed from home plate names read there from left to right are listed from top of display to bottom Redskins football players Cliff Battles Charley Taylor Bobby Mitchell Chris Hanburger Jerry Smith Len Hauss Sammy Baugh and Pat Fischer Panel 2 Redskins Brig Owens Larry Brown Sonny Jurgensen team founder owner George Marshall Vince Lombardi who coached them for one season before his death Dave Butz Art Monk and Dick James Panel 3 Redskins Vince Promuto Russ Grimm Joe Jacoby Mark Moseley Doug Williams John Riggins coach George Allen and Ken Houston Panel 4 Redskins Joe Theismann Billy Kilmer Wayne Millner Sam Huff Gene Brito Eddie LeBaron Charlie Justice and Bill Dudley Panel 5 Edward Bennett Williams Arthur Dutch Bergman and Jack Kent Cooke Williams and Cooke were Redskins owners Bergman coached in D C at The Catholic University of America and then ran the corporation that lobbied for the building of RFK Stadium Panel 6 New Senators manager Gil Hodges Old Senators player and manager Joe Cronin New Senator Frank Howard Old Senator owner Clark Griffith and Old Senators Goose Goslin and George Case Panel 7 Josh Gibson Bucky Harris Walter Johnson Chuck Hinton Eddie Yost and George Selkirk Gibson played for the Homestead Grays of the Negro leagues Harris Johnson and Yost played for the Old Senators Harris also managed the Old Senators Hinton played for the New Senators Selkirk who played for the Yankees was the general manager of the New Senators Panel 8 Old Senators Mickey Vernon Roy Sievers Cecil Travis Early Wynn Joe Judge Harmon Killebrew Ossie Bluege and Grays star Walter Buck Leonard Vernon also managed the New Senators Panel 9 Basketball figures Bones McKinney Arnold Red Auerbach Abe Pollin Bob Ferry Phil Chenier Wes Unseld and Elvin Hayes McKinney played for the NBA s Washington Capitols Auerbach played in D C for George Washington University and coached the Capitols Pollin owned the Baltimore Bullets and moved them to Washington where they became the Capital Bullets Washington Bullets and now the Washington Wizards He also founded the NHL s Washington Capitals and built two area arenas The now extinct Capital Centre in Landover Maryland and the MCI Center now the Capital One Arena in downtown Washington Ferry played for the Bullets in Baltimore and was their general manager in Washington Chenier Unseld and Hayes played for the Bullets in both cities Unseld later coached them Panel 10 Olympic swimming gold medalist Melissa Belote broadcaster Jim Gibbons and golf figures Lee Elder and Deane Beman Panel 11 Capitals hockey star Rod Langway tennis players Pauline Betz Addie and Donald Dell and jockey Sonny Workman Panel 12 Boxers Bobby Foster Marty Gallagher Holley Mims Sugar Ray Leonard and Steve Mamakos Panel 13 Soccer player Theodore Ted Chambers soccer player and coach Gordon Bradley sportswriters Morris Mo Siegel and Shirley Povich and Griffith Stadium and RFK Stadium public address announcer Charles Brotman Panel 14 Heroes of September 11th To the right of Panel 15 were four banners honoring D C United s MLS Cup wins 1996 1997 1999 and 2004 To the right of these banners was D C United s Tradition of Excellence banner which honors John Harkes and Marco Etcheverry To the left of those banners were four banners honoring D C United s MLS Supporters Shield wins 1997 1999 2006 and 2007 Those moved to Audi Field with D C United Public transportation editRFK Stadium sits 0 5 miles 0 80 km from the Stadium Armory station of the Washington Metro The station is served by the Blue Orange and Silver Lines It is also served directly by Metrobus lines B2 D6 96 and 97 References edit 50 Years Willie Leak maintains TifGrand bermudagrass at RFK Stadium SportsTurf November 30 2001 Retrieved July 11 2015 Robert F Kennedy Memorial Stadium Ballpark Tour Archived from the original on April 6 2013 Retrieved March 11 2014 1634 1699 McCusker J J 1997 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States Addenda et Corrigenda PDF American Antiquarian Society 1700 1799 McCusker J J 1992 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States PDF American Antiquarian Society 1800 present Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Retrieved May 28 2023 District of Columbia gets RFK Stadium Free Lance Star Fredericksburg Virginia Associated Press October 18 1986 p 11 DeBonis Mike August 2 2013 City Will Study RFK Stadium Options in Wake of Soccer Deal The Washington Post Archived from the original on September 14 2013 Retrieved September 30 2013 H R 4984 IH D C Robert F Kennedy Memorial Stadium Campus Revitalization Act GovInfo July 27 2023 Retrieved November 23 2023 Segraves Mark September 20 2023 RFK Stadium site redevelopment advances after House Oversight Committee drama WRC TV Retrieved November 23 2023 a b McCartney Robert September 5 2019 Bye bye bouncy seats District to raze RFK Stadium by 2021 The Washington Post Retrieved September 5 2019 a b Vitka Will September 10 2020 DC names partner company for RFK Stadium demolition project WTOP FM a b Beaujon Andrew April 26 2023 What s Next for RFK Stadium Washingtonian Retrieved May 23 2023 a b Janezich Larry March 30 2023 Update on Demolition of RFK Phase 3 Structural Demolition To Begin Capitol Hill Corner Retrieved May 23 2023 East Capitol Plan Boosted As Asset Washington Evening Star December 21 1930 p B 8 Allied Architects of Washington D C August 9 1932 Stadium National Stadium Project Washington D C Bird s eye perspective of site www loc gov Scott Pamela Tepfer Diane 2005 Capital Drawings Architectural Designs for Washington D C from the Library of Congress JHU Press pp 36 37 ISBN 0801872324 Dyersson Mark Trumpboer Robert September 13 2013 The Rise of Stadiums in the Modern United States Cathedrals of Sport Routledge pp 59 65 ISBN 978 1317989288 Nearly All Land for D C Stadium bought The Evening Star February 20 1941 a b c d e f g Roberts Jay Return to RFK Retrieved December 30 2017 Adams Brett November 24 2008 Capital Sporting Grounds A History of Stadium and Ballpark Construction in Washington Part 3 McFarland pp 139 148 ISBN 978 0786452507 a b c d Venue History EventsDC com Events DC Retrieved October 4 2023 Subsidize baseball attorney suggests Milwaukee Journal UPI July 30 1958 p 21 a b Jail is Stadium s Newest Asset The News Star Monroe Louisiana September 28 1961 p 17 Retrieved January 17 2018 via Newspapers com a b Giants Ruin Redskin Debut In New Stadium With 24 21 Victory Y A TITTLE LEADS RALLY N Y Comes From Behind 21 7 First Period Deficit The Baltimore Sun Associated Press October 2 1961 p S24 ProQuest 533832061 a b Baseball to Play First Game at Nationals Park George Washington University Official Athletic Site Press release George Washington University February 29 2008 Archived from the original on December 29 2017 Retrieved December 29 2017 Preps Draw Crown The Gazette Janesville Wisconsin November 24 1961 p 16 Retrieved January 20 2018 via Newspapers com Evans Judith November 22 2001 When Eastern Ruled the City The Washington Post Retrieved October 4 2023 In 1961 Eastern won its first City Title with a 34 14 victory over St John s Nats defeat Tigers behind Daniels JFK The Wilmington News United Press International April 10 1962 p 9 via Google News Daniels does duty hurls opening win The Spokesman Review Spokane Washington Associated Press April 10 1962 p 13 via Google News Buttram Bill April 10 1962 Stadium howling Marine steal spotlight The Free Lance Star Fredericksburg Virginia p 6 via Google News A Showdown That Changed Football s Racial History NPR September 4 2011 Retrieved June 24 2020 Bring Back the City wide Championship The Washington Post November 23 1981 Retrieved May 26 2022 McKenna Dave October 14 2011 Could the City Football Title Game Return to RFK Washington City Paper Retrieved May 26 2022 Key Man Held Back Records Tucson Daily Citizen February 2 1965 p 12 Retrieved January 29 2018 via Newspapers com McCloskey Faces Suit FBI Probe Philadelphia Daily News January 23 1964 p 5 Retrieved April 19 2017 via Newspapers com a b Stadium renamed for Robert Kennedy Toledo Blade Associated Press January 19 1968 p 16A D C Stadium name changed to honor R F K Chicago Tribune UPI January 19 1969 p 2 section 2 a b c d e Massimo Rick October 20 2017 End runs curve balls and last minute shots How RFK Stadium got its name Washington DC WTOP TV Retrieved May 16 2018 a b c Stadium dedicated to Sen Kennedy Reading Eagle Pennsylvania Associated Press June 8 1969 p 3 a b c Polk James R September 30 1971 Ginger may send Nats away wet Free Lance Star Fredericksburg Virginia Associated Press a b c Lowitt Bruce October 1 1971 Fans finish off the Senators Free Lance Star Fredericksburg Virginia Associated Press Seppy Tom May 29 1973 We re going to fill stadium promises D C mayor Washington Free Lance Star Fredericksburg Virginia Associated Press p 6 Bavasi hoping to keep Padres in San Diego Free Lance Star Fredericksburg Virginia Associated Press May 30 1973 p 14 a b Russell Jake June 16 2016 San Diego Padres were once so close to moving to D C they had uniforms and everything The Washington Post Retrieved May 15 2018 Capitol Excited about new Team The Jacksonville Daily Journal May 30 1973 p 12 Retrieved January 15 2018 via Newspapers com Kuhn rejects Birds in D C Free Lance Star Fredericksburg Virginia Associated Press October 15 1975 p 9 Birds 76 RFK Plans Rejected Cumberland Evening Times October 15 1975 p 36 Retrieved January 15 2018 via Newspapers com Weil Martin Wilgoren Debbi December 8 1992 Redskins Continue Negotiations Over RFK New Stadium Retrieved December 29 2017 Schneider Howard Harris Hamil R November 10 1995 BARRY S STADIUM PLAN WOULD REPLACE RFK Retrieved December 29 2017 Sell Dave December 5 1995 FOR JACK KENT COOKE THIS WEEKEND WAS A VERY BIG DEAL Retrieved December 29 2017 Washington D C Ballparks Retrieved January 4 2018 Patterson Chip May 20 2013 Military Bowl Moving to Annapolis Adds Conference USA for 13 CBS Sports Retrieved May 21 2013 Deal reached for new stadium StadiaDirectory July 25 2013 Archived from the original on September 27 2013 Retrieved July 25 2013 Term Sheet DC United Stadium Project PDF District of Columbia and DC Soccer LLC District of Columbia Office of the City Administrator July 25 2013 Archived from the original PDF on March 4 2016 DC United 1 New York Red Bulls 2 2017 MLS Match Recap October 22 2017 Retrieved December 29 2017 Umana Jose July 6 2022 RFK Stadium demolition to be completed by 2023 WTOP FM Retrieved July 7 2022 Gould Andrew July 5 2022 NFL World Reacts To The RFK Stadium Fire News The Spun Reineking Jim July 5 2022 Authorities respond to fire at RFK Stadium in Washington D C USA Today Moore Jack November 3 2022 RFK Stadium s iconic orange seats up for sale ahead of demolition WTOP FM Retrieved November 20 2022 Matthews Brad November 4 2022 Orange seats from RFK Stadium on sale to fans ahead of planned demolition The Washington Times Retrieved November 20 2022 RFK Stadium Demolition Updates October 2023 Events DC October 11 2023 Retrieved November 18 2023 Griffith Stadium Now Ghost Park News Journal September 21 1961 p 44 Retrieved January 17 2018 via Newspapers com Kennedy Memorial The High Point Enterprise December 6 1963 p 4 Retrieved January 28 2018 via Newspapers com Stadium Honors John F Kennedy The Times Record December 27 1963 p 16 Retrieved January 28 2018 via Newspapers com a b Smith Thomas G Showdown JFK and the Integration of the Washington Redskins Beacon Press 2011 pp 1 2 Smith Thomas G September 4 2011 A Showdown That Changed Football s Racial History NPR Retrieved August 28 2017 a b RFK s Field May Be Named For Military The Washington Post April 14 2005 a b Investing Firm Close to Deal on Renaming RFK The Washington Post May 4 2005 Surround sound Washington Business Journal a b c d e Goff Steven October 20 2017 Perspective American soccer made its home at aging funky RFK Stadium The Washington Post Retrieved February 1 2018 White Joseph December 23 1996 Final play at RFK Free Lance Star Fredericksburg Virginia Associated Press p A1 White Joseph December 23 1996 It s a Redskins day at RFK Free Lance Star Fredericksburg Virginia Associated Press p B1 Rodriguez Alicia January 4 2018 DC United to open Audi Field on July 14 vs Vancouver Whitecaps FC Retrieved January 12 2018 a b Goff Steven October 22 2017 D C United celebrates its past on emotional final day at RFK Stadium The Washington Post Retrieved February 1 2018 Fans farewell Short stinks Milwaukee Journal press dispatches October 1 1971 p 14 part 2 Lowitt Bruce October 1 1971 Fans finish off Senators Free Lance Star Fredericksburg Virginia Associated Press p 6 Senators last hurrah fans cause forfeit 9 0 Chicago Tribune UPI October 1 1971 p 1 section 3 Vice President Opens 1968 Baseball Season Beckley Post Herald Associated Press April 11 1968 p 3 Retrieved January 29 2018 via Newspapers com Hopes Pinned on Improved Weather Today The Daily Times Salisbury Maryland July 23 1969 p 22 Retrieved January 15 2018 via Newspapers com a b c d e f g h i Elzey Chris Wiggins David K July 15 2015 DC Sports The Nation s Capital at Play University of Arkansas Press pp 159 161 ISBN 9781610755665 Pele Packs Stands at RFK Stadium The Capital June 30 1975 p 15 Retrieved January 30 2018 via Newspapers com Washington Diplomats Games Soccer Stats Retrieved January 30 2018 a b Goff Stephen June 28 1990 MERGER PROPOSAL FOLLOWS DROP IN ATTENDANCE STRAIN ON BUDGETS The Washington Post Retrieved January 31 2018 Jackson James H October 30 1990 Bays Stars merger Diplomats kick in Retrieved January 31 2018 George Washington U Drops Grid Program Lubbock Avalanche Journal Associated Press January 20 1967 p 63 Retrieved January 14 2018 via Newspapers com Colonials Like Cats Seek First Win Saturday The Daily Herald Provo Utah September 27 1962 p 15 Retrieved January 14 2018 via Newspapers com George Washington Colonials School History Sports Reference Retrieved January 14 2018 George Washington Upsets Villanova Oakland Tribune November 15 1964 Denlinger Kenneth Villanova Claws GW In Final 16 7 The Washington Post November 25 1966 p D1 Denlinger Kenneth GW Decides On Football Path Today The Washington Post January 19 1967 p G1 George Washington Will Drop Football The Morning Herald Hagerstown Maryland Associated Press December 21 1966 p 17 Retrieved January 14 2018 via Newspapers com a b Denlinger Kenneth Within Reach GW Will Put Emphasis on Basketball Recruiters Abound Transfer Rules Waived The Washington Post January 20 1967 p E1 When we played football the GW boys of fall 1890 1966 Archived July 27 2011 at the Wayback Machine The GW Hatchet August 30 1999 Romano Ross September 24 2007 Nats Move From Halfway House to Home GW Hatchet Retrieved August 25 2014 Perfect 1920 Bisons Reunite After 50 Years The Pittsburgh Courier October 17 1970 p 14 Retrieved January 19 2018 via Newspapers com Washington D C The Pittsburgh Courier August 10 1974 p 10 Retrieved January 19 2018 via Newspapers com Hente Karl November 1 1992 HOWARD ROUTS BOWIE ST IN CONTEST CALLED OFF WITH 2 36 LEFT Retrieved January 21 2018 Wang Gene September 17 2005 Howard and Hampton reprise the battle for the real HU Retrieved January 21 2018 Hopkins Tatyana June 12 2017 Nation s Football Classic Cancelled The Washington Informer Retrieved January 21 2018 Wang Gene September 17 2016 Howard football suffers demoralizing loss to Hampton in Nation s Football Classic Retrieved January 15 2018 Sweezy Christian July 15 2015 Nothing Left to Lose Retrieved February 26 2018 2008 Washington Freedom W League Thread Retrieved February 26 2018 D C UNITED AND WASHINGTON FREEDOM TO PLAY DOUBLE HEADER AT RFK STADIUM MAY 1 PDF Retrieved February 26 2018 Goff Stephen May 23 2009 Freedom United Kick Off First of Three Twin Bills at RFK Stadium Retrieved February 26 2018 Washington Whips Games Retrieved February 2 2018 Red White Black and Blue Sports Illustrated Archived from the original on May 4 2014 NASL All Time Attendance kenn com Archived from the original on December 5 2008 Forgey Benjamin March 30 1991 RFK Stadium Ready for the First Pitch Washington Post Retrieved January 15 2024 Breakdown Of The Fedex Field Seating Chart fromthisseat com Retrieved January 15 2024 Amenabar Teddy September 6 2019 Like you were inside a drum Readers share their memories from RFK Stadium Washington Post Archived from the original on September 10 2019 Retrieved January 15 2024 Cooper Rebecca November 27 2013 Events D C Looks at Next Steps for RFK Washington Business Journal Retrieved August 25 2014 Sernovitz Daniel J August 18 2014 Events D C to Award Contract for RFK Memorial Stadium Master Plan Washington Business Journal Retrieved August 25 2014 a b c RFK Stadium Ballparks com Retrieved on December 24 2011 Wallace William N November 30 1964 Jurgensen Hurls 4 Scoring Passes Mitchell Carpenter Taylor and Cola Elude WeakenedDefensive Secondary The New York Times Retrieved December 24 2011 Draft Choices to Play in U S Bowl Lewiston Morning Tribune January 6 1962 Retrieved December 24 2011 Larry Brown Gains 1 000 Yard Club The Free Lance Star Fredericksburg Virginia December 14 1970 Retrieved December 24 2011 Redskins Smash Giants The Palm Beach Post December 6 1971 Retrieved December 24 2011 Izenberg Jerry November 28 1972 Packer Rookie Picked Clean The Boston Globe Retrieved December 24 2011 1973 Washington Redskins Schedule National Football League Retrieved November 28 2011 Harving Al November 6 1975 Grambling Is Seeking Bid to Bowl The New York Times Retrieved December 24 2011 Sunday Scouting Report Los Angeles Times September 19 1975 Archived from the original on November 7 2012 Retrieved December 24 2011 Shapiro Leonard November 28 1977 Cowboys Win 14 7 on Dorsett s TD The Washington Post Retrieved November 27 2011 Snyder Cameron C November 29 1982 Redskins Nip Eagles to Stay Undefeated The Baltimore Sun Retrieved December 24 2011 Redskins Run Over Cowboys as Riggins hits 10 000 Yards Pittsburgh Post Gazette October 15 1984 Retrieved December 24 2011 Mihoces Gary August 30 1988 Redskins Reload Champs Have Firepower to Win Again Prospects of Repeating Downplayed USA Today Retrieved December 24 2011 Pro Football NFC Young and Rice Re Ignite 49er Fireworks The New York Times November 29 1993 Retrieved December 24 2011 USA vs Germany friendly at RFK Stadium The Washington Post June 2 2013 Retrieved June 2 2013 Teams battle on and on then Solons win in 22nd Spokane Daily Chronicle Washington Associated Press June 13 1967 p 15 Senators outlast Sox in 22 innings Eugene Register Guard Oregon Associated Press June 13 1967 p 3B Polk James R April 7 1969 Ted sees spoiler role for Nats Free Lance Star Fredericksburg Virginia Associated Press p 15 Nissenson Herschel April 8 1969 New managers find openers little tough Free Lance Star Fredericksburg Virginia Associated Press p 6 Montella Paul March 29 2012 This Date In Baseball ESPN Associated Press Retrieved February 1 2018 All Star Game rained out rescheduled this morning Spokesman Review Spokane Washington Associated Press July 23 1969 p 16 Rathet Mike July 24 1969 Jackson says N L has more stars Free Lance Star Fredericksburg Virginia Associated Press p 8 Grimsley Will July 23 1969 It s official Nixon No 1 fan Free Lance Star Fredericksburg Virginia Associated Press p 8 Nixon heads for recovery of moon craft Spokesman Review Spokane Washington Associated Press July 24 1969 p 1 Chapman Lou July 24 1969 Bombs away NL stars shell AL hurlers 9 3 Milwaukee Sentinel p 1 part 2 Lowry Philip 2006 Green Cathedrals Walker amp Company p 239 ISBN 978 0 8027 1608 8 Nelson John July 20 1982 Age hasn t diminished flair for drama Free Lance Star Fredericksburg Virginia Associated Press p 6 Boswell Thomas July 20 1982 The best time for oldtimers Eugene Register Guard Oregon Washington Post p E1 Old timers game to be played again Gainesville Sun Florida Associated Press December 1 1982 p 5D They played just for old times sake The St Petersburg Times Florida AP photos July 20 1982 p 1C Baker Kent July 1 1984 This old timers game is a real crackerjack Reading Eagle Pennsylvania Baltimore Sun p 101 Old timers game moves to Buffalo The Washington Post December 3 1987 Retrieved May 16 2018 Glory names from baseball s past will play in Buffalo on June 20 Los Angeles Times Associated Press May 29 1988 Retrieved May 16 2018 Appel Marty January 11 2015 CRACKER JACK OLD TIMERS GAMES The National Past Time Museum Retrieved January 28 2018 Baseball is Back at RFK Stadium in 1987 Ghosts of DC GhostsOfDC org May 8 2012 Retrieved February 1 2018 Boswell Thomas February 24 1987 Washington s Baseball Morsel The Washington Post Retrieved February 1 2018 Justice Richard April 4 1989 36 123 See Orioles Lose at RFK to Mets The Washington Post Gildea William April 3 1989 Baseball a Memory Again The Washington Post Gazuza Hurls Win Against Soviet Nine The Journal News White Plains New York May 7 1989 Goff Stephen April 8 1990 Chilly RFK Exhibition Stokes Fire for Expansion The Washington Post Justice Richard April 7 1991 Lining Up for Baseball The Washington Post Maske Mark April 8 1991 Orioles Downed at RFK Head for Home Opener The Washington Post Fachet Robert April 5 1992 In Washington for Just a Day Orioles Fall at RFK The Washington Post Gildea William April 6 1992 The Faithful Come to RFK Knowing This Is All There Is The Washington Post Justice Richard April 3 1998 ORIOLES ON SEASON S DOORSTEP AT RFK Retrieved December 28 2017 RFK Set For Expos Cardinals March 28 1999 Retrieved December 28 2017 Nakamura David Farenthold David A April 4 2005 In Nationals D C Debut Fans Shrug Off Snags The Washington Post a b Fendrich Howard April 15 2005 Long wait worth it for D C faithful Eugene Register Guard Oregon Associated Press p C1 Jacobson Todd April 15 2005 Nationals enjoying the view from the top Free Lance Star Fredericksburg Virginia p C1 Warters Nathan April 14 2005 34 years nine games later Free Lance Star Fredericksburg Virginia p B1 Jacobson Todd April 18 2005 Nationals break out brooms Free Lance Star Fredericksburg Virginia p C1 Mearns Andrew October 22 2017 Looking back at five great baseball moments at RFK Stadium Major League Baseball Retrieved February 1 2018 Ladson Bill September 16 2006 Soriano Joins Elite Group Major League Baseball Advanced Media Retrieved December 24 2011 Phils find no relief in loss Reading Eagle Pennsylvania September 24 2007 p D1 Gildea William November 27 1986 A Day for Feasting on Football The Washington Post Retrieved February 20 2018 The scheduled 19 game round robin series involving NFL All Stars October 13 1982 Retrieved December 28 2017 a b c Washington Federals United States Football League FunWhileItLasted net January 16 2014 Retrieved February 1 2018 Solomon Jon December 28 2012 Military Bowl reports college football s smallest bowl crowd in 7 years AL com Retrieved December 28 2012 Grambling Morgan State Collide at RFK Stadium The Pittsburgh Courier September 6 1975 Carter Russell October 31 1978 Name Changes Teams Same Retrieved January 22 2018 Hente Kent October 4 1991 BISON AGAIN ENJOYING THE CLASSICS Retrieved December 28 2017 Fogg Sam January 8 1962 Hall Aerials West to 33 19 Victory The Warren County Observer p 21 Retrieved January 22 2018 via Newspapers com Greenberger Neil H December 14 1986 All Star Game Debuts at RFK Retrieved December 28 2017 FOOTBALL CLASSIC AT RFK GIVES OTHERS A CHANCE January 14 1993 Retrieved December 28 2017 Navy Blitz made Pitt 12 0 Victim Simpson s Leader Times Kittanning Pennsylvania October 18 1965 p 15 Retrieved January 22 2018 via Newspapers com Frostburg Gains Sixth Straight Victory The Morning Herald Hagerstown Maryland October 19 1970 p 16 Retrieved January 22 2018 via Newspapers com Kentucky State has talent lacks depth The Courier Journal Louisville Kentucky August 27 1972 p 177 Retrieved January 22 2018 via Newspapers com Navy Air Force Hobbs Daily News Sun October 5 1975 p 6 Retrieved January 22 2018 via Newspapers com TWO TACKLES VA TECH WRAP UP PIECE OF TITLE November 12 1995 Retrieved December 28 2017 REGENTS CUP GAME Archived from the original on September 1 2016 Retrieved January 22 2018 Football Shoots Down Salisbury in OT to Win Third Annual Regents Cup Game October 11 2001 Retrieved January 22 2018 Brooks J August 1 2017 Georgetown football to host Harvard at RFK Stadium Retrieved December 28 2017 a b c Pell Samantha August 14 2018 D C high school football triple header set for RFK Stadium in September The Washington Post Retrieved August 18 2018 Williams Gary September 17 2018 Friendship Wilson Dunbar Victorious in DC Kickoff Classic The Washington Informer Retrieved February 20 2019 Raggs Tramel September 14 2019 Friendship Collegiate handles H D Woodson in D C Kickoff Classic The Washington Post Retrieved July 26 2020 Recap Friendship Collegiate Academy vs Woodson 2019 Hudl Retrieved July 19 2022 D C Soccer Scheduled The Federal Times May 13 1970 Stokers Defeat Washington Medina County Gazette United Press International May 27 1967 p 6 Retrieved January 31 2018 via Newspapers com Washington Darts Friendlies Retrieved February 5 2018 Washington Diplomats Archives Fun While It Lasted Fun While It Lasted January 7 2018 Retrieved February 1 2018 Feinstein John June 2 1980 Dips Stripped of 2 Goals Lose 2 1 Before 53 351 The Washington Post Retrieved January 30 2018 a b c d e f Goff Steven May 31 2012 U S vs Brazil friendly at FedEx Field ranks third in attendance in Washington area first for a national team match Retrieved January 31 2018 a b a, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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