NFL football stadium in Missouri, United States
Arrowhead Stadium
|
|
Aerial view of Arrowhead Stadium; part of
Kauffman Stadium
is shown in the top-left corner
|
Location in Missouri
Show map of Missouri
Location in the United States
Show map of the United States
|
Full name
| GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium
|
---|
Address
| 1 Arrowhead Drive
|
---|
Location
| Kansas City, Missouri
, U.S.
|
---|
Coordinates
| 39°2′56″N
94°29′2″W
/
39.04889°N 94.48389°W
/
39.04889; -94.48389
|
---|
Public transit
| KCATA
: Route 47
[1]
|
---|
Owner
| Jackson County Sports Complex Authority
|
---|
Operator
| Kansas City Chiefs
|
---|
Executive suites
| 128
|
---|
Capacity
| 76,416 (2010?present)
[2]
Former capacity
:
-
- 78,097 (1972?1994)
[3]
- 79,101 (1995?1996)
[4]
- 79,451 (1997?2009)
[5]
|
---|
Surface
| TartanTurf
(1972?1993)
Latitude 36 Bermuda Grass (1994?2012)
NorthBridge Bermudagrass (2013?present)
[6]
|
---|
|
Broke ground
| July 11, 1968
; 55 years ago
(
July 11, 1968
)
[7]
|
---|
Opened
| August 12, 1972
; 51 years ago
(
1972-08-12
)
|
---|
Renovated
| 1991, 1994, 2007?2010
|
---|
Expanded
| 1995, 1997
|
---|
Construction cost
| US$43 million
($313 million in 2023 dollars
[8]
)
US$375 million (2007?2010 renovation)
($524 million in 2023 dollars
[8]
)
|
---|
Architect
| Kivett and Myers
Populous
(2007?2010 renovations)
[9]
|
---|
Structural engineer
| Bob D. Campbell & Co. Structural Engineers
[10]
|
---|
General contractor
| Sharp-Kidde-Webb Joint Venture
[11]
|
---|
|
Kansas City Chiefs
(
NFL
) 1972?present
Kansas City Wizards
(
MLS
) 1996?2007
|
|
chiefs.com/stadium
|
Arrowhead Stadium
is an
American football
stadium in
Kansas City, Missouri
. It primarily serves as the home venue of the
Kansas City Chiefs
of the
National Football League
(NFL). The stadium has been officially named
GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium
(pronounced G.E.H.A.) since March 2021, following a naming rights deal between
GEHA
and the Chiefs.
[12]
The agreement began at the start of the
2021 season
and ends in January 2031 with the expiration of the leases for the Chiefs and Royals with the stadium's owner, the
Jackson County
Sports Complex Authority.
[13]
It is part of the
Truman Sports Complex
with adjacent
Kauffman Stadium
, the home of the
Kansas City Royals
of
Major League Baseball
(MLB). Arrowhead Stadium has a seating capacity of 76,416, making it the
25th-largest stadium in the United States
and the fourth-largest NFL stadium. It is also the largest sports facility by capacity in the state of
Missouri
. A $375 million renovation was completed in 2010. The stadium is scheduled to host matches for the
2026 FIFA World Cup
and has hosted college football games, as well as other
soccer
games.
History
[
edit
]
When the
Dallas Texans
of the
American Football League
(AFL) relocated to Kansas City in 1963 and were rebranded as the
Chiefs
, they played their home games at
Municipal Stadium
. They originally shared the stadium with the
Kansas City Athletics
of
Major League Baseball
, but the Athletics relocated to Oakland, California, after the 1967 season, with the expansion
Kansas City Royals
being added in 1969.
Municipal Stadium, built in 1923 and mostly rebuilt in 1955, seated approximately 35,000 for football, but as part of the
AFL?NFL merger
announced in 1966, NFL stadiums would be required to seat no fewer than 50,000 people. Since the City of Kansas City was unable to find a suitable location for a new stadium,
Jackson County
stepped in and offered a location on the eastern edge of Kansas City near the interchange of
Interstate 70
and
Interstate 435
.
Voters approved a $102 million bond issue in 1967 to build a new sports complex with two stadiums. The original design called for construction of side-by-side baseball and football stadiums with a common roof that would roll between them.
[14]
The design proved to be more complicated and expensive than originally thought and so was scrapped in favor of the current open-air configuration. The Chiefs staff, led by team general manager
Jack Steadman
, helped develop the complex.
Construction
[
edit
]
Construction began in 1968. The original two-stadium concept was initially designed by Denver architect
Charles Deaton
and Steadman. The baseball and football stadiums have a very different appearance, but share utilities, parking, and underground storage. Plans to have covered stadiums were dropped, leaving two open-air stadiums. Lamar Hunt included an owner's suite, complete with three bedrooms, bathrooms, a kitchen, and a living room, to the design of the football stadium. To increase seating while limiting the stadium's footprint, the upper sections were placed at a steep incline which cannot be replicated in modern stadiums due to accessibility regulations.
Deaton's design was implemented by the Kansas City architectural firm of
Kivett & Myers
. Arrowhead Stadium is considered by some to have had an influence on the design of several future NFL stadiums. Construction of the stadium was a joint venture Sharp-Kidde-
Webb
construction firms.
[15]
1970s
[
edit
]
Construction on Arrowhead Stadium was completed in time for the
1972 season
. On August 12, 1972, the Chiefs defeated the
St. Louis Cardinals
24?14 in the first preseason game at Arrowhead Stadium.
In the first regular season game at Arrowhead Stadium in 1972, the Chiefs were defeated by the Miami Dolphins,
[16]
the team that defeated the Chiefs in the final game football game at Municipal Stadium, a double overtime playoff game on Christmas Day 1971 that is still the longest game in NFL history.
[17]
On November 5, 1972, 82,094 people (the largest crowd to see a game at Arrowhead Stadium) saw the Chiefs defeat the
Oakland Raiders
, 27-14, to mark their first regular-season victory in their new home.
In 1973, the stadium was the first in the NFL to include arrows on the yard markers to indicate the nearer goal line. (Initially, they resembled little Indian arrowheads.) This practice would eventually spread to the other NFL stadiums as the 1970s progressed, finally becoming mandatory league-wide in the
1978 season
(after being used in
Super Bowl XII
), and become almost near-universal at lower levels of football.
[18]
On January 20, 1974, Arrowhead Stadium
hosted
the
Pro Bowl
. Due to an ice storm and brutally cold temperatures the week leading up to the game, the game's participants worked out at the facilities of the
San Diego Chargers
. On game day, the temperature soared to 41 °F (5 °C), melting most of the ice and snow that accumulated during the week. The
AFC
defeated the
NFC
, 15?13.
1980s?present
[
edit
]
In 1984, the Jackson County Sports Authority re-evaluated the concept of a fabric dome. The concept was disregarded as being unnecessary and financially impractical. Arrowhead hosted the
Drum Corps International
World Championships in 1988 and 1989.
In 1991, two
Diamond Vision
screens shaped as footballs were installed. In 1994, other improvements were made and natural grass playing surface was installed, replacing the original artificial
AstroTurf
playing field.
In 2009, Arrowhead Stadium completed the installation of a multimillion-dollar integrated system from
Daktronics
out of
Brookings, South Dakota
. Two high definition video displays were retrofitted into the existing football-shaped displays in both end zones. Approximately 1,625 feet (495 m) of digital ribbon board technology was also installed in the stadium.
[19]
In 2013, Arrowhead Stadium started using a new playing surface known as NorthBridge Bermudagrass. The reason the team made the switch was due to the cold weather tolerance, rapid recovery and aggressive rooting.
[6]
In 2021, the Chiefs sold the naming rights for Arrowhead Stadium to
GEHA
, renaming it GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium.
[20]
Arrowhead Stadium will be one of the hosts for the
2026 FIFA World Cup
and it is scheduled to undergo small renovations in the years ahead. Seating capacity is expected to be reduced in the corners of the end zones to comply with
FIFA field regulations
. Space would also have to be made for hospitality and media seating (outside of the stadium's already existing press box). The field will also undergo improvement to its ventilation system.
[21]
In February 2024, renovations were announced and showcased. The renovations were scheduled to begin in 2027 if an extension of a 3/8-cent sales tax from
Jackson County, Missouri
, voters was approved,
[22]
however, the sales tax extension failed to pass.
[23]
Noise record
[
edit
]
In 1990 in a game against the
Denver Broncos
, the Chiefs were threatened with a penalty if the crowd would not quiet down. After
John Elway
was backed up to his own goal line and unable to even run a play he quickly spoke to referee
Gordon McCarter
. After listening to Elway, McCarter said "Any further crowd-noise problem will result in a charged timeout against Kansas City. Thank you for your cooperation."
[26]
On October 13, 2013, in a game between the Chiefs and
Oakland Raiders
, the crowd at the stadium set a
Guinness World Record
for the loudest stadium, with 137.5
dB
.
[27]
That record would be broken by
Seattle Seahawks
fans
at
CenturyLink Field
on December 2, 2013 at a home game against the
New Orleans Saints
. Seattle gained the record by reaching a noise level of 137.6 decibels.
[28]
The Chiefs reclaimed the title on September 29, 2014 in a
Monday Night Football
game against the
New England Patriots
, hitting 142.2 decibels.
[29]
Arrowhead Stadium has hosted five
Big 12 Conference football championship games
:
Kansas State
versus
Oklahoma
in 2000 and 2003,
Colorado
versus
Oklahoma
in 2004,
Nebraska
versus
Oklahoma
on December 2, 2006, and
Missouri
versus
Oklahoma
in 2008.
From 2007 to 2011, Arrowhead Stadium hosted the
Border War
between the
Kansas Jayhawks
and the
Missouri Tigers
. The 2007 game between the No. 2
Jayhawks
and No. 3
Tigers
, dubbed "Armageddon at Arrowhead" by media and fans, drew the second largest crowd in stadium history, at 80,537, with the Tigers winning 36-28.
[30]
Kansas also played
Oklahoma
at Arrowhead in 2005. Missouri played Arkansas State in 2005 and BYU in 2015 as home games at Arrowhead. Missouri was scheduled to play Arkansas in 2020; however, the game location was changed to Columbia due to the
COVID-19 pandemic
.
In 2009 and 2010, Arrowhead Stadium hosted the annual "Farmageddon" game (a reference to the shared agricultural roots of the two competing schools) between the
Iowa State Cyclones
and the
Kansas State Wildcats
.
[31]
Iowa State previously played at Arrowhead against the Florida State Seminoles in the 2002 Eddie Robinson Classic, while
Kansas State
played
Cal
in the 2003 Eddie Robinson Classic.
In 1998,
Oklahoma State
moved its scheduled home game vs.
Nebraska
to Arrowhead. The move was done to boost attendance and revenue:
Lewis Field
in Stillwater sat less than 50,000 fans at that time, the Huskers were the defending national champions, and with many Nebraska supporters living only a few hours' drive via
Interstate 29
from Arrowhead, it made sense for a program which, at the time, one of the Big XII's lesser teams.
The stadium also played host to the annual
Fall Classic at Arrowhead
, a Division II game that featured two nearby powerhouse programs in
Northwest Missouri State University
and
Pittsburg State University
. The 2004 game featured No. 1 Pittsburg State defeating No. 2 Northwest Missouri State in the only Division II game to feature the nation's top two teams playing in the regular season finale.
For their 2024 season, Kansas will play four conference home games at the stadium due to renovations at
their stadium
.
[32]
Non-annual College Football games
Date
|
Winner
|
Loser
|
Score
|
Attendance
|
October 3, 1998
|
Nebraska
|
Oklahoma State
|
24?17
|
79,555
|
August 24, 2002
|
Florida State
|
Iowa State
|
38?31
|
55,132
|
August 23, 2003
|
Kansas State
|
Cal
|
42-28
|
50,823
|
September 3, 2005
|
Missouri
|
Arkansas State
|
44?17
|
32,906
|
October 15, 2005
|
Oklahoma
|
Kansas
|
19?3
|
54,109
|
November 14, 2015
|
Missouri
*
|
BYU
|
20-16
|
42,824
|
Upcoming Non-annual College Football games
Date
|
Home
team
|
Away
team
|
September 28, 2024
|
Kansas
|
TCU
|
October 19, 2024
|
Kansas
|
Houston
|
November 9, 2024
|
Kansas
|
Iowa State
|
November 23, 2024
|
Kansas
|
Colorado
|
*Win vacated
Soccer
[
edit
]
With the formation of
Major League Soccer
in 1996, Arrowhead Stadium became home to the Kansas City Wiz, now known as
Sporting Kansas City
. After the 1996 season, the team was renamed the Wizards. They left after the 2007 season, after being sold by the Hunt Family to
On Goal, LLC
, once their lease ended. This was also beneficial so that construction work on Arrowhead Stadium's renovation could take place during the NFL off-season. The Wizards moved to CommunityAmerica Ballpark, now known as
Legends Field
, in 2008 and did not return to Arrowhead except for one friendly.
That friendly was played on July 25, 2010; the Wizards faced
Manchester United
at Arrowhead Stadium for the
English
team's third preseason friendly in America during 2011. Due to ticket demand, they could not play the game at their new home stadium, CommunityAmerica Ballpark. The match ended with Kansas City winning 2-1 with
Dimitar Berbatov
scoring the only goal for Manchester United on a
penalty kick
.
The stadium has hosted two
US Men's National Team
matches and three
Women's National Team
matches.
Arrowhead hosted MLS teams Sporting Kansas City and
Inter Miami
in a 2?3 victory for the later on April 13, 2024 to accommodate for the large demand for tickets to see Inter Miami player
Lionel Messi
. It was Sporting's first game at the stadium since 2010 and attracted a crowd of 72,610, the fourth highest attended MLS event.
Date
|
Winning Team
|
Result
|
Losing Team
|
Game type
|
Attendance
|
October 7, 1999
|
United States
|
6?0
|
Finland
|
Women's International Friendly
|
36,405
|
August 20, 2000
|
United States
|
1?1
|
Canada
|
Women's International Friendly
|
21,246
|
April 25, 2001
|
United States
|
1?0
|
Costa Rica
|
2002 FIFA World Cup qualification ? CONCACAF final round
|
37,319
|
October 22, 2003
|
United States
|
2?2
|
Italy
|
Women's International Friendly
|
18,263
|
October 16, 2004
|
United States
|
1?0
|
Mexico
|
Women's International Friendly
|
20,435
|
July 25, 2010
|
Kansas City Wizards
|
2?1
|
Manchester United
|
Club Friendly
|
52,424
|
March 31, 2015
|
Mexico
|
1?0
|
Paraguay
|
International Friendly
|
38,114
|
April 13, 2024
|
Inter Miami CF
|
3?2
|
Sporting Kansas City
|
2024 MLS season
|
72,610
|
- Upcoming games
2026 FIFA World Cup
[
edit
]
Arrowhead Stadium was chosen as one of the 16 venues that will host games during the
2026 FIFA World Cup
, which will be hosted jointly by the United States,
Canada
and
Mexico
. The stadium will require renovations. Kansas City, Missouri mayor
Quinton Lucas
estimated the cost of the necessary renovations at $50 million.
[34]
The stadium will host matches six matches, including four group stage matches, one Round of 32 match, and one quarterfinal match.
[35]
Renovations
[
edit
]
On April 4, 2006, Jackson County voters approved a tax increase to finance municipal bonds to pay for $850 million in renovations to Arrowhead Stadium and nearby
Kauffman Stadium
.
[36]
Before the bond election, the NFL awarded the 49th Super Bowl in 2015 to Kansas City provided it would have a climate-controlled stadium. With the passing of the stadium bill, the Chiefs signed a new lease which ensures that the team will remain at Arrowhead until at least 2031.
[37]
However, a second bond issue to build the rolling roof shared with Kauffman Stadium that was part of the original 1967 stadium plan was defeated by voters, and Kansas City chose to withdraw its request to host
Super Bowl XLIX
in 2015; the game was played at the
University of Phoenix Stadium
(now State Farm Stadium) in
Glendale, Arizona
.
[38]
On August 15, 2007, the Chiefs announced final plans for the renovated Arrowhead Stadium, which would cost $375 million. The cost to the city was reduced by $50 million thanks to an additional payment by the Hunt family, which originally had intended to donate $75 million. The renovated stadium features the Chiefs Hall of Honor, a tribute to
Lamar Hunt
, and "horizon level" seating in which
luxury suite
owners sit outdoors.
[39]
Reconstruction for the stadiums started on October 3, 2007. Refurbishment of nearby Kauffman Stadium, home to the
Kansas City Royals
baseball team, commenced at that time, and both completely-refurbished stadiums were ready for play by the 2010 season.
[40]
In 2019, the Chiefs announced multiple renovations for the 2020 season, which included replaced seats in the lower level, a new video display on the East end, and locker room upgrades.
[41]
In 2027, renovations were planned to begin as announced in February 2024, it will include more seating capacity but won't include a retractable roof,
[22]
but funding to help the project was rejected in April 2024 elections ballot.
[42]
[43]
Stadium music
[
edit
]
From 1963 to 2008, the TD Pack Band was a mainstay at every Chiefs home game. The band was founded by
trumpeter
Tony DiPardo.
[44]
The band was previously known as The Zing Band while the Chiefs played at
Municipal Stadium
. DiPardo, nicknamed "Mr. Music",
[45]
was born in
St. Louis, Missouri
on August 15, 1912. DiPardo has written songs about the team such as "The Chiefs are on the Warpath" and "The Hank Stram Polka". DiPardo received a
Super Bowl ring
for the Chiefs' victory in
Super Bowl IV
.
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
Cronkleton, Robert (April 3, 2015).
"Fans can take Metro bus to Kauffman Stadium"
.
The Kansas City Star
. Retrieved
April 29,
2019
.
- ^
"Official Website of the Kansas City Chiefs | Chiefs.com"
.
Kansas City Chiefs
.
- ^
Rogers, Thomas (December 13, 1976).
"Colts Rout Bills, 58-20, for Title; Steelers Playoff Foe"
.
The New York Times
. Retrieved
October 22,
2011
.
- ^
Covitz, Randy (September 8, 1995).
"Chiefs Make KC's Pitch for Big 12 Football Title Game Arrowhead is Biggest of Four Stadiums in the Running Get Event"
.
The Kansas City Star
. Retrieved
October 22,
2011
.
- ^
Felser, Larry (September 21, 1997).
"Chiefs Master the Art of Marketing in a Small Market"
.
The Buffalo News
. Retrieved
October 22,
2011
.
- ^
a
b
"Arrowhead Stadium | NorthBridge® Bermudagrass"
.
Sod Solutions Pro
.
- ^
"Truman Sports Complex Renovation Newsletter"
(PDF)
.
Jackson County Sports Complex Authority
. January 2010. Archived from
the original
(PDF)
on December 2, 2011.
- ^
a
b
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
February 29,
2024
.
- ^
Stagemeyer, Suzanna.
"Kansas City Chiefs' new Arrowhead Stadium opens for first sporting event"
.
Biz Journals
.
- ^
Everly, Steve (January 13, 1991).
"Engineering Firm's Founder Has Retired"
.
The Kansas City Star
. Retrieved
May 7,
2012
.
- ^
"Stadium History"
.
Team History
. Chiefs War Path
. Retrieved
October 18,
2011
.
- ^
"Chiefs and GEHA Announce Naming Rights Agreement for GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium"
.
Chiefs.com
(Press release). Archived from
the original
on March 4, 2021
. Retrieved
March 4,
2021
.
- ^
Goldman, Charles (March 4, 2021).
"Chiefs announce naming rights agreement with GEHA for field at Arrowhead Stadium"
.
Chiefs Wire
. Retrieved
October 21,
2021
.
- ^
Shope, Alan (January 29, 2022).
"Arrowhead Stadium was originally designed to have a few extra features"
.
KMBC
. Retrieved
October 7,
2022
.
- ^
"Webb Spinner, 1969-1970"
(PDF)
. Archived from
the original
(PDF)
on October 23, 2018
. Retrieved
January 20,
2019
.
- ^
"Miami Topples Sluggish Chiefs"
. September 18, 1972
. Retrieved
September 25,
2023
.
- ^
"1971 AFC Divisional Playoff Game"
. January 2005.
- ^
"Pat Bickle Benefit Game - Raytown High School vs Center High School At Arrowhead Stadium 11-24-1973"
– via www.youtube.com.
- ^
"Chiefs Kansas City Chiefs Contracts With Daktronics for HD Video Displays [Archive] - ChiefsPlanet"
.
www.chiefsplanet.com
.
- ^
"Chiefs and GEHA Announce Naming Rights Agreement for GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium"
.
Chiefs.com
. Archived from
the original
on March 4, 2021
. Retrieved
March 4,
2021
.
- ^
Hernandez, Joseph (June 17, 2022).
"The 2026 World Cup is coming to Kansas City. When can you get tickets?"
. Retrieved
June 17,
2022
.
- ^
a
b
"Kansas City Chiefs reveal an $800 million vision for the future of Arrowhead Stadium"
.
KCUR - Kansas City news and NPR
. February 28, 2024
. Retrieved
February 29,
2024
.
- ^
"Sales tax vote to fund Chiefs, Royals stadium fails in Jackson County"
.
KCTV5.com
. April 3, 2024.
- ^
"Chiefs Ready for Playoff Nemesis Indianapolis"
.
The Topeka Capital-Journal
. 2004. Archived from
the original
on October 5, 2008.
- ^
"Celtic's win over Rangers made Hampden roar like a lion, say sound experts"
.
BBC Sport
. BBC. April 17, 2018
. Retrieved
April 18,
2018
.
- ^
"Remember When: Chiefs crowd makes life hard for Elway in 1990"
.
CBSSports.com
. November 25, 2014
. Retrieved
January 3,
2016
.
- ^
Kuhla, Andrew (October 13, 2013).
"Arrowhead Sets World Record For Loudest Stadium"
.
Fansided
. Retrieved
October 13,
2013
.
- ^
Schwab, Frank (December 2, 2013).
"Seahawks take back the Guinness World Record for crowd noise at 137.6 decibels"
.
Yahoo! Sports
. Retrieved
December 2,
2013
.
- ^
Peters, Micah (September 29, 2014).
"Chiefs break Guinness crowd noise record at Arrowhead against the Patriots"
.
USAToday.com
. Retrieved
September 29,
2014
.
- ^
"Missouri Beats Kansas"
.
Associated Press
. November 24, 2007. Archived from
the original
on December 16, 2008
. Retrieved
November 25,
2007
.
- ^
"Cyclone Football Team to Play in Kansas City"
.
cyclones.com
. Iowa State University Athletic Department
. Retrieved
November 27,
2013
.
- ^
"Kansas Football to Play 2 Games at Children's Mercy Park; 4 at Arrowhead Stadium in 2024"
.
KUAthletics.com
. January 30, 2024.
- ^
Quinton Lucas [@QuintonLucasKC]
(June 17, 2022).
"And we're here to answer. Only actual cost right now is $50M of improvements to Arrowhead Stadium. Look for an ask to the state on that in addition to private fundraising to fund that step. That is unless the future of the stadiums chat progresses further"
(
Tweet
) – via
Twitter
.
- ^
Bushnell, Henry (February 4, 2024).
"2026 World Cup schedule reveal: FIFA picks New York for final, Mexico for opener, West Coast for USMNT"
.
Yahoo Sports
. Retrieved
February 4,
2024
.
- ^
"Kansas City OKs sales tax for sports renovations"
.
ESPN
. April 5, 2006.
- ^
"Chiefs, Royals sign lease extensions"
.
St. Louis Public Radio
. January 24, 2006.
- ^
No rolling roof, no Super Bowl at Arrowhead
Associated Press. May 25, 2006.
- ^
Chiefs unveil the new Arrowhead
KCChiefs.com
. August 25, 2007.
Archived
September 30, 2007, at the
Wayback Machine
- ^
Thorman, Chris (September 13, 2010).
"Kansas City Chiefs To Show Off New Arrowhead Stadium Renovations"
.
Arrowhead Pride
.
- ^
Spedden, Zach (January 27, 2020).
"Chiefs Announce Arrowhead Stadium Renovations for 2020"
.
- ^
Chavanelle, Nikki (April 3, 2024).
"Voters reject sales tax measure to help fund Chiefs' Arrowhead Stadium renovations"
.
On3
. Retrieved
April 3,
2024
.
- ^
Writer, James Brizuela Contributing Sports (April 3, 2024).
"Kansas City Chiefs Stadium Renovations Shut Down by Local Taxpayers"
.
Newsweek
. Retrieved
April 4,
2024
.
- ^
Gutierrez, Lisa (December 9, 2008).
"DiPardo's band ending longtime engagement at Arrowhead"
.
Kansas City Star
.
- ^
"Mr. Music is ailing"
. Kansas City Chiefs. March 19, 2008. Archived from
the original
on January 10, 2009
. Retrieved
December 31,
2008
.
External links
[
edit
]
|
---|
- Founded in 1960
- Formerly the
Dallas Texans
(1960?1962)
- Based and headquartered in
Kansas City
,
Missouri
|
Franchise
| |
---|
Stadiums
| |
---|
Key personnel
| |
---|
Culture
| |
---|
Lore
| |
---|
Rivalries
| |
---|
Wild card berths (10)
| |
---|
Division championships (16)
| |
---|
Conference championships (4)
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League championships (5)
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Retired numbers
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Media
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Current league affiliations
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Former league affiliation
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Articles related to Arrowhead Stadium
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| Club
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Stadiums
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Culture
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Affiliated clubs
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Rivalries
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Key personnel
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| | MLS Cup (2)
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Supporters' Shield (1)
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U.S. Open Cup (4)
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| Major League Soccer
| Seasons (29)
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Years
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Venues
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- Trans World Dome
(1996, 1998)
- Alamodome
(1997, 1999, 2007)
- Arrowhead Stadium
(2000, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2008)
- Texas Stadium
(2001)
- Reliant Stadium
(2002, 2005)
- Cowboys/AT&T Stadium
(2009, 2010, 2017?present)
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Venues
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Bowls & rivalries
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Culture & lore
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People
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Seasons
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Music venues of Missouri
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Outdoor
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Indoor
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Theaters
and clubs
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Arenas
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Festivals
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International
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National
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Geographic
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