UIL's looming switch to pre-set sites could mean larger crowds for football title games
12:00 AM CST on Tuesday, December 1, 2009
The record attendance for a Texas high school football game has stood for 32 years. That's how huge the crowd of 49,950 was for the Plano vs. Port Neches-Groves game in 1977.
But an even bigger crowd could be coming to a state championship game soon. Maybe even next year, when the University Interscholastic League begins using predetermined sites for all its championship games.
Imagine the Class 4A Division I and II championship games on a Friday and a 5A championship doubleheader the following day at the same site. Could the crowd be bigger than 50,000?
"There is no doubt," Lovejoy coach Jim Bob Puckett said. "If they got the right teams together, you bet."
Those teams could come together next season when the UIL, which has held its 5A football title games at predetermined sites since 2006, expands that to levels 1A through 4A. Currently, championship sites for games below 5A are selected by the coaches involved.
"I always hate to see anything that's taken out of the hands of the coach, but my experience with the UIL is that they've done everything first class," said Prosper coach Kent Scott, whose team won the 3A Division I title last year. "I think there are positives and negatives."
One negative is that predetermined sites can mean extra travel for schools that aren't near the site. Had all of last year's title games been played at the 5A site, Reliant Stadium in Houston, it would have added to travel for teams such as Prosper and Waco La Vega, which played for the 3A Division I title at Texas Stadium. And it would have been a 590-mile, all-day trip to Houston for Canadian, the Panhandle school that won a 2A Division II title in 2007 and the 1A Division I title last year. Canadian played those title games in Wichita Falls and Brownwood, which were a much more reasonable drive.
As for the positives, there is one for the coaches. Puckett, whose team plays Saturday for a spot in the 3A Division I title game, sees that right now as he takes time from this week's preparation to look into possible sites for the championship.
"You never want to look past an opponent, but you have to because you need to look at venues," he said. "That would be one less headache going into the final week."
The biggest positive, however, would be for fans. The decision to predetermine the championship sites does not mean that all the games would be played at only one or two sites, but it would be likely. UIL spokesman Chris Schmidt said that discussion won't begin until after this season ends, but he also said that the UIL is interested in packaging the games for television.
For that, the biggest games need to be at one site. And if the biggest games are at one site, you can expect the biggest crowds of the season.