**********************************
From ESPN Magazine, Monday, October 1, 2012. See
http://espn.go.com/college-sports/recruiting/football/story/_/id/8391751/allen-high-school-defends-18000-seat-60-million-stadium-espn-magazine
**********************************
This is our house
A $60 million high school stadium just makes sense to the
folks in Allen, Texas
By Jim Dent
In June, two months before the grand opening of one of America's
richest high school football stadiums, I stood with Steve "Bubba"
Williams on the photo deck of a three-tiered press box. He gazed to
the west, where the dirt roads once crisscrossed the open prairie in
Allen, Texas, and recalled that first morning in 1975 when he drove
his dust-covered pickup to work at Allen High School.
"This was just a farming community, and Stacy Road was a
dirt road," said the Allen athletic director. "Just a lot of
farmhouses."
From chicken coops and cornfields to a roughly $60 million
stadium, Bubba has certainly seen it all. The Allen flatland now boils
with traffic as Williams watches the light turn green at the six-lane
intersection of Exchange Parkway and Greenville Avenue. And the wheels
of progress roll on.
Bubba said that he honestly never imagined all the fuss over this
18,000-seat horseshoe. But there is plenty. Folks across America have
been talking about Eagle Stadium since The New York Times wrote
a lengthy piece 19 months before it opened, and practically every
media source in Texas has produced a major story. By mid-August, with
Allen fans already whipped into a frenzy, Williams was forced to
increase season-ticket sales from 5,000 to 8,252. Four days before the
first game, thousands of fans began lining up just past dawn to grab
the final 5,000 grandstand seats. They were gone in a day and a half.
On Aug. 31, against defending Class 5A state champion Southlake
Carroll, attendance was announced at 21,776. If not for an order from
the fire marshal, Allen could have sold several thousand more
tickets.
I have lived in Allen for more than two years and sat in the
stands the past three seasons. Bubba and I have talked Texas football
over hamburgers a few times. I have covered sports for 41 years in
some form. Never, however, have I witnessed the palpable energy of
those two hours leading to kickoff. The tailgating scene that started
around noon was straight out of Tuscaloosa. In spite of the
temperature soaring to 103 degrees by 5 p.m., the foot traffic on that
Friday looked like a Sunday afternoon at Cowboys Stadium.
Among the most eager was Bob Curtis, a four-year letterman for
the Eagles from 1960 to 1964 and part of Allen's 47-game winning
streak that ended in '61. He served as Allen's facilities chief for 32
years, retiring in 2010. When he entered Eagle Stadium, he said:
"This is what a stadium in Allen is supposed to look like. Allen
does everything top-notch and first-class." But no one in Allen
was prouder than Williams, who tells me he felt chills running down
his spine as the Eagles roared onto the field and the 700-piece band
played the school song. At that moment he said to himself, EFFL --
Eagle Fan for Life.
Together, Williams and Curtis have spent 73 years at Allen High.
To them, a $60 million stadium just makes sense. It is a show of
support for their community, because high school football in Texas is
an identity, like the cowboy, the rancher and the oil wildcatter. It
has often been said that football in the Lone Star State is larger
than religion. On certain days, I'd be hard-pressed not to
agree.
But people in places like Trenton, N.J., and Oshkosh, Wis., have
not been so impressed with the mega-millions spent on an
extracurricular activity. How was it possible, they asked, that this
city of about 88,000 could pass a $119 million bond referendum in 2009
with America's economy going south? Williams has received hundreds of
stinging emails from all over the country. In reference to them, he
says: "I just tell 'em that in Allen we are proud of our kids and
are doing the best we can by them. The people in Allen are fully
behind the stadium. Nobody here complains one bit."
What is there to complain about? Eagle Stadium has the most seats
of any one-school stadium in Texas. It's fitted with a $1.2 million
turf and a 38-by-23 hi-def video screen that most FBS programs would
be proud of. They'd also be proud of the accompanying 84-yard-long
weight room and the marching band, which takes up the entire field at
halftime. Allen does not cut football players or band members, no
matter the size of the squads.
Everything is just bigger in Allen, and the enormous size of it
all must be what caused emailers to accuse Allen of sacrificing
academics for athletics. But to the contrary, U.S. News & World
Report recently reported that Allen ranked in the top 5 percent of
all Texas public schools, 5 percent nationwide. According to the
school, 85 percent of graduates go to college. Those emailers should
check the field too. After shutting out Southlake Carroll 24-0 and
starting the season 3-0, Allen has risen to No. 17 in the ESPN 25
Power Rankings.
With an enrollment of 5,700 students, Allen is the second-largest
high school in Texas behind Plano East. And the Eagles seem destined
to be perennial state title contenders under head coach Tom
Westerberg, a talented offensive mind who didn't play college football
yet learned as a student trainer under Texas A&M legend Billy
Pickard. Westerberg has led Allen to the state playoffs eight straight
seasons, including the school's first state title in 2008. But the
Eagles are rarely blue-chip-laden, and the 2012 squad doesn't have a
single prospect ranked in the ESPN 300. At 5-foot-8, quarterback
Oliver Pierce is headed to the University of Oklahoma on a wrestling
scholarship; he is considered a prospect for the 2016 U.S. Olympic
team.
The absence of superstars adds to the small-town feel in the city,
where about half the residents commute 20 miles to downtown Dallas
each day through maddening traffic that requires at least an hour.
Mayor Steve Terrell says, "I will always consider Allen a town."
Still, it is difficult to sell Allen as typical Main Street America
when the median household income is about $100,000, roughly twice the
national average.
In truth, though, Allen was just a farming outpost not that long
ago.
Since the Eagles started playing football in 1936, they've known
six homes. The second was a weedy patch of farmland that had to be
cleared of cow dung on game days. When Williams arrived in 1975, the
stands were so small and rickety that the fans invented drive-in
football, sitting in their cars and trucks, rolling down the windows
to cheer when the Eagles scored. That prompted the construction of a
7,000-seat stadium the following season. As the population boomed over
the next three decades, a total of 7,000 temporary aluminum seats were
eventually added, causing the stadium to resemble the world's largest
Erector set.
Then Allen finally shifted from the Erector set to the Palace along
Exchange Parkway, and the rest of the world assumes the laid-back
appeal has vanished. But I can attest that Allen still is a
truck-driving, barbecue-eating, boot-wearing and C&W-listening
town with more than its share of Bubbas.
In many ways, Allen is what America used to be: a thriving economy
where the locals like to spend money on the community, even if the
skeptics see it as excess. They would rather watch the Eagles than the
Dallas Cowboys, because the Eagles are Allen's Team, not America's
Team. And they couldn't care less about what people are saying in
Trenton or Oshkosh.
--------------------------------
PHOTO SIDEBAR: Even 18,000 seats aren't enough: On opening
night, 3,776 fans paid to stand. Brent Humphreys for ESPN The
Magazine
----------------------------------
PHOTO SIDEBAR: Allen High School
-- It's true: Everything is bigger in Texas. Go inside the
Eagles' stadium. Gallery at
http://espn.go.com/espn/photos/gallery/_/id/8392308/image/4/everything-bigger-texas
------------------------------------
PHOTO SIDEBAR: The varsity football roster has 89
players. Brent Humphreys for ESPN The Magazine
------------------------------------
PHOTO SIDEBARX -- At 71 members, the Allen
Tallenettes rivals the varsity football roster. Brent Humphreys for
ESPN The Magazine
------------------------------------
Jim Dent is a New York Times best-selling author, who has written
nine books, including Courage Beyond The Game: The Freddie Steinmark
Story.
******************************************************
An Allen, TX resident who I know quite well comments on this
new stadium as follows:
Below is a rant I made in April 2009 in
the News & Some Views about the lunacy of a $60 million
high school football stadium here in Allen, TX. I was wrong
about one very important thing: it ended up being a THREE!-story
press box.
#1. The Los Angeles Public
School system recently laid off 40,000 employees, more than 75% of
them teachers. In some of the poorest areas, 1/3 of the teachers
in schools were fired. Student : teacher ratios in most schools
will now be 40:1.
#2. I live in Allen, Texas,
where the high school Allen Eagles recently won the Class 5A
state football championship. Go Eagles! Allen High School
is a beautiful palace, and I mean beautiful. While Allen is not
considered an especially "well-to-do" community (especially when
compared to next-door Plano, where it seems that 80% of high
school students have their own vehicles, and at least half of those
are late model BMWs or tricked-out F-150s, Allen schools
aren't suffering in any sense of the word. In the echo chamber
of the state championship comes a school bond proposition on the May 9
ballot. It asks the taxpayers of Allen to authorize a bond
issuance in the amount of $119 million (in a town of approx 80,000
people). This means we are being asked to vote ourselves a tax
increase of $119 million, since bond purchasers will eventually need
to be paid back over time. I'm no municipal finance guru, but
I think that comes to about $1,500 for every man, woman, and
child-kinda pricey. Half of the bond proposal is for the
construction of a new football stadium for the Eagles. Pity,
pity, the current stadium only holds 7,200 permanently, with another
in 7,000 leased bleachers that cost $225,000 annually. The new
stadium will hold 18,000, and it will have the "keep up with the
Joneses" de rigeur two-story press box. Yes, that's
right, any high school worth its _ _ _ _ in Texas has a stadium with a
two-story press box. There might be temporary trailer classrooms
at elementary and middle schools, but we G _ _DAMN WELL have our
2-story press boxes! So for $59+ million, we will get a net
increase of <4,000 seats. For $59 million, we could rent the
current leased bleachers for the next 262 years-let's just call it
only 175-200 years with inflation on that rent. The resultant
tax increase to pay for the stadium and other new facilities will
"only" be about $50 per house in the cityŠ.every year for the rest
of time. And that $50 won't even get me a discount on season
tickets. Not that I want them-high school football in Texas is
an extraordinarily deranged vision of what is important in education
in the United States. This ballot proposal is a lead-pipe
lock for passage.
#3. If a ballot proposal were to
appear in Allen, Texas requesting $5 million to either a) hire
100 new teachers, or b) raise the pay for math and science
teachers to attract great technical teaching minds to Allen, that
ballot proposal would be lucky to receive 15% of the
vote.
#4. Silly me. There is no chance
in hell a ballot proposal for hiring and paying teachers would ever
actually find its way onto the ballot.
************************************************
--
Jerry P. Becker
Dept. of Curriculum & Instruction
Southern Illinois University
625 Wham Drive
Mail Code 4610
Carbondale, IL 62901-4610
Phone: (618) 453-4241 [O]
(618) 457-8903 [H]
Fax: (618) 453-4244
E-mail: jbecker@siu.edu