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Greater_Zion_Stadium Latitude and Longitude:

37°05′58″N 113°34′02″W / 37.09944°N 113.56722°W / 37.09944; -113.56722
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Greater Zion Stadium
Greater Zion Stadium (2022)
Former names
  • Hansen Stadium (1985–2016)
  • Legend Solar Stadium (2016-2017)
  • Trailblazer Stadium (2017–2020)
Address501 S 700 E
Location Utah Tech University
St. George, Utah, U.S.
Coordinates 37°05′58″N 113°34′02″W / 37.09944°N 113.56722°W / 37.09944; -113.56722
Owner Utah Tech University
Capacity
  • 10,500 (2017–present)
  • 5,000 (until 2017) [1]
Record attendance8,280 (vs. Weber State, 2021)
SurfaceFieldTurf
Opened1985
Tenants
Utah Tech University Trailblazers ( football, soccer)
Website
utahtech.edu/events/greater-zion-stadium

Greater Zion Stadium, originally Hansen Stadium and later Trailblazer Stadium, is a stadium on the campus of Utah Tech University in St. George, Utah. [2] It is primarily used for American football, and is the home field of the Utah Tech Trailblazers football and soccer programs. The stadium holds 10,500 people. [3] In 2002 and 2003, it hosted the Paradise Bowl which was a post season college football all-star game. After the seating expansion in 2017, Greater Zion Stadium became the largest stadium in the southern portion of Utah.

MLS soccer club Real Salt Lake played their first match at Hansen Stadium on March 29, 2007, versus the BYU soccer club which, at the time, played as a minor league professional club and not in a collegiate league. Plans include the vision that Hansen Stadium will become the Southern Utah "home" stadium for RSL when visiting the area and practicing in warm weather environments in pre-season.

Bands of America currently holds the St. George, Utah Regional Championship at Greater Zion Stadium. The competition was moved from Las Vegas, Nevada and the UNLV's Sam Boyd Stadium to St. George in 2009, with the American Fork Marching Band winning the first competition there. It was held in St. George again in 2010.

The stadium was most recently renamed on January 21, 2020, under an agreement between the university and Washington County, Utah, whose tourism promotion agency is branded as the Greater Zion Convention & Tourism Office. [4]

References

  1. ^ "No. 5 2017-18 Top Moment – Trailblazer Stadium East Grandstand". Dixie State University Athletics.
  2. ^ "Utah's semipro teams flourishing". Deseret News. October 1, 2004.
  3. ^ "Greater Zion Stadium". Dixie State University Athletics. Retrieved 2021-01-22.
  4. ^ "Dixie State University and Washington County Partner to Promote Greater Zion" (Press release). Dixie State Trailblazers. January 21, 2020. Retrieved February 2, 2020.