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Red and Black or Orange and Blue? For a game this important, you’re going to want to be with your fellow fans. TIAA Bank Field has 64,428 seats, but during the annual Georiga-Florida game the capacity is increased to well over 84,000. There are distinct parking and seating areas assigned to each fanbase to put you right in the middle of your team’s pregame festivities.
You park next to them, you cheer alongside them, and hopefully you’ll celebrate with them after the game!. The Georgia Bulldogs are the home team and are located on the West side of the stadium. The Florida Gators are the visiting team and are located on the East side of the stadium.
Prohibited Items. No cameras with lenses longer than six inches.
No bags or purses larger than 12” x 6” x 12”. No coolers or containers including cans, cups, and bottles. No strollers or umbrellas.
No pets (except special services). No food or beverage from outside the stadium. No seat cushions. No video or audio recorders. No whistles, noisemakers, air horns or laser pointers. No poles or sticks, including selfie sticks. No knives, guns, or any type of weapons or explosives.
No smoking (except in designated areas). No promotional materials. Any other item deemed unacceptable by stadium management. Banners or signs larger than 3’ x 2’.
There are elevators located in the southwest and southeast corners of the stadium, as well as between Gates 2 and 3 in the north end zone. Disabled guests in sections 148-150, 101-106 and 403-416 should use the elevator located in the southwest corner of the stadium near Gate 1. Disabled guests in section 140-147 and 430-443 should use the elevator in the southeast corner of the stadium near Gate 2. Disabled guests in section 113-133 and 217-229 should use the elevator between Gates 2 and 3 in the north end zone. Please note that guests in sections 113-122 and 217-229 that have entered the inside perimeter gates of the stadium will need to use the elevators in the southwest or southeast corner of the stadium to access their seats. Wheelchair Escort Service The Wheelchair Escort Service is available at all perimeter gates of the stadium.
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This service will assist disabled patrons from entrance gate to their assigned seat. The Wheelchair Escort Service will return post-game to pick up patrons at their assigned seats and return them to their original entry gate. If disabled patrons need constant use of a wheelchair, we ask that they provide their own. The Wheelchair Escort Service is intended to relieve those in need of the initial long entry and exit walks. Drop-Off A designated drop-off location has been created at Gate 1 to allow those with a disability to be dropped off as close as possible to TIAA Bank Field. Drivers who drop off disabled patrons should enter Lot M (use entrance at Georgia Street and Adams Street) and tell the parking attendant and the police officer that you are dropping off a guest with disabilities. Once the guest has been dropped off, the driver must exit Lot M if he/she does not have a parking pass for that lot.
Please note that cars found in designated lots without the proper pass will be towed at the owner’s expense. VERNE LUNDQUIST Lead Play-by-Play Announcer SEC ON CBS College Football Verne Lundquist is CBS Sports’ lead play-by-play announcer for college football. He teams with Gary Danielson and Allie LaForce to call the popular SEC ON CBS package featuring the “SEC Game of the Week.” Lundquist has been the lead voice of CBS Sports’ college football coverage since 2000. September 2016 marks his 54 th year in broadcasting.
During his tenure at CBS, Lundquist has broadcast more than 20 different sports for the Network, including broadcasting NFL games for 13 years. He also is currently a play-by-play announcer for CBS Sports’ coverage of NCAA basketball, including the NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Championship. Lundquist has been announcing the NCAA Tournament for 32 consecutive years. In addition, Lundquist is part of the GOLF ON CBS team. He marked his 20 th PGA Championship in July 2016. Lundquist also joined the CBS Sports Masters® announce team in 1983 and has called the action at Augusta National every year except 1997-98, in addition to several other PGA TOUR events.
Lundquist was the lead play-by-play announcer for figure skating at the 1992, 1994 and 1998 Olympic Winter Games. He also had extensive involvement in CBS Sports’ previous coverage of the NBA. Among the 20 different sports Lundquist has broadcast for CBS include track and field, swimming and diving, boxing, volleyball, gymnastics, soccer, weightlifting, free style skiing, archery, horse racing and horse jumping, and was a regular member of the Network’s golf team (1983-95). Lundquist worked with Terry Bradshaw, who he presented at the Pro Football Hall of Fame induction ceremonies in Canton, Ohio, as well as Dan Fouts, and occasionally with lead analyst John Madden, on the Network’s NFL broadcasts.
He worked at ABC Sports from 1974-81 and three years as play-by-play announcer for TNT’s NFL, NBA, golf and figure skating coverage (1995-97). Well known in Texas as the long-time radio voice of the Dallas Cowboys (1972-84), he was sports director at WFAA-TV in Dallas for 16 years. Lundquist began his career at KTBC-TV in Austin, a station owned by President and Mrs. Lyndon Johnson. Lundquist has played himself in three movies, including Happy Gilmore. He was born July 17, 1940, in Duluth, Minn., and grew up in Everett, Wash.
And Austin, Texas. Lundquist was inducted into the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association Hall of Fame in 2007.
Most recently, he was honored in May 2016 with the Sports Emmy Award for Lifetime Achievement. He was inducted into the Texas Radio Hall of Fame in 2003. He won seven consecutive Texas Sportscaster of the Year Awards (1977-83).
Lundquist was inducted into the Texas Sports Hall of Fame in 2005. It was the first time in the 55-year history of the Texas Sports Hall of Fame that members of the media were inducted. Lundquist was part of the inaugural class along with seven other legendary sportscasters and sports writers.
He also was named the 2005 Legend of the Sun Bowl by the Sun Bowl Association. In 2011 he was named co-winner of the award for Outstanding Contribution to Amateur Football by the National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame. In May 2014, Lundquist received the Vin Scully Lifetime Achievement Award in Sports Broadcasting from Fordham University’s WFUV Radio. Also in 2014 he was named as a Distinguished American by the Walter Camp Football Foundation in New Haven, Conn., recognized as the oldest organization in the U.S. Devoted to college football, and was given the Blackie Sherrod Lifetime Achievement Award by the North Texas Final Four Organizing Committee. In 2015, he and Gary Danielson were honored with the Maxwell Football Club’s Excellence in Broadcasting.
Also that year, Lundquist was honored with the Charles Ringler Founders’ Award by the Davey O’Brien Football Foundation and the Jake Wade Memorial Award by the College Sports Information Directors Association. Among his other honors, Lundquist was presented with the Lifetime Achievement Award by the Bobby Bragan Youth Foundation, and named as a Champion in Sports Business by the Sports Business Journal, the first on-air person ever so honored.
Lundquist earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Sociology from Texas Lutheran University in 1962 and received the school’s Distinguished Alumnus Award. He also is a member of Texas Lutheran’s Board of Regents. He lives in Steamboat Springs, Colo., with his wife, Nancy, where they serve on the Board of Directors of the summer chamber music festival, “Strings Music Festival.” Most recently, the Lundquists were named the Yampa Valley Community Foundation’s “Philanthropist of the Year” in Steamboat Springs.
VERNE LUNDQUIST Lead Play-by-Play Announcer SEC ON CBS College Football Verne Lundquist is CBS Sports’ lead play-by-play announcer for college football. He teams with Gary Danielson and Allie LaForce to call the popular SEC ON CBS package featuring the “SEC Game of the Week.” Lundquist has been the lead voice of CBS Sports’ college football coverage since 2000. September 2016 marks his 54 th year in broadcasting.
During his tenure at CBS, Lundquist has broadcast more than 20 different sports for the Network, including broadcasting NFL games for 13 years. He also is currently a play-by-play announcer for CBS Sports’ coverage of NCAA basketball, including the NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Championship. Lundquist has been announcing the NCAA Tournament for 32 consecutive years. In addition, Lundquist is part of the GOLF ON CBS team. He marked his 20 th PGA Championship in July 2016. Lundquist also joined the CBS Sports Masters® announce team in 1983 and has called the action at Augusta National every year except 1997-98, in addition to several other PGA TOUR events. Lundquist was the lead play-by-play announcer for figure skating at the 1992, 1994 and 1998 Olympic Winter Games.
He also had extensive involvement in CBS Sports’ previous coverage of the NBA. Among the 20 different sports Lundquist has broadcast for CBS include track and field, swimming and diving, boxing, volleyball, gymnastics, soccer, weightlifting, free style skiing, archery, horse racing and horse jumping, and was a regular member of the Network’s golf team (1983-95). Lundquist worked with Terry Bradshaw, who he presented at the Pro Football Hall of Fame induction ceremonies in Canton, Ohio, as well as Dan Fouts, and occasionally with lead analyst John Madden, on the Network’s NFL broadcasts. He worked at ABC Sports from 1974-81 and three years as play-by-play announcer for TNT’s NFL, NBA, golf and figure skating coverage (1995-97). Well known in Texas as the long-time radio voice of the Dallas Cowboys (1972-84), he was sports director at WFAA-TV in Dallas for 16 years. Lundquist began his career at KTBC-TV in Austin, a station owned by President and Mrs.
Lyndon Johnson. Lundquist has played himself in three movies, including Happy Gilmore. He was born July 17, 1940, in Duluth, Minn., and grew up in Everett, Wash. And Austin, Texas.
Lundquist was inducted into the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association Hall of Fame in 2007. Most recently, he was honored in May 2016 with the Sports Emmy Award for Lifetime Achievement. He was inducted into the Texas Radio Hall of Fame in 2003. He won seven consecutive Texas Sportscaster of the Year Awards (1977-83). Lundquist was inducted into the Texas Sports Hall of Fame in 2005.
It was the first time in the 55-year history of the Texas Sports Hall of Fame that members of the media were inducted. Lundquist was part of the inaugural class along with seven other legendary sportscasters and sports writers. He also was named the 2005 Legend of the Sun Bowl by the Sun Bowl Association.
In 2011 he was named co-winner of the award for Outstanding Contribution to Amateur Football by the National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame. In May 2014, Lundquist received the Vin Scully Lifetime Achievement Award in Sports Broadcasting from Fordham University’s WFUV Radio. Also in 2014 he was named as a Distinguished American by the Walter Camp Football Foundation in New Haven, Conn., recognized as the oldest organization in the U.S. Devoted to college football, and was given the Blackie Sherrod Lifetime Achievement Award by the North Texas Final Four Organizing Committee. In 2015, he and Gary Danielson were honored with the Maxwell Football Club’s Excellence in Broadcasting. Also that year, Lundquist was honored with the Charles Ringler Founders’ Award by the Davey O’Brien Football Foundation and the Jake Wade Memorial Award by the College Sports Information Directors Association. Among his other honors, Lundquist was presented with the Lifetime Achievement Award by the Bobby Bragan Youth Foundation, and named as a Champion in Sports Business by the Sports Business Journal, the first on-air person ever so honored. Lundquist earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Sociology from Texas Lutheran University in 1962 and received the school’s Distinguished Alumnus Award.
He also is a member of Texas Lutheran’s Board of Regents. He lives in Steamboat Springs, Colo., with his wife, Nancy, where they serve on the Board of Directors of the summer chamber music festival, “Strings Music Festival.” Most recently, the Lundquists were named the Yampa Valley Community Foundation’s “Philanthropist of the Year” in Steamboat Springs.