Nyeland Stadium
Neyland Stadium, which is primarily the home of the Tennessee Volunteers football team, is next on the list of the largest football stadiums in the United States.
It also serves as a venue for large meetings and has hosted a number of National Football League (NFL) exhibition games. The official seating capacity of the stadium is 102,455.
Shields–Watkins Field (which is currently the name of the playing surface) was built in 1921 and has had 16 extension projects, reaching a capacity of 104,079 at one point before being somewhat decreased by changes in the following decade.
Neyland Stadium is the fifth-largest stadium in the United States, the world's seventh-largest stadium, and the Southeastern Conference's second-largest stadium.
The stadium is named after Robert Neyland, who led the University of Tennessee football team for three years between 1926 and 1952.
General Robert Neyland, the recently dead former athletic director and coach, was honored when the stadium was renamed Neyland Stadium in 1962.
Capacity: 102,455
Opened: September 24, 1921
Location: Knoxville, Tennessee, USA