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Top 10 oldest Football Bowl Subdivision stadiums
Take a look through history with these 10 oldest stadiums in college football.

1 / 10
10. Rose Bowl (UCLA)
Opened: 1922
(Associated Press)
1931 AP

2 / 10
7 (tie). Stanford Stadium (Stanford)
Opened: 1921
(Stanford News Service)
Stanford News Service

3 / 10
7 (tie). Neyland Stadium (Tennessee)
Opened: 1921
(Tennessee Athletics)
Tennessee Athletics

4 / 10
7 (tie). Memorial Stadium (Kansas)
Opened: 1921
(AP Photo/Orlin Wagner)
Orlin Wagner/2009 AP

5 / 10
6. Boone Pickens Stadium (Oklahoma State)
Opened: 1920
(Richard Rowe/USA TODAY Sports)
Richard Rowe-USA TODAY Sports/Richard Rowe

6 / 10
5. Husky Stadium (Washington)
Opened: 1920
(Seattle Municipal Archives)

7 / 10
4. Camp Randall Stadium (Wisconsin)
Opened: 1917
(AP Photo/Andy Manis)
Andy Manis/AP2008

8 / 10
3. Vaught-Hemingway Stadium (Mississippi)
Opened: 1915
(AP Photo/Rogelio Solis)
ROGELIO SOLIS/AP2002

9 / 10
2. Davis Wade Stadium at Scott Field (Mississippi State)
Opened: 1914
(Spruce Derden/USA TODAY Sports)
Spruce Derden-USA TODAY Sports/Spruce Derden

10 / 10
1. Bobby Dodd Stadium at Historic Grant Field (Georgia Tech)
Opened: 1913
(AP Photo/Gregory Smith)
Gregory Smith/2010 AP
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