Remembering the Halo

Submitted by BursleyHall82 on October 22nd, 2020 at 10:04 AM

I'm posting this because I just came across a great aerial photo of the ugliest-ass thing in Michigan Stadium history.

In the wake of our national championship, the Halo was only around for two seasons - 1998 and 1999. U-M President Lee Bolinger announced in January of 2000 that they were tearing it down. Daily story HERE.

The Halo certainly ranks up there with the hires of Brian Ellerbe and Rich Rod as the worst decisions in U-M athletic history.

But as we wait for the boys to kick it off on Saturday night, for one last time, behold the Halo!

Hab

October 22nd, 2020 at 10:09 AM ^

Let's be fair, all championship rings are gaudy.  The stadium deserved a ring for the '97-'98 championship as much as the players.  And in keeping with good taste, you can't wear it all the time, so it was a good decision to take it down. 

BlockM

October 22nd, 2020 at 10:23 AM ^

Yeah, it brings back some good memories and I think it looks quite good actually, but not something that needs to be permanent. If we win another National Championship I wouldn't mind constructing a new halo for a year or two, lol.

azee2890

October 22nd, 2020 at 10:12 AM ^

As an architect, I don't hate it. Didn't seem to be particularly well executed but I don't hate the idea of having some bold element accentuate the profile of the stadium.

mgokev

October 22nd, 2020 at 10:26 AM ^

I think the scoreboards could have a nice water feature above them similar to the Bellagio in Las Vegas. I also think many would benefit from a zen rock garden in the concourse. Lastly, there's ample space to install a quaint breakfast nook for those getting in early. 

I will say they got it right with having an open concept floor plan within the stadium. It's much easier to entertain 111,000 guests. 

stephenrjking

October 22nd, 2020 at 11:48 AM ^

I actually didn't mind the idea. It was executed poorly (those helmets and footballs they put on there looked baaaaad) but I like the idea of color and excitement in a facility that exists for that sort of thing. 

So I was cautiously optimistic and didn't hate it when it went in.

But I was 19 when it was installed. I was wrong about a lot of things at 19. I still don't loathe the idea, but... it was a bad idea. 

evenyoubrutus

October 22nd, 2020 at 11:28 AM ^

When that photo leaked there was an uproar, naturally. So Brandon claimed that it was a temporary fixture for a donor event or something. And IIRC his public statement had a tone of condescension. The thing is, I'm pretty sure that early in his time as AD he had talked about trying to get advertising inside the gates but not inside the bowl itself. So he hadn't exactly earned the benefit of the doubt with that stuff.

Blue Vet

October 22nd, 2020 at 10:52 AM ^

Thanks for posting. I don't think I've ever actually seen it, only read the horrified references to it.

And I agree with Hab: get gaudy to celebrate a championship, then go back to real life.

othernel

October 22nd, 2020 at 10:55 AM ^

The RichRod hire was not the bad decision.

Letting someone hijack our coaching search and then undermine RR after he was hired was the worst decision that was made.

That, and then doubling down on that bad decision by hiring Hoke.

M-Dog

October 22nd, 2020 at 11:01 AM ^

Just to be clear: Nobody snuck in and put that thing up in the middle of the night when we were not watching.

We paid to have that thing put up on purpose.

 

Spitfire

October 22nd, 2020 at 11:04 AM ^

"The halo debuted during the first game of the 1998 football season - the same year the Athletic Department recorded a deficit of $2.784 million for the 1998-99 fiscal year." Any idea how much it cost?

While it looks bad I don't think it ranks anywhere close to the Richrod hiring process.

lsjtre

October 22nd, 2020 at 11:17 AM ^

I remembered this was a thing not too long ago and looked up how long it was around, I forgot how widely criticized it was and I feel even the biggest die hard hated it, there were photos from when I was 3 at the Spring Game in 1998 with construction going on, little did I know how much of a monstrosity was taking place around the stadium 

ih8losing

October 22nd, 2020 at 11:37 AM ^

I've finally come around to reading JUB's EndZone and it hasn't ceased to astonish me how horrible Dave Brandon was to the University. His hiring as AD has to be one of the worst decisions, outside of the sexual abuse atrocities, at the University level. 

Regarding the "Hackathon" hosted by MPowered Entrepeneurship in 2013 at the Big House...

"After everyone packed up and went home, the athletic department sent the M-Hack club an additional bill, this one for almost $60,000 more, bringing the total to host the event to almost $100,000"

Sad how one man can destroy so much so quickly. 

 

edit - I know Dave wasn't responsible for the halo, and it was tacky as all, but it paled in comparison to what DB would do.

ConcretePillow

October 22nd, 2020 at 11:43 AM ^

I vaguely recall during the deconstruction process some students stole the huge university seal and rolled it down the street to their house. I think they ended up returning it. Too bad as it would've made a nice addition to someone's man cave.

XtremeUMich

October 22nd, 2020 at 12:07 PM ^

You all do realize that it was just a "New Coke" ploy to get a bigger stadium built.  When Coca-Cola sales were slipping to Pepsi they introduced New Coke and everyone hated it, but then they all rushed back to Coca-Cola Classic and sales boomed. Same with the Halo, people hated it so much that they pledged support and a ton of money that they normally wouldn't have to enlarge and beautify the Big House. Marketing geniuses played consumers like a fiddle.  *Boom, Mindblown!!!*

uminks

October 22nd, 2020 at 12:08 PM ^

I remember seeing it for the first time when I drove up to MI from Lubbock, TX  for a long weekend visiting family and went to the Purdue game. From a distance it was looking pretty cool but as you walked up closer to the stadium the uglier it looked.