The Salt Lake Tribune
Friday, April 24, 2009
Eat from your seat
Unlike other sports, soccer doesn't provide enough breaks to let people go to the concession stand.

At a baseball game, there are breaks every half-inning. In football and basketball, you can go between quarters - or, frankly, during the game - without missing much.

But at a soccer match, when there may be only a single goal scored during an entire game, there's always the chance that goal will happen while you're in line ordering nachos.

A service debuting Saturday night at Rio Tinto Stadium, during Real Salt Lake's match against the New England Revolution, aims to answer that conundrum.

RSLExpress will allow fans to order food via text message - and have it delivered to their seats in the stadium. (You have to create an account online first, so the service can bill your credit card.)

The company behind the service, Mangia, is based in Salt Lake City, and was founded in 2007 by two Brigham Young University grads, Nate Checketts and Blake Ferguson. (Yes, Nate's dad, Dave Checketts, owns Real Salt Lake.)

If they can solve the problem of having to leave to use the restroom, they'll become billionaires.

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Friday, October 10, 2008
Opening night reviews

So how did Rio Tinto Stadium fare on its first night hosting Real Salt Lake? The early reviews in the blogosphere are positive:

  • Michael Cardillo, AOL's FanHouse: "Watching the game on ESPN2 the new digs came across pretty well. Then again, it's always nice to be able to watch an MLS game that isn't dominated by NFL gridiron lines or artificial turf. ... Perhaps the oddest sight of the night came in the form of multiple, shall we say, MILFs flashing devil horns to the cameras. Not sure what that says about the state of Utah, but it probably bodes well for RSL."
  • Dave Martinez, The Offside (blog of the New York Red Bulls): "Let me give credit where it is due - Rio Tinto Stadium is absolutely gorgeous. And the RSL fans were electric, as would be expected for the debut of their home stadium."
  • Ridge Mahoney, Soccer America Daily: "The 20,008 fans, most bundled up in rather chilly weather of 47 degrees, put on their own show for a national ESPN2 audience. A bagpiper wailed in tribute to, presumably, RSL's resident Scots, defender Ian Joy and striker Kenny Deuchar. Fans in several sections sported king's crowns ('real' translates to 'royal'). Drumming and buzz reverberated throughout the facility for most of the match yet the excitement dissipated as RSL's efforts to score the winning goal fell short."
  • Randy Davis, Goal.com: "Thursday begins a new era for soccer in Utah. This will be an era of soccer played on a spectacular pitch in a dazzling new stadium. There will be no odd bounces as a result of the unpredictable turf, and no unsightly football lines."

Perhaps the only people who didn't like the new stadium are those who left Thursday's match only to find their cars - parked at an abandoned Lowe's hardware store nearby - had been towed. According to KSL, car owners could get their cars back from Speedy Towing for $227, cash.

(Photo: Leah Hogsten/The Salt Lake Tribune)

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