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Cowboys cracking down on free-for-all tailgating in blue lots

12:00 AM CDT on Thursday, August 28, 2008

By BRANDON FORMBY / The Dallas Morning News
bformby@dallasnews.com

Dallas Cowboys fans still have a few months left to worship their team at the famed Texas Stadium, but the days of free-for-all tailgating in the parking lots immediately surrounding Irving's legendary landmark are already over.

COURTNEY PERRY/DMN
COURTNEY PERRY/DMN
Tailgating in the blue lots outside Texas Stadium in Irving is now limited to the perimeter spots, and fans must stay between newly painted blue lines. The changes are an attempt to get fans accustomed to rules at the new stadium, which opens next season.

Team officials are limiting which spaces in the blue lots – those outside the VIP lots – fans can use for tailgating. And they're also cracking down on folks tailgating in several spots without paying for them.

Fans expressed mixed reactions. Some welcomed the changes, especially the renewed parking pass enforcement. A blue lot parking pass costs $53 per game.

"They needed to do it because people were showing up an hour before game time and couldn't find a parking spot because Mr. Corporate over here was taking up 15 parking spots with wedding tents and a hospitality table," said longtime Cowboys fan Kenneth Melendez of Flower Mound.

Fan Susan Goforth suspects the motive is simply an attempt to generate more money.

"That's crap," she said of the policy, "especially with as much money as [team owner] Jerry Jones is getting."

In any case, tailgaters trying to get a good spot at today's 7 p.m. preseason game against Minnesota should head over early if they want one of the first-come, first-served blue lot spots. And North Texas drivers whose evening commute passes Texas Stadium, be ready: The clamor for tailgating spots at last week's preseason home game is believed to have caused traffic to back up onto State Highway 114 hours before kickoff.

Tailgating in the eight blue lots is now allowed only in perimeter parking spots. Team officials do not know how many of the blue lots' 6,464 parking spaces are on the perimeter. All interior blue lot parking spots will be reserved for fans who want to park and head directly into the stadium. Fans parking in the green, gold and red lots, which are all farther from the stadium, can still tailgate wherever they want.

Those tailgating in the blue lots also will be expected to stay inside new blue lines painted at the end of designated parking spots.

Rich Dalrymple, Cowboys director of public relations, said it's all an effort to keep the parking lots safer, use the spaces more efficiently and keep traffic flowing.

But Ms. Goforth said she's never noticed such problems.

"I've never seen anybody get hurt, and I've been going out there for years," she said.

Longtime tailgater Chuck Sharpe doesn't think tailgating affects parking lot traffic.

"There is no traffic because those people are there early, and they're out of the way of any traffic," he said.

Like Ms. Goforth, he suspects the changes are more about money than safety, efficiency or fairness.

"It's a way to get people inside to buy the food and the alcohol – to do it inside instead of outside because I'm sure there's a lot of money lost," he said.

But Mr. Dalrymple said the changes are an attempt to get fans accustomed to the rules that will be in place when the Cowboys move to their mammoth new home in Arlington next season.

"The new policy was devised after we did extensive research of all the new NFL venues built recently," Mr. Dalrymple said.

That doesn't appease Mr. Sharpe, a longtime season ticket holder who bought four tickets to the as-yet-unnamed new stadium.

"I feel like I'm not honored in my loyalty," he said.

Mr. Melendez said when he and his friends showed up to tailgate last week, there were non-tailgaters parked in the spots set aside for tailgating.

"We were looking at this line of cars and thinking, 'How they'd get in here before us and why aren't they tailgating?' " he said. "And we look at the cars, and they had employee passes."