From 2003:
OU Special Events Catering initially catered beer for the first two home football games, Annis said.
However, an incident occurred in the club level at the first home game against North Texas that resulted in banning alcohol on the club level. After the second game, the Athletic Department also requested that the caterer no longer provide beer to the suite-holders.
"We provide the food, and we were providing the beer on the suite level," Annis said. "With the change in university policy, it was decided that we would continue with the food but that we would no longer sell beer on that level."
During the first two games when OU was catering beer to suites, the suite-holders were not allowed to bring their own beer, but only liquor and wine, said suite-holder Stan Deardeuff. It was not until after the caterer stopped providing beer to suites that suite-holders were allowed to bring their own beer, as well as liquor and wine, Deardeuff said.
If suite-holders decide to provide their own alcohol, the alcohol must be brought up to the suite the Friday prior to the game, Deardeuff said. If they choose to order alcohol from the third-party vendor, orders must be faxed in by 5 p.m. the Wednesday before the game. Suite-holders may also request a bartender, he said.
The alcohol controversy arose during the first home game, in which alcohol was available to club seat holders who donated a minimum of $1,000 on top of paying the season ticket prices of about $700 for their seats.
When it began to rain during the game, club members rushed the bar inside the club area and began to drink.
"They had people drinking too damn much, and they had some security problems," Deardeuff said. "They had some damage done."
After the incident, President David L. Boren announced that alcohol would no longer be sold in the stadium on game days.
On Sept. 22, OU Athletics Director Joe Castiglione issued a press release in which he took full responsibility for misleading club seat holders to believe that alcohol would be served on game day.
"The facts are clear," Castiglione said in a press release. "The athletics department administration had no authority to change the practice of several decades that no alcoholic beverages would be sold on game days in the stadium.
OUDaily.com | Fans still drink in stadium
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