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About the Team or Event
Florida State 's school colors of garnet and gold are a merging of the University's past. In 1904 and 1905 the Florida State College won football championships wearing purple and gold uniforms. When FSC became Florida State College for Women in 1905, the football team was forced to attend an all-male school in Gainesville. The following year, the FSCW student body selected crimson as the official school color. The administration in 1905 took crimson and combined it with the recognizable purple of the championship football teams to achieve the color garnet. The now-famous garnet and gold colors were first used on an FSU uniform in a 14-6 loss to Stetson on October 18, 1947.
Chief Osceola and Renegade
Perhaps the most spectacular tradition in all of college football occurs in Doak Campbell Stadium when a student portraying the famous Seminole Indian leader, Osceola, charges down the field riding an Appaloosa horse named Renegade and plants a flaming spear at midfield to begin every home game. Bill Durham, a 1965 graduate of FSU, envisioned the idea of Chief Osceola and Renegade when he was a sophomore on the Homecoming Committee in 1962. He didn't get any support for the idea until Bobby Bowden came to FSU as head coach. In the fall of 1977, Durham's idea began to materialize. Durham sought and obtained the approval of the Seminole Tribe of Florida for the portrayal of Osceola and during the opening game of 1978 against Oklahoma State, the legend of Osceola and Renegade began. Since that time Osceola, in authentic regalia designed by the ladies of the Seminole Tribe of Florida, and Renegade have opened every home game with the traditional planting of the spear, appeared in many major bowl games, and performed on national television on numerous occasions. Bill Durham and his family supply the beautiful Appaloosa horses and, with the help of the Renegade Team volunteers, continue to bring this spectacular tradition to those who love Florida State University.
About the Stadium
A permanent home for the Seminole men’s and women’s basketball teams was included in the blueprint for FSU athletics. The 40,000-square-foot office and practice complex is owned by the athletic department and attached to the Tallahassee-Leon County Civic Center, providing the FSU teams with a home for practice and games. Rather than operating out of cramped locker rooms in the current Moore Center and driving to practices, FSU’s basketball players can now dress, practice and play their home games all in one location, and have a place to congregate and study. The complex now provides each team with their own practice floor, greatly expanded locker rooms at the practice and game site, coaches’ offices, meeting rooms, players’ lounges, along with a reception area, a tradition room to display the Seminoles’ basketball success, and offices for support staff.