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Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2014

About the Author

Neal Milner

Neal Milner is a former political science professor at the University of Hawaiʻi where he taught for 40 years. He is a political analyst for KITV and is a regular contributor to Hawaii Public Radio's "The Conversation." His most recent book is The Gift of Underpants. Opinions are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Civil Beat's views.

The modest plan for a new stadium displays the needed caution in an age of big-money national college athletics.

The best name for Honolulu’s new stadium is staring us in the face. Aloha and welcome to Limbo Field!

“Limbo” should be the name because that’s the situation UH football is in, and that’s such a dangerous place to be.

At its root, limbo is a sign of fragility, being on the precipice, hanging by a thread. Things could become unbalanced and fall apart at any moment.

Limbo may also mean that, like a limbo dance contest, you need to go as low as you can go.

Here’s how limbo shows its face here. The new stadium is designed with the risks of limbo in mind. Traditional ways of recruiting players that stressed Hawaiʻi as a special place may not work well anymore. And even with the new stadium, the fans may not come back.

Naming it after the old Aloha Stadium doesn’t cut it.



Ideas showcases stories, opinion and analysis about Hawaiʻi, from the state’s sharpest thinkers, to stretch our collective thinking about a problem or an issue. Email news@civilbeat.org to submit an idea or an essay.

The Limbo Stadium Design

The new stadium is the essence of limbo.

Stadiums are often described as cathedrals, or sacred fountains of awe and memories.

Hawaiʻi’s new Limbo Field, on the other hand, is a cathedral of modesty.

Compared to the national trends in stadium design, ours is as modest as that tiny backyard ADU you built for your mom and dad.

UH versus UNLV.  ALOHA STADIUM, HONOLULU, HAWAII. photo CORY LUM/ CIVIL BEAT
University of Hawaiʻi football’s glory days were many years ago. (Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2014)

It’s a plain vanilla, spartan little thing seating only 22,500, uncovered, with bleacher seats and no parking. There will be only a few luxury suites.

(For a totally upbeat stadium developer view of it, look here.

Deficient? No, it’s all good because Limbo Field does the job. Don’t think crown jewel. Think finger in the dike preventing UH football from falling off the map. 

Limbo Stadium’s look rightly doesn’t evoke big dreams. It evokes caution and ambivalence. Not so much a field of dreams but a shield against the nightmare changes in major college football that threatens to leave UH behind.

That nightmare is called “Name, Image, and Likeness.” NIL, for short. UH football may not be able to afford to pay to play.

Paying The Players

Thanks to rule changes over the past few years, college athletes can now get paid for the use of their name, image and likeness and can easily move from school to school in search of more money.

We’re talking about a lot of money. Many college athletes make over a million dollars a year. It’s seller’s market and schools, like shoppers looking at the price of eggs, have to figure out a way to come up with the cash.

There is some evidence that the change benefits schools like UH that are not football elites. But UH does not have enough money to take advantage of this possible benefit, so it needs to get the money from somewhere else.

Good luck. Despite a recent big gift, UH athletics has very few mega-money benefactors. 

There’s no easy way out, but we can start by being real about what were up against.

Talking about a UH football player getting recruited by another school to jump ship, football coach Timmy Chang said, “He wants to be part of this culture, loves the guys that he’s playing next to, but that’s just the world we live in right now through NIL and just retaining our guys, recruiting our guys.”

He said this while requesting taxpayer money for NIL.

Taxpayer money? Holy voter revolt! Only a handful of states offer this private sector enhancement. 

The idea has not been well received so far in Hawaiʻi. One legislator said she didn’t want to pay good money to players who aren’t from Hawaiʻi.

If you can’t pay to bring players in and don’t have enough money to keep Hawaiʻi players here, that spells diminishment and debacle.

Some people argue that UH athletics should not sully itself by participating in this sleazy ritual.

A more optimistic view is that Hawaiʻi can do more with less because of the weather, the culture — “Hawaii’s one-of-a-kind background,” as the head of a UH football fundraising group called it.

The problem is that special is not always so special when money is involved. Look at how many people love Hawaiʻi but move to Las Vegas.

It comes down to this: UH is on a precipice. It is having trouble coming up with the money to stay in the game, yet there is no other option.

Playing little-time football against lower division teams is not feasible. But neither is eliminating football.

And this isn’t just a threat to the program, which many of you may not care about. It’s also a threat to Hawaiʻi’s belief in the strength of its uniqueness.

This state of limbo may go as low as you can go.

The Rainbow Warriors currently play at Clarence Ching Athletic Arena. (David Croxford/Civil Beat/2024)

Fan Support?

Fan support is iffy. You’ve heard the stories about the legacy of UH football from the sold-out games at funky, homey Honolulu Stadium to the big-time football at Aloha Stadium.

But how much support is there for UH football now?

The only public survey available, a 2022 Star Advertiser poll, showed that that it may be far weaker than you think.

One-third of respondents said they strongly supported UH football, but 40% either wanted to scrap football right now or talk about doing it.

The poll is unscientific, but so are the prognostications of sportswriters, politicians, booster club officials and other drum-beaters.

That drum beat recalls the heady football legacy at the old Honolulu Stadium, the big names and big games at Aloha (June Jones, Ray Nagel and a trip to the Sugar Bowl). Good times. 

Those times are gone, maybe for good. Fandom has been interrupted.

There hasn’t been a home crowd as large as Limbo Field’s proposed 22,500 capacity since 2019. Tradition is a habit that has to be developed or restored.

Unlike most major college football venues, Limbo Field will not be a college stadium in a college town. It’ll be a community stadium that depends on a wide range of fans.

How we, especially our kids, spend time today — streaming, social media — is very different from what it was back in those successful football days.

Being a fan is less of a guarantee that you will actually show up and buy a ticket. I’m not saying no, but I’m not saying yes either. More limbo.

There’s no easy way out, but we can start by being real about what were up against.

Lowly Limbo Field is a good place to begin, because there’s strength in its lowliness

As I wrote this, I found myself changing my mind about Limbo Stadium from seeing it simply as an overhyped bare bones, flawed mini-venue. What I first thought were its deficits may really be its strengths. There’s nothing sacred or awesome about it, and that’s great.

Think of it as a bricks and mortar classroom for teaching moments. See Limbo Field’s look as a beacon, not of awe, but of caution.


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About the Author

Neal Milner

Neal Milner is a former political science professor at the University of Hawaiʻi where he taught for 40 years. He is a political analyst for KITV and is a regular contributor to Hawaii Public Radio's "The Conversation." His most recent book is The Gift of Underpants. Opinions are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Civil Beat's views.


Latest Comments (0)

This stadium project could be a way worse money pit than the rail debacle and for the next 30 years which is how long the website predicts the length of full completion. UH needs to stay on campus and forget about any tax dollars for NIL payments to players. Ching Field is the solution with a few upgrades.When will local politicians stop spending our tax dollars so frivolously on pet projects to enrich developers and start focusing on the basic needs of our community? The dollars spent on the rail should be a constant reminder of the states history of fiscal mismanagement and the need for keeping those in charge of fiscal responsibility. Let's start with Kapuna assistance, strengthening public schools, teacher pay and consistent & effective road maintenance.

Pameulu · 4 months ago

With no pro bowl UH football will be the only game in town.Are the UH fans going to pay $100 or more to use the new stadium?On the mainland there are stadiums that charge over $600 per seat for NFL games, and those are the cheapest seats!The dire need for a developer to create the new stadium at the former Aloha stadium is false.A developer is only interested in building housing to sell at market rates, nothing more.With no local user for the Aloha stadium we are left with importing musicians to fill the seats, you guessed it, at $600 per seat. In a newly constructed residential area. Can you say lawsuit?Noise complaints and parking will be just the beginning…,Keep the stadium plans at UH, support our community, not a political insider.

Surferdude · 4 months ago

The Hawaii Bowl was a great way for Coach Timmy and the boys to close out the 2025 season. Imua! Go Bows!

Sun_Duck · 4 months ago

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