College football: The Power 5's smallest stadiums   

Many of the stadiums in the Power Five conferences are massive structures that can seat over 100,000 fans and, in some cases over 110,000.  

From Michigan’s “Big House” to the Tennessee Volunteers’ Neyland Stadium,

 the football meccas create as much of the team’s identity as the colors and mascot.

But not all Power Five schools have such a grand venue for college football.

Here are the smallest-capacity stadiums in each conference …

(1) BB&T Field (Wake Forest   Capacity: 31, 500 

2) Wallace Wade Stadium (Duke)   Capacity: 33,941  

3) Martin Stadium (Washington State)   Capacity: 35,117 

4) Vanderbilt Stadium (Vanderbilt)   Capacity: 40,550 

5) Alumni Stadium (Boston College)   Capacity: 44,500 

6) McLane Stadium (Baylor)   Capacity: 45,000 

7) Rice Eccles Stadium (Utah)   Capacity: 45,017 

8) Reser Stadium (Oregon State)   Capacity: 45,674 

9) Carrier Dome (Syracuse)   Capacity: 49,250 

10) Ryan Field (Northwestern)   Capacity: 49,256 

11) Amon Carter Stadium (TCU)   Capacity: 50,000 

12) Stanford Stadium (Stanford)   Capacity: 50,000  

13) Memorial Stadium (Kansas)   Capacity: 50.071 

14) TCF Bank Stadium (Minnesota)   Capacity: 50,300 

15) Bill Snyder Family Stadium (Kansas State)   Capacity: 52,200 

16) High Point Solutions Stadium (Rutgers)   Capacity: 52,454 

17) Memorial Stadium (Indiana)   Capacity: 53,500 

18) Folsom Field (Colorado)   Capacity: 53,613 

19) Byrd Stadium (Maryland)   Capacity: 54,000 

If you know where the open roads are going to take you, choosing an RV will be a little easier.

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