Tampa: Bay Stadium Ship

But Tampa, a city built on pirate lore (Gasparilla, anyone?), embraced the insanity. The ship was constructed in sections, hoisted into place, and welded to the stadium’s upper deck. When Raymond James Stadium opened in 1998, the ship was there — a 43-foot-tall act of beautiful defiance. The ship isn’t just a prop. It’s fully walkable.

Then the Bucs’ ownership said: What if we built a full-scale pirate ship? tampa bay stadium ship

During the 2020 playoff run, the cannons fired so often that local meteorologists joked about “unseasonal gunpowder fog” settling over the stadium. But Tampa, a city built on pirate lore (Gasparilla, anyone

Here’s a creative feature piece on the — a quirky, little-known architectural and cultural curiosity. The Pirate Ship That Stole the Show: Inside Tampa Bay’s Strangest Stadium Feature TAMPA, Fla. — On most game days at Raymond James Stadium, all eyes are on the field. Tom Brady (once upon a time) dropping back, Mike Evans hauling in a touchdown, or the Bucs’ defense swarming a running back. But for a certain breed of fan — the kind who looks up, not just ahead — the real star never moves. The ship isn’t just a prop

One visiting coach (who asked not to be named) once told a sideline reporter: “I’ve been coaching 30 years. I’ve heard crowd noise, buzzers, fireworks. I have never had to game-plan against the smell of sulfur.” For Tampa, the ship is identity. The Buccaneers’ logo is a knife-wielding pirate. Their fight song is “Yo Ho, Yo Ho, a Buccaneer’s Life for Me.” The team’s Ring of Honor includes a guy named “Lee Roy” and another guy they call “Hard Rock.” The ship makes all of that feel earned, not ironic.

It’s 103 feet long. It has masts, rigging, cannons, and a Jolly Roger. And it’s perched high above the north end zone, as if a Spanish galleon sailed straight into the stands and decided to stay.