Hosting a Soccer Tournament at the Stadium: An Organizer's Playbook
Friday, April 24
Running a tournament at a park complex means renting portable goals, scheduling around the weather with no backup, managing parking in a grass lot, and hoping the portable restrooms hold up. Running a tournament at a professional stadium eliminates most of those variables before the first whistle.
Texas Health Mansfield Stadium is designed for year-round soccer programming, including youth tournaments, adult leagues, club showcases, and multi-team competitions. The venue provides the infrastructure that park complexes charge as extras, and a dedicated events team that handles the operational load organizers usually carry alone.
For club directors, league administrators, and tournament organizers evaluating whether a stadium venue fits, here is the operational playbook.
Field Operations and Match Scheduling
The pitch is the foundation of any tournament, and the quality of the surface directly affects how many matches you can run and how the competition is perceived by participating clubs.
A Professional-Grade Pitch
The playing surface at Texas Health Mansfield Stadium is the same one used by North Texas SC, the 2024 MLS NEXT Pro champions and affiliate of FC Dallas. For tournament organizers, that means a regulation pitch maintained to professional standards. You do not need to inspect the field the night before, worry about sprinkler heads, or manage line painting. The pitch is match-ready.
Scheduling and Field Time
The events team builds your match schedule based on the number of teams, age groups, match duration, and format (round-robin, group plus knockout, or single elimination). Field transitions between matches are managed by on-site staff. Organizers provide the bracket structure and team assignments; the venue handles the clock, scoreboard, and changeover logistics.
According to a guide from SoccerCoachLab, a well-organized tournament can accommodate 8 to 32 teams in a single day, depending on field availability and match length. A professional stadium with dedicated staff and a single regulation pitch can run a tighter schedule with fewer delays than a multi-field park complex, where coordination across scattered fields creates bottlenecks.
Match Officials
Organizers are responsible for sourcing and compensating referees unless otherwise arranged. The events team can advise on referee coordination, scheduling, and on-site logistics for officials.
Hospitality and Catering
Tournament hospitality separates a forgettable event from one that clubs want to return to the following year. At a stadium, concessions and catering are built into the facility rather than contracted from outside vendors.
Concession Stands and Food Service
Permanent concession stands operate during tournament days, offering food and beverage options for players, families, and spectators. The Texas Health Resources partnership as Official Health Partner means the menu includes healthier, balanced options alongside standard stadium fare. You do not need to arrange food trucks or portable concession setups.
Premium Hospitality for Organizers and VIPs
The Staybolt Club, an upscale indoor lounge with panoramic views, and Private Suites offer premium spaces for tournament organizers, sponsors, VIP guests, and award ceremonies. Read more about the stadium to see the full list of available spaces.
Team Facilities
Four professional locker rooms give participating teams access to real changing rooms, showers, and preparation areas. At a park complex, teams change in cars or under pop-up tents. At THMS, the experience matches the competition level.
Spectator Experience and Logistics
A tournament that families enjoy attending is a tournament that attracts better teams the following year. The spectator experience at a stadium is built in, not assembled.
Seating and Shelter
More than 7,000 fixed seats provide permanent, covered seating on both sides of the pitch. The stadium was built around the pitch, with the closest seats at field level just feet from the action. Spectators do not need to bring lawn chairs or stand behind ropes along a sideline.
Permanent Restrooms and Accessibility
Permanent, accessible restroom facilities are available throughout the venue. No portable units required. The venue meets accessibility standards for guests with disabilities.
Parking and Access
The stadium sits in the Staybolt Street Entertainment District in Mansfield, Texas, adjacent to Texas State Highway 360. Parking lots adjacent to the venue accommodate tournament-day traffic. From downtown Dallas, the drive is roughly 30 minutes; from DFW International Airport, 35 to 40 minutes.
Vendor and Sponsor Coordination
Many tournament organizers rely on sponsorship revenue to offset costs. A professional venue creates sponsor value that a park complex cannot.
Sponsor Visibility
Fixed signage infrastructure, a PA system, and a scoreboard give sponsors visible placement throughout the event. Premium spaces like the Mansfield Mile (the longest bar at any outdoor stadium in North America) and South Plaza can be branded for sponsor activations. The events team works with organizers on custom branding opportunities.
Outside Vendor Policies
The venue has in-house concession and catering capabilities. Policies on outside food vendors, merchandise vendors, and equipment suppliers should be discussed during the inquiry process. The events team can advise on what is permitted and how vendor load-in and placement works.
Day-of Operations
On tournament day, the THMS operations team handles the infrastructure so organizers can focus on the competition.
What the Venue Manages
- Field setup and transitions between matches
- Scoreboard operation and PA announcements
- Concession and hospitality service
- Parking and guest services staffing
- Security and facility operations
What the Organizer Manages
- Match officials and referee coordination
- Team check-in and bracket administration
- Award ceremonies and special programming
- Sanctioning compliance (US Youth Soccer, US Club Soccer, or North Texas State Soccer Association, depending on the teams involved)
The split is straightforward: the venue handles the facility, and the organizer handles the competition.
Make Your Tournament a Stadium Event
A tournament at a professional stadium is a fundamentally different product than a tournament at a park. The pitch is better. The seating is permanent. The concessions are real. The locker rooms exist. And the events team carries the operational load that usually falls on the organizer’s volunteers.
Contact our team with your tournament details, preferred dates, and format, and a member of the events staff will build a proposal. Check the upcoming events calendar for date availability.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many teams can a tournament at THMS accommodate?
Team count depends on the format, age groups, and match duration. A single regulation pitch with dedicated staff and efficient transitions can support 8 to 32 teams in a day. The events team builds a schedule based on your bracket structure.
Do I need to bring my own referees?
Yes. Organizers are responsible for sourcing and paying match officials unless otherwise arranged. The events team can advise on scheduling and on-site logistics for referees.
Are locker rooms available for teams?
Yes. Four professional locker rooms are available for tournament use. Locker room access and rotation between teams is coordinated by the events team.
Can I bring outside food vendors?
THMS has in-house concession and catering. Outside vendor policies should be discussed during the inquiry process. The events team will advise on what is permitted.
Is the stadium available for multi-day tournaments?
Yes. Multi-day tournaments can be accommodated depending on the venue’s event calendar. Submit your inquiry early to secure consecutive dates.
What sanctioning do I need for a youth tournament in Texas?
Youth tournaments typically require sanctioning through US Youth Soccer, US Club Soccer, or the North Texas State Soccer Association. The events team can help you understand what applies.