Syracuse targets December of 2024 for opening of new football operations center

Syracuse, N.Y. — Syracuse University is targeting December of 2024 for the opening of its new football operations center, a critical component of the schoolโ€™s transformation of the Manley Field House space into the John A. Lally Athletics Complex.

Pete Sala, the schoolโ€™s vice president and chief facilities officer, included the project timeline in an email to the campus community.

When completed the John A. Lally Athletics Complex will provide a badly-needed upgrade to the areas where Syracuse athletes spend much of their time. The complex will house weightlifting and conditioning facilities, team locker rooms, lounges, eating spaces, administrative offices and areas where athletes perform schoolwork and receive academic help.

The school said last October that the improvements made to create the Lally Complex will be done in phases. It put an estimated price on the first phase at $55 million.

Lally, a former Syracuse football player, provided the cornerstone donation to make the improvements, pledging $25 million in 2019. Lally said he was initially planning to donate to help the football program but a tour of the schoolโ€™s aging athletic facilities created awareness that all of the schoolโ€™s programs could use the help.

Different portions of Lallyโ€™s pledge are unlocked as the school meets various fundraising goals, with the mission of bringing in other financial supporters.

One of the major donations for the football operations center came from Arthur and Chandler Jones, who made a seven-figure donation in October.

The school said at a ribbon-cutting ceremony in February that it expected the operations center to be part of the first phase of improvements and that it hoped to begin construction this summer but they were dependent on fundraising. The campus-wide construction update from Pete Sala provided the first firm timeline.

Salaโ€™s announcement said that work will begin in June and start with excavation and utility work. Eventually, the current football…

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