by Roberts Stadium » February 23rd, 2022, 6:06 am
I'm glad this thread was created. A few weeks ago I completed all of my visits to Missouri Valley gyms/arenas with Drake and Northern Iowa games. I started with Northern Iowa @ Evansville and ended with Bradley @ Northern Iowa (was hoping to get the game ball but unfortunately they didn't have enough extra balls for me to do that) and in between I did Purdue @ Iowa, Xavier @ Creighton, Rutgers @ Nebraska, UMKC @ UNO, Loyola @ Drake, and Kansas @ Iowa State. 2900 miles over 9 days. I'm not the best advisor for food in each area because I'm always running 100 mph to get to other games but I definitely know of things to do in the areas...
Evansville- Turonis Pizza
LST, Evansville Wartime Museum, Reitz Hill/Bowl overlooking the city
Southern Illinois- The Vault Cafe (Marion), World's Oldest Saloon
There's a ton of things to do in the Shawnee National Forest if you get there in the real early or real late parts of basketball season. Beyond that you're driving for a while. One interesting thing is Marion/Ray Fosse Park which has an interesting and ironic connection with Ray Fosse and Pete Rose.
Indiana State- I miss the old Pizza Hut in Terre Haute so now I just go with generic places off of the 41 strip
- The Holocaust Museum, Larry Bird statue (soon to be museum), the birthplace of the coca-cola bottle statue tour, and if you stay back off the grounds you can see the historic federal prison.
Illinois State- The first Steak N Shake is now a Monical's pizza and not too far from Redbird Arena.
- The McLean County Courthouse has a lot of great stuff on Lincoln and Route 66. The Evergreen Memorial Cemetery has the person who was the inspiration for Dorothy on the Wizard of Oz. You can also see State Farm's HQs from the outside in downtown Bloomington.
Bradley- I just ate at a Perkins and Taco Bell outside my hotel.
- The Peoria Riverfront Museum and Caterpillar Visitors Center, Spirit of Peoria Riverboat, and if it's the right time of the season there's an observatory in Donovan Park and the Heights Tower observation deck in a random neighborhood north of downtown.
Valpo- I stopped at the Monon Railroad Museum diner in Monon on the way up.
- Not a lot in Valpo other than some interesting buildings on campus. I went on in to Chicago after that. Although you could pair Michael Jackson's birthplace in Gary with it or the John Dillinger museum in Crown Point.
Loyola- I got sick after the game so I stumbled back on to the subway and went to my hotel in the suburbs but there are plenty of restaurants just across the street from Gentile Arena. With UIC taking their place next year, I'd add all of Chicago to this. Certainly a deep dish pizza on Michigan Street is number 1.
There are a ton of things to do in Chicago obviously so I'll add the smaller things I've visited there- The graves of Al Capone and Jack Ruby, the site where the Chicago Fire allegedly started, the World's Largest Laundry Mat, the Leaning Tower of Niles, and the Home Alone House just to name a few. I also visited the first Ray Kroc McDonald's before it was torn down.
Missouri State- Red's Giant Hamburg (worlds first drive thru) in Springfield and you can't go wrong with any of the tourist trap buffets down the road in Branson.
The birthplace of Route 66, the World's Largest Fork outside the Food Channel, and Bass Pro Shops' HQs in Springfield. I think Payne Stewart is buried there but that could be Orlando. I did the Ozarks in Missouri and then the Ozarks in Arkansas before and after the game in addition to all of the tourist sites in Branson. On a side note, I visited the Clinton Whitewater scandal site the day after in Flippin, AR.
Drake- There's a ton of options in Des Moines. I enjoyed Fong's Pizza although I hated that they discontinued the infamous fruit loop pizza.
The Iowa Capitol, the World Food Prize Hall of Laureates, the Iowa Gold Star museum, the Val Air Ballroom site of Howard Dean's famous I Have A Scream Speech, and there's a lot of tributes to Merle Hay who was one of three first Americans to die in WWI (Evansville's James Bethel Gresham was one of the others) are all in Des Moines but definitely visit Winterset, Pella, Knoxville, Van Meter, and Newtown Iowa among many other places just outside the city plus the high trestle bridge in Madrid at night and the famous Route 6.
Northern Iowa- I went over to Dyersville to go back to the Field of Dreams movie where I ate lunch in town before going to Dubuque and back so I have no restaurant recommendations.
In Cedar Falls/Waterloo, there's the John Deere museum and just down the road from Northern Iowa is the Hyvee where Kurt Warner worked. I also drove up to Clear Lake, IA and back to see the Surf Ballroom where Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, and the Big Booper played last before their plane crash. Don McLean put on a concert to commemorate the 50th anniversary of his song American Pie. It's only a couple of hours from Cedar Falls as is Cedar Rapids where a city hall on an island and North America's oldest Mosque is.
I've also already been to Murray State several times and recommend Dippin Dots and Land Between the Lakes plus the Patsy Cline plane crash site and the Eiffel Tower of Paris, TN depending on which direction you're coming from as well as Belmont where you should tour the Belmont Mansion before the game in Nashville.
And then lastly, I went to former Missouri Valley cities. I was lucky enough catch a Creighton game in Omaha during my visit to Iowa a few weeks ago where there's a lot in Omaha/Council Bluffs like the Bob Kerrey Pedestrian Bridge, Golden Spike, Union Pacific Museum, Rosenblatt Stadium memorial, and Malcolm X's homesite. I didn't get to go to a Wichita State game but their campus has the first Pizza Hut building and there's 2 silos that claim to be the world's longest outside of town.
I love traveling through the Valley during basketball season. It's an amazing time of the year despite the weather. A lot of great gyms and arenas in a great historic conference.