In 2019 it became the home field for the Flint City Bucks, a soccer club that competes in USL League Two, as well as Powers Catholic High School.
It has hosted boxing matches, UAW strikes, high school football, minor-league baseball, election stump speeches, and concerts over the years.
The stadium reopened in 1995 after $3.5 million in improvements, including a new artificial turf field, and resumed hosting football games for Flint Community Schools.
Since 2019, the Flint City Bucks soccer team and Powers Catholic High School's football, boys and girls soccer, boys and girls lacrosse, and marching band programs share Atwood Stadium as their home field.
Kettering University leaves a portion of the paved parking area publicly accessible to allow residents to fish the river.
The 1950 game with Tony Branoff, Leroy Bolden, and Ellis Duckett drew a record crowd of 20,600, thanks to standing room and temporary seating.
[5][6] Atwood Stadium was renovated in 1966 with new ticket booths, a larger press box, improved lighting and new sod.
[3] In the past Atwood Stadium hosted the Michigan Invitational Tournament, a high school marching band competition hosted by Flushing High School, which at the time was one of the longest-running marching band competitions in Michigan.
This alleviated scheduling conflicts which occasionally displaced Flint Southwestern home openers to Guy Houston Stadium.
Since 2017, Atwood Stadium has hosted the Vehicle City Gridiron Classic to mark the start of the Michigan high school football season.
Powers Catholic shares the "home of" title with the Flint City Bucks USL League Two soccer team, who also moved to Atwood Stadium in 2019.
[11] A committee of runners led by Brian and Dorie Barkey attempt to have the Turri race be continued by Hurley or picked up by the Crim Fitness Foundation.
[11] In 2018 and 2019, Kettering University operated the road races with the route being changed taking the runners past Chevy Commons, the Flint River Trail, Mott Park, the Educare Center, Glenwood Cemetery and Kettering's new Mobility Research Center.