The post Pizza Chef Tony Gemignani Preps Super Bowl As Stadium Presence Grows appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The Slice House concept from Tony Gemignani is now in four different stadium or arena venues in San Francisco and Las Vegas. Gamma Nine When officials wanted to upgrade the pizza experience at the home of the San Francisco Giants over a decade ago they turned to famed local pizza chef Tony Gemignani. Now 13 World Pizza Championship wins later, Gemignani has franchised his Slice House concept across stadiums in San Francisco and Las Vegas as he readies for the Super Bowl and World Cup in 2026. What started at Oracle Park has grown to include Gemignani concepts at all three major San Francisco-area sports venues—the Slice House at Oracle Park and Levi’s Stadium and Tony G’s at Chase Center—along with multiple concepts at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, including the Slice House. Sports was a part of Gemignani’s youth, so taking a 30-plus-year pizza career into stadiums was something the Bay Area-native was focused on. “My dad was big into sports, and we went to games all the time,” Gemignani tells me. “Being able to be in a stadium meant the world for me. I hustled to get it.” Tony Gemignani finishing a pizza with San Francisco Giants player Logan Webb. Slice House Known for his New York-style, Gemignani also crafts Sicilian and virtually every variety of pizza at his restaurants, often with nonstop lines out the door. He can bring those styles into stadiums, giving the Slice House concept—or other Gemignani-made pizza concepts—a unique feel. As the Slice House brand continues to grow outside of stadiums, he expects it to pop up in more venues across the country, even as he readies new recipes for the 49ers season and both the Super Bowl and World Cup coming to Levi’s Stadium in 2026. “This is not one of these… The post Pizza Chef Tony Gemignani Preps Super Bowl As Stadium Presence Grows appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The Slice House concept from Tony Gemignani is now in four different stadium or arena venues in San Francisco and Las Vegas. Gamma Nine When officials wanted to upgrade the pizza experience at the home of the San Francisco Giants over a decade ago they turned to famed local pizza chef Tony Gemignani. Now 13 World Pizza Championship wins later, Gemignani has franchised his Slice House concept across stadiums in San Francisco and Las Vegas as he readies for the Super Bowl and World Cup in 2026. What started at Oracle Park has grown to include Gemignani concepts at all three major San Francisco-area sports venues—the Slice House at Oracle Park and Levi’s Stadium and Tony G’s at Chase Center—along with multiple concepts at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, including the Slice House. Sports was a part of Gemignani’s youth, so taking a 30-plus-year pizza career into stadiums was something the Bay Area-native was focused on. “My dad was big into sports, and we went to games all the time,” Gemignani tells me. “Being able to be in a stadium meant the world for me. I hustled to get it.” Tony Gemignani finishing a pizza with San Francisco Giants player Logan Webb. Slice House Known for his New York-style, Gemignani also crafts Sicilian and virtually every variety of pizza at his restaurants, often with nonstop lines out the door. He can bring those styles into stadiums, giving the Slice House concept—or other Gemignani-made pizza concepts—a unique feel. As the Slice House brand continues to grow outside of stadiums, he expects it to pop up in more venues across the country, even as he readies new recipes for the 49ers season and both the Super Bowl and World Cup coming to Levi’s Stadium in 2026. “This is not one of these…

Pizza Chef Tony Gemignani Preps Super Bowl As Stadium Presence Grows

6 min read

The Slice House concept from Tony Gemignani is now in four different stadium or arena venues in San Francisco and Las Vegas.

Gamma Nine

When officials wanted to upgrade the pizza experience at the home of the San Francisco Giants over a decade ago they turned to famed local pizza chef Tony Gemignani. Now 13 World Pizza Championship wins later, Gemignani has franchised his Slice House concept across stadiums in San Francisco and Las Vegas as he readies for the Super Bowl and World Cup in 2026.

What started at Oracle Park has grown to include Gemignani concepts at all three major San Francisco-area sports venues—the Slice House at Oracle Park and Levi’s Stadium and Tony G’s at Chase Center—along with multiple concepts at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, including the Slice House.

Sports was a part of Gemignani’s youth, so taking a 30-plus-year pizza career into stadiums was something the Bay Area-native was focused on. “My dad was big into sports, and we went to games all the time,” Gemignani tells me. “Being able to be in a stadium meant the world for me. I hustled to get it.”

Tony Gemignani finishing a pizza with San Francisco Giants player Logan Webb.

Slice House

Known for his New York-style, Gemignani also crafts Sicilian and virtually every variety of pizza at his restaurants, often with nonstop lines out the door. He can bring those styles into stadiums, giving the Slice House concept—or other Gemignani-made pizza concepts—a unique feel. As the Slice House brand continues to grow outside of stadiums, he expects it to pop up in more venues across the country, even as he readies new recipes for the 49ers season and both the Super Bowl and World Cup coming to Levi’s Stadium in 2026.

“This is not one of these things where you plan it three months out,” he says about the marquee events. “[The concessionaires] don’t think about it the day before, they think about it way ahead. They really dive deep and try to figure out something cool for the fans.”

MORE: The Stadium History of Nachos

For this year’s NFL season that means a different pizza recipe each game, depending on the opposing team— Gemignani recently crafted a Carolina short rib pizza for the Jaguars and an Italian beef recipe when Chicago came to town—and highlighting fun tie-ins, such as a Purdy Pizza at Levi’s Stadium in honor of Brock Purdy and the new WNBA’s Valkyries team color purple inspiring a purple potato pizza at Chase Center.

Still, though, the most popular slice across all stadiums remains pepperoni. “America is totally a pepperoni town,” Gemignani says. “Cheese would be next.”

Tony Gemignani finishing a pizza. Gemignani is a famed San Francisco pizza chef who has created a stadium-friendly pizza concept.

Gamma Nine

Every pizza served ties directly to Gemignani’s famed San Francisco restaurants, using the same ingredients. From day one at Oracle Park, Gemignani says that while he’s proven he’s willing to adapt to any venue—he cooks pizza in wood-fired, coal-fired, gas or electric ovens—the non-negotiable is the ingredients. All dough is made in-house, even at stadiums, activated by his own starters. He uses a specific flour and requires Grande cheese. While it happens to be one of the most expensive on the market, Gemignani says the common New York cheese melts great.

“There were certain ingredients,” he says were required. “This is what separates us from other ballparks and arenas. We were one of the first ones back in the day to do dough and starters, and every stadium came and wanted to see the pizza operations.”

All the attention to detail was about creating a high-quality product. “My dream was to see a dad and son walk up and grab a slice bigger than the kid’s head,” Gemignani says. His first day at Oracle Park, tucked in what was once a break room high in the stadium, he made pizza on an imported Cuppone electric-deck oven with dough made on site with his starters. “Here we are,” he says, “we build it and get everything I wanted and the first customer on opening day was a dad walking up with his sone and they got a cheese slice. I remember it like it was yesterday.”

Tony Gemignani’s Slice House Pizza growing across stadiums.

Gamma Nine

Slice House then grew into multiple locations within Oracle Park before the 49ers came calling. And then the Warriors. And the Raiders.

Gemignani went from paying a marketing fee to get into Oracle to having teams craving his brand and inviting him in (it helped that Joe Montana and the owners of the 49ers were all regulars at his restaurants).

Typical restaurant owners can have a steep learning curve dealing with the rush and volume of stadiums. Gemignani says he’s been dealing with that from the start of his pizza business, so understanding the operations side wasn’t a giant leap. “There is a lot to it,” he says, “being at a high quality, but at the same time being super-fast. I was used to that kind of busyness.”

MORE: How Sports Embraces Cheese Sponsorships, The New Stadium Cheddar

Having worked with a wide range of concessionaires—the three San Francisco venues are all operated by a different company— Gemignani says he simply focuses on being a good operator and making fans happy. “The thing about sports, sometimes you just need to do a damn good cheese and pepperoni,” he says. “Do we do chef-driven pizzas? We do, but when you got to a stadium you want a great slice and sometimes fans aren’t looking for the truffle pizza that is $15. You want to sell and move and make fans happy. Fans are happy with great food.”

Of course, the clamoring for world-class pizza doesn’t stop on the concourses. Gemignani also cooks for players and team staff, proving that kids wanting a cheese pizza slice as big as their head at their first big-league game grow up seeking a top-choice slice, especially when available at their home stadium.

MORE: The Stadium History Of Ice Cream

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/timnewcomb/2025/10/03/pizza-chef-tony-gemignani-preps-super-bowl-as-stadium-presence-grows/

Market Opportunity
Housecoin Logo
Housecoin Price(HOUSE)
$0.0006965
$0.0006965$0.0006965
+6.66%
USD
Housecoin (HOUSE) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.
Tags:

You May Also Like

USDT Transfer Stuns Market: $238 Million Whale Movement to Bitfinex Reveals Critical Patterns

USDT Transfer Stuns Market: $238 Million Whale Movement to Bitfinex Reveals Critical Patterns

BitcoinWorld USDT Transfer Stuns Market: $238 Million Whale Movement to Bitfinex Reveals Critical Patterns In a stunning development that captured global cryptocurrency
Share
bitcoinworld2026/02/06 21:45
The market value of NFTs has fallen back to pre-2021 levels, close to $1.5 billion.

The market value of NFTs has fallen back to pre-2021 levels, close to $1.5 billion.

PANews reported on February 6th, citing Cointelegraph, that the global NFT market capitalization has fallen below $1.5 billion, returning to pre-2021 levels. This
Share
PANews2026/02/06 21:13
Fed’s Hammack Backs Restrictive Policy Over Fed Rate Cuts

Fed’s Hammack Backs Restrictive Policy Over Fed Rate Cuts

The post Fed’s Hammack Backs Restrictive Policy Over Fed Rate Cuts appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Cleveland Federal Reserve President Beth Hammack has advocated for a restrictive monetary policy amid growing concerns of rising inflation . Her comment comes as Fed officials remain divided on whether they should make a Fed rate cut at the October FOMC meeting, a move that would impact the crypto market. Hammack Raises Inflation Concerns Amid Fed Rate Cut Debate Hammack stated that inflation continues to exceed the Fed’s objective and remains a concern across both headline and core categories. Speaking on CNBC, she noted that price growth remains above the Federal Reserve’s 2% objective and is not expected to return to target until the end of 2027 or early 2028. The Fed president added that pressures are most apparent in the services sector, where inflation has proven more persistent. Notably, her comments follow the first Fed rate cut of the year, two weeks ago at the September FOMC meeting.  In her remarks, Hammack said monetary policy must remain restrictive to ensure progress toward the inflation target, indicating that she doesn’t favor further Fed rate cuts for now. She explained that the Federal Reserve’s dual mandate requires balancing price stability with employment, but argued that inflation remains the greater challenge at present. “When I balance those two sides of our mandate, I think we really need to maintain a restrictive stance of policy so that we can get inflation back down to our goal,” she said. Inflation Over the Jobs Market Hammack pointed to service-related spending as an area where inflationary pressures remain strong. She explained that both headline and main price levels are still above target, with little evidence of near-term relief. She described the U.S. labor market as “reasonably healthy” and overall balanced, noting that current conditions do not show major weaknesses. However, Hammack stressed that maintaining this balance…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/29 23:50