Sterling Route — game day ready

For Game Day Crews

Because You're Not
22 Anymore.
And That's a Good Thing.

10 seats. A cold fridge. WiFi. Your playlist. The tailgate starts the moment you pull out of the driveway.

The Old Way

Let's be honest about the Uber situation.

Ten of you want to go to Gainesville for a noon kickoff. You check Uber. It's surge pricing. Of course it's surge pricing. It's a home game, 80,000 people are moving at the same time, and the algorithm knows it.

You split into three cars. Somebody's wife has a minivan. You feel bad about it. You spend two hours in a caravan on I-75 with nobody to talk to because your buddies are in a different car.

Parking is $60 cash only. Somebody doesn't have cash. Now there's a whole thing.

After the game — win or lose — the ride home is the problem. Who's driving? How much did he drink? Are we stopping for food? Does anyone have room for the guy who took the bus?

At some point, the logistics of getting there starts to outweigh the fun of actually going.

The Better Way

One van. One crew. Zero logistics.

Saturday morning. Everyone meets at your place. The fridge in the van is already loaded — you stocked it Friday night while you watched the injury report. Cooler in the back. Flags on the windows.

The whole crew is in one vehicle. For the entire trip. That means everyone hears the same pre-game takes. Everyone reacts to the same highlights on the 32" screen. The trip itself becomes part of the day.

You pull up, you park once, and everyone walks in together. Not in separate pods, not 40 minutes apart — together, the way game day is supposed to be.

After the game? Nobody's calculating who owes what on Venmo. Nobody's waiting on a surge to calm down. You pile back in, someone puts on the post-game show, and you debrief the fourth quarter all the way home.

The van ride is half the experience. Stop treating it like the part you survive to get to the game.

Sterling Route — exterior

What's Onboard

Everything game day needs.

10 seats — captain chairs and benches, nobody's cramped
Mini fridge — stock it with whatever you're drinking
Microwave — hot food on the road, no drive-throughs
Private commode — no gas station stops
32" TV — pre-game, RedZone, post-game, all of it
WiFi & Bluetooth — stream, cast, connect
Self-drive — you control when you leave, how long you stay
Room for a cooler, chairs, a canopy — real tailgate gear

The Trips Worth Making

Florida fans know these drives.

We're in South Florida. These are the away trips your crew keeps almost taking.

Miami Hurricanes

Hard Rock Stadium

Miami Gardens · 30 min

Home crowd, but the van makes it an event. Show up as a crew, leave as a legend. Away game matchups change every year — check the schedule.

Florida Gators

Ben Hill Griffin Stadium

Gainesville · 3.5 hrs

The Swamp. Noon kickoff in September heat. Everybody's going. The difference is whether you're sweating in a Prius or riding up right.

Florida State Seminoles

Doak Campbell Stadium

Tallahassee · 4.5 hrs

Night game in Tallahassee. You know what that means. One van, ten people, everybody gets home safe. Plan accordingly.

How It Works

Sterling Route is a self-drive rental. One person in your crew drives — you decide that before you leave, not after the game. Maybe it rotates: one person drives up, someone else handles the return. Or you stay over and drive home Sunday morning when everyone's fresh. The point is you planned it, everyone knows the deal, and nine other people are completely free to enjoy the day they came for. That's a good arrangement for everybody.

Fall Schedule Fills Fast

Pick the game.
Book the van.
Show up right.

There is one van. Fall weekends — especially Gator and FSU games — go fast. Check availability now before someone else's crew takes your dates.

Check Availability