Colonial Center

From Free net encyclopedia

Revision as of 18:26, 17 April 2006; view current revision
←Older revision | Newer revision→
Image:Colonial center.jpg 

The Colonial Center is a basketball arena in Columbia, South Carolina. Opened in 2002, the 18,000 seat arena is home to the University of South Carolina basketball teams and also host various events like conferences, concerts, and graduation ceremonies throughout the year. It is the largest arena in the state of South Carolina and the tenth largest college arena.

The naming rights are held by Chattanooga, Tennessee-based insurance company UnumProvident.

The arena first opened on November 22, 2002 with the season opener of the South Carolina women's basketball team. A sell-out crowd of 17,712 fans saw the 72-58 Gamecocks victory over in-state rival Clemson. The official grand opening took place December 2, 2002. The men's basketball team defeated Temple 66-47.

Aside from Gamecock basketball, the Colonial Center also hosts the South Carolina High School Basketball Championships each year. The facility is built to also host ice hockey games, but because of legal issues withe the funding for the facility, has yet to host one.

The Colonial Center was ranked 22nd in the world in ticket sales in 2003 [1]. It was also ranked the #1 arena in the Carolinas and was the #2 rated university arena in the world in 2005, based on ticket sales for touring shows [2]. Some of the arists that have performed in the Colonial Center so far are Bruce Springsteen (first artist to perform at venue), Michael W. Smith, Point of Grace (first group to perform at venue), and The Katinas.

It is managed by Comcast Spectacor, whose Philadelphia 76ers played an exhibition game in the venue in October 2005.

The venue was built to host future NCAA Men's and Women's Basketball Tournament games, but before the venue opened, it was banned from such use by the NCAA under a policy enacted shortly before construction began banning venues in South Carolina and Mississippi from hosting such events under recommendations from the NAACP.

The arena has been criticized for being too large for Gamecock basketball, considering the team has not won an NCAA tournament game since 1973, and has struggled since 1974, and rarely selling out games (some non-conference games no more than 10,000 attend, but over 14,000 typically show up for SEC games, including several 17,500+ crowds, and sellouts annually for Kentucky, and the biennial game against Clemson.); however, the venue construction began before activist groups forced the NCAA to ban the venue from hosting NCAA championship events because of a Confederate Rebel Flag on a soldiers' memorial nearby on the South Carolina Statehouse grounds. Perhaps the basketball program is on an upswing -- it has won the past two National Invitational Tournaments.

Other events included Disney on Ice, Sesame Street, American Idols Live !, and Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus.

The University of South Carolina holds most of its commencement exercises in the Colonial Center. The first commencement speaker for ceremonies at the Colonial Center was President George W. Bush in 2003.

External links

Template:SEC Basketball Venues