Is there a saying that a college basketball game is only as good as the venue it’s played in? No? Well there should be, because the Pac-12 has some great ones. The Pac-12 crew decided to rank them all based on three categories (history, aesthetics, and home-court advantage), and the results are below:
1. Pauley Pavilion (UCLA): Aesthetics Average Score – 3.5, History – 1.75, Advantage – 6.5. Pauley opened up in 1965 and has been rocking ever since. Legendary coach John Wooden needed a bigger place to house his back-to-back NCAA Championship Bruins than the 2,000 seat Men’s Gym, so the team moved into the nearly 13,000 seat Pauley Pavilion. With players like Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Reggie Miller, and Bill Walton (to name a few of plenty) to pass through Los Angeles, it’s no secret as to why Pauley houses some of the best fans in the conference, spurred on by The Den, the school’s student section. Pauley underwent a renovation during the entire 2011-12 season, meaning Friday’s season opener against Indiana State was the first game played in the fancy new digs.
2. McKale Memorial Center (Arizona): Aesthetics – 7, History – 3, Advantage – 2. Right up there with Pauley, when people around the nation think of the meccas of Pac-12 hoops, they think of Lute Olson, Steve Kerr, and the McKale Center. Before rocking the place for two straight hours, this is a fan base that is comfortable tailgating in mid-January before a game, in shirts and shorts, no less. Then, all hyped up from the desert sun, the Zona Zoo gets to cheer on a basketball team that is pretty damn good every season. McKale ranks just behind the Huntsman Center in Salt Lake City in terms of capacity.
3. Alaska Airlines Arena at Hec Edmunson Pavilion (Washington): Aesthetics – 5, History – 3.25, Advantage – 4. This one may seem as a surprise at first, but taking into consideration that AA is the oldest venue in the conference (opened in 1927) and is home to one of the top student sections in the league (The Dawg Pack), it makes sense. With the students right on top of the action and the old-school, tight feeling to the place, it almost seems as if it’s Cameron Indoor lite. And for as cool as it looks on the inside, the outside, made completely of brick, looks even better. Nestled into the bay of Montlake, Hec Ed is one of the most scenic venues in the conference, and the look on both the outside and inside makes it an easy choice for number two.
What’d I tell you. Cameron Lite.
4. Maples Pavilion (Stanford): Aesthetics – 4.75, History – 4.25, Advantage – 6.25. The 6th Man may not be as loud or raucous as they were when the Cardinal made 11 straight NCAA Tournaments, but the close, intimate feel that Maples provides has it ranked in the upper third of the conference. Maples may be the size of some Atlantic 10 gyms, but for me, that just adds to the aura of it. Already unique, Maples used to be downright crazy before the renovation in 2004. Up until then, the floor had a very springy feel to it, making players feel that they landed on a different level then what their body sensed when the student body jumped up and down.
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