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ARCO Arena (known as Power Balance Pavilion from 2011 to 2012 and Sleep Train Arena from 2012 until 2022) was an indoor arena located in Sacramento, California, United States. Opened in 1988, it was the home of the Sacramento Kings of the National Basketball Association (NBA) from 1988 to 2016. It hosted nearly 200 spectator events each year.
A construction worker moves debris out of Sleep Train Arena demolition on Tuesday in Natomas. A new hospital will be built at the site in Sacramento and also include over 3,000 units of housing ...
The arena would be funded by Ron Burkle, while 24 Hour Fitness founder Mark Mastrov would provide backing for franchise bid. [9] On March 1, 2013, it was announced that Kings minority owner John Kehriotis, who owns 12% of the team, would attempt to exercise his right of first refusal and submit a bid to purchase the Maloof's share of the team.
ARCO Arena 16,482 12–34 47 February 4 San Antonio: L 100–113 : Tyreke Evans (25) DeMarcus Cousins (10) Pooh Jeter (6) ARCO Arena 15,772 12–35 48 February 7 Utah: L 104–107 : DeMarcus Cousins (25) DeMarcus Cousins (14) Tyreke Evans, Jason Thompson (4) ARCO Arena 11,509 12–36 49 February 9 Dallas: L 100–102 : Samuel Dalembert (20 ...
The arena's first event was a fashion show on September 20, 1985. [1] The arena also hosted boxing matches. [2] The idea to move the Kings to the building was first pitched in late 1984, with the building being described as a "warehouse under construction" by The Sacramento Bee. The arena cost $12 million to build. [3]
Oklahoma City is preparing to tear down the former Cox Convention Center to make way for construction of a $1 billion arena.
The Sacramento Attack was an Arena Football League team that competed under that name in the 1992 AFL season only. They played at ARCO Arena (later Sleep Train Arena ) for that season. The team was originally supposed to play in Los Angeles as the Los Angeles Wings, [ 1 ] but the franchise never came into existence in Los Angeles, and moved to ...
The team, whose ownership group is led by investor Josh Harris, said it had formed a 50-50 joint venture with Comcast to replace its arena in the South Philadelphia stadium district by 2031. Comcast will also take a minority stake in the team and work together on the WNBA bid, the parties said in a joint statement Monday.