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Interior during an exhibition basketball game against Cal Poly Pomona. USC had planned to build an on-campus indoor arena for more than 100 years. Before the Galen Center, USC basketball had been played at a variety of locations, including the neighboring Shrine Auditorium stage, the old Pan-Pacific Auditorium in the Fairfax District, and from 1959 onward at the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena.
This is a list of arenas that currently serve as the home venue for NCAA Division I college basketball teams. Conference affiliations reflect those in the 2024–25 season; all affiliation changes officially took effect on July 1, 2024.
After his retirement, Coach Wooden was a fixture at UCLA Men's Basketball games until the year he died. The pavilion has played host to the numerous annual Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards, including the 21st show on March 29, 2008, with UCLA alum Jack Black as host. The ceremony moved to USC's Galen Center arena after the 2011 renovations.
USC got a lift from its bench, helping the Trojans earn a 82-68 win over San José State Wednesday night at Galen Center.
JuJu Watkins broke Cheryl Miller's USC record for most 30-point games in a season and scored 42 points in the No. 7 Trojans' win over No. 11 Colorado.
From 1989 to 2006, the North Gym and the Lyon Center split time as the teams' home courts. [1] [2] In 2007, the teams moved to the Galen Center, but use the old venues if the Galen Center is reserved for other events. [1] [3] Until 2006, the Trojans basketball and volleyball teams held practice in the North Gym. [4]
The 2014–15 USC Trojans finished the season with an overall record of 12–20, and 3–15 in the Pac-12 regular season. In the 2015 Pac-12 tournament, the Trojans defeated Arizona State, 67–64 in the first round, before losing to UCLA, 70–96 in the quarterfinal.
FIBA uses a marginally larger radius of 1.25 m (4 ft 1.2 in). Starting with the 2023–24 season, NCAA women's basketball reduced the size of the no-charge arc to a radius of 9 inches (22.86 cm)—in other words, the size of the basket. The no charge zone arc rule first appeared at any level of basketball in the NBA in the 1997–98 season. [8]