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The arena, which is situated across the street from ], is named after its sponsor, ], under a ] arrangement. After ] merger with ] it was announced that America West Arena would be renamed to US Airways Center on ], ] with the name change taking place in January ]. | The arena, which is situated across the street from ], is named after its sponsor, ], under a ] arrangement. After ] merger with ] it was announced that America West Arena would be renamed to US Airways Center on ], ] with the name change taking place in January ]. | ||
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Revision as of 12:29, 26 December 2005
US Airways Center | |
Facility Statistics | |
Location | 201 East Jefferson Phoenix, Arizona 85004 |
Opened | June 1, 1992 |
Owner | The City of Phoenix |
Manager | Phoenix Arena Development, L.P. |
Construction Cost | $90 million USD |
Architects | Ellerbe Becket |
Tenants | |
Arizona Rattlers | 1992-present |
Phoenix Suns | 1992-present |
Arizona Sandsharks (CISL) | 1993-1997 |
Phoenix Coyotes | 1996-2003 |
Phoenix Mercury | 1997-present |
Phoenix Roadrunners (ECHL) | 2005-present |
Seating Capacity | |
2005 Basketball | 18,422 |
2003 Hockey | 16,210 |
US Airways Center (formerly America West Arena) is a sports and entertainment facility located in Phoenix, Arizona. It is home of the NBA's Phoenix Suns, the WNBA's Phoenix Mercury, and arena football's Arizona Rattlers. The NHL's Phoenix Coyotes previously played here, but have moved to a new arena of their own in the suburb of Glendale. Since then, the Phoenix Roadrunners of the ECHL have made this their home. It was also the home of the indoor soccer Arizona Sandsharks. Three of the games of the 1993 NBA Finals between the Suns and the Chicago Bulls, including game six where John Paxson hit basketball's version of the shot heard around the world, were played there, as was one of the three 1998 WNBA finals games and two Arena Bowl games. In 1997, the Rattlers won the Arena football world championship at America West Arena.
Construction of this arena began in 1988, as Suns owner Jerry Colangelo envisioned a need for a new playing facility for his sports team. In 1993, the arena was officially inaugurated with an 111-105 Suns win over the Los Angeles Clippers. After the Suns failed to win the NBA championship that year, a parade that attracted more than 300,000 Suns fans finished up at the America West Arena.
In 2003 the US Airways Center had WWE SummerSlam. Triple H defeated Goldberg, Chris Jericho, Randy Orton, Kevin Nash and Shawn Michaels in an Elimination Chamber Match to retain the World Heavyweight Championship.
In addition to sports events, many famous singers and musical acts, such as The Spice Girls, Britney Spears, *NSYNC, The Backstreet Boys, Gwen Stefani, Vicente Fernandez and others have performed at the arena. Oscar De La Hoya had one of his first professional boxing bouts (versus Narciso Valenzuela) there, and Michael Carbajal also fought there various times.
The arena, which is situated across the street from Chase Field, is named after its sponsor, US Airways, under a naming rights arrangement. After America West's merger with US Airways it was announced that America West Arena would be renamed to US Airways Center on November 14, 2005 with the name change taking place in January 2006.
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