Not just the setting in the movie, it was the actual site for the IHSAA finals from 1928-1942 and 1946-1971 which includes tiny Milan's win in 1954. Assembly Hall at IU also hosted it a few times in the 70s.
I did a basketball camp at Harvard as a teenager in the 70s. The basketball team then played in an upper floor gym in an athletic building near Harvard Square. The pavilion at that time was an empty field house used for indoor practices by the football baseball and track teams. We toured the facilities as a camper and there was a dirt/clay floor and a baseball Diamond was chalked on the floor when I was there. The hockey arena next door had just been built.
"Indiana University" Assembly Hall is one of the best arenas for basketball I have experienced, it is compact, with good line of sight for all seats. It is loud, though, and part of its reputation for intimidating visiting teams, aside from the fact the the fans are supportive, and it gives the highest proportion of seats to students than any other school in the Big Ten.
It is nice that students get better seating than the general population, which is the reverse of most arenas today. I've attended a game there as a non-student and I was up in the stratosphere, but it was still a good view. At Rupp Arena in Lexington, it's the students who are stashed up in the rafters, with the big shot donors and booster members getting priority seating. I love the futuristic design of Assembly Hall. Many buildings built on the IU campus in the late 60s-early '70s have a striking futuristic style.
And thanks for pointing out that it's not _the University of Indiana._ Al McGuire (god love him) would always call IU that in broadcasts. Al would also sometimes call Louisville "St. Louis." He had a heart of gold, but his brain was sometimes a quart low.
I remember back in the old days you didn’t see much of assembly hall on the camera due to where the cameras were placed but now you see more of it than back in the 80s on tv.
Memorial gym in Nashville rocks but the players don't sit beneath the floor as stated at 2:13 when comparing the stadium to Minnesota's arena. They sit at the ends of the court as mentioned at 1:58. That was an interested segment as I didn't realize how many arenas and stadiums were non-standard like that. I had no idea Harvard held so few people.
Vandy vs #1 Tennessee at Memorial in 2019 ended up being a heartbreaker, but is still easily one of the most fun live events I’ve ever been to. Memorial Magic is rare some seasons, but it’s real, and that building is so weird and can get so loud, and the position of the student section is so unique.
Love the vid.. Vanderbilt's has a gothic theater look to it. Also it seems like "Fieldhouse (style) stadium's" are making a comeback as apposed to the oval/circular shapes.... In waco the new Baylor basketball stadium will be a Fieldhouse style and personally I like that feel to it (Like Butler's University "old lady" 😂)
I have been there for Army Syracuse lacrosse games, and it was loud TILL AMY KICKED ORANGE ASS! Then after Army wins,as loud as a funeral parlor.after the people left. An NCAA tourney game, OT Army win, you could hear a watch ticking.
I grew up in Indiana and had a ton of friends who went to IU, but I only went to Assembly Hall once. That was for the 1984 Team USA Olympic tryouts. Young Michael Jordan, Charles Barkley, Karl Malone, Patrick Ewing, John Stockton, Chris Mullin and Indiana's own Steve Alford (who I ended up playing for in college years later)... We had court access before and after the game and got to meet some of the players, but our actual seats were way up on the second level. I got mild vertigo walking down the aisle because the incline was so steep. It was dimly lit in the seating area, but the court was bright and everything was so easy to see. And it was LOUD!
the UW Huskies had a really cool arena before the renovation that had stained glass and it was made in the 1920's as well. Wish they kept the stained glass when they renovated it.
Outside of D1 schools, take a look at Tufts University in Medford MA. Cousens Gymnasium opened in 1932. Since then the court was rotated 90 degrees to meet college requirements for length. The locker rooms aren't at court level, rather you have to climb up a couple flights of stairs to reach them.
Jersey Mike’s Arena at Rutgers is also pretty unique - the building is built into the ground and the seats are super close to the court and go up high on the two sides
The University of San Francisco's Sobrato Center has an interesting two-tiered seating arrangement that I find unique. Weber State's Dee Events Center, similar to North Texas's arena, has an oval shape to it, making it quite unique.
The Original Pit was the Stockton Civic Auditorium built in 1925. It was home to University of the Pacific Basketball until the Spanos Center opened on the campus in 1982. Some of the seats in the upper lodge were over the court and fans would occasionally swat away opponent's shots. The floor was famous for dead spots where the ball would not bounce and UOP Players knew where those spots were.
Cool vid, interesting arenas & courts that I didn't know of! A personal fav of mine not mentioned in the video: UConn's Gampel Pavilion. It looks like Space Mountain, smack dab in the middle of Storrs campus, which in itself is in the middle of farm country. When it first opened in 1990 it must've looked so futuristic compared to everything around it, and still does to this day.
Pre-renovation, NC State’s Reynolds Coliseum (no longer the men’s team’s primary home court) had somewhat small seating areas on either side, but the seating at the ends went on forever.
I kept expecting to see Carver-Hawkeye Arena show up. It’s built into a natural bowl, so it looks very short from the outside. There’s only one tier of seating on the inside and a clear view of the court from the concourse around the top of the bowl - no tunnels.
Huh, I've always known Assembly Hall looks a bit odd on TV when compared to other circular/oval arenas, but now I know why! I've never seen a full-size internal shot of the place. I like the design, you can tell the acoustics are designed to focus the noise toward the court.
While you mention the floor at Oregon, and while Matthew Knight Arena probably isn’t weird enough to make the list (a combination of subtle asymmetry and edifice complex), I need to mention old MacArthur Court. Originally built in 1925 to 6,000, and kind of expanded the way Vanderbilt’s Memorial expanded… straight up, because that’s the only way it could go. The main difference was the floor, which not only wasn’t elevated, but there was practically NO room along the sidelines. When I would sit in the front row of the student section, I’d literally have to pull my feet back so it didn’t touch the sideline. The view from the top level was the closest you would ever come to a chalkboard view of the floor… everyone was almost literally on top of you. It got comparisons to Boston Garden… but it was a true pit. It still stands, the floor being used for rev purposes while the school determines (or waits for Phil Knight to determine) what to do with it. Speaking of pits, you didn’t mention why New Mexico’s arena is the way it is… it’s literally dug into a hillside. A literal pit. And it’s in that arena (during a womens tournament game, no less) that my ears ever came closest to total pain from the crowd noise. Another “too bad it renovated” mention… when Leavey Center at Santa Clara University was still Toso Pavilion, it had an air-supported fabric roof with 5,000 capacity… and landscaping within the arena. Bark and shrubs. Kind of hilarious.
I went to high school outside of Eugene in the 90s and saw a pre-season game between the Portland and Indiana at the old Pit. I was only there once but I'll never forget the atmosphere of those seats right on top of the court and each other.
State Farm Center in Champaign, Illinois (home of the Illinois Fighting Illini men's and women's basketball teams) looks like a giant mushroom from the outside. The Big Ten has plenty of interesting gymnasiums for basketball.
Great to see The Palestra and the Rose Hill Gymnasium. If this video was made twenty years ago it would have included the home of the Long Island University Blackbirds, the former Brooklyn Paramount Theater (Opened in 1928 with 4,084 seats) in downtown Brooklyn. It was transformed into classroom and gymnasium space in 1962 (with a smaller seating capacity) and was the home of LIU basketball until 2005. It is slated to become a concert venue but reconstruction has hit a snag.
Viejas Arena, built into the Aztec Bowl is pretty interesting as well. They built it in the middle of the former football stadium and left much of the football stadium in place.
Nice job. Where would Duke's Cameron fit in here? Also I think WKU's Diddle Arena was one of the first Basketball arena's based on the ceiling/roof being like the spoked wheel of a bicycle.
I know this is about arenas currently in use but one very interesting tidbit is that the University of Texas-Arlington Mavericks used to play on the stage of an actual auditorium! One of the weirdest stadiums I've ever seen and I'm almost sad they moved to College Park in the early 2010s.
You should check out the Armory Gymnasium at Montana State Northern. Its a hut type building with the court going the "wrong" way and not seating on the ends.
University of Texas at Arlington old stadium omg one half was normal the other half was a theater seating. Their new digs are badass one of the best college basketball stadiums
Had to look and see if anyone put this! Loved Texas Hall because it was so unique, but also glad they got the College Park Center! My freshman year they played half the season there before they moved to the new arena. Nothing like watching basketball played on a stage though!
I have always thought it was odd that at Cameron indoor stadium ( where Duke plays) the basketball backboards are hanging from the ceiling and not like all other basketball backboards in other arenas.
Fun Fact about the Pit, it was where Phi Slamma Jamma succumbed to the NC State Wolfpack in the '83 title game on Lo Charles' game-winning dunk! Say what you will, but Jimmy V is still running around that court!
Im not for sure but when assembly hall was first built it was supposed to be a auditorium but they changed it to the basketball court. Also no hate but its Indiana University not University’s of Indiana. Cool video thoe!
The Palestra, aka "The Cathedral of College Basketball" Since its inception, the Palestra has hosted more games, more visiting teams, and more NCAA tournaments than any other facility in college basketball.
You missed the State Farm Center at Assembly Hall in Champaign IL. It looks like an alien spaceship and has the largest freestanding concrete dome roof. It also holds 16,000+ very loud Fighting Illini fans!!!
Just because he didn't include it in the video, doesn't mean he "missed" it. I really hate these types of comments. You missed this, you forgot that. So annoying......yet I do agree with you in regards to the State Farm Center.
@@geneseofootball1915 I typically agree with your sentiment. But in a video declaring the top 15 weirdest arenas, State Farm center is weirder looking than most of the arenas shown, if not all.
If you do part two do some more mid majors. They always end up with unique arenas. Look up Prather coliseum. Northwestern State plays there in the Southland Conference. I got my masters degree there. The arena is reeeaaalllly long. Like 3 courts long. So they have seats that are way down at the end like 200 feet from the baseline of the court.
The weirdest one Ive been to is the old San Antonio Spurs stadium. It was so weird, only half of it was used and they used like giant curtains to cover it. Haven't been to any of the weird college ones.
The old Pontiac Silverdome was the same way, being used for the NFL's Detroit Lions (as well as hosting Super Bowl XVI) and the NBA's Detroit Pistons before the latter moved to The Palace at Auburn Hills in 1988.
The Carrier Dome while named after the air conditioning company which has is its HQ there never had air conditioning and would get quite hot especially in September games. They recently refurbished it and changed the name to JMA Wireless Dome.
I went to IU and can confirm that Assembly Hall is messed up if you don't have good seats. From the upper rows of the lower level, you can't see the scoreboard because the second level overhangs the lower level. I once had a seat in the upper level where I couldn't see one of the baskets.
@@thereal_fatshady6920 I was an IU student during Assembly Hall's early years, and students almost always ended up in the balcony. There's more room up there than you think.
Greensboro Coliseum is interesting as it’s the largest purpose built basketball arena in the country but the college that plays there averages like 1500 people per game.
If you're going to highlight Ivy League schools, I'd say Princeton is much weirder than Harvard and Penn. One thing you forgot to mention about Long Beach State is that unlike many arenas that have retractable seating, their seating actually folds upwards when not in use.
Jadwin Gym .at Princeton has a "Geodesic Dome" look. It is a fun place to play and is much larger than the basketball court. In fact, just past one of the baskets, is a full-sized wrestling mat set up for their wrestling team. That is large also. Love that gym.
Williams Arena for the Gophers has an arched roof like a barn, not airplane hangar. Hence the nickname, "The Barn." The student section dresses as farm animals for games.
Next time you do the top 10 weirdest college basketball arenas you need to add the WVU coliseum it looks so weird from the outside ive never seen another arena look like it. I cant even explain how it looks cause it looks so weird, definitely weirder than any of these
I have never understood Vanderbilt putting the team benches at each end of the court, when they have so much excess room on the side lines. I mean you could set up street vendors on the side lines and still have room lol!
It's kinda obvious why the ends. Everything on the sidelines that would have been on the floor level is lower. So it would look pretty dumb to have the benches on the floor level and nothing else. Coaches, trainers, and the seating would obstruct the view on top of that.
It was a great atmosphere for basketball. The building is still with us as a performing arts venue, but LIU athletic events have been moved to a new gym nearby.
I’m from Philly. The spectrum was demolished a decade ago. They play the big games at the Wells Fargo center “home of the sixers”. But they play most conference games at the palestra. And Pennsylvania (high school) district 1 (suburbs of Philly) usually has their finals there for mens and womens bball. Some other stuff too. And it’s beautiful inside because of the roof
Fun fact: Indiana's Assembly Hall was originally touted as a music venue for A-list musical acts when it opened in 1971. Growing up in Bloomington, I remember attending performances by Santana, Pure Prairie League, John Denver, Eagles, Steve Miller Band, and an off Broadway production of Jesus Christ Superstar. However, it's acoustics really suck, and most big acts stopped coming in favor of Market Square Arena in Indianapolis, one hour away.
i can't believe my alma mater UNT is on this list... The Coliseum/Super Pit sure is an interesting stadium to say the least... solid build though. Go Mean Green!!!
There is a high school in Michigan that has a basketball arena in a dome. It’s at lumen Christi catholic high school in Jackson and it’s called the Jerry Cox Memorial Fieldhouse
When Hinkle Fieldhouse first opened, the court did match the orientation of the building. However, the building has big windows on each end. Sunlight coming through the windows could get in players' eyes and impact the shooting. So, fairly early on, they rotated the court 90 degrees and altered the seating bowl.
CSULB !!! I remember when they built the pyramid , it was the end of all day concerts on the grass. Those were some fun afternoons...now I'm craving BBQ.
Hinkle Fieldhouse (3:00) was also a movie star, as it was used as the setting for the Indiana State finals in the 1986 Gene Hackman movie 'Hoosiers'.
They missed that info
Not just the setting in the movie, it was the actual site for the IHSAA finals from 1928-1942 and 1946-1971 which includes tiny Milan's win in 1954. Assembly Hall at IU also hosted it a few times in the 70s.
I can’t believe the narrator didn’t mention this!!!
I did a basketball camp at Harvard as a teenager in the 70s. The basketball team then played in an upper floor gym in an athletic building near Harvard Square. The pavilion at that time was an empty field house used for indoor practices by the football baseball and track teams. We toured the facilities as a camper and there was a dirt/clay floor and a baseball Diamond was chalked on the floor when I was there. The hockey arena next door had just been built.
"Indiana University" Assembly Hall is one of the best arenas for basketball I have experienced, it is compact, with good line of sight for all seats. It is loud, though, and part of its reputation for intimidating visiting teams, aside from the fact the the fans are supportive, and it gives the highest proportion of seats to students than any other school in the Big Ten.
It is nice that students get better seating than the general population, which is the reverse of most arenas today.
I've attended a game there as a non-student and I was up in the stratosphere, but it was still a good view.
At Rupp Arena in Lexington, it's the students who are stashed up in the rafters, with the big shot donors and booster members getting priority seating.
I love the futuristic design of Assembly Hall. Many buildings built on the IU campus in the late 60s-early '70s have a striking futuristic style.
And thanks for pointing out that it's not _the University of Indiana._ Al McGuire (god love him) would always call IU that in broadcasts. Al would also sometimes call Louisville "St. Louis." He had a heart of gold, but his brain was sometimes a quart low.
Had the luxury of season tickets there to watch Eric Gordon play
Yeah the student seating is nice but that shit is a death trap lol
I remember back in the old days you didn’t see much of assembly hall on the camera due to where the cameras were placed but now you see more of it than back in the 80s on tv.
Memorial gym in Nashville rocks but the players don't sit beneath the floor as stated at 2:13 when comparing the stadium to Minnesota's arena. They sit at the ends of the court as mentioned at 1:58. That was an interested segment as I didn't realize how many arenas and stadiums were non-standard like that. I had no idea Harvard held so few people.
Yessir,..as for the opposing team, Memorial Gym at Vanderbilt, is an intimidating place !
Vandy vs #1 Tennessee at Memorial in 2019 ended up being a heartbreaker, but is still easily one of the most fun live events I’ve ever been to. Memorial Magic is rare some seasons, but it’s real, and that building is so weird and can get so loud, and the position of the student section is so unique.
Love the vid.. Vanderbilt's has a gothic theater look to it. Also it seems like "Fieldhouse (style) stadium's" are making a comeback as apposed to the oval/circular shapes....
In waco the new Baylor basketball stadium will be a Fieldhouse style and personally I like that feel to it (Like Butler's University "old lady" 😂)
The carrier dome is so cool when you’re there in person. That crowd is insane when it gets going. Go Cuse 🧡
JMA Wireless dome**
@@sustud1531 will always be the carrier dome to me
That place is a spectacle for college hoops. The Syracuse - Georgetown matchups in the 1980s were solid entertainment.
I have been there for Army Syracuse lacrosse games, and it was loud TILL AMY KICKED ORANGE ASS! Then after Army wins,as loud as a funeral parlor.after the people left. An NCAA tourney game, OT Army win, you could hear a watch ticking.
Been there for football but not basketball. Yes it will always be the Carrier Dome even though it did not have AC.
I grew up in Indiana and had a ton of friends who went to IU, but I only went to Assembly Hall once. That was for the 1984 Team USA Olympic tryouts. Young Michael Jordan, Charles Barkley, Karl Malone, Patrick Ewing, John Stockton, Chris Mullin and Indiana's own Steve Alford (who I ended up playing for in college years later)... We had court access before and after the game and got to meet some of the players, but our actual seats were way up on the second level. I got mild vertigo walking down the aisle because the incline was so steep. It was dimly lit in the seating area, but the court was bright and everything was so easy to see. And it was LOUD!
the UW Huskies had a really cool arena before the renovation that had stained glass and it was made in the 1920's as well. Wish they kept the stained glass when they renovated it.
I love Vandys court, and The Pit in ABQ is so awesome.
Outside of D1 schools, take a look at Tufts University in Medford MA. Cousens Gymnasium opened in 1932. Since then the court was rotated 90 degrees to meet college requirements for length. The locker rooms aren't at court level, rather you have to climb up a couple flights of stairs to reach them.
Jersey Mike’s Arena at Rutgers is also pretty unique - the building is built into the ground and the seats are super close to the court and go up high on the two sides
Hinkle Fieldhouse was also the arena used in the movie “Hoosiers “ as the championship game.
The University of San Francisco's Sobrato Center has an interesting two-tiered seating arrangement that I find unique. Weber State's Dee Events Center, similar to North Texas's arena, has an oval shape to it, making it quite unique.
Seen games at Vandy and Syracuse. Absolutely loved the old arenas in this video!
The Original Pit was the Stockton Civic Auditorium built in 1925. It was home to University of the Pacific Basketball until the Spanos Center opened on the campus in 1982. Some of the seats in the upper lodge were over the court and fans would occasionally swat away opponent's shots. The floor was famous for dead spots where the ball would not bounce and UOP Players knew where those spots were.
Surprised that the RAC didn't make the list. There's a reason why Rutgers calls it the Trapezoid of Terror.
You should have seen where they played in the 1970's. A wall directly behind the benches.
@@kencummings953 Great old gym! If the crowd cheered loud enough, paint fell from the ceiling!
Literally never heard it called that. It will always be the RAC to me.
@@kencummings953 College Avenue Gym AKA The Barn.
Cool vid, interesting arenas & courts that I didn't know of! A personal fav of mine not mentioned in the video: UConn's Gampel Pavilion. It looks like Space Mountain, smack dab in the middle of Storrs campus, which in itself is in the middle of farm country. When it first opened in 1990 it must've looked so futuristic compared to everything around it, and still does to this day.
Pre-renovation, NC State’s Reynolds Coliseum (no longer the men’s team’s primary home court) had somewhat small seating areas on either side, but the seating at the ends went on forever.
NC State's Reynolds basketball floor was made of rubber, the only court I stepped on that was
Spent a lot of night there, and yes, it was weird that the end zones went on for days.
I kept expecting to see Carver-Hawkeye Arena show up. It’s built into a natural bowl, so it looks very short from the outside. There’s only one tier of seating on the inside and a clear view of the court from the concourse around the top of the bowl - no tunnels.
Texas Hall, where Texas Arlington used to play, was a glorified performing arts theatre with a basketball court placed on the stage.
My alma mater, and one which should have made the list.
Yeah, that was always a freaky setup. The court was basically on a stage.
Seen games at Indiana, Vandy, and Butler. All three are unique and very cool.
Huh, I've always known Assembly Hall looks a bit odd on TV when compared to other circular/oval arenas, but now I know why! I've never seen a full-size internal shot of the place. I like the design, you can tell the acoustics are designed to focus the noise toward the court.
Vandy has always been my favorite college stadium. It’s so unique. And the hoops are reallly odd
While you mention the floor at Oregon, and while Matthew Knight Arena probably isn’t weird enough to make the list (a combination of subtle asymmetry and edifice complex), I need to mention old MacArthur Court. Originally built in 1925 to 6,000, and kind of expanded the way Vanderbilt’s Memorial expanded… straight up, because that’s the only way it could go. The main difference was the floor, which not only wasn’t elevated, but there was practically NO room along the sidelines. When I would sit in the front row of the student section, I’d literally have to pull my feet back so it didn’t touch the sideline. The view from the top level was the closest you would ever come to a chalkboard view of the floor… everyone was almost literally on top of you. It got comparisons to Boston Garden… but it was a true pit. It still stands, the floor being used for rev purposes while the school determines (or waits for Phil Knight to determine) what to do with it.
Speaking of pits, you didn’t mention why New Mexico’s arena is the way it is… it’s literally dug into a hillside. A literal pit. And it’s in that arena (during a womens tournament game, no less) that my ears ever came closest to total pain from the crowd noise.
Another “too bad it renovated” mention… when Leavey Center at Santa Clara University was still Toso Pavilion, it had an air-supported fabric roof with 5,000 capacity… and landscaping within the arena. Bark and shrubs. Kind of hilarious.
I went to high school outside of Eugene in the 90s and saw a pre-season game between the Portland and Indiana at the old Pit. I was only there once but I'll never forget the atmosphere of those seats right on top of the court and each other.
I saw Bob Dylan, Van Morrison, and Lucinda Williams at Mac Court in '98. Great venue for hoops, terrible acoustics for concerts. Go Ducks!
Very unique stadium. Definitely a smaller version of the old Boston Garden. Sadly neither stadiums exist anymore.
MacArthur was a gem. They should have remodeled that gym.
State Farm Center in Champaign, Illinois (home of the Illinois Fighting Illini men's and women's basketball teams) looks like a giant mushroom from the outside. The Big Ten has plenty of interesting gymnasiums for basketball.
Great to see The Palestra and the Rose Hill Gymnasium. If this video was made twenty years ago it would have included the home of the Long Island University Blackbirds, the former Brooklyn Paramount Theater (Opened in 1928 with 4,084 seats) in downtown Brooklyn. It was transformed into classroom and gymnasium space in 1962 (with a smaller seating capacity) and was the home of LIU basketball until 2005. It is slated to become a concert venue but reconstruction has hit a snag.
Palestra is the best gym in the country. Place is a gem
The PIT in New Mexico is awesome, N.C State beat Phi Slamma Jamma for the National Championship there in 1983
The mile-high thinner air can devastate opponents from other parts of the U.S.
It's also below ground something he curiously didn't mention.
Viejas Arena, built into the Aztec Bowl is pretty interesting as well. They built it in the middle of the former football stadium and left much of the football stadium in place.
Where will San Diego States new stadium for football be located ??
@@dhart8451 it is already built on the site of the former Qualcomm stadium.
@@toemblem Thanks
@@dhart8451 I think it was built at the old Jack Murphy/San Diego/Qualcomm Stadium sight.
Most know the Butler arena was the scene in the "state final" game of Hoosiers, but it does have a great traditional look though. I rather like it
Nice job. Where would Duke's Cameron fit in here? Also I think WKU's Diddle Arena was one of the first Basketball arena's based on the ceiling/roof being like the spoked wheel of a bicycle.
7:47 “another weird one” what are you doing bro? 😂😂😂
I like to imagine the coach for the teams playing in Williams Arena being like "ok are you all ready to practice falling off the court"
I know this is about arenas currently in use but one very interesting tidbit is that the University of Texas-Arlington Mavericks used to play on the stage of an actual auditorium! One of the weirdest stadiums I've ever seen and I'm almost sad they moved to College Park in the early 2010s.
Basketball games have recently been played on the stage at Radio City Music Hall in NYC
You should check out the Armory Gymnasium at Montana State Northern. Its a hut type building with the court going the "wrong" way and not seating on the ends.
University of Texas at Arlington old stadium omg one half was normal the other half was a theater seating. Their new digs are badass one of the best college basketball stadiums
Had to look and see if anyone put this! Loved Texas Hall because it was so unique, but also glad they got the College Park Center! My freshman year they played half the season there before they moved to the new arena. Nothing like watching basketball played on a stage though!
LIU in Brooklyn also has a weird gym. It is an old theater.
I have always thought it was odd that at Cameron indoor stadium ( where Duke plays) the basketball backboards are hanging from the ceiling and not like all other basketball backboards in other arenas.
Dang, bruh, that IS weird!! Yeah, I called you “bruh.”
Also true at Stanford’s Maples Pavilion.
@@PCSPounder I always wondered if there was somewhere else that hung the back boards from the ceiling. I'll have to check them out.
There’s some small school gems out there too. Pacific Union in Angwin, CA is worth checking out.
Fun Fact about the Pit, it was where Phi Slamma Jamma succumbed to the NC State Wolfpack in the '83 title game on Lo Charles' game-winning dunk! Say what you will, but Jimmy V is still running around that court!
Jimmy V's spirit will ALWAYS be in that place.
Awesome video. I am an Indiana University graduate so I have always loved our weird Assembly Hall. Some of these arenas are so cool.
Hey IGS! Would love to collab on some content with ya! Let me know if you would be interested 🙏🏼
Im not for sure but when assembly hall was first built it was supposed to be a auditorium but they changed it to the basketball court. Also no hate but its Indiana University not University’s of Indiana. Cool video thoe!
It's also Syracuse University, not University of Syracuse
It’s also though not thoe
The Palestra, aka "The Cathedral of College Basketball" Since its inception, the Palestra has hosted more games, more visiting teams, and more NCAA tournaments than any other facility in college basketball.
Allen Fieldhouse is the Cathedral of College Basketball, sorry
You missed the State Farm Center at Assembly Hall in Champaign IL. It looks like an alien spaceship and has the largest freestanding concrete dome roof. It also holds 16,000+ very loud Fighting Illini fans!!!
Just because he didn't include it in the video, doesn't mean he "missed" it. I really hate these types of comments. You missed this, you forgot that. So annoying......yet I do agree with you in regards to the State Farm Center.
@@geneseofootball1915 I typically agree with your sentiment. But in a video declaring the top 15 weirdest arenas, State Farm center is weirder looking than most of the arenas shown, if not all.
"And groove even smoother than moves by Villanova
You're still a soldier, I'm like Sly Stone in Cobra" - Nas
When New Mexico is really good - a game in “The Pit” is one of the best college basketball environments anywhere.
If you do part two do some more mid majors. They always end up with unique arenas. Look up Prather coliseum. Northwestern State plays there in the Southland Conference. I got my masters degree there. The arena is reeeaaalllly long. Like 3 courts long. So they have seats that are way down at the end like 200 feet from the baseline of the court.
The weirdest one Ive been to is the old San Antonio Spurs stadium. It was so weird, only half of it was used and they used like giant curtains to cover it. Haven't been to any of the weird college ones.
The old Pontiac Silverdome was the same way, being used for the NFL's Detroit Lions (as well as hosting Super Bowl XVI) and the NBA's Detroit Pistons before the latter moved to The Palace at Auburn Hills in 1988.
Indiana University! (and yes, Assembly Hall is the weirdest, but also the GREATEST college basketball arena in the country!)😊
Are pieces of the ceiling still falling onto spectators in the "greatest college basketball arena in the country"? LOL!
@@msh6865 Yes, but it adds to the excitement of the game when you also gotta survive ........ cmon man! lol
IU sucks👎👎👎👎
Nice to see the JMA on here! Strange but it’s the dome!
Last week it was just the A dome. They’re still working on the J and M.
The Carrier Dome while named after the air conditioning company which has is its HQ there never had air conditioning and would get quite hot especially in September games. They recently refurbished it and changed the name to JMA Wireless Dome.
I went to IU and can confirm that Assembly Hall is messed up if you don't have good seats. From the upper rows of the lower level, you can't see the scoreboard because the second level overhangs the lower level. I once had a seat in the upper level where I couldn't see one of the baskets.
Huge IU fan here and i agree if all i can get is balcony tix, im not going... but it is insane during a game , our students are nuts! lol
@@thereal_fatshady6920 I was an IU student during Assembly Hall's early years, and students almost always ended up in the balcony. There's more room up there than you think.
Greensboro Coliseum is interesting as it’s the largest purpose built basketball arena in the country but the college that plays there averages like 1500 people per game.
The Atlantic Coast Conference’s headquarters is in Greensboro, and the coliseum was built specifically to host the ACC Tournament.
@@fishflake1209 I know
That FIU court is really cool looking but oh man I bet it’s is extremely difficult for reds and players on that out of bounds line
That water would irritate me if I was playing
It was the Carrier Dome, not the Carrie Dome. It is also NOW named JMA Wireless Dome
If you're going to highlight Ivy League schools, I'd say Princeton is much weirder than Harvard and Penn.
One thing you forgot to mention about Long Beach State is that unlike many arenas that have retractable seating, their seating actually folds upwards when not in use.
Jadwin Gym .at Princeton has a "Geodesic Dome" look. It is a fun place to play and is much larger than the basketball court. In fact, just past one of the baskets, is a full-sized wrestling mat set up for their wrestling team. That is large also. Love that gym.
Been to four of the Syracuse games that broke the record. The one vs Villanova I legit couldn’t hear my friend sitting next to me it was so loud
Williams Arena for the Gophers has an arched roof like a barn, not airplane hangar. Hence the nickname, "The Barn." The student section dresses as farm animals for games.
Really cool video! Interesting arenas is just another reason why college basketball is fun!
Next time you do the top 10 weirdest college basketball arenas you need to add the WVU coliseum it looks so weird from the outside ive never seen another arena look like it. I cant even explain how it looks cause it looks so weird, definitely weirder than any of these
Doesn’t look THAT weird. It is interesting that the roof is from poured concert. That’s pretty unique
Most of these are iconic arenas and I think they’re all cool tbh
It's Indiana University not university of indiana
Thanks Judge Judy
4:10....so it's like a high school gym
Great video, one question, could you make a video about the NHL Weird arenas or MLS?
Vanderbilt HAD to be on the list and lo and behold it was.
I have never understood Vanderbilt putting the team benches at each end of the court, when they have so much excess room on the side lines. I mean you could set up street vendors on the side lines and still have room lol!
It's kinda obvious why the ends. Everything on the sidelines that would have been on the floor level is lower. So it would look pretty dumb to have the benches on the floor level and nothing else.
Coaches, trainers, and the seating would obstruct the view on top of that.
@@ItsNeezy Good point and that's obvious..
I would really like to see a game at the pit. Seems like it would be such a cool experience.
The Palestra is a philly Landmark. 👍🏼
Also, never knew where Pepperdine was. 😂
I've been inside of FDUs Arena it's very Strange in NEC its a Walkway in a Rectangle outside plus a indoor Track I've seen it before
Back in the 30s many high schools had their basketball courts in their auditoriums.
This is a very enjoyable video. Thanks for posting.
I'm liking your videos. They're always fun and informative. Keep it up!
3:48....haha "normal" Looks like a grocery store.
The Long Island University court inside the old Brooklyn Paramount Theater is also unusual. 🙂
It was a great atmosphere for basketball. The building is still with us as a performing arts venue, but LIU athletic events have been moved to a new gym nearby.
@@VincentPaterno-hs2fv Thanks for the update. I went there years ago and did not know.
Watched HS games at Villanova. It’s tiny but one of the best atmospheres around for basketball.
Villanova plays most of their games at the spectrum in Philadelphia. Home of the 76ers
I’m from Philly. The spectrum was demolished a decade ago. They play the big games at the Wells Fargo center “home of the sixers”.
But they play most conference games at the palestra. And Pennsylvania (high school) district 1 (suburbs of Philly) usually has their finals there for mens and womens bball. Some other stuff too. And it’s beautiful inside because of the roof
@can72287 yes I wasn't aware the spectrum was tore down I just thought it was renamed
Princeton Dome is an insane place for college bball… so is the RAC at rutgers
Fun fact: Indiana's Assembly Hall was originally touted as a music venue for A-list musical acts when it opened in 1971. Growing up in Bloomington, I remember attending performances by Santana, Pure Prairie League, John Denver, Eagles, Steve Miller Band, and an off Broadway production of Jesus Christ Superstar. However, it's acoustics really suck, and most big acts stopped coming in favor of Market Square Arena in Indianapolis, one hour away.
Thanks for this info i did not know this.
You better not be IU fan
🟨⬛️boiler up
There’s no such thing as the Carrier Dome anymore, it’s the JMA Wireless Dome
Good video lol I watched it using the subtitles, definitely some interesting buildings and I would assume stadiums out there as well.
dayton should be on here the court and seats are all like under ground you walk in and your at the top
Plus the dramatically sloping roof that sags in the middle.
Carver-Hawkeye arena in Iowa City is very interesting. Look it up if you’ve never seen it.
Cary Dome!? University of Syracuse!?
It's JMA Dome and Syracuse University.
i can't believe my alma mater UNT is on this list... The Coliseum/Super Pit sure is an interesting stadium to say the least... solid build though. Go Mean Green!!!
Xavier University has a pretty odd arena. When I went to a game there from the outside I thought it was a big bx store
There is a high school in Michigan that has a basketball arena in a dome. It’s at lumen Christi catholic high school in Jackson and it’s called the Jerry Cox Memorial Fieldhouse
My dad always said that IU’s arena was designed by a Purdue engineer!
Is that why stuff is falling from the ceiling into the crowd? just jokes.....
Mental issues and no life @the REAL_Fat SHADY
Happy to see CSUB make the cut
3:53 it looks like a high school gymnasium, but with the jumbotron on the ceiling
Nova plays most of their home games at Wells Fargo center
When Hinkle Fieldhouse first opened, the court did match the orientation of the building. However, the building has big windows on each end. Sunlight coming through the windows could get in players' eyes and impact the shooting. So, fairly early on, they rotated the court 90 degrees and altered the seating bowl.
'The Pit' 🕳️ looks RAD! 😈
For future reference, it's a "court", not a "field."
And it's "Indiana University" (IU), not the other way around.
For Syracuse, it's now called The JMA Wireless Dome
CSULB !!! I remember when they built the pyramid , it was the end of all day concerts on the grass. Those were some fun afternoons...now I'm craving BBQ.
played in Syracuse's Carrier Dome back in HS for the section championship, was a nice stadium, but the Turf was terrible back then
That first arena doesn't look like it holds 17,000 but it does.
I’m very very curious what your take is on Allen Fieldhouse if it’s not in this vid🤦🏻♂️
If you’ve ever been to Syracuse, you’d realize why they put the dome where they did lol
How can you tell the ball is out of bounds at FIU?
Hi, yes you can, and fun fact is that this is the second edition of the floor, something weird happened and it was damaged so they replaced it
@@thugstead5171 How?