Stadium Name: | Bob Devaney Sports Center |
Nickname: | "The Bob" |
Location: | 1600 Court Street Lincoln, Nebraska |
Broke Ground: | 1974 |
Opened: | November 27, 1976 |
Renovated: | 2013 |
Owner: | University of Nebraska |
Operator: | University of Nebraska |
Surface: | Multi-surface |
Construction Cost: | $13 million ($ in) |
Architect: | Leo A Daly |
Former Names: | NU Sports Complex |
Tenants: | Nebraska Cornhuskers (NCAA) Men's basketball (1976–2013) Women's basketball (1976–2013) Men's gymnastics (1976–present) Women's gymnastics (1976–present) Swimming & diving (1976–present) Track & field (1976–present) Volleyball (2013–present) Wrestling (2013–present) |
Seating Capacity: | 8,309 (volleyball) 5,000 (track & field) 1,000 (aquatics) |
The Bob Devaney Sports Center (commonly referred to as the Devaney Center, formerly the NU Sports Complex) is a sports complex on the campus of the University of Nebraska–Lincoln in Lincoln, Nebraska. The 8,309-seat arena opened in 1976 and serves as the primary home venue for several of Nebraska's athletic programs. The complex is named for Bob Devaney, who served as Nebraska's football coach from 1962 to 1972 and athletic director from 1967 to 1992.
The Devaney Center opened in 1976 with a capacity of 13,595, replacing the Nebraska Coliseum as the primary home venue for Nebraska's men's and women's basketball programs. Initially called the NU Sports Complex, it was later named for College Football Hall of Fame head coach Bob Devaney, who led Nebraska's football program to two national championships and served as athletic director for twenty-five years. Nebraska's men's team played at the Devaney Center from 1976 until 2013, compiling a record of 477–148 in its thirty-seven years at the arena. The highest attendance recorded at the arena was 15,038, a 62–54 Nebraska win over Oklahoma State on February 7, 1981.[1] From December 1986 to January 1989, Nebraska's women's team won twenty-nine consecutive games at the Devaney Center, an arena record.[2] Decades later, NU's record-setting 32–2 season in 2009–10 produced the only regular-season sellout in program history, a 67–51 win for No. 3 Nebraska over Missouri. While Pinnacle Bank Arena became the home venue for NU's men's and women's basketball teams in 2013, both programs practice and train at the Hendricks Training Complex at the Devaney Center.
The arena hosted first- and second-round games in the 1980, 1984, and 1988 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournaments, and first-round games in the 1993 women's tournament. Michael Jordan and Magic Johnson both played preseason NBA games at the arena; during a 1995 game featuring Jordan's Bulls against former NU star Eric Piatkowski and the Los Angeles Clippers, Chicago center Dennis Rodman was called for two technical fouls and ejected to a standing ovation from the Devaney Center crowd.[2]
The complex is home to the Devaney Center Natatorium, a 25-yard pool with a listed seating capacity of 1,000.[3] NU hosted several Big 12 tournaments in the conference's early years. More recently, the Natatorium has been criticized as out-of-date and is considered among the worst swimming venues in the Big Ten.[4] [5]
In 2000, the university completed construction on the $2.979 million Devaney Center Indoor Track, which houses a 200-meter hydraulic bank track that is the largest of its kind in the world.[6] The track seats up to 5,000 spectators and underwent a $1.1 million renovation prior to the 2011 season. The Devaney Center has hosted championship meets for each of the Big Eight, Big 12, and Big Ten.
When Nebraska's basketball programs moved to the newly constructed Pinnacle Bank Arena in 2013, the Devaney Center underwent a $20 million remodel to reconfigure its main arena.[7] The remodel included the addition of luxury suites and decreasing the main arena's seating capacity to 7,907, though this number is often exceeded during volleyball games due to standing room availability. Nebraska's volleyball program has led the country in attendance each year it has played at the Devaney Center, averaging over 8,000 fans per game each season.[8] NU has sold out over 300 consecutive matches, a streak that ranks second only to Nebraska football in collegiate sports, dating back to its days at the NU Coliseum. The move to the Devaney Center has made Nebraska's volleyball program profitable, a rarity in women's collegiate athletics;[9] the program receives no financial support from tax dollars, tuition, or student fees.[10]
During the summer of 2023, Nebraska modestly expanded the Devaney Center's volleyball capacity to 8,309.[11]
The Devaney Center served as the primary host venue of the NSAA Boys and Girls State Basketball Tournament every year from its opening until 2013, when it was moved to Pinnacle Bank Arena. The Devaney Center continued to host some tournament games until 2020, when all University of Nebraska on-campus facilities were closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Local high schools were used for games not able to be played at Pinnacle Bank Arena. State tournament games returned to the Devaney Center the following year. Since 2021, the Devaney Center hosts quarterfinals and semifinals in the smaller classifications, while PBA hosts the quarterfinals and semifinals in the larger classifications, as well as all state championship games (third place games are played at a local high school)..[12]
Following its opening in 1976, the Devaney Center was the main concert destination in Lincoln for several years. Notable performers at the arena include Crosby, Stills & Nash (Oct. 28, 1977), Jethro Tull (Apr. 21, 1979), Elton John (Oct. 5, 1980), Journey (Apr. 6, 1983), Styx (May 20, 1983), Billy Joel (Apr. 9, 1984), Frank Sinatra (Apr. 19, 1984), Bruce Springsteen (Nov. 18, 1984), Hall and Oates (Apr. 17, 1985), Boston (Oct. 25, 1987), Def Leppard (Oct. 19, 1988), Van Halen (Nov. 5, 1988), Bob Dylan (Aug. 31, 1990), The Dixie Chicks (Oct. 8, 2000), Tim McGraw (Jun. 7, 2002), and The Beach Boys (three occasions).[13] [14]