Ford Center is a multipurpose indoor sports/concert arena located in downtown Oklahoma City. It is the home of the NBA's Oklahoma City Thunder, the Central Hockey League's Oklahoma City Blazers, and the af2 Arena Football team, the Oklahoma City Yard Dawgz.
Ford Center also plays host to major concerts, family and social events, conventions, ice shows, civic events, and sporting events from local universities and high schools. Of special note, Ford Center served as the temporary home for the NBA's New Orleans Hornets during the 2005-06 and 2006-07 seasons.
The facility is the premier component of the city's 1993 Capital Improvement Program, known as Metropolitan Area Projects (MAPS), which financed new and upgraded sports, entertainment, cultural and convention facilities primarily in the downtown section with a temporary 1-cent sales tax assessed. Despite the "metropolitan" moniker of the improvement program, the tax was only assessed inside city limits.
Oklahoma City officials had long planned to upgrade the facility in order to remain competitive for NCAA events, concerts, and conventions (see MAPS-III). Many critics had felt that Ford Center was a large facility but did not have many of the luxuries of other arenas. Originally billed and marketed as a "state-of-the-art" facility, Ford Center was constructed to minimum NBA and NHL specifications. The arena was built without the luxury amenities because of local concerns on expenditures on an arena without a major-league tenant. The city had thought that it could shell-in updated NBA or NHL amenities and improvements to Ford Center once a team announced it would relocate to the city.
Recognizing that a local investor group had purchased a team as well as the "new NBA model", city leaders revised their plans for upgrading the facility and desired to upgrade Ford Center immediately to remove any doubt about its competitive amenities and potential profitability should a team relocate. Originally city officials had hoped to include Ford Center improvements as part of a planned 2009 MAPS-III initiative.
Architecturally, Ford Center shares likeness with its brother stadium Ford Field in Detroit, Michigan. The facility seats up to 19,675 on four seating levels and features 3,380 club seats, seven party suites and 49 private suites. This makes Ford Center the largest indoor arena in the state of Oklahoma.
Ford Center is located immediately across the street from the Cox Convention Center, a marketing point often used by city officials (since Cox Center itself has a 15,000-seat arena).
The city held the temporary tax initiative in March 2008 to facilitate the relocation of the NBA's Seattle SuperSonics or another relocation franchise. It is expected that the refurbishment will turn the Ford Center into a top-tier NBA facility.
Some of the planned upgrades to the Ford Center include upscale restaurants, clubs, additional suites (including so-called 'bunker suites'), office space, Kid's Zone, additional concessions, flooring upgrades, view lounges, upgraded 'general use' locker rooms. NBA specific amenities include 'NBA ONLY' locker rooms and facilities, a practice court, media broadcast facilities, lighting, and sound, an NBA press room, an onsite NBA and team store, and ticket/staff rooms. It is anticipated that the Oklahoma City Thunder team will lease the new office space.
Naming rights for the 'new' facility are currently under discussion per terms of the lease agreement between the Professional Basketball Club LLC and the City of Oklahoma City, however preference is being given to the Oklahoma Ford Association, who is the current sponsor.
Ford Center hosts a number of games and events from Oklahoma City University, the University of Oklahoma, and Oklahoma State University along with those from local highschools and post-secondary organizations. Ford Center is also used for other events, including major concert tours, conventions, National Hockey League preseason and exhibition games, and notably professional wrestling shows such as Unforgiven 2005, RAW and Smackdown!.
Ford Center will host the 2009 Big 12 Conference Men's Basketball Tournament. In early July, UFC president Dana White announced that they are working on bringing an event to the Ford Center within the the next 6-8 months. It would be the first UFC event held in the state of Oklahoma since UFC 4, which was at the Expo Square Pavillion in Tulsa on December 16, 1994.
In consideration for Oklahoma City's efforts and to help market the team locally, the Hornets franchise was renamed "New Orleans/Oklahoma City Hornets" during the period and was often known as the 'Hornets' or 'Hometown Hornets' for home games in Oklahoma City and in the media. The Hornets played their last game at Ford Center on October 9, 2007, a preseason game.
Attendance for Hornets games at the Ford Center averaged 18,716 fans in 2005-06 (36 games) and 17,951 fans (35 games) in 2006-2007. Oklahoma City set season ticket sales records with some 12,000 being sold in 2005 although the team had only six weeks to market the team to the new market. 14,000 season tickets were sold in 2006 despite it being a 'lame duck' season.
The hosting of the Hornets arguably gave Oklahoma City the edge it needed to land on the radar of professional sports. Long being considered by many as too small to host a major-league team for a variety of reasons, support for the Hornets during their two-year stay caught the attention of the NBA and other sports leagues. David Stern was quoted as stating that "Oklahoma City was at the top of the relocation list of cities" and during the Hornets' last home game he all but assured local fans that the NBA "had not played its last game in Oklahoma City."
After an April 2008 league approval, it was announced on July 2, 2008 that the Sonics franchise would be relocating to Oklahoma City and would play at Ford Center. The agreement retires the "SuperSonics" moniker, color, and logos--possibly to be used by a future NBA team in Seattle. On September 2, 2008, the team announced they would be called the Oklahoma City Thunder. The Storm remained in Seattle and was sold by Bennett to local Seattle investors.
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