Pepsi Center (aka The Can) is a multi-purpose arena in
Denver, Colorado, United States. The building is home to the Denver Nuggets of
the National Basketball Association, the Colorado Avalanche of the National
Hockey League, and the Colorado Mammoth of the National Lacrosse League. When
not in use by one of Denver's sports teams, the building frequently serves as a
concert venue.
Pepsi Center was constructed as part of a large six-year
sporting venue upgrade in Denver along with Coors Field, home of the Colorado
Rockies, and Sports Authority Field at Mile High (formerly Invesco Field at
Mile High), home of the Denver Broncos. The complex was constructed to be
readily accessible. The arena is situated at Speer Boulevard, a main
thoroughfare in downtown Denver, and is served by a nearby exit off Interstate
25. A light rail station is on the western side of the complex.
Ground was broken for the arena on November 20, 1997, on the
4.6-acre (19,000 m2) site. Its completion in October 1999 was marked by a
Celine Dion concert. Also included in the complex are a basketball practice
facility used by the Nuggets, and the Blue Sky Grill, a restaurant accessible
from within and outside the Center itself. The atrium of the building houses a
suspended sculpture depicting various hockey and basketball athletes in action
poses.
Before the construction of Pepsi Center, the Denver Nuggets
and Colorado Avalanche played in McNichols Sports Arena, a building that has
since been torn down to serve as a parking lot for nearby Sports Authority
Field at Mile High. Coincidentally, prior to the Avalanche relocating to
Denver, the then-Quebec Nordiques played at another arena to which Pepsi owned
naming rights: the Colisée Pepsi.
Pepsi Center hosted the 2001 NHL All-Star Game, the 2001
Stanley Cup Finals, and the 2005 NBA All-Star Game. From 2004–2006, the center
hosted the Mountain West Conference men's basketball tournament. The National
Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Men's ice hockey Frozen Four West
Regional was hosted on March 24 and March 25, 2007. The Centrix Financial Grand
Prix of Denver was held in the parking lot from 2002 to 2006. In 2004, Denver,
Colorado was selected as one of five cities in the U.S. to host the Dew Action
Sports Tour, a new extreme sports franchise that began in 2005. Titled the
Right Guard Open, the inaugural event was held at Pepsi Center from July 6–10.
The Dew Action Sports returned to Denver for its second year in 2006 during
July 13–16. During the week of July 2–8, 2007, the arena hosted the
International Convention and Contests of the Barbershop Harmony Society, a
men's singing organization.
The NCAA Men's ice hockey Frozen Four tournament was held at
the arena on April 10 and April 12, 2008. Pepsi Center also hosted games of the
NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament in 2004, 2008 and 2011. In 2012, the NCAA
Women's basketball Final Four was held here.
The arena also hosted the 2008 Democratic National
Convention, although the party's presidential nominee, then-Senator Barack
Obama, made his acceptance speech at the nearby INVESCO Field at Mile High. To
prepare for the convention, Pepsi Center underwent large scale projects including
electrical power increases and the installation of new transformers by Xcel
Energy (which is the namesake of the Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul, which
hosted the 2008 Republican National Convention the following week) and
telecommunications wiring by Qwest. A backup generator was installed that has
the capacity to power the entire city of Pueblo, Colorado. Roughly 12 miles (19
km) of optical fiber cables were installed for the massive communication needs
of the convention.
On August 15, 2008, World Wrestling Entertainment booked an
internationally televised event, WWE Raw, to take place at Pepsi Center on
Monday, May 25, 2009. However, Denver Nuggets and Pepsi Center owner Stan
Kroenke arranged a verbal agreement to book Game 4 of the NBA Western Conference
Finals between the Nuggets and the Los Angeles Lakers on the same date prior to
the Nuggets actually earning a slot in the playoffs. Though a contract existed
to hold the venue for the WWE event and only a verbal agreement granted the
Nuggets the venue, Kroenke stood firm that the Nuggets game would take
precedence.
WWE chairman Vince McMahon said, "Even though the
Denver Nuggets had a strong team this year and were projected to make the
playoffs, obviously Nuggets and Pepsi Center owner Stan Kroenke did not have
enough faith in his own team to hold the May 25 date for a potential playoff
game."
For the WWE event, Ticketmaster refused to refund their
processing fee, thereby only giving fans a partial refund. The fee,
however, is strictly charged by Ticketmaster alone and not WWE or KSE. On May
20, 2009, it was announced that the WWE event scheduled for Pepsi Center would
be moved to Staples Center in Los Angeles, California (home of the Nuggets'
Western Conference Finals opponent), and return to the Denver area for a
non-televised event at the Denver Coliseum on August 7, 2009, with refunds for
the original date made available at points of purchase.
The double-booking controversy was parlayed into a
main-event match during the May 25 edition of Raw at Staples Center. In the
match, the face team wearing Lakers jerseys (Batista, Montel Vontavious Porter,
John Cena, Jerry Lawler & Mr. Kennedy) defeated the heel team wearing
Nuggets jerseys (The Miz, Ted DiBiase, Cody Rhodes, Randy Orton & The Big Show)
in a 10-man tag team match.
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