Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver To Host Regular-Season NCAA Basketball Tournaments Beginning In 2017

IANS, 16 Dec, 2015 01:15 PM
    Vancouver will host two regular-season NCAA Division I basketball tournaments beginning in 2017.
     
    Local officials and event management firm bd Global announced today that the city is set to welcome eight men's and eight women's teams from the U.S. college ranks for back-to-back tournaments to be played each November.
     
    The Vancouver Convention Centre's exhibition space will be transformed into a 3,000-plus seat venue for the events.
     
    "We are very excited to bring the first regular-season NCAA Division I college basketball tournaments ever played in Canada to this extraordinary city," bd Global president and CEO Brooks Downing said in a release.
     
    The U.S.-based company has worked with a number of men's programs in the past, including Kentucky, Duke, Gonzaga and Michigan State, along with Connecticut, Stanford, Baylor and UCLA on the women's side.
     
    The NCAA allows teams to play in any one tournament — known as a multiple-team event — once every four years, meaning that a school participating at the 2017 event in Vancouver wouldn't be eligible to return until 2021.
     
    Teams for the first tournaments will be announced at a later date.
     
    Vancouver played host to a men's NCAA game between Gonzaga and Hawaii in 2011 that attracted more than 9,500 fans to Rogers Arena.
     
    The NBA's Vancouver Grizzlies played six years in the city before moving to Memphis following the 2000-01 campaign.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Downtown Eastside Pharmacy Headed To B.C. Court In PharmaCare Fight

    Downtown Eastside Pharmacy Headed To B.C. Court In PharmaCare Fight
    An audit of the Eastside Pharmacy last year found billing discrepancies, and its enrolment in the provincial program that helps patients cover drug costs was expected to be cancelled today.

    Downtown Eastside Pharmacy Headed To B.C. Court In PharmaCare Fight

    Immigration Minister John McCallum Says 'Crazy' To Think Refugees Don't Want To Come To Canada

    Immigration Minister John McCallum Says 'Crazy' To Think Refugees Don't Want To Come To Canada
    McCallum just returned from visiting a refugee camp in Jordan, where he said there is "huge enthusiasm — a great hunger to come to Canada."

    Immigration Minister John McCallum Says 'Crazy' To Think Refugees Don't Want To Come To Canada

    Police In Newfoundland Investigating Anonymous 'Ugliest Girls' Poll

    Police In Newfoundland Investigating Anonymous 'Ugliest Girls' Poll
    Lynelle Cantwell, a student at Holy Trinity High School in Torbay, is getting national attention for her response to the creators of the online poll, called "Ugliest Girls in Grade 12."

    Police In Newfoundland Investigating Anonymous 'Ugliest Girls' Poll

    Vancouver Teenager, Toronto Engineer Honoured For Their Civic Engagement

    Vancouver Teenager, Toronto Engineer Honoured For Their Civic Engagement
    Hana Woldeyes says she can't fathom what pain Syrian refugees faced as they fled their country, but she's got an inkling of what the teenagers will go through as they try to settle into a new one.

    Vancouver Teenager, Toronto Engineer Honoured For Their Civic Engagement

    Supreme Court Rules That Class-action Lawsuit Against CIBC Can Proceed To Trial

    Supreme Court Rules That Class-action Lawsuit Against CIBC Can Proceed To Trial
    TORONTO — The Supreme Court of Canada has dismissed an appeal by CIBC, allowing a class-action lawsuit brought by shareholders against the bank to proceed to trial.

    Supreme Court Rules That Class-action Lawsuit Against CIBC Can Proceed To Trial

    Opening Of Canadian Parliament Reflects The Brutality Of Some Age-old Traditions

    Opening Of Canadian Parliament Reflects The Brutality Of Some Age-old Traditions
    OTTAWA — The opening of Parliament is ripe with traditions and symbolism that reach back in time to the beginnings of parliamentary democracy.

    Opening Of Canadian Parliament Reflects The Brutality Of Some Age-old Traditions