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The venue opened in 1999 as the home of the Los Angeles Lakers and Los Angeles Clippers (NBA), and Los Angeles Kings of the NHL. The Los Angeles Sparks of the WNBA joined in 2001, while the Los Angeles D-Fenders of the NBA D-League joined in 2006. It became home to the Los Angeles Avengers of the Arena Football League in 2000 until the team's ...
On February 24, 2023, the Kings beat the host Los Angeles Clippers in double-overtime by the final score of 176–175. It was the second-highest scoring game in NBA history behind a December 13, 1983, affair in which the Detroit Pistons beat the Denver Nuggets 186–184 in triple-overtime. The game featured 44 combined three-pointers made, tied ...
The Kings' previous owners, led by the Maloof family, first proposed a downtown arena in 2012. [11] The arena's estimated cost was $391 million. [12] The City of Sacramento would have paid $255.5 million, the Kings would have contributed $73.25 million, and AEG was going to contribute $58.75 million. [13] Inside of Golden 1 Center during a ...
The Los Angeles Lakers’ Anthony Davis (3) shoots over the Sacramento Kings’ Domantas Sabonis (11) at Crypto.com Arena on Saturday, Oct. 26, 2024, in Los Angeles. (John McCoy/Getty Images/TNS)
The Sacramento Kings are once again playing ball on their home court after a six-game away stint. ... The Sacramento Kings (10-6) will take on the Los Angeles Clippers (7-9) at 7 p.m. on Wednesday ...
The Sacramento Kings will host the Golden State Warriors ... The winner will play the loser of the New Orleans Pelicans and Los Angeles Lakers contest, and will need to win that game to enter a ...
Opened in 1988, it was the home of the Sacramento Kings of the National Basketball Association (NBA) from 1988 to 2016. It hosted nearly 200 spectator events each year. The arena was named for ARCO, at the time in 1988, a Los Angeles–based independent oil and gas company that today is now a brand owned by Findlay, Ohio–based Marathon Petroleum.
It was the NBA's smallest arena as it held just 10,333 people and was built in 1985 to temporarily accommodate the NBA's Sacramento Kings, who had relocated from Kansas City. The arena's first event was a fashion show on September 20, 1985. [ 1 ]