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Basketball: Canadian Elite Basketball League: Toronto Pan Am Sports Centre: 2021 1 (2023) Toronto Argonauts [1] Canadian football: Canadian Football League: BMO Field: 1873 19 Grey Cup (last in 2024) Toronto Blue Jays [2] Baseball: Major League Baseball: Rogers Centre: 1976 2 World Series (last in 1993) Toronto FC [3] Soccer: Major League ...
Toronto was the lone non-American venue city to host a Big3 event. 2019 NBA Finals – Games 1, 2, and 5 versus the Golden State Warriors. The Raptors won the NBA championship 4–2, albeit in the Warriors' former home arena of Oracle Arena in Oakland in Game 6.
Folded on March 10, 2008 without ever playing a game Oshawa, Ontario: 2011 0 Announced as a member of ABA-Canada, but the ABA-Canada was reduced to a single "selects" team. Ottawa, Ontario: 2011 0 Announced as a member of ABA-Canada, but the ABA-Canada was reduced to a single "selects" team. Quebec Kebs: Quebec City, Quebec: 2006-07 0
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From July 11 to 20, 2015, the Coliseum hosted the gymnastics competition of the 2015 Pan American Games, during which it was known as the "Toronto Coliseum." [48] The Coliseum hosted the Longines World Cup Jumping (Equestrian) Championships in November 2015. The Coliseum hosted events as part of the 2016 NBA All-Star Weekend in Toronto over 2 days:
The Toronto Entertainment District is an area in downtown Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is concentrated around King Street West between University Avenue and Spadina Avenue. It is home to theatres and performing arts centres, the Toronto Blue Jays, and an array of cultural and family attractions. The area was also home to most of the nightclubs ...
Toronto Blue Jays: A crowd of 52,268 attended game five of the 1992 World Series, which Toronto lost 7–2 to the Atlanta Braves. The smallest crowd for a Jays game occurred in April 2010, when 10,314 watched Toronto win 8–1 against the Kansas City Royals .