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Cal Poly won 77-73 to advance to the Final Four, with a crowd of 3,217 (at the time a facility record for basketball [11]) in attendance. Mott Athletics Center hosted the 1994 and 2005 Pac-10 Wrestling Championships, with the total attendance for the latter two-day four-session event totaling 7,738.
The stadium opened on January 21, 2001, with the Mustangs defeating #11-ranked Stanford 6–5 in 12 innings in front of a crowd of 3,110 fans. [3] [4] The stadium originally had a usual, day-to-day capacity of 1,734 [5] before later expansion, and is part of an encompassing 47-acre (190,000 m 2) Upper Sports Complex which is also home to the Mustang softball team.
This is a list of arenas that currently serve as the home venue for NCAA Division I college basketball teams. Conference affiliations reflect those in the 2024–25 season; all affiliation changes officially took effect on July 1, 2024.
Mustang Memorial Field, formerly known as Mustang Stadium and then Alex G. Spanos Stadium, is an 11,075-seat multi-purpose stadium located on the campus of California Polytechnic State University (Cal Poly) in San Luis Obispo, California. It is the home field of the Cal Poly Mustangs football and soccer teams.
Bill Frost graduated from Cal Poly in 1972 with a degree in biochemistry, according to the release. There are three classrooms in the building, seating 180, 100 and 60 students.
The following is a list of stadiums in the United States. They are ranked by capacity, which is the maximum number of spectators the stadium can normally accommodate. All U.S. stadiums with a current capacity of 10,000 or more are included in the list.
Cal Poly Humboldt Lumberjacks: CCAA: 1,850 2008 [23] Kellogg Arena Pomona: CA: Cal Poly Pomona Broncos: CCAA: 3,000 1968 [24] Art Acker Gymnasium Chico: CA: Cal State Chico Wildcats: CCAA: 2,143 N/A (1960s) [25] Torodome: Carson: CA: Cal State Dominguez Hills Toros: CCAA: 2,802 [26] 1970 Pioneer Gymnasium Hayward: CA: Cal State East Bay ...
2021 – Sierra Nevada left the Cal Pac at the end of the 2021–22 academic year as the school announced plans to merge with the University of Nevada, Reno, dropping all athletic programs in the process. 2022 – Marymount California left the Cal Pac after the 2021–22 academic year as the school announced its closure in August of that year. 2023