CenturyLink Center

This article is about the arena in Louisiana. For the similarly named arena in Omaha, Nebraska, see CenturyLink Center Omaha.
CenturyLink Center
Former names Bossier City Arena (2000)
CenturyTel Center (2000-2010)
Location 2000 CenturyTel Center Drive
Bossier City, Louisiana 71112
Owner City of Bossier City
Operator SMG
Capacity 14,000 (concerts)
12,440 (hockey)
Surface Multi-surface
Construction
Broke ground March 30, 1999[1]
Opened November 2, 2000[2]
Construction cost $56.5 million
($77.6 million in 2016 dollars[3])
Architect AE Design Group
General contractor Roy Anderson Corp.
Tenants
Bossier-Shreveport Mudbugs (CHL) (2000–2011)
Bossier–Shreveport Battle Wings (AFL) (2001–2010)

The CenturyLink Center[4] (formerly CenturyTel Center and Bossier City Arena) is a 14,000-seat multi-purpose arena, in Bossier City, Louisiana. The naming rights were purchased by the telephone company CenturyLink of Monroe, Louisiana.

Opened in 2000 during the administration of then Bossier City Mayor George Dement, the center is among several projects financed in part from revenues derived from three casinos in the city.[5]

The center was home to the Bossier–Shreveport Battle Wings AFL team and the Bossier-Shreveport Mudbugs CHL team.

It hosted the Southland Conference men's basketball tournament in 2001. In 2011, the CenturyLink Center with the Louisiana Tech Lady Techsters hosted 1st and 2nd round games for the NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament including the first two games of eventual champion Texas A&M.

On September 28, 2002, the NHL came to the arena, for a pre-season game, between the Nashville Predators and Atlanta Thrashers.

On January 14, 2007, the CHL All-Star game was played at the arena, for the first time ever, hosted by the Mudbugs.

On October 23rd, 2014, CLC held an NBA preseason game between the New Orleans Pelicans and Dallas Mavericks.

In December 2014, the Bossier City Council once again rejected pay increases for city employees as proposed by Mayor Lo Walker. Columnist Jeffrey D. Sadow attributed the lack of municipal funds for such raises to the recurring high costs associated with the operation of CenturyLink, which cost $1,500 per resident, or $55.6 million, nearly $20 million more than had been anticipated by city officials. Through 2013, the city spent $5 million more to operate the center. Minor league sports teams, unable to survive, abandoned the CenturyLink. In 2013 alone, the city transferred $750,000 into CenturyLink and still ran a deficit of $200,000. Those costs could have funded the pay raises Walker proposed. Sadow proposes that the city sell CenturyLink at a loss so that it not become a permanent white elephant on municipal expenditures.[6]

See also

References

  1. "Arena Tops Builder's Resume Bossier City Picks Anderson For Huge Multipurpose Center". Sun Herald. April 1, 1999.
  2. http://www.mib.org/~lennier/hockey/graph.cgi
  3. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Retrieved November 10, 2015.
  4. "Bossier City Arena Getting a New Name" (Press release). CenturyLink. 22 June 2011. Archived from the original on 20 November 2011. Retrieved 20 November 2011.
  5. "Amanda Crane, "'Mr. Bossier' turns 91"". bossierpress.com. Retrieved February 6, 2013.
  6. Jeffrey D. Sadow (December 22, 2014). "Sadow: Bossier City Fiddles While Its Arena Burns Tax Dollars". The Hayride. Retrieved February 28, 2014.

Coordinates: 32°27′54.60″N 93°40′24.88″W / 32.4651667°N 93.6735778°W / 32.4651667; -93.6735778

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to CenturyTel Center.
Preceded by
first arena
Home of the Bossier–Shreveport Battle Wings
2001–2010
Succeeded by
New Orleans Arena as New Orleans VooDoo
Preceded by
MGM Grand Garden Arena
Ultimate Fighting Championship venue
UFC 37
Succeeded by
Bellagio
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