Nebraska plays final game in old arena

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) - It's the end of an era for the house cigarettes built.

The Devaney Sports Center hosted its last college basketball game Wednesday night when Nebraska played Minnesota, ending a 37-year run as the home of the Cornhuskers.

After a $20 million facelift, it will reopen in the fall as the women's volleyball venue. The basketball teams, which moved into a new practice facility in 2011, will play games in the Pinnacle Bank Arena just west of campus.

"We're going to have state-of-the-art facilities for any major college basketball team or any professional franchise," first-year coach Tim Miles said. "At the same time, it's a sentimental time because there is so much historical value to the Devaney."

Nebraska certainly isn't a bastion of basketball tradition. The Huskers haven't won a conference championship since 1950 or any of their six all-time NCAA Tournament games.

But on the Devaney court, Nebraska has won 75 percent of its games overall (446-148) and 60 percent of its conference games (166-111).

"A lot of good memories," said Beau Reid, who provided a couple of the building's highlights during his career from 1988-91. "It's bittersweet. Sweet because our program is moving on and getting a new facility that will help make us relevant. Bitter because it's not like the Devaney is some dump people move out of. It's still a really nice, clean arena, and I think the volleyball girls will like playing there."

The building is named for Nebraska's Hall of Fame football coach Bob Devaney, who led the Huskers to national championships in 1970-71 and served as athletic director until 1992. Devaney pushed for a new multi-sports facility to replace the Nebraska Coliseum in 1971. After much consternation, state lawmakers approved a 5-cent increase to the state cigarette tax to fund the construction.

The final cost was $13.8 million for the 13,595-seat building that opened in March 1976 as the Nebraska Sports Complex. It was renamed the Bob Devaney Sports Center in November 1978 and has been the Huskers' home through the Big Eight and Big 12 years, and their first two seasons in the Big Ten.

The most exciting years were from 1986-2000 under coach Danny Nee, whose .572 winning percentage is best in program history. He led the Huskers to four straight NCAA Tournaments (1991-94) and another in 1998, and coached future pros such as Tyronn Lue, Eric Piatkowski, Erick Strickland and Mikki Moore.

Nee's first visit to the Devaney was in 1980, when he was an assistant under Digger Phelps at Notre Dame. The Irish were in town and lost to Missouri in the NCAA Tournament. The building hosted NCAA first- and second-round games three times in the 1980s.

"I was so impressed with how it was designed, and the size was really cool," Nee said.

Nebraska beat 33 ranked opponents at the Devaney, but maybe the most memorable win was against an unranked Kansas team led by Danny Manning in January 1988. Reid's 18-foot shot at the buzzer beat the Jayhawks 70-68 - the last game "Danny and the Miracles" lost on their way to the national championship.

The Huskers trailed Kansas by as many as 16 points, but they stayed in the game because the Jayhawks missed a bunch of late free throws.

Reid recalled this week that in the final seconds, he and his teammates were supposed to clear out and let Eric Johnson make a play. Reid started to hand the ball to Johnson when the Jayhawks came with a trap.

The ball popped loose. Reid picked it up, took a dribble and got his shot off just in time. It was the freshman's only basket of the game.

In Wednesday's game, Nebraska never trailed in a 53-51 victory against Minnesota.

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