Jump to content

Peterson Gymnasium

Coordinates: 32°46′27″N 117°04′36″W / 32.7742°N 117.0768°W / 32.7742; -117.0768
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Peterson Gym)
Peterson Gymnasium
Map
Address5340 55th Street
LocationSan Diego, California
Coordinates32°46′27″N 117°04′36″W / 32.7742°N 117.0768°W / 32.7742; -117.0768
Public transit MTS Local 11 from
SDSU Transit Center
OwnerSan Diego State University
OperatorSan Diego State University
Associated Students of SDSU
Capacity3,668 (238 seatbacks)
Record attendance2,358
OpenedMay 1961
Tenants
San Diego State Aztecs (NCAA) (1961–present)
San Diego Conquistadors (ABA) (1972–1973)

Peterson Gymnasium (or Peterson Gym) is an indoor arena in San Diego, California, located on the campus of San Diego State University (SDSU). Opened in 1961, it is the home of the San Diego State Aztecs women's volleyball team. The Aztecs compete in NCAA Division I as a member of the Mountain West Conference (MW). The Peterson Gym building also contains classrooms for lectures.

History

[edit]

Peterson Gym is named after Charles E. Peterson, who during his 37-year career at San Diego State University served as athletic director, football coach, track coach, basketball coach, Dean of Men and alumni executive secretary.

Aztec Court at Peterson Gym has been home to several San Diego State Aztecs varsity sports teams over the years, including the now-defunct men's volleyball team (discontinued in 2000), which won the school's first (and-to-date only) NCAA Division I national championship in any sport, at the 1973 NCAA men's volleyball tournament (which was hosted by SDSU and played at Peterson Gym). The men's and women's basketball teams also played at Peterson Gym until moving across the street to Cox Arena (now known as Viejas Arena) upon its opening in 1997.

In 1972–73, Peterson Gym was home of the American Basketball Association (ABA)'s San Diego Conquistadors.[1] The Conquistadors were coached by Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame inductee and former Boston Celtics player K.C. Jones.[2] The team finished with a 30–54 record. Following the season, the team switched its home arena to the San Diego Sports Arena.[3]

Today, Peterson Gym also contains some classrooms for lectures.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "San Diego Conquistadors". Remember the ABA. Retrieved 2017-06-22.
  2. ^ "K.C. Jones". Basketball-Reference.com. Retrieved 2017-06-22.
  3. ^ "1972-73 San Diego Conquistadors Roster and Stats". Basketball-Reference.com. Retrieved 2017-06-22.