Tin Can (basketball arena)
35°54′33″N 79°2′49″W / 35.90917°N 79.04694°W
The Tin Can & Indoor Athletic Center | |
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania | |
Tenants | |
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North Carolina Tar Heels (NCAA) Men's basketball (1924–1938) |
The Indoor Athletic Court (commonly known as the Tin Can or the Indoor Athletic Center) was the home of
During their time in the Tin Can, the Tar Heels won several Southern Conference championships: six regular season titles and four conference tournament titles. Aside from basketball the building was used for many other sports including: wrestling, fencing, and boxing, among others. It hosted the Southern Indoor Track and Field Games for the Southern Conference for nine years. Outside of athletics, the Tin Can was the site of many class picnics, school dances, class registration, and concerts. In the 1930s and 1940s, the building hosted several big bands and artists including Frank Sinatra and Tommy Dorsey. Following the basketball team's departure, students continued to use the facility for sports, while adjustments were made to allow for volleyball and golf. After World War II, the building was used as a temporary dormitory for around 275 students. When a structure was announced to be built in the Tin Can's location in 1976, the university's trustees weighed the costs of moving the existing structure to the east end of Fetzer Field or tearing down the Tin Can and building a replica in the aforementioned location. Ultimately, the structure was torn down and a new one built on Fetzer Field. In total, the university used the temporary building for 54 years.
Construction and architecture
![A cleared area ready to be built on.](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/1d/Tin_Can_Site_1923.png/220px-Tin_Can_Site_1923.png)
The growth of the
The building for indoor athletic field was purchased from
The Tin Can was always freezing [...] they had icicles in the corners. To stay warm the electricians put those big-wattage bulbs under the benches, and we had blankets and wore heavy sweat clothes. Later on they did get central heat in there, but it was never adequate. You couldn't dress there.
North Carolina head coach Bo Shepard (1931–35)[16]
The structure was never given a formal name aside from Indoor Athletic Center or the Indoor Athletic Court, but the students eventually referred to it as the Tin Can and the name stuck.[1] It was located between what is now Morehead-Patterson Bell Tower and Woollen Gymnasium along South Road, on the site of what is now Fetzer Hall.[8] The Bell Tower's chimes would make the Tin Can's roof reverberate.[8] There was no air conditioning, heating, or insulation in the Tin Can, which left it freezing in the winter and "like an oven" in the summer.[6][11][14] Dripping water would often leak down the walls and form icicles.[11] By 1927, players wore sweatshirts and gloves while warming up due to the cold conditions in the venue and its lack of heating, and later, effective heating.[3] In 1929, it was announced that there would be a renovation to add a heating system.[17] In addition, there will be a place created for a stage to be placed for concerts.[17] Despite the installation of a heating system, players and coaches still complained about the temperature.[3] Near the end of December 1940, the Tin Can was announced to be receiving a $4,000 paint job on the exterior.[18] Backboards that were used by the students were replaced, along with the addition of signs and partitions placed at the entrance.[18] One writer expressed that the floors were "spic and span" after not having been cleaned in a long time.[18]
Since there were no showers in the building, athletes and students would have to head to their dormitories or Emerson Field to shower.[1] Due to continued heating issues, small electric heaters that featured blowers were used, but this proved ineffective.[1] Heaters would be placed near the benches during games, while the crowd had no heaters in their area.[19] There were four heaters that the Tin Can had in 1940.[11]
History
![A finished structure.](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/c1/Tin_Can_Finished_1923-24.png/220px-Tin_Can_Finished_1923-24.png)
The first game in the Tin Can was played on January 8, 1924, when Carolina squared off against Mercer University.[20] Two thousand people turned up for the game.[3] The Tar Heel wrote following the game: "Two thousand spectators, well-wrapped in overcoats, shivered away in the spacious and airy and saw the 'Tin Can' christened with a victory."[11] After several of the first home games that season, The Tar Heel wrote that the venue should be called "the Refrigerator" instead of the Tin Can.[21] The Tar Heels concluded the 1923–24 campaign and season in the Tin Can undefeated.[8][12] The team was retroactively named the national champion by the Helms Athletic Foundation and the Premo-Porretta Power Poll.[22][23]
As success continued into Southern Conference play in the 1930s, the capacity of the Tin Can proved insufficient to meet the increased interest in the team. North Carolina played the last of their games there at the end of the 1938 season, having officially moved to the adjacent Woollen Gymnasium on January 4, 1939.[24] The last game that was played was against Washington & Lee on February 17, 1938, where 4,000 fans attended as Carolina beat the visitors 42–39.[11][25] The Tar Heels won Southern Conference regular season titles in 1922, 1924, 1925, 1926, 1935, and 1936, along with conference titles in 1924, 1925, 1926, and 1935.[26]
Home–court advantage
The Carolina teams played 15 seasons in the arena.[13][27] Across those seasons, the Tar Heels played 150 games, where they amassed 130 wins against 20 losses, for a win percentage of 86.7%.[27] In four of the fifteen seasons, the team went undefeated in all contests at the Tin Can: 1923–24 (10–0), 1925–26 (10–0), 1927–28 (10–0), and 1934–35 (9–0).[27][28] Their worst home record in the venue was in the 1929–30 season, when the Tar Heels went 7–5.[27]
Other uses
The Indoor Athletic Center was used for a myriad of other sports including:
After the men's basketball team departed
It's so dark in there that you can hardly see the ball. To catch a quick pass you have to use your forearms and your chest as well as your hands.
North Carolina basketball player Bob Bennett in 1965 on practicing in the Tin Can[31]
No longer needed for major athletic events, the Tin Can was used for a variety of purposes during the remainder of its life. The gym served as an annex for Woollen Gymnasium.
Immediately after World War II, the arena housed returning veterans when the university ran out of space in dormitories.[1][13][32] The school placed nearly 100 bunk beds in the building, along with around 50 dressers for over 200 students.[12][13][32] Those that stayed in the structure were known as "tin canners" and would bathe and use the restrooms in Woollen Gymnasium.[1][32] The students stayed there for several weeks.[12]
On April 12, 1976, the university's trustees approved the building plans for a new facility on the site of the Tin Can.[33] It was also revealed they were debating on what to do with the Tin Can: either move it to the east end of Fetzer Field or build a new facility like the Tin Can in that same location.[33] Prior to deciding on the future of the venue, the trustees wanted to see the cost estimates for moving the Tin Can.[33] The structure was finally demolished in 1977 to allow the construction of the present day Fetzer Hall.[8] The venue was removed with a bulldozer in early June.[29] It was stipulated that 25 sheets of the siding be saved in the deconstruction for the alumni department, who would sell them to former students as sentimental pieces.[29] The Tin Can was used for 54 years after being envisioned as a temporary building.[29][13] Don Bolden of The Daily Times–News felt the Tin Can was a landmark.[14]
It was decided that a structure similar to the Tin Can was to be built near Fetzer Field by November 1977.[2][29] That new structure would be of similar dimensions and serve the same purpose.[29] Then Physical Education Department chairman Carl S. Blyth stated the cost for that new building would be between $400,000 and $450,000.[29] No parts of the original Tin Can were to be used in the new building's construction.[29] Blyth stated moving the original Tin Can was considered, but ultimately rejected.[29] The $5.9 million building to be placed on top of where the Tin Can laid was hoped to completed by November 1979 and featured 157,000 square feet that would be used for handball, squash, and three large gymnasiums, among other uses.[34]
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/4/4a/Commons-logo.svg/30px-Commons-logo.svg.png)
References
Footnotes
Citations
- ^
- ^
- ^ a b c d Lucas 2010, p. 165.
- ^ "Clipped from Asheville Citizen-Times". Asheville Citizen-Times. 8 January 1924. p. 9.
- ^
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- ^ Powell 2005, p. 17.
- ^
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- ^ "NCAA Division I Men's Basketball – NCAA Division I Champions". Rauzulu's Street. 2004. Retrieved May 23, 2014.
- ISBN 978-0-345-51392-2.
- ^ Powell 2005, p. 19.
- ^ Lucas 2010, p. 234.
- ^ a b c d Kirschner 2022, p. 174.
- ^ Kirschner 2022, p. 278–80.
- ^
- ^
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Bibliography
- Kirschner, Steve, ed. (2022). Carolina Basketball 2022-23 Facts & Records Book (PDF). Chapel Hill, North Carolina: UNC Athletic Communications Office. Archived (PDF) from the original on May 20, 2023.
- Lucas, Adam (2010). Carolina Basketball: A Century of Excellence. Chapel Hill, North Carolina: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 9780807834107.
- Powell, Adam (2005). University of North Carolina Basketball. Mount Pleasant, S.C.: Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 0-7385-4150-8.