On Wednesday, the 50th anniversary of Arizonaβs last basketball game at Bear Down Gym, I walked through the front door and was greeted by a nurse.
βAre you here to get a COVID vaccine?β she asked.
The site where Arizona once won 81 consecutive games has been repurposed. You can buy a cup of coffee and a donut at a quick-serve market where the office of coaches Fred Enke and Fred Snowden used to be.
You can study for an exam in the βThink Tank,β nap in a comfortable chair, take a cooking class or consult with a nutritional coach at what is now called the Bear Down Building.
But you canβt play basketball.
Two glass backboards with rims and nets hang 10 feet from the ground, but they are ornamental, not to be used for a 3-point jumper or an intramural game.
Time has touched every aspect of the one-time state-of-the-art gymnasium, built in 1926 for a then-hefty $166,207.
In the early spring of 1926 the metal framework for the new menβs gymnasium (Bear Down Gym) at the University of Arizona is beginning to take shape.
Fifty years ago, on Jan. 18, 1973, Snowdenβs first Arizona team beat UC-Santa Barbara in a farewell-to-Bear Down Gym game. One columnist referred to the venue as βonce elegant, now a relic.β It was the last of 488 UA games played at Bear Down Gym.
It was forgotten almost overnight.
Jerry Holmes, who was Snowdenβs lead assistant coach, remembers the seven games Arizona played at Bear Down Gym in the 1972-73 season, but not necessarily fondly.
βOh my god, it was so small,β Holmes says now. βIt seated about 3,000, and half of those were for students. I think we mustβve had 500 students turned away every game. It was a wild environment β intimidating β but we werenβt thinking about the history of the gym; we were too excited to get into McKale.β
By 1973, the history of the gym had long been classified as old news. Tucson was eager to make its tardy entrance in the Western Athletic Conferenceβs first true facilities βarms race.β What was once the premier basketball facility in the Southwest was over the hill by age 30.
βThe grand old dameβs days as a queen of high society are long past,β the Tucson Citizen wrote in 1973. βNow itβs a doddering old dowager.β
Some referred to it as βTear Down Gym.β
The Star reported that Bear Down Gym prevented the UA from being a competitive basketball force. βIt has drained Arizona,β it wrote. βThe school is now so weak it cannot field a presentable team.β
The UAβs competitors in the WAC didnβt have any pity for the slow-moving UA athletic department. The arms race was full-on:
Colorado State opened Moby Arena in 1966, seating 8,700.
New Mexico debuted the 14,000-seat βThe Pit in 1966.
Utah completed the 15,000-seat Huntsman Center in 1969.
BYU opened the doors to its 21,000-seat Marriott Center in 1971.
Former UA basketball coach Fred A. Enke at Bear Down Gym, around 1960, with assistant Bruce Larson, who succeeded Enke, sitting to his right. Enke achieved great success at the old gymnasium, which ceased hosting Wildcat hoops in 1973.
The final decade at Bear Down Gym all but erased memories of Enkeβs teams of 1945-51, a golden era in which the Wildcats went 132-40, played in their first NCAA Tournament and began to play a coast-to-coast national schedule.
When Dick Clausen was hired as Arizonaβs athletic director in 1958, one of his first stated goals was to replace Bear Down Gym. In a 1998 interview at his midtown Tucson home, Clausen told me that departing Bear Down Gym met opposition at every turn.
Clausen estimated that the UAβs gate receipts for a typical 1960s season at Bear Down Gym were a thin $25,000. He accurately estimated that McKale Centerβs income would exceed that by 10 times, more than $300,000 per season in the early β70s.
Yet progress was clogged by political opposition and financial issues.
βI was the AD for 13 years, and it took 14 to get McKale Center built,β Clausen told me. βThe state legislature, especially the Phoenix group, wouldnβt budge. But when (former UA vice president) Swede Johnson and I proposed it would be named after Pop McKale, it changed everything. We got the fans on our side, and it moved the legislature to take action.β
The price for Arizonaβs long delay was staggering. From 1955-72, Arizona had just four winning seasons. Utah, BYU and New Mexico ruled WAC basketball.
On the day of the last game at Bear Down Gym 50 years ago, no one could have guessed or dreamed that Arizona would become the No. 1 college basketball program West of the Kansas Jayhawks.
βWe couldnβt have recruited the Eric Moneys and Coniel Normans and Bob Elliotts without having McKale,β Holmes says now. βBut it was sad to see what Bear Down Gym had become.β
The facility formerly known as Bear Down Gym still features a hardwood floor and some of the original bleacher seats, but it has been rebranded and repurposed as the Bear Down Building as part of the UAβs βStudent Success District.β
Now, 50 years from the last game played at Bear Down, itβs possible to put the positives of the old arena in perspective.
Thirteen athletes who played their entire basketball careers at Bear Down Gym β Warren Rustand, Ed Nymeyer, Ernie McCray, Roger Johnson, Fred W. Enke, Hank Leiber, Linc Richmond, Joe Skaisgir, Mo Udall, Waldo Dicus, Leon Blevins, Hadie Redd and George Genung β have been inducted into the UA Sports Hall of Fame.
The street in front of McKale Center is appropriately named Fred Enke Drive. And rather than tear down the old gym, the UA spent more than $25 million to revive it and make it useful. Today the school refers to it as part of the βStudent Success District.β
Just like the day in 1951 when the Wildcats beat No. 2 LIU, rose to No. 11 in the AP poll and provided the first glimpse of Tucson as a basketball town.
With students back at UA for the fall semester, here's a look at the Tucson campus over the years compared to now.
Photos: University of Arizona β Then and Now β Part 3
University of Arizona: Football stadium
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The horseshoe-shaped University of Arizona football stadium is clearly visible on campus on September 10, 1968 in Tucson.
University of Arizona: Football stadium
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The Meinel Optical Sciences Building at the University of Arizona in Tucson on July 23, 2018. It was originally built in 1970 and with the expansion of the west wing in 2006 has evolved into a four story structure above ground with three levels below. There is a 100-foot vertical test tower; laser beam, glass technology and solar energy laboratories; offices and classrooms.
University of Arizona: Adminstration
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A couple of students walk along the University of Arizona Mall in front of the new Administration building being erected on January 3, 1966.
University of Arizona: Adminstration
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Constructed in 1966, the University of Arizona Administration Building is not only occupied by the provost and vice presidents it is also used by student services and business offices including financial aid, the registrar's office and graduate college in Tucson on July 16, 2018.
University of Arizona: Mall
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University of Arizona students enjoy a warm fall morning on the mall in Tucson, on October 1, 1968.
University of Arizona: Mall
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Huge trees surround parts of Old Main, the original building at the University of Arizona in Tucson, including the balcony that overlooks the Mall on July 23, 2018.
University of Arizona: Mall at Campbell
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A worker uses heavy equipment to place a palm tree along North Campbell Avenue near the easternmost side of campus at the University of Arizona, in Tucson on August 13, 1968. Some of the palm trees were transplanted from different parts of campus.
University of Arizona: Mall at Campbell
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Cyclists ride along the entrance to the Mall at the University of Arizona in Tucson on July 25, 2018. The "Curving Arches (Homage to Bernini), right, was designed by Athena Tacha and is inspired by the work of Gian Lorenzo Bernini's St. Peter's Square. It was installed in September, 1981.
University of Arizona: McKale Center exterior
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The new McKale Center is starting to take shape as construction continues at the University of Arizona in Tucson on August 4, 1972. The health and physical education complex, which will include a 15,000-seat basketball facility. McKale, named after legendary coach James "Pop" McKale Center, will replace the aging Bear Down Gym and is expected to be ready for the upcoming 1972-73 basketball season.
University of Arizona: McKale Center exterior
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The McKale Memorial Center at the University of Arizona is the home of the Department of Intercollegiate Athletics in Tucson on July 16, 2018. Named in honor of James "Pop" McKale, the former athletic and Arizona coach, it has a 14,000 seat arena and now houses a 10,000 square foot strength and condition facility and heritage center. In addition of being the venue for the basketball, volleyball and gymnastics teams it is also where past commencement ceremonies have taken place.
University of Arizona: Dorms
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Trees and spacious parking is available for football fans and for residents of Santa Cruz Hall, middle, and Apache Halls, far right, at the University of Arizona on East Sixth Street, in Tucson on September 11, 1966. The new look for the school is part of a decade of planning to provide as much open space as possible.
University of Arizona: Dorms
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A large eucalyptus tree provides plenty of shade on the southwest corner of Arizona Stadium and partially obscures Likins Residence Hall at the University of Arizona in Tucson on July 16, 2018. Built in 2011 the four to six story hall was designed around a hacienda-style interior courtyard. It is named for former UA President Emeritus Peter Likens.
University of Arizona: Coronado Dorm
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Coronado, the 10-story women's dorm, is one of the latest structures built on the campus of the University of Arizona on September 11, 1966.
University of Arizona: Coronado Dorm
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The Arbol de la Vida, middle, is the largest and newest honors hall at the University of Arizona in Tucson on July 16, 2018. The six-story hall is home for more than 700 residents and features striking architecture including sky bridges connecting five buildings.
University of Arizona: Physics, Math and Meteorology
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One of the newer structures on the campus of the University of Arizona, in Tucson, is the Physics, Math and Meteorology building on the southern part of the school near East Sixth Street on January 3, 1966.
University of Arizona: Physics, Math and Meteorology
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Once called the Physics, Math and Meteorology Building, it is now the Physics and Atmospheric Sciences Building at the University of Arizona in Tucson on July 16, 2018.
University of Arizona: Math building
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Work is still ongoing at the new Math Building at the University of Arizona in Tucson on April 4, 1968.
University of Arizona: Math building
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Built in 1968, the Mathematics Building at the University of Arizona, in Tucson, is located on the southern portion of the campus on July 16, 2018. The department has a long tradition of doing outreach to local schools with programs that support high school teachers and provide a research center focusing on improving the math education of low-income Hispanic students. The department makes major contributions to the overall mission of the UA and Tucson.
University of Arizona: Administration and Mall
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The walkway and steps that lead up to the nearly finished University of Arizona Administration building on campus on September 11, 1966.
University of Arizona: Administration and Mall
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Students take a short cut as they walk in front of the University of Arizona Administration Building on their way to the Student Union in Tucson on July 16, 2018.
University of Arizona: Steward Observatory
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A photo of the Steward Observatory on the campus of the University of Arizona in March 1930. R.B. Streets, UA Department of Plant Pathology / UA Special Collections.
University of Arizona: Steward Observatory
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The old Steward Observatory at the University of Arizona in Tucson on July 16, 2018. The first telescope and building were dedicated on April 23, 1923. The observatory is near the Education Building, left, and Modern Sciences Building. When constructed it was located on an isolated piece of university land that was once an ostrich farm.
University of Arizona: Homecoming parade
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The University of Arizona Marching Band performs during the Homecoming Parade as they walk south along North Stone Avenue in October 1955.
University of Arizona: Homecoming parade
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Pedestrians cross North Stone Avenue near West Council Street at the Pima County Public Service Center in Tucson on July 16, 2018.
University of Arizona: Mall and Old Main
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The Student Union bell tower looms over the campus mall at the University of Arizona in Tucson, on October 1, 1968.
University of Arizona: Mall and Old Main
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The Mall at the University of Arizona looking west in Tucson on July 16, 2018.
University of Arizona: Bear Down Gym
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In the early spring of 1926 the metal framework for the new men's gymnasium at the University of Arizona is beginning to take shape. The structure is where the Wildcats are expected to play their basketball games, the first maybe as early as January, 1927. It is located east of the Old Main, the original building on campus.
University of Arizona: Bear Down Gym
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Bear Down Gymnasium is still in use at the University of Arizona in Tucson on July 16, 2018. Constructed in 1926 as the men's gym it has served a number of different functions throughout its history. It was the main basketball venue until the McKale Center was built and during World War II it was made into a barracks for cadets in the Naval Training School. The Department of Campus Recreation uses the basement for activity classes, the main floor currently houses the Office of International Admissions, College of Letters, Arts and Science Academic Advising Center and the THINK TANK.
University of Arizona: Optical Sciences
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The huge hole in the ground on the eastside of campus at the University of Arizona is going to be the new Optical Science Building on September 10, 1968, in Tucson.
University of Arizona: Optical Sciences
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The Meinel Optical Sciences Building at the University of Arizona in Tucson on July 23, 2018. It was originally built in 1970 and with the expansion of the west wing in 2006 has evolved into a four story structure above ground with three levels below. There is a 100-foot vertical test tower; laser beam, glass technology and solar energy laboratories; offices and classrooms.
University of Arizona: McKale Center
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Interior of the new McKale Center is starting to take shape as construction continues at the University of Arizona in Tucson on August 4, 1972. The health and physical education complex, which will include a 15,000-seat basketball facility. McKale, named after legendary coach James "Pop" McKale Center, will replace the aging Bear Down Gym and is expected to be ready for the upcoming 1972-73 basketball season.
University of Arizona: McKale Center
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Participants in coach David Rubio's volleyball camp break out into groups at the University of Arizona McKale Center in Tucson on July 16, 2018.
University of Arizona: South of Bear Down Gym
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A paid parking gate is located not far from the mall at the University of Arizona on September 11, 1966. The new look for the school is part of a decade of planning to provide as much open space as possible.
University of Arizona: South of Bear Down Gym
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Likins Residence Hall at the University of Arizona, in Tucson, was built in 2011 and is next to Arizona Stadium on July 16, 2018. The four to six story hall was designed around a hacienda-style interior courtyard. It is named for former UA President Emeritus Peter Likins.
University of Arizona: Mall looking East
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University of Arizona students enjoy a warm fall morning on the mall in Tucson, on October 1, 1968.
University of Arizona: Mall looking East
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The Mall at the University of Arizona as seen from Old Main in Tucson on July 23, 2018. It is now the site of the USS Arizona Mall Memorial featuring medallions bearing the names of the 1,177 sailors and US Marines killed in board the ship on December 7, 1941.
University of Arizona: Football stadium
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There is a new, open look at the football stadium, just east of the building where the baseball field is being developed on Sixth Street, on September 11, 1966. The new look for the entire school is part of a decade of planning to provide as much open space as possible. Moving the baseball field from Bear Down Gym is helping to create the open mall look that will be extended all the way to North Cherry Avenue. The university's aggressive building program amounted to about $8 million which includes the new administration building, the Space Sciences building and a new women's dorm.
University of Arizona: Football stadium
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Construction of the Intercollegiate Athletics Indoor Sports Center at the University of Arizona continues in Tucson on July 16, 2018. Once the site of Sancet Field, the baseball complex has made way for the Arizona football team facility after moving to Hi Corbett Field. The $15 million indoor sports center which is expected to be completed in December 2018, includes a 90-yard field with a 10-yard end zone and full width, climate-controlled area for training and conditioning.
University of Arizona: Steward Observatory
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A circa 1921 copy photo of the Steward Observatory at the University of Arizona in Tucson.
University of Arizona: Steward Observatory
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at the University of Arizona in Tucson on July 16, 2018.



