While folks in Indiana, North Carolina, New York or even, ahem, Boston may beg to differ, Los Angeles may reasonably call itself the basketball capital of the world.
The city’s rich hoops history includes the Lakers’ 11 NBA World Championship titles, UCLA’s 11 NCAA basketball titles, a high school system that’s developed dozens of basketball greats, and a wide-ranging pick-up basketball culture featured in such films as “White Men Can’t Jump.” Heck, even the term “slam dunk” was coined here, by the late, great Lakers announcer Chick Hearn . All of which makes LA, which hosted the 60th NBA All-Star Game at STAPLES Center on Feb. 20, 2011, a veritable hoops heaven for roundball junkies looking to explore the area.
The city’s rich hoops history includes the Lakers’ 11 NBA World Championship titles, UCLA’s 11 NCAA basketball titles, a high school system that’s developed dozens of basketball greats, and a wide-ranging pick-up basketball culture featured in such films as “White Men Can’t Jump.” Heck, even the term “slam dunk” was coined here, by the late, great Lakers announcer Chick Hearn . All of which makes LA, which hosted the 60th NBA All-Star Game at STAPLES Center on Feb. 20, 2011, a veritable hoops heaven for roundball junkies looking to explore the area.
UCLA, Westwood Blvd. and Le Conte Ave. (southern entrance), Los Angeles, 310.825.4321
Venice Beach Recreation Center, 1800 Ocean Front Walk (two blocks west of the intersection of 18th Ave. and Pacific Ave.), Los Angeles, 310.399.2775
Marques Johnson, Trevor Ariza, Paul Westphal, Jordan Farmar, Gail Goodrich, Sidney Wicks and Kiki Vandeweghe are among the dozens of NCAA and NBA basketball stars who played for LA high schools, and late February is the perfect time to catch schools like Crenshaw, Fairfax, Westchester, Taft and Loyola gearing up for City and CIF Southern Section playoffs. Games will be going on all over the city that week – just check the Los Angeles Times for updated schedules.
While the USC Trojans men’s basketball team has a storied basketball history in its own right, with an alumni list that includes NBA Hall of Famer Bill Sharman, NBA standout Gus Williams and legendary coach Tex Winter, it’s that women’s team that’s made more of a national mark in recent decades. Lisa Leslie, Cynthia Cooper-Dyke and Cheryl Miller are among former stars of Trojan teams, which have taken home two NCAA Championship crowns. Even better, the Trojans play in the $147 million Galen Center, which opened in 2006. If you're exploring the campus and the adjacent Exposition Park, check out the spaceship-like Sports Arena and the LA Memorial Coliseum next door. The Sports Arena was the Lakers home for the seven seasons after the team moved from Minneapolis in 1960. The Coliseum hosted the 1932 and 1984 Summer Olympics, and the stadium’s iconic peristyle and Olympic cauldron can easily be viewed from the building’s eastern end.
Though it may have started out its LA life in the Sports Arena and may currently call STAPLES Center home, the Lakers became The Lakers during its 23-year residency at Inglewood’s Forum. Originally known as The Fabulous Forum, the building was home to the team’s first title run in 1972 as well as the five rings won by the “Showtime”-era Lakers led by Magic Johnson during the 1980s. The Forum also hosted the 1983 NBA All-Star Game, best known for Marvin Gaye’s legendary pregame rendition of “The Star-Spangled Banner.” Today, the building hosts Faith Central Bible Church, as well as other events, so you may get a chance to pray at the altar of a one-time basketball temple – literally. Check the Faith Central Bible Church’s website for updated schedules.
Not many places allow you to combine the serenity of a sun-kissed coastline drive with the raucousness of a crowded college basketball arena, but Pepperdine University’s Firestone Fieldhouse lets you do just that. Situated on Pepperdine’s idyllic oceanside campus in Malibu, the Fieldhouse seats about 3,100 people but has housed as many as 4,500 for the Waves’ West Coast Conference games.



