The Arizona Republic

NCAA awards Final Four to Las Vegas for 1st time

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The Final Four is headed for the first time to Las Vegas, where wagering on the NCAA Tournament has long been a staple of March Madness revelry, after the NCAA awarded the men’s national semifinals and championsh­ip game to Allegiant Stadium for the 2027-28 season. The NCAA also announced Tuesday that Ford Field in Detroit would host the Final Four in 2027, while Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapol­is would get the 2029 event and AT&T Stadium in Dallas would get the 2030 event.

“We are excited to bring the NCAA’s premier championsh­ip to Las Vegas, a city that for a number of years has hosted numerous championsh­ips from several member conference­s,” said Bradley athletic director Chris Reynolds, who chairs the NCAA selection committee. “The feedback from leagues, the fans of their teams and the media covering the events staged there has been overwhelmi­ngly positive, and we are confident we’ll get the same reviews.”

The national championsh­ip this season will be decided at NRG Stadium in Houston, while State Farm Stadium in Phoenix, the Alamodome in San Antonio and Lucas Oil Stadium already had been chosen for the following three Final Fours.

The NCAA long shied away from taking marquee events to Las Vegas because of its reputation as a gambling mecca. But the stance softened over the years, particular­ly as sports wagering became legal in states across the country, and many leagues have made its glitzy arenas the homes of their postseason basketball tournament­s.

The Mountain West will play its championsh­ip game this season at the Thomas & Mack Center, the Pac-12 at TMobile Arena, the West Coast Conference at Orleans Arena and the WAC split between Michelob ULTRA Arena and Orleans Arena.

Las Vegas already was scheduled to host nine other NCAA championsh­ips over the next four years, and the men’s NCAA Tournament will head there for the first time next March when a regional round is played at T-Mobile Arena.

The other Final Four sites chosen Tuesday have a history of hosting the men’s basketball championsh­ip.

Ford Field was the site of the 2009 tournament, when 72,922 fans packed the home of the Detroit Lions to watch North Carolina beat Michigan State. AT&T Stadium will also get its second Final Four after hosting it in 2014, when Connecticu­t beat Kentucky before a crowd of 79,238 at the home of the Dallas Cowboys.

 ?? JOHN LOCHER/AP ?? Fans cheer as the Raiders announce their fourth-round NFL draft pick during a 2017 draft event in Las Vegas.
JOHN LOCHER/AP Fans cheer as the Raiders announce their fourth-round NFL draft pick during a 2017 draft event in Las Vegas.

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