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~~#Ticket One Direction, Trans-Siberian Orchestra, George Strait, Lady Gaga, Luke Bryan, Billy Joel in Tampa, Florida For Sale

Price: $40
Type: Tickets & Traveling, For Sale - Private.

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Boston Celtics Charlotte Bobcats Chicago Bulls Denver Nuggets Golden State Warriors Los Angeles Clippers Los Angeles Lakers Miami Heat Minnesota Timberwolves NBA All Star Celebrity Game NBA All Star Game NBA All Star Rookie Game NBA All Star Saturday Night NBA Draft New Orleans Pelicans Oklahoma City Thunder Sacramento Kings Utah Jazz Events(season 13) Leopards 600Liberty Lions Lipscomb Little Lobos Long Longhorns Longwood Louis Louisiana Louisville Loyola LSU Lumberjacks Madison Maine Manhattan Marist Marquette Marshall Mary Mary's Maryland Marymount Mason Massachusetts Mastodons Matadors Mavericks McNeese MD Mean Memphis Mercer Methodist Mexico Miami Michigan Middle Midshipmen Military Milwaukee Miners Minnesota Minutemen Miss Mississippi Missouri Mizzou Mocs Monarchs Monmouth Monroe Montana Morehead Morgan Morris Mount Mountain Mountaine Mountaineers Murray Musketeers Mustangs N Navy Nebraska Nevada New Niagara Nicholls Nittany Norfolk North Northeastern Northern Northridge Northwestern Notre NY Oakland OH Ohio Oklahoma Old Oral Orange Oregon Orleans Ospreys Salukis Sam Samford San Santa Savannah Scarlet SE Seahawks Seattle Seawolves Seminoles Seton Shockers Shore Siena Sioux SIU Skyhawks Sooners South Southern Spartans Spiders St Stags Stanford State Stephen Stetson Stony Storm Sun Sycamores Syracuse T Tar TCU Tech Temple Tenn Tenn-Martin Tennessee Terrapines Terriers Texas Thunderbirds Thunering Tide Tigers Titans Toledo Toreros Towson Tribe Trojans Troy Tulane Tulsa TX U UAB UC UCF UCLA UCSB UNLV Utah UTEP Utes VA Valley Valparaiso Vandals Vanderbilt Vermont View Vikings Villanova Virginia Volunteers Wagner Wake Warhawks Warriors Wash Washington Wave Waves Weber West Western Wichita Wildcats William Wilmington Winthrop Wisconsin Wofford Wolf Wolfpack Wolverines Wolves Wright Wyoming Xavier Yale Yellow revivals)In early xxxx, a group of six investors (among them attorney Richard Tinkham, John DeVoe, Chuck DeVoe, sports agent Chuck Barnes and Indianapolis Star sports writer Bob Collins) pooled their resources to purchase a franchise in the proposed American Basketball Association. For their first seven years, they played in the Indiana State Fairgrounds Coliseum, now called the Pepsi Coliseum. In xxxx, they moved to the plush new Market Square Arena in downtown Indianapolis, where they stayed for 25 years. Early in the Pacers' second season, former Indiana Hoosiers standout Bob "Slick" Leonard became the team's head coach, replacing Larry Staverman. Leonard quickly turned the Pacers into a juggernaut. His teams were buoyed by the great play of superstars such as Mel Daniels, George McGinnis, Bob Netolicky, Rick Mount and Roger Brown. The Pacers were -- and ended -- as the most successful team in ABA history, winning three ABA Championships in four years. In all, they appeared in the ABA Finals five times in the league's nine-year history: a feat that was never bettered by any other ABA franchise. xxxx--xxxx: Early NBA struggles[edit] The Pacers were one of four ABA teams that joined the NBA in the ABA-NBA merger in xxxx. For the xxxx--77 season the Pacers were joined in the merged league by the New York Nets, Denver Nuggets and San Antonio Spurs. Financially, the Pacers were by far the weakest of the four ABA refugees, as they were on far weaker financial footing than the team acknowledged to be the last ABA team left out of the expansion, the Kentucky Colonels. However, the Colonels were shut out because the Chicago Bulls owned the NBA rights to the Colonels' best player, Artis Gilmore, and would not have allowed the merger to go through unless the Colonels were left out. The Pacers' financial troubles dated back to their waning days in the ABA; they had begun selling off some of their star players in the last ABA season. They were further weakened by the price required to join the NBA. The league charged a $3.2 million entry fee to each former ABA team. Because the NBA would only agree to accept four ABA teams in the ABA-NBA merger, the Pacers and the three other surviving ABA teams also had to compensate the two remaining ABA franchises which were not a part of the merger. The new NBA teams also were barred from sharing in national TV revenues for four years.[3] As a result of the price they paid to join the NBA, the Pacers were in a dire financial situation. It took a $100,000 contribution from a group of local businesses to keep the franchise going through June xxxx. The team announced that unless season-ticket sales reached 8,000 by the end of July xxxx, the club would be sold to someone who might take the franchise elsewhere. WTTV, which was the television flagship for Pacers' games at the time, offered to hold a 16.5 hour telethon to keep the team in Indiana. The telethon began on the night of July 3, and the next day, 10 minutes before the show was set to go off the air, it was announced that team officials had reached the 8,000-ticket goal. In part because of the telethon, the Pacers' average attendance jumped from 7,615 during the xxxx--77 season to 10,982 during the xxxx--78 season.[4] The Pacers finished their inaugural NBA season with a record of 36--46. Billy Knight and Don Buse represented Indiana in the NBA All-Star Game. However, this was one of the few bright spots of the Pacers' first 13 years in the NBA. During this time, they had only three non-losing seasons and only two playoff appearances. A lack of continuity became the norm for most of the next decade, as they traded away Knight and Buse before the xxxx--78 season even started. They acquired Adrian Dantley in exchange for Knight, but Dantley (who was averaging nearly 27 points per game at the time) was traded in December, while the Pacers' second-leading score Year honors.

State: Florida  City: Tampa  Category: Tickets & Traveling
Tickets & Traveling in Florida for sale

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