First Horizon Coliseum

{{Short description|Multi-purpose arena in Greensboro, NC}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=April 2025}}

{{Infobox venue

| name = First Horizon Coliseum

| image = First Horizon Coliseum.jpg

| caption = The Coliseum in 2021

| former_names = Greensboro Memorial Coliseum (1959–1980)
Greensboro Coliseum (1980–2024)

| seating_capacity = 22,000{{Cite web |url=https://www.gsocomplex.com/complex-info/about-us |title=About Us |website=Greensboro Complex}}

| image_map = {{infobox mapframe|coordinates={{coord|36.059600|-79.825700|format=dms}}|zoom=3}}

| coordinates = {{coord|36.0596000|-79.825700|format=dms|display=inline,title}}

| city = 1921 W Gate City Blvd, Greensboro, North Carolina

| owner = City of Greensboro

| operator = Oak View Group

| record_attendance = 23,642

| broke ground = January 6, 1959{{Cite news |url=https://journalnow.com/as-greensboro-coliseum-turns-60-here-are-60-tidbits-you-might-not-know-about-it/article_0c67608a-2cfd-522e-9b74-4feea1879df0.html |title=As Greensboro Coliseum turns 60, here are 60 tidbits you might not know about it| first=Dawn |last=DeCwikiel-Kane |date=October 27, 2019 |newspaper=Winston-Salem Journal}}

| opened = October 29, 1959

| renovated =

| expanded = 1972, 1978, 1993{{Cite web |url=https://www.retroseasons.com/stadiums/greensboro-coliseum-complex/ |title=Greensboro Coliseum Complex - Greensboro |website=RetroSeasons.com |date=March 21, 2023}}

| yearsactive = 1959-present

| cost = $4.5 million (equivalent to ${{Inflation|US|4.5|1959|r=1}} million in {{Inflation/year|US}})

| tenants = UNC Greensboro Spartans (2010–present)
Carolina Cobras (NAL) (2018–present)
Carolina Cowboys (2023–present)
Greensboro Gargoyles (2025–present)

}}

First Horizon Coliseum (formerly Greensboro Coliseum) is an arena in Greensboro, North Carolina. Opened in 1959 as the first building of the Greensboro Complex, the 22,000-seat arena is the home arena of the UNC Greensboro Spartans basketball team, and will serve as home arena of the Greensboro Gargoyles of the ECHL.

It has a history in hosting college basketball games, having been a recurring host of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) basketball tournaments, and early-round games in the NCAA tournament. As it was the largest arena in the state for a period, the Coliseum previously hosted a number of neutral site games involving North Carolina's teams; Wake Forest regularly played marquee and ACC games at the Coliseum from 1959 to 1989.

History

The arena was first proposed in 1944 by Greensboro mayor W.H. Sullivan to honor the soldiers who fought in World War I and World War II. The building was approved and venue construction commenced in 1958 and was finalized by September 1959 and opened one month later. Initially named the "Greensboro Memorial Coliseum"{{cite book |last=Sink |first=Alice E. |date=November 27, 2012 |title=Growing Up in the Piedmont Triad: Boomer Memories from Krispy Kreme to Coca-Cola Parties |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2LBxCwAAQBAJ&pg=PT104 |location=Stroud, England |publisher=The History Press |isbn=978-1614238065}} (a title it retained until 1980), the arena welcomed its first event on October 29, 1959. At its inception, the Coliseum had a seating capacity of 7,100, making it one of the largest arenas on the East Coast.{{cite news |url=http://www2.morganton.com/sports/2010/dec/20/column-greensboro-coliseum-home-memories-ar-633536/ |title=The Greensboro Coliseum, home of memories |last=Waters |first=Roy |date=December 20, 2010 |work=The News Herald |location=Morganton, North Carolina |archive-url=https://archive.today/20130129000020/http://www2.morganton.com/sports/2010/dec/20/column-greensboro-coliseum-home-memories-ar-633536/ |archive-date=January 29, 2013}} In 1993 the arena was expanded to reach a capacity of 22,000, where the arena stands today.

In October 2024, the arena announced a ten-year naming rights agreement with First Horizon Bank, under which it was renamed First Horizon Coliseum.{{Cite web |date=October 1, 2024 |title=Greensboro arena now First Horizon Coliseum |url=https://venuesnow.com/greensboro-arena-now-first-horizon-coliseum/ |website=VenuesNow}}

Events

Over the years, the Coliseum has been the site of numerous sporting events, particularly basketball. Additionally, it has hosted concerts for over four decades. During the 1960s and 1970s, the venue attracted rock and R&B artists, with The Monkees being the first major act to perform there. Elvis Presley held a concert on April 14, 1972, and footage from this event was featured in his last film, titled Elvis on Tour. Presley returned to the Coliseum for another concert on April 21, 1977, shortly before his passing on August 16. On April 24, 2010, Christian band Casting Crowns recorded their live album, Until the Whole World Hears... Live, at the Coliseum. The rock band Phish set the attendance record for a concert at the venue on March 1, 2003, with 23,642 fans present.{{Cite web|url=https://greensboro.com/go-phish-legendary-jam-band-will-end-its-tour-in-front-of-a-record-crowd/article_bfe67f97-da9a-570e-af20-d9252eddc709.html|title=Go Phish\ Legendary Jam Band Will End Its Tour in Front of a Record Crowd |first=Jamie |last=Kritzer |date=February 26, 2003 |newspaper=News & Record |location=Greensboro, North Carolina}}

The Coliseum also hosted 102 JAMZ SuperJam from 1997 to 2014, featuring well-known artists from the hip hop scene, including LL Cool J, Soulja Boy, Ludacris, Ja Rule, Piles, Nas, Lil Jon & the East Side Boyz, Travis Porter, and the Ying Yang Twins.

Additionally, the Coliseum was the venue for American Idol auditions for season 5 on October 3, 2005. From July 8 to 10, 2012, it served as the Greensboro audition site for the second season of The X Factor.

class="wikitable collapsible collapsed" style="text-align:center"
colspan="4"|List of concerts and events held at the coliseum
style="width:250px;"| Artist

! style="width:250px;"| Event

! style="width:150px;"| Date

! style="width:250px;"| Opening act(s)

3 Doors Down

|3 Doors Down Tour

|December 17, 2008

|Switchfoot & American Bang

rowspan="9"|AC/DC

|Highway to Hell Tour

|October 3, 1979

|Blackfoot & Mother's Finest

Back in Black Tour

|August 10, 1980

|Nantucket

Fly on the Wall Tour

|November 17, 1985

|Yngwie Malmsteen

Blow Up Your Video World Tour

|August 27, 1988

|White Lion

Razors Edge World Tour

|February 17, 1991

|King's X

Ballbreaker World Tour

|January 12, 1996

|The Poor

Stiff Upper Lip World Tour

|March 29, 2001

|Wide Mouth Mason

Black Ice World Tour

|October 25, 2009

|The Answer

Rock or Bust World Tour

|August 27, 2016

|Tyler Bryant & The Shakedown

rowspan="2"|Acquire the Fire

|rowspan="2"| RESILIENT Tour

|March 20, 2015

|{{n/a}}

March 21, 2015

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="8"|Aerosmith

|Toys in the Attic Tour

|October 10, 1975

|REO Speedwagon & Ted Nugent

Aerosmith Express Tour

|May 5, 1978

| style="text-align:center;"|Mahogany Rush

Right in the Nuts Tour

|December 15, 1979

|{{n/a}}

Permanent Vacation Tour

|March 23, 1988

|white lion

rowspan="2"|Nine Lives Tour

|January 31, 1998

|Kenny Wayne Shepherd

April 15, 1999

|The Afghan Whigs

Just Push Play Tour

|November 25, 2001

|Fuel

Rockin' the Joint Tour

|January 21, 2006

|Lenny Kravitz

Aerosmith & KISS

|AeroKiss Tour

|November 22, 2003

|Saliva

rowspan="4"|Alabama

|Feels So Right Tour

|November 21, 1981

|Janie Fricke

The Closer You Get... Tour

|February 12, 1983

|{{n/a}}

40-Hour Week Tour

|February 8, 1985

|Bill Medley

Roll On 2 North American Tour

|November 11, 2023

|Grits & Glamour, Lorrie Morgan, & Pam Tillis

rowspan=2|Alan Jackson

|Drive Tour

|November 8, 2002

|{{n/a}}

Last Call: One More For the Road Tour

|September 10, 2022

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="4"|Alice Cooper

|Killer Tour

|May 13, 1972

|Todd Rundgren & Free

Billion Dollar Babies Holiday Tour

|December 9, 1973

|ZZ Top

School's Out For Summer Tour

|June 30, 1978

|Sweet

Raise Your Fist and Yell Tour

|January 29, 1988

|Motörhead

rowspan="2"|Alicia Keys

|As I Am Tour

|May 30, 2008

|Jordin Sparks

Set the World on Fire Tour

|March 30, 2013

|Miguel

rowspan="2"|The Allman Brothers Band

|Brothers and Sisters Tour

|May 24, 1974

|{{n/a}}

Reach for the Sky Tour

|August 16, 1980

|Nantucket

rowspan="4"|American Idol LIVE!

|American Idols LIVE! Tour 2005

|July 17, 2005

|rowspan="4" {{n/a}}

American Idols LIVE! Tour 2006

|July 30, 2006

American Idols LIVE! Tour 2007

|September 11, 2007

American Idols LIVE! Tour 2009

|August 2, 2009

Amy Grant

|A Christmas to Remember Tour

|December 4, 1999

|Michael W. Smith, Point of Grace
& The Katinas

Ashford & Simpson

|1982 Tour

|August 20, 1982

|{{n/a}}

Avenged Sevenfold & Buckcherry

|Avenged Sevenfold Tour

|November 29, 2008

|Shinedown & Saving Abel

rowspan="3"|The Avett Brothers

|The Carpenter Tour

|December 31, 2012

|Amos Lee

{{n/a}}

|December 31, 2019

|Drew Holcomb and the Neighbors

An Evening with the Avett Brothers

|March 19, 2022

|David Childers

Bachman–Turner Overdrive

|Four Wheel Drive Tour

|July 12, 1975

|Bob Seger

rowspan="2"|Backstreet Boys

|Into the Millennium Tour

|February 20, 2000

|{{n/a}}

Black & Blue Tour

|June 17, 2001

|Shaggy & Krystal Harris

rowspan="2"|Bad Company

|Straight Shooter Tour

|May 14, 1975

|{{n/a}}

Run with the Pack Tour

|April 3, 1976

|Kansas

The Band CAMINO

|The Tour Camino

|September 18, 2021

|{{n/a}}

The Bar-Kays

|Nightcruising Tour

|March 12, 1982

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="2"|Barry Manilow

|If I Should Love Again Tour

|October 31, 1981

|{{n/a}}

Singin' with the Big Bands Tour

|April 27, 1994

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="8"|The Beach Boys

|The Beach Boys' Christmas Album Tour

|January 1, 1965

|{{n/a}}

Summer Days (And Summer Nights!!) Tour

|July 13, 1965

|The Roemans

Wild Honey Tour

|April 23, 1968

|Buffalo Springfield & Strawberry Alarm Clock

Friends Tour

|October 20, 1968

|1910 Fruitgum Company & The Pickle Brothers

1975 Tour

|April 5, 1975

| style="text-align:center;"|Billy Joel

L.A. (Light Album) Tour

|April 29, 1979

|Ian Matthews

1982 Tour

|June 2, 1982

|Alliance

Still Cruisin' Tour

|July 30, 1989

|Chicago

Bee Gees

|Spirits Having Flown Tour

|October 2, 1979

|Sweet Inspirations

Beyoncé, Alicia Keys & Missy Elliott

|Verizon Ladies First Tour

|March 21, 2004

|Tamia

Beyoncé

|I Am... World Tour

|June 27, 2009

|RichGirl

Bill Clinton

|Embracing Our Common Humanity{{cite web |url=http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2010/nov/30/bill-clinton-expects-leaks-to-cause-lost-lives/ |title=Bill Clinton expects leaks to cause lost lives |author=Baker, Mike |date=November 30, 2011 |work=The San Diego Union-Tribune |archive-url=https://archive.today/20130202082506/http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2010/nov/30/bill-clinton-expects-leaks-to-cause-lost-lives/ |archive-date=February 2, 2013 |access-date=June 27, 2011 |url-status=dead }}

November 30, 2010

|{{n/a}}

Billy Currington

|Summer Forever Tour

|February 26, 2016

|Kelsea Ballerini

Billy Ray Cyrus

|Shot Full of Love Tour

|September 19, 1999

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="2"|Billy Joel

|Turnstiles Tour

|March 23, 1977

|{{n/a}}

52nd Street Tour

|December 3, 1978

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="2"|Billy Strings

|Winter Tour 2022

|February 11, 2022

|{{n/a}}

Fall Tour 2023

|December 6, 2023

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="2"|Billy Squier

|Emotions in Motion Tour

|January 21, 1983

|Def Leppard

Signs of Life Tour

|November 1, 1984

|Ratt

rowspan="4"|Black Sabbath

|Master of Reality Tour

|April 1, 1972

|{{n/a}}

Sabbath Bloody Sabbath Tour

|February 24, 1974

|Bedlam

Sabotage Tour

|December 7, 1975

|Savoy Brown & Grey Ghost

Mob Rules Tour

|February 16, 1982

|Doc Holliday

Blackfoot

|Marauder Tour

|September 26, 1981

|Outlaws

rowspan=2|Blake Shelton

|Back to the Honkey Tonk Tour

|February 23, 2023

|Carly Pearce & Jackson Dean

Friends & Heroes Tour

|March 1, 2025

|Craig Morgan, Deanna Carter,
& Trace Adkins

Blue Öyster Cult

|Agents of Fortune Tour

|December 28, 1976

|Grinderswitch

Bob Dylan

|1978 World Tour

|December 7, 1978

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="4"|Bob Seger & The Silver Bullet Band

|Night Moves Tour

|April 1, 1977

|{{n/a}}

Against the Wind Tour

|March 23, 1980

|{{n/a}}

The Distance Tour

|March 11, 1983

|John Hall Band

2011 Tour

|April 23, 2011

|Frankie Ballard

rowspan="2"|Bon Jovi

|Slippery When Wet Tour

|May 9, 1987

|Cinderella

Lost Highway Tour

|March 16, 2008

|Daughtry

Boston

|Boston Tour

|May 14, 1977

|Starcastle

Brad Paisley

|Bonfires & Amplifiers Tour

|November 9, 2007

|Rodney Adkins & Taylor Swift

Brandon Lake

|Tear Off the Roof Tour

|May 4, 2024

|DOE

rowspan="2"|Brantley Gilbert

|Let It Ride Tour

|April 10, 2014

|Thomas Rhett & Eric Paslay

The Devil Don't Sleep Tour

|February 24, 2017

|Luke Combs, Tucker Beathard,
& Brian Davis

Bread

|Lost Without Your Love Tour

|August 26, 1977

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="2"|Britney Spears

|(You Drive Me) Crazy Tour

|March 29, 2000

|LFO & Bosson

The Circus Starring Britney Spears

|September 5, 2009

|Jordin Sparks & Kristinia DeBarge

Brooks & Dunn

|Reboot 2023 Tour

|June 17, 2023

|Scotty McCreery & Megan Moroney

Bruce Springsteen

|Devils & Dust Tour

|July 26, 2005

|rowspan=9 {{n/a}}

rowspan="8"|Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band

|The River Tour

|February 28, 1981

rowspan="2"|Born in the U.S.A. Tour

|January 18, 1985

January 19, 1985
The Rising Tour

|November 16, 2002

Magic Tour

|April 28, 2008

Working on a Dream Tour

|May 2, 2009

Wrecking Ball World Tour

|March 19, 2012

2023 Tour

|March 25, 2023

rowspan="2"|Bryan Adams

|Reckless Tour

|September 10, 1985

|{{n/a}}

Into the Fire Tour

|May 29, 1987

|{{n/a}}

Budweiser Superfest

| —

|August 21, 2010

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="4"|Carrie Underwood

|Play On Tour

|October 29, 2010

|Billy Currington & Sons of Sylvia

Blown Away Tour

|November 4, 2012

|Hunter Hayes

Storyteller Tour: Stories in the Round

|February 3, 2016

|The Swon Brothers & Easton Corbin

Cry Pretty Tour 360

|May 1, 2019

|Maddie & Tae & Runaway June

rowspan="6"|Casting Crowns

|The Altar and the Door Tour

|November 17, 2007

|Leeland & John Waller

Peace on Earth Tour

|December 12, 2008

|Natalie Grant & Denver and the Mile High Orchestra

Until the Whole World Hears Tour

|April 24, 2010

|Tenth Avenue North & CALEB

Come to the Well Tour

|October 22, 2011

|Sanctus Real, The Afters
& Lindsay McCaul

Story Tour

|November 24, 2012

|Natalie Grant & Jeremy Camp

THRIVE Tour

|November 8, 2014

|Mandisa & Sidewalk Prophets

Chance the Rapper

|Be Encouraged Tour

|June 7, 2017

|King Louie & DJ Oreo

Charlie Wilson

|In It to Win It Tour

|March 3, 2017

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="2"|Cheap Trick

|In Color Tour

|December 18, 1977

|AC/DC

One on One Tour

|August 22, 1982

|{{n/a}}

The Cheetah Girls

|One World Tour

|November 22, 2008

|Clique Girlz

Cher

|Living Proof: The Farewell Tour

|September 7, 2002

|Cyndi Lauper

rowspan="2"|The Chicks

|Top of the World Tour

|May 17, 2003

|Joan Osborne

The Chicks World Tour 2023

|August 8, 2023

|Wild Rivers

Chris Brown & Bow Wow

|UCP Exclusive Tour

|December 23, 2007

|Sean Kingston, Soulja Boy,
Shop Boyz, Lil Mama

Chris Brown

|Between The Sheets Tour

|March 18, 2015

|Tyga

rowspan=2|Chris Stapleton

|rowspan=2|Chris Stapleton's All-American Road Show Tour

|October 19, 2019

|Brothers Osborne & Kendell Marvel

June 18, 2025

|Maggie Rose

Chris Tomlin & Hillsong United

|Tomlin United Tour

|June 8, 2022

|Pat Barrett & Benjamin Hastings

rowspan="24"|Cirque du Soleil

|rowspan="2"|Delirium

|May 6, 2006

|rowspan="2" {{n/a}}

May 7, 2006
rowspan="5"|Saltimbanco

|September 19, 2007

|rowspan="5" {{n/a}}

September 20, 2007
September 21, 2007
September 22, 2007
September 23, 2007
rowspan="5"|Alegría

|April 13, 2011

|rowspan="5" {{n/a}}

April 14, 2011
April 15, 2011
April 16, 2011
April 17, 2011
rowspan="5"|Quidam

|April 17, 2013

|{{n/a}}

April 18, 2013

|{{n/a}}

April 19, 2013

|{{n/a}}

April 20, 2013

|{{n/a}}

April 21, 2013

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="2"|Michael Jackson: The Immortal

|April 11, 2014

|rowspan="2" {{n/a}}

April 12, 2014
rowspan="5"|Ovo

|April 20, 2016

|{{n/a}}

April 21, 2016

|{{n/a}}

April 22, 2016

|{{n/a}}

April 23, 2016

|{{n/a}}

April 24, 2016

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="2"|Commodores

|Natural High Tour

|September 16, 1978

|{{n/a}}

In the Pocket Tour

|September 19, 1981

|{{n/a}}

Conway Twitty

|Southern Comfort Tour

|May 1, 1982

|Ronnie McDowell

rowspan="4"|Country Shindig

|rowspan="4"| —

|January 25, 1970[http://www.lookatstubs.com/cgi-bin/tickets_searchdb.pl?venue&Greensboro Coliseum]

|{{n/a}}

July 4, 1975

|{{n/a}}

January 25, 1976

|{{n/a}}

January 15, 1977

|{{n/a}}

Creed

|Human Clay Tour

|May 3, 2000

|Sevendust & Guano Apes

rowspan="2"|Crosby, Stills & Nash

|CSN Tour

|November 12, 1977

|{{n/a}}

Daylight Again Tour

|October 21, 1982

|{{n/a}}

Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young

|CSNY Tour of America

|April 16, 2002

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="2"|The Cult

|Sonic Temple Tour

|February 20, 1990

|Bonham

Ceremony Tour

|February 12, 1992

|Lenny kravitz

Dan Fogelberg

|The Innocent Age Tour

|January 31, 1982

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="3"|Daughtry

|Leave This Town Tour

|November 12, 2009

|Theory of a Deadman & Cavo

Break the Spell Tour

|April 7, 2012

|SafetySuit & Mike Sanchez

Baptized World Tour

|November 7, 2014

|Drew Bordeaux

rowspan="3"|The Dave Clark Five

|rowspan="2"|1965 North American Tour

|July 22, 1965

|rowspan="2" {{n/a}}

December 7, 1965
1966 North American Tour

|July 20, 1966

|{{n/a}}

Dave Matthews Band

|Before These Crowded Streets Tour

|November 28, 1998

|Béla Fleck and the Flecktones

David Bowie

|Diamond Dogs Tour

|July 6, 1974

|{{n/a}}

David Cassidy

|1972 Tour

|April 29, 1972

|{{n/a}}

David Lee Roth

|Skyscraper Tour

|January 28, 1989

|Poison & Tesla

DC Talk

|Supernatural Tour

|March 11, 1999

|The W's & Jennifer Knapp

The Dead

|2009 Tour

|April 12, 2009

|{{n/a}}

Dead & Company

|2015 Tour

|November 14, 2015

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="2"|Deep Purple

|Stormbringer Tour

|December 13, 1974

|Electric Light Orchestra & Elf

Come Taste the Band Tour

|January 30, 1976

Ted Nugent & Nazareth
rowspan="2"|Def Leppard

|Hysteria World Tour

|December 19, 1987

|Tesla

Songs from the Sparkle Lounge Tour

|March 27, 2008

|Styx & REO Speedwagon

Demi Lovato

|Demi Lovato: Live in Concert

|July 29, 2009

|David Archuleta, Jordan Pruitt & KSM

Dio

|Dream Evil Tour

|January 21, 1988

|Megadeth & Savatage

Dire Straits

|Communiqué Tour

|September 18, 1979

|{{n/a}}

Dolly Parton

|Pure and Simple Tour

|June 3, 2016

|{{n/a}}

Donny & Marie Osmond

|Donny & Marie Christmas Tour

|December 9, 2013

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="5"|The Doobie Brothers

|1974 Tour

|April 27, 1974

|rowspan="5" {{n/a}}

1975 Tour

|October 26, 1975

1978 Tour

|October 7, 1978

Minute by Minute Tour

|September 22, 1979

One Step Closer Tour

|October 31, 1980

Dr. Hook

|Pleasure & Pain Tour

|January 30, 1979

|Sha Na Na

Drake

|Light, Dreams & Nightmares Tour

|October 9, 2010

|Rick Ross & J. Cole

Drake & Future

|Summer Sixteen Tour

|August 23, 2016

|Roy Wood$ & Dvsn

Duran Duran

|Sing Blue Silver Tour

|March 30, 1984

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="9"|Eagles

|One of These Nights Tour

|August 1, 1975

|Seals and Crofts

Hotel California Tour

|June 27, 1977

|{{n/a}}

The Long Run Tour

|January 29, 1980

|{{n/a}}

Hell Freezes Over Reunion Tour

|June 17, 1996

|{{n/a}}

Farewell 1 Tour

|May 23, 2003

|{{n/a}}

Long Road Out of Eden Tour

|January 17, 2009

|{{n/a}}

History of the Eagles Tour

|November 16, 2013

|JD & The Straight Shot

An Evening with the Eagles

|October 17, 2017

|{{n/a}}

Hotel California Tour

|April 4, 2023

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="3"|Earth, Wind & Fire

|All 'n All Tour

|January 6, 1978

|{{n/a}}

I Am Tour

|September 21, 1979

|{{n/a}}

Raise! Tour

|October 27, 1981

|{{n/a}}

Edgar Winter Group

|They Only Come Out at Night Tour

|August 10, 1973

|Foghat

rowspan="4"|Electric Light Orchestra

|On the Third Day Tour

|October 27, 1973

|REO Speedwagon & Foghat

Face the Music Tour

|March 27, 1976

|Journey

Out of the Blue Tour

|July 11, 1978

|{{n/a}}

Time Tour

|October 17, 1981

|Hall & Oates

rowspan="3"|Elton John

|1974 North American Tour

|November 8, 1974

|Kiki Dee

Louder Than Concorde Tour

|July 13, 1976

|{{n/a}}

Farewell Yellow Brick Road

|April 19, 2022

|{{n/a}}

Elton John & Billy Joel

|Face to Face 2001

|April 28, 2001

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="5"|Elvis Presley

|1972 North American Tour

|April 14, 1972

|{{n/a}}

1974 North American Tour

|March 13, 1974

|{{n/a}}

1975 North American Tour

|July 21, 1975

|{{n/a}}

1976 North American Tour

|June 30, 1976

|{{n/a}}

1977 North American Tour

|April 21, 1977

|{{n/a}}

Emerson, Lake & Palmer

|Works Volume 1 Tour

|June 29, 1977

|{{n/a}}

Eminem

|Anger Management Tour

|December 13, 2000

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="4"|Eric Church

|Blood, Sweat & Beers Tour

|February 18, 2012

|Brantley Gilbert & Sonia Leigh

The Outsiders Tour

|September 27, 2014

|Dwight Yoakam & Brothers Osborne

Holdin' My Own Tour

|May 20, 2017

|{{n/a}}

Gather Again Tour

|December 18, 2021

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="4"|Eric Clapton

|461 Ocean Boulevard Tour

|August 2, 1974

|Ross

There's One in Every Crowd Tour

|August 29, 1975

|Poco

Another Ticket Tour

|May 24, 1981

|rowspan="2" {{n/a}}

Journeyman Tour

|August 2, 1990

Feid

|Ferxxocalipsis World Tour

|June 21, 2024

|{{n/a}}

Five Finger Death Punch

|North American Tour 2019

|November 22, 2019

|Three Days Grace, Bad Wolves, & Fire from the Gods

rowspan="4"|Fleetwood Mac

|Rumours Tour

|March 19, 1977

|Firefall

Mirage Tour

|September 1, 1982

|rowspan="3" {{n/a}}

Say You Will Tour

|September 10, 2003

On with the Show

|March 17, 2015

rowspan="2"|Florida Georgia Line

|Here's to the Good Times Tour

|November 23, 2013

|Colt Ford & Tyler Farr

Smooth Tour

|March 23, 2017

|Dustin Lynch, Chris Lane & Seth Ennis

rowspan="5"|Foghat

|rowspan="2"|Fool for the City Tour

|May 30, 1975

|Blue Öyster Cult & Thee Image

November 7, 1975

|{{n/a}}

Night Shift Tour

|April 10, 1976

|Montrose

Stone Blue Tour

|May 19, 1978

|rowspan="2" {{n/a}}

Tight Shoes Tour

|October 3, 1980

Foo Fighters

|Concrete and Gold Tour

|October 15, 2017

|The Struts

rowspan="2"|Foreigner

|Head Games Tour

|October 19, 1979

|{{n/a}}

4 Tour

|March 28, 1982

|Bob Welch

For King and Country

|A Drummer Boy Christmas

|December 11, 2022

| {{n/a}}

Fresh Music Festival

| —

|May 27, 2012

|{{n/a}}

Further Festival

| —

|September 21, 2000

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="3"|Gaither Homecoming

|2001 Tour

|April 20, 2001

|rowspan="3" {{n/a}}

2008 Tour

|July 19, 2008

2009 Tour

|April 25, 2009

rowspan="2"|The Gap Band

|The Gap Band Tour

|August 4, 1979

|Mass Production, McFadden & Whitehead
Anita Ward & Five Special

Gap Band IV Tour

|September 24, 1982

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="5"|Garth Brooks

|rowspan="5"|The Garth Brooks World Tour with Trisha Yearwood

|November 19, 2014

|rowspan="5"|Trisha Yearwood

November 20, 2014
November 21, 2014
November 22, 2014
November 23, 2014
rowspan="3"|George Strait

|Honkytonkville Tour

|February 22, 2004

|Dierks Bentley & Kellie Coffey

It Just Comes Natural Tour

|January 20, 2007

|Ronnie Milsap & Taylor Swift

The Cowboy Rides Away Tour

|March 23, 2013

|Martina McBride

George Strait & Reba McEntire

|Twang Tour

|January 23, 2010

|Lee Ann Womack

rowspan="2"|Genesis

|Mama Tour

|December 11, 1983

|rowspan="2" {{n/a}}

Invisible Touch Tour

|February 23, 1987

Gloria Estefan

|Live & Re-Wrapped Tour

|September 7, 2004

|{{n/a}}

Gloria Trevi & Alejandra Guzmán

|Versus World Tour

|October 1, 2017

|{{n/a}}

Golden Earring

|Moontan Tour

|June 7, 1974

|{{n/a}}

Gordon Lightfoot

|Salute Tour

|March 1, 1984

|{{n/a}}

Grand Funk Railroad

|Shinin' On Tour

|April 6, 1974

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="8"|Grateful Dead

|Go to Heaven Tour

|May 1, 1980

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="2"|1981 Tour

|April 30, 1981

|rowspan="2" {{n/a}}

April 31, 1981
1983 Tour

|October 9, 1983

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="2"|Built to Last Tour

|March 30, 1989

|rowspan="2" {{n/a}}

March 31, 1989
rowspan="2"|1991 Tour

|March 31, 1991

|rowspan="2" {{n/a}}

April 1, 1991
rowspan="4"|Greensboro Blues Festival

|rowspan="4"| —

|March 15, 2008

|{{n/a}}

February 20, 2009

|{{n/a}}

April 2, 2010

|{{n/a}}

February 13, 2011

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="2"|Guns N' Roses

|Use Your Illusion Tour

|June 25, 1991

|Skid Row

Chinese Democracy Tour

|November 2, 2006

|Papa Roach & Sebastian Bach

rowspan="3"|Hank Williams Jr.

|Strong Stuff Tour

|April 15, 1983

|{{n/a}}

Major Moves Tour

|May 11, 1984

|{{n/a}}

Rowdy Frynds Tour

|May 9, 2008

|Lynyrd Skynyrd

rowspan="2"|Hawk Nelson

|rowspan="2"|Revolve Tour

|January 23, 2009

|rowspan="2"|Natalie Grant & Krystal Meyers

January 24, 2009
rowspan="3"|Heart

|Dog & Butterfly Tour

|February 3, 1979

|Firefall

Bebe le Strange Tour

|May 14, 1980

|rowspan="2" {{n/a}}

Private Audition Tour

|November 5, 1982

High School Musical

|High School Musical: The Concert

|December 27, 2006

|Jordan Pruitt

rowspan="2"|Hillsong United

|Aftermath Tour

|August 19, 2011

|{{n/a}}

Zion Tour

|November 18, 2013

|{{n/a}}

Huey Lewis and the News

|Fore! Tour

|February 15, 1987

|Robert Cray Band

rowspan="2"|Humble Pie

|Smokin' Tour

|July 10, 1972

|Eagles

Eat It Tour

|July 7, 1973

|{{n/a}}

In This Moment & Ice Nine Kills

|Kiss of Death Tour

|November 21, 2023

|Avatar & New Years Day

rowspan="3"|Iron Maiden

|World Slavery Tour

|February 9, 1985

| Twisted Sister

Somewhere on Tour

|April 5, 1987

|Waysted

Legacy of the Beast World Tour

|October 25, 2022

|Within Temptation

J. Cole & 21 Savage

|The Off-Season Tour

|September 28, 2022

|Druski & Morray

rowspan="2"|The Jackson 5

|The Jackson 5 First National Tour

|December 29, 1970

|{{n/a}}

The Jackson 5 World Tour

|July 8, 1973

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="2"|Jackson Browne

|Lawyers in Love Tour

|August 6, 1983

|{{n/a}}

The Naked Ride Home Tour

|May 21, 2002

|{{n/a}}

The Jacksons

|Triumph Tour

|July 24, 1981

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="2"|Jamie Foxx

|Unpredictable Tour

|March 17, 2007

|Fantasia Barrino

Blame It Tour

|July 19, 2009

|Collie Buddz

rowspan="2"|James Taylor

|Before This World Tour

|July 31, 2015

|{{n/a}}

Fall 2021 Tour

|November 19, 2021

|Jackson Browne

rowspan="2"|Janet Jackson

|Rhythm Nation 1814 World Tour

|August 14, 1990

|Chuckii Booker

All for You Tour

|September 9, 2001

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="4"|Jason Aldean

|Wide Open Tour

|May 29, 2009

|Colt Ford

My Kinda Party Tour

|February 4, 2011

|Eric Church & The JaneDear Girls

Night Train Tour

|May 18, 2013

|Jake Owen & Thomas Rhett

Burn It Down Tour

|February 13, 2015

|Tyler Farr & Cole Swindell

rowspan="2"|Jay Z

|BP3 Tour

|February 28, 2010

|Jeezy & Trey Songz

Magna Carter World Tour

|January 5, 2014

|{{n/a}}

Jay Z & R. Kelly

|Best of Both Worlds Tour

|October 9, 2004

|{{n/a}}

Jay Z & Mary J. Blige

|Heart of the City Tour

|April 5, 2008

|The-Dream

Jay Z & Kanye West

|Watch the Throne Tour

|October 30, 2011

|{{n/a}}

Jelly Roll

|Backroad Baptism Tour

|October 6, 2023

|Yelawolf, Struggle Jennings, & Josh Adam Meyers

rowspan="7"|Jerry Lee Lewis

|1969 Tour

|June 28, 1969

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="2"|1971 Tour

|May 22, 1971

|{{n/a}}

November 27, 1971

|{{n/a}}

1973 Tour

|January 28, 1973

|{{n/a}}

1975 Tour

|March 9, 1975

|{{n/a}}

1977 Tour

|January 15, 1977

|{{n/a}}

1981 Tour

|March 6, 1981

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="4"|Jethro Tull

|Aqualung Tour

|November 8, 1971

|{{n/a}}

A Passion Play Tour

|May 19, 1973

|{{n/a}}

Minstrel in the Gallery Tour

|August 9, 1975

|{{n/a}}

Songs from the Wood Tour

|November 23, 1977

|{{n/a}}

The Jimi Hendrix Experience

| —

|July 12, 1967

|The Monkees

rowspan="2" |Jimmy Buffett

|Tuesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays Tour

|February 17, 2001

|{{n/a}}

Far Side of the World Tour

|April 20, 2002

|{{n/a}}

Joan Jett and the Blackhearts

|Album Tour

|November 11, 1983

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="4"|John Denver

|Back Home Again Tour

|October 11, 1974

|{{n/a}}

I Want to Live Tour

|March 26, 1978

|{{n/a}}

Autograph Tour

|May 16, 1980

|{{n/a}}

Seasons of the Heart Tour

|May 24, 1982

|{{n/a}}

John Mayer

|Battle Studies World Tour

|March 15, 2010

|Michael Franti & Spearhead

Johnny Winter

|Still Alive and Well Tour

|January 7, 1974

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="5"|Journey

|Raised on Radio Tour

|November 13, 1986

|Glass Tiger

Revelation Tour

|September 18, 2009

|Cheap Trick & Night Ranger

rowspan="2"|Eclipse Tour

|October 3, 2012

|Pat Benatar & Loverboy

June 12, 2017

|Asia

Freedom Tour

|February 11, 2023

|Toto

rowspan="2"|Judas Priest

|World Vengeance Tour

|January 16, 1983

|{{n/a}}

Mercenaries of Metal Tour

|September 8, 1988

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="4"|Justin Bieber

|My World Tour

|December 15, 2010

|Sean Kingston & Mindless Behavior

Believe Tour

|January 19, 2013

|Carly Rae Jepsen & Cody Simpson

Purpose World Tour

|July 6, 2016

|Post Malone & Moxie Raia

Justice World Tour

|April 5, 2022

|Jaden, Eddie Benjamin,< ¿Téo?

Justin Moore

|Off the Beaten Path Tour

|January 23, 2014

|Randy Houser & Josh Thompson

Kamala Harris

| –

| September 12, 2024

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="4"|Kansas

|Leftoverture Tour

|February 17, 1977

|Styx

Point of Know Return Tour

|November 6, 1977

|Crawler

2 For the Show Tour

|July 30, 1978

|Walter Egan

Monolith Tour

|October 27, 1979

|Sniff 'n' the Tears

rowspan="7"|Kenny Chesney

|rowspan="2"|Greatest Hits Tour

|November 17, 2000

|{{n/a}}

September 14, 2001

|Lee Ann Womack

Margarita's & Senorita's Tour

|February 15, 2003

|Montgomery Gentry & Kellie Coffey

Guitars, Tiki-Bars & A Whole Lotta Love Tour

|April 24, 2004

|Keith Urban

Flip-Flop Summer Tour

|April 19, 2007

|Pat Green & Sugarland

The Big Revival Tour

|April 16, 2015

|Jake Owen & Chase Rice

I Go Back Tour

|April 28, 2023

|Kelsea Ballerini

rowspan="3"|Kenny Rogers

|Love Will Turn You Around Tour

|March 27, 1982

|Larry Gatlin & The Gatlin Brothers Band

We've Got Tonight Tour

|March 20, 1983

|Crystal Gayle

The Heart of the Matter Tour

|March 9, 1985

|Dottie West & Sawyer Brown

rowspan="2"|Kevin Hart

|What Now? Tour

|April 21, 2015

|{{n/a}}

Reality Check Tour

|May 17, 2023

|{{n/a}}

Keyshia Cole

|The Love Hard Tour

|February 23, 2024

|Trey Songz, K. Michelle, & Jaheim

rowspan="2"|Kid Rock

|Born Free Part 1 Tour

|February 22, 2011

|Jamey Johnson & Ty Stone

Rebel Soul Tour

|February 26, 2013

|Buckcherry & Hellbound Glory

rowspan="10"|KISS

|Alive! Tour

|September 12, 1975

|Slade

Destroyer Tour

|August 27, 1976

|Ted Nugent, Bob Seger
& Cheap Trick

Alive II Tour

|December 31, 1977

|Piper

Dynasty Tour

|July 3, 1979

|Nantucket

Asylum Tour

|December 29, 1985

|Black 'n Blue

Crazy Nights Tour

|February 5, 1988

|Ted Nugent

Hot in the Shade Tour

|July 27, 1990

|Slaughter

Alive/Worldwide Tour

|September 28, 1996

|The Verve Pipe

Kiss Farewell Tour

|April 22, 2000

|Ted Nugent & Skid Row

End of the Road World Tour

|February 8, 2020

|David Lee Roth

Koe Wetzel

|Road to Hell Paso Tour

|September 15, 2023

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="3"|KoЯn

|Rock Is Dead Tour

|March 29, 1999

|Rob Zombie & Videodrone

Sick and Twisted Tour

|April 15, 2000

|Staind & Mindless Self Indulgence

Requiem Tour

|March 11, 2022

|Chevelle & Code Orange

Lauren Daigle

|The Kaleidoscope Tour

|December 7, 2023

|Victory Byrd

rowspan="2"|Led Zeppelin

|North American Tour 1975

|January 29, 1975

|{{n/a}}

North American Tour 1977

|May 31, 1977

|{{n/a}}

Lee Brice & Justin Moore

|Made in America Tour

|February 4, 2017

|William Michael Morgan

Lil Baby

|The Back Outside Tour

|November 12, 2022

|Gunna, Mooski, & 42 Dugg

rowspan="2"|Lil Wayne

|I Am Music Tour

|December 29, 2008

|Keyshia Cole & T-Pain

I Am Music II Tour

|April 8, 2011

|Nicki Minaj, Rick Ross, Porcelain Black, Travis Barker, Mix Master Mike, Cory Gunz, & Birdman

Linkin Park

|Meteora Tour

|March 2, 2004

|P.O.D., Hoobastank & Story of the Year

Little Big Town

|Pain Killer Tour

|October 15, 2015

|Drake White & The Big Fire

Live

|Songs from Black Mountain Tour

|October 14, 2007

|{{n/a}}

Loggins and Messina

|So Fine Tour

|July 2, 1975

|{{n/a}}

The Lox

|We Are the Streets Tour

|March 16, 2000

|DMX, Juvenile,
Lil Wayne & Eve

Luis Miguel

|Luis Miguel Tour 2023–24

|June 11, 2024

|{{n/a}}

Luke Bryan

|That's My Kind of Night Tour

|February 17, 2014

|Lee Brice & Kelleigh Bannen

rowspan="3"|Lynyrd Skynyrd

|Nuthin' Fancy Tour

|June 28, 1975

|rowspan="2" {{n/a}}

Street Survivors Tour

|May 13, 1977

The Last of the Street Survivors Farewell Tour

|November 13, 2021

|Telsa

Lynyrd Skynyrd & ZZ Top

|Sharp Dressed Simple Man Tour

|March 29, 2024

|Black Stone Cherry

Maluma

|Papi Juancho Tour

|October 3, 2022

|{{n/a}}

Marco Antonio Solís

|Yla Historia Continúa Tour

|September 3, 2017

|Jesse and Joy

Martina McBride

|Shine All Night Tour

|April 30, 2010

|Blake Shelton & The Lost Trailers

Mary J. Blige

|Good Morning Gorgeous Tour

|September 17, 2022

|Ella Mai & Queen Naija

Matchbox Twenty

|Mad Season Tour

|September 20, 2000

|The Jayhawks

Maxwell

|The Night Tour

|March 20, 2022

|Anthony Hamilton

MercyMe

|Always Only Jesus Tour

|April 27, 2024

|Newsboys

rowspan="3"|Metallica

|Damaged Justice Tour

|February 19, 1989

|Queensrÿche

Wherever We May Roam Tour

|March 26, 1992

|{{n/a}}

Poor Touring Me Tour

|April 12, 1997

|Corrosion of Conformity

rowspan="2"|Miley Cyrus

|Best of Both Worlds Tour

|November 25, 2007

|Jonas Brothers

Wonder World Tour

|November 22, 2009

Metro Station
rowspan=2|Miranda Lambert

|On Fire Tour

|February 19, 2012

|Chris Young & Jerrod Niemann

Roadside Bars & Pink Guitars Tour

|November 23, 2019

|Maren Morris & Ashley McBryde

The Monkees

|North American Tour 1967

|July 12, 1967

|The Jimi Hendrix Experience

rowspan="2"|The Moody Blues

|Octave Tour

|November 15, 1978

|Jimmie Spheeris

1994 Tour

|March 17, 1994

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="5"|Mötley Crüe

|Welcome to the Theatre of Pain Tour

|December 13, 1985

|{{n/a}}

Girls, Girls, Girls Tour

|November 15, 1987

|Guns N' Roses

Mötley Crüe vs. The Earth Tour{{cite news |title=Concert guard suing Motley Crue duo|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=5iEfAAAAIBAJ&dq=greensboro%20coliseum&pg=5243%2C6086656|newspaper=The Tuscaloosa News|location=Tuscaloosa, Alabama|date=October 31, 1998 |page=8B|access-date=June 27, 2011}}

|October 28, 1997

|{{n/a}}

Red, White & Crüe Tour

|April 21, 2005

|{{n/a}}

The Final Tour

|October 22, 2014

|Alice Cooper

rowspan="2"|Mountain

|rowspan="2"|Avalanche Tour

|June 21, 1974

|{{n/a}}

September 14, 1974

|Wet Willie

NC A&T

|Aggie Homecoming Concert 2023
Summer Walker, Lil Durk, Flo Milli, Coco Jones

|November 4, 2023

|{{n/a}}

Needtobreathe

|The Caves World Tour

|November 17, 2023

|Judah & the Lion

rowspan="3"|Neil Diamond

|Beautiful Noise Tour

|May 3, 1977

|{{n/a}}

You Don't Bring Me Flowers Tour

|December 15, 1978

|{{n/a}}

Heartlight Tour

|September 14, 1982

|{{n/a}}

rowspan="2"|New Edition

|30th Anniversary Tour

|February 17, 2012

|{{n/a}}

Culture Tour

|April 2, 2022

|Charlie Wilson & Jodeci

Newsboys

|Love Riot Tour

|October 11, 2016

|The Afters & Ryan Stevenson

Nickelback

|Dark Horse Tour

|April 17, 2010

|Shinedown, Breaking Benjamin, & Sick Puppies

Nine Inch Nails

|Lights in the Sky Tour

|November 3, 2008

|HEALTH

NKOTBSB

|NKOTBSB Tour

|July 21, 2011

|Matthew Morrison

*NSYNC

|No Strings Attached Tour

|May 16, 2000

|Sisqó & P!nk

The O'Jays

|My Favorite Person Tour

|June 18, 1982

|Cameo, Atlantic Starr
& One Way

The Oak Ridge Boys

|Bobbie Sue Tour

|February 19, 1982

|T.J. Sheppard

Oliver Anthony

|Out of the Woods Tour

|April 26, 2024

|{{n/a}}

Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark

|Crush Tour

|December 6, 1985

|Thompson Twins

rowspan="5"|The Osmonds

|1971 North American Tour

|August 27, 1971

|rowspan="5" {{n/a}}

1972 North American Tour

|July 19, 1972

The Osmond Brothers Tour

|July 6, 1982

rowspan="2"|One Way Rider Tour

|April 4, 1984

April 5, 1984
rowspan="4"|Ozzy Osbourne

|Diary of a Madman Tour

|April 30, 1982

|Magnum

The Ultimate Sin Tour

|September 13, 1986

|Queensrÿche

No Rest for the Wicked Tour

|November 22, 1988

|Anthrax

Ozzmosis Tour

|May 17, 1996

|{{n/a}}

Panic! at the Disco

|Death of a Bachelor Tour

|April 11, 2017

|MisterWives & Saint Motel

rowspan="2"|Parliament-Funkadelic

| 1976 Tour

|November 21, 1976

|{{n/a}}

1979 Tour

|February 9, 1979

|The Brides of Funkenstein

Expansions

=1972=

After the Greensboro Coliseum started to get fame, in 1968, the people of Greensboro voted to increase the capacity of the Coliseum from 9,000 to 15,500{{Cite web|url=https://jay.typepad.com/william_jay/2022/03/1971-1974-a-glorious-run-for-the-greensboro-coliseum.html|title=1971-1974: A Glorious Run for the Greensboro Coliseum|website=Jaybird's Jottings}} to meet the demands. It was eventually approved and the construction started in 1970. The brand-new arena was completed in 1972. When it was finished it had many more events at the venue.

=1978=

In 1978, they expanded the Coliseum and expanded the Special Events Center to connect to the Coliseum. It was called the "Exhibition Center" at the time with three new exhibition centers and eight meeting rooms. It was renamed to the Special Events Center after a new arena was made.{{Cite web |url=http://www.greensborocoliseum.com/about |title=About Us |website=Greensboro Coliseum Complex |date=September 15, 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150915085355/http://www.greensborocoliseum.com/about |archive-date=September 15, 2015}}

=1993=

In 1991, the Coliseum's manager (Jim Evans) proposed an additional expansion of the complex. The construction started two years later in 1993. This expansion would raise the seating capacity of the Coliseum an additional 8,000 (adding a third tier) to 23,000; however, this capacity would later be lowered to around 20,000 after renovations in the late 2010s.{{cite news |title=Greensboro Coliseum reopens |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=F08aAAAAIBAJ&dq=greensboro%20coliseum&pg=3025%2C4656675 |newspaper=Times-News |location=Hendersonville, North Carolina |date= November 16, 1993 |page=2B |access-date=June 27, 2011 |via=Google News}}

Sports

=Basketball=

The Carolina Cougars of the American Basketball Association played a majority of their home games at the Greensboro Coliseum during their tenure in North Carolina from 1969 to 1974,{{Cite news |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-gastonia-gazette-cougars-have-three/108133862/ |title=Cougars have three homes |newspaper=The Gastonia Gazette |date=September 14, 1969 |pages=41 |via=Newspapers.com}} before moving to St. Louis and becoming the Spirits of St. Louis. The Greensboro City Gaters played their first and only season as a charter franchise of the Global Basketball Association minor league in 1991–1992 in the Greensboro Coliseum.{{Cite web |url=https://funwhileitlasted.net/2012/11/22/1991-1992-greensboro-city-gaters/ |title=Greensboro City Gaters |website=Fun While It Lasted |first=Drew |last=Crossley |date=November 22, 2012}}

From 1959 to 1989, the Wake Forest Demon Deacons basketball team played a portion of its home schedule at the Coliseum, usually games against popular opponents that could not be accommodated in the smaller Winston-Salem Memorial Coliseum. In practice, Wake Forest played most of its ACC games during this period at the Coliseum. From the 1960s to the 1980s, North Carolina, Duke and North Carolina State frequently played neutral-site games at the Coliseum, as it was the state's largest arena at the time. The Tar Heels still occasionally play a neutral-site game here, as late as 2012. Between its service as Wake Forest's de facto primary home court and its many neutral-site and postseason games, the Coliseum has hosted many of the most important basketball games in North Carolina's history.{{Cite web|url=https://www.tarheelblog.com/unc-tar-heels-basketball/2017/2/4/14506412/unc-mens-basketball-greensboro-coliseum-history-notre-dame|title=UNC's history at the Greensboro Coliseum|first=Akil|last=Guruparan|date=February 4, 2017|website=Tar Heel Blog}}

Since 2010, the UNC Greensboro Spartans men's basketball team has played at the Coliseum, having moved there from the smaller Fleming Gymnasium on the campus of UNCG.{{cite web |url=http://www.news-record.com/content/2008/12/05/article/coliseum_to_serve_as_home_of_uncg_mens_basketball |title=Coliseum to serve as home of UNCG men's basketball |author=Daniels, Rob |date=December 12, 2008 |work=News & Record |location=Greensboro, North Carolina |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120213222629/http://www.news-record.com/content/2008/12/05/article/coliseum_to_serve_as_home_of_uncg_mens_basketball |archive-date=February 13, 2012 |access-date=June 27, 2011 |url-status=dead}}{{cite web |url=http://www.statesman.com/sports/longhorns/ut-n-c-coaches-keen-for-a-clash-1129620.html |title=UT, N.C. coaches keen for a clash |author=Rosner, Mark |date=December 17, 2010 |work=Austin American-Statesman |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101222010816/http://www.statesman.com/sports/longhorns/ut-n-c-coaches-keen-for-a-clash-1129620.html |archive-date=December 22, 2010 |access-date=June 27, 2011 |url-status=dead}} For Spartans games, most of the upper level is curtained off; this leaves a capacity of about 7,500.

The Coliseum has played host to many college basketball tournaments. The Coliseum has hosted games during 14 NCAA Division I men's tournaments (with its most recent being first and second round games in 2023); it hosted the 1974 Final Four (where the NC State Wolfpack won the national championship in its first appearance in the game),Mike Douchant – [https://www.usatoday.com/sports/college/basketball/men/02tourney/greatest-games.htm Greatest 63 games in NCAA Tournament history]. The Sports Xchange, published in USA Today, March 25, 2002 as well as Lehigh's upset of Duke in 2012. It also hosted the NCAA Division I women's tournament in 2007 and 2008. The Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) has held its men's basketball tournament at the Coliseum 26 times since 1967, the most of any venue.{{cite web |url=http://www.greensborocoliseum.com/about/facts_and_figures |title=Facts & Figures |work=Greensboro Coliseum Complex |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110617052823/http://www.greensborocoliseum.com/about/facts_and_figures |archive-date=June 17, 2011 |access-date=June 27, 2011 |url-status=dead}} This is in part because the arena was within seven hours' drive of the conference's original footprint, and is within an hour of most of the fanbases of the conference's heartland in North Carolina. The most recent event was in 2023, and will return in 2027. Barring one year, it also hosted the ACC women's basketball tournament from 2000 to 2025.

The Greensboro Coliseum hosted the Big Four Tournament from 1971 to 1981, and the MEAC men's basketball tournament ten times. It was also the host of the Southern Conference men's basketball tournament from 1996 to 1999.

=Hockey=

The hockey history of Greensboro began in 1959, when the Greensboro Generals of the Eastern Hockey League arrived and competed until the league folded in 1973. The team moved to the Southern Hockey League for four seasons until it too ceased operations in January 1977.

Greensboro hockey's modern era began with the establishment of the Greensboro Monarchs of the East Coast Hockey League, who played from 1989–90 to 1994–95. When the American Hockey League expanded southward in 1995, it invited Greensboro to join; the new team took the Monarchs nickname, but attempted to draw a more regional fan base by labeling themselves the Carolina Monarchs.

When the Hartford Whalers announced their move to Raleigh, North Carolina, in 1997 as the Carolina Hurricanes, they leased the Coliseum for two years while waiting for the Raleigh Entertainment and Sports Arena (now Lenovo Center) in Raleigh to be completed.{{cite web |url=https://www.dukechronicle.com/article/1997/06/advertising-early-success-key-nhls-survival-triangle |title=Advertising, early success key to NHL's survival in Triangle |last=Krywyj |first=Yvonne |date=June 12, 1997 |work=The Chronicle |publisher=Duke University |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110307030730/http://dukechronicle.com/node/111731 |archive-date=March 7, 2011 |access-date=November 12, 2018 |url-status=live}} Subjected to ticket price increases and unwilling to support a team that was destined for Raleigh, Greensboro hockey fans rarely filled the arena for Hurricane games. Meanwhile, Triangle fans were unwilling to make the hour-long drive across Interstate 40 to Greensboro. As a result, the Hurricanes played in front of some of the smallest NHL crowds since the 1950s. During the 1998–99 season, the team curtained off most of the upper deck for home games in an effort to artificially create scarcity in the ticket market, force would-be attendees to purchase higher-priced tickets, and hide what national media mocked as "green acres" of empty seats.{{cite news |title= Rangers cool off Hurricanes |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=PdsgAAAAIBAJ&dq=greensboro%20coliseum&pg=3062%2C3676608 |newspaper=Sun Journal |publisher=Sun Media Group |location=Lewiston, Maine |agency=Associated Press |via=Google News |date=November 22, 1997 |page=C3 |access-date=June 27, 2011}}

Once the Raleigh Entertainment and Sports Arena was completed and the Hurricanes moved out, the plan was that the Monarchs, who spent those two years in New Haven, Connecticut, as the Beast of New Haven, would move back into the venue as a Hurricanes affiliate. Monarchs owner Bill Black tried to bring the Monarchs back to Greensboro, but the Hurricanes refused to claim the Monarchs as their affiliate. After the deal fell through, Bill Black tried to sell shares to the public in a final attempt to bring the Monarchs back to Greensboro.{{Citation needed|date=April 2025}}

Rather than leave the Coliseum without a hockey team for the first time in more than 10 years, a new hockey team was founded, the Greensboro Generals, returning the city to the East Coast Hockey League. The Generals competed in the arena until 2004, when they were terminated by the ECHL due to poor performance and lackluster support from the community.{{cite web |url=http://www.bizjournals.com/triad/stories/2004/07/19/daily20.html?jst=b_ln_hl |title=Greensboro hockey team terminated by league |date=July 21, 2004 |work=Triad Business Journal |publisher=Advance Publications |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121102222319/http://www.bizjournals.com/triad/stories/2004/07/19/daily20.html?jst=b_ln_hl |archive-date=November 2, 2012 |access-date=June 27, 2011 |url-status=dead}} Increased operating expenses from the ECHL Players Union and overhead costs as a result of recent Coliseum renovations significantly affected the Generals' ability to promote within the community. It was revealed that after the team folded, nearly all of the money used to support the team over and above ticket revenues, could have been covered by Coliseum advertising revenue that was purchased as a direct result of the hockey team's presence.

After the Generals folded, the complex saw a significant revenue drop in local advertising and to this day, the Coliseum operations must be supplemented with nearly $2 million a year from the city government.{{Cite web |url=https://funwhileitlasted.net/category/southern-hockey-league-1973/ |title=Southern Hockey League 1973 Archives |website=Fun While It Lasted}}

=Arena Football=

The Coliseum first saw an arena football team when the Greensboro Prowlers of the af2 league played in the Coliseum from 1999 until 2004. The team folded due to a poor record and lack of fan support. The Greensboro Revolution of the National Indoor Football League played here in 2006 and 2007. The team ceased operations on January 23, 2008.

In 2018, the Coliseum began to host the Carolina Cobras, an expansion team of the National Arena League. The Cobras went on to win the league championship, going 10–5 in the regular season and winning their two playoff games, both hosted at the Coliseum. They defeated the Columbus Lions with a final score of 66–8. The team is still in operation today and has played for the championship in 4 of the last 5 seasons.{{Cite web |url=http://www.nationalarenaleague.com/news-m/360-nal-expansion-heads-to-north-carolina-expansion-team-in-carolina-to-be-named-cobras.html |title=NAL Expansion Heads to North Carolina - Expansion Team in Carolina to be named Cobras |date=December 4, 2017 |website=NationalArenaLeague.com |access-date=December 4, 2017 |archive-date=December 5, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171205093058/http://www.nationalarenaleague.com/news-m/360-nal-expansion-heads-to-north-carolina-expansion-team-in-carolina-to-be-named-cobras.html |url-status=dead}}

Tenants

Some of the past and present tenants at the First Horizon Coliseum.

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; float:center; margin:25px 0 50px 25px;"
colspan="3" style="background: #EECBAD;"|Tenants
Greensboro Gargoyles

|ECHL

|2025–present

Carolina Cobras

| style="text-align:center;"|NAL

|2018–present

Greensboro Roller Derby

| style="text-align:center;"|WFTDA

|2010–present

UNC Greensboro Spartans

| style="text-align:center;"|SoCon

|2009–present

Greensboro Revolution

| style="text-align:center;"|NIFL

|2006–07

Greensboro Prowlers

| style="text-align:center;"|AF2

|2000–03

Atlantic Coast Conference

| style="text-align: center;" |Men's basketball tournament

|1967–present

Atlantic Coast Conference

| style="text-align:center;" |Women's basketball tournament

|2000–2025

Greensboro Generals

| style="text-align:center;"|ECHL

|1999–2004

Carolina Hurricanes

| style="text-align:center;"|NHL

|1997–99

Carolina Monarchs

| style="text-align:center;"|AHL

|1995–97

Greensboro City Gators

| style="text-align:center;"|GBA

|1991–92

Greensboro Monarchs

| style="text-align:center;"|ECHL

|1989–95

NCAA Final Four

| style="text-align:center;"|NCAA

|1974

Carolina Cougars

| style="text-align:center;"|ABA

|1969–74

Wake Forest Demon Deacons

| style="text-align:center;"|ACC

|1959–89

Greensboro Generals

| style="text-align:center;"|EHL / SHL

|1959–77

See also

References

{{Reflist}}

External Links

  • [https://gsocomplex.com/ Official Site]
  • [https://uncgspartans.com/sports/2020/3/23/first-horizon-coliseum.aspx/ UNCG Spartans]
  • [http://www.acchallofchampions.net/ ACC Hall of Champions | Greensboro Complex] ACC Hall of Champions]

{{Wake Forest Demon Deacons men's basketball navbox}}

{{UNC Greensboro Spartans men's basketball navbox}}

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