51ĀŅĀ× Wolstein Center Turns 30!

Sports, Concerts, Politics and More Unfurl Arenaās Growing Legacy
It was 30 years ago this month that the for the first time. Originally known as the 51ĀŅĀ× Convocation Center, the multipurpose arena began operations on November 1, 1991 as the new home for 51ĀŅĀ× Vikings Basketball.
URS-Dalton Consultants and Whitley/Whitley Architects of Cleveland broke ground on the $55M facility (thatās $130M adjusted for 2021 inflation) in August 1989. Vikings might not think of the venue as fabled, but it most certainly is ā and it began the transformation of 51ĀŅĀ×ās urban campus into what it is today.
The epic 1985-1986 51ĀŅĀ× menās basketball season in Woodling Gym was still quite fresh in the hearts and minds of Clevelanders when the arena opened. That yearās school record 14-game win streak and NCAA āSweet Sixteenā appearance felt like a sign of things to come.
As a result, enthusiasm surrounding āThe Convoā was big. Cleveland had nary a professional sports championship to speak of since the Cleveland Brownsā AFL championship in 1964, and the Vikes would be a strong, competitive group to rally behind.

They ultimately became conference season champions in 1993 (Mid-Continent), 2011 and 2021; conference tournament champions in 2009 and 2021 and returned to the NCAA āMarch Madnessā round of 32 in in 2009, representing their current Horizon League membership.
Those teams all graced the Wolstein Center, renamed in 2005 in honor of Bert L. Wolstein ā a 1953 graduate of Cleveland-Marshall College of Law, 51ĀŅĀ×ās 2003 Distinguished Alumni Award recipient and very much a winner in his own right.
The Vikes werenāt the only winners to grace Wolsteinās floors. NPSL professional indoor soccer champions the Cleveland Crunch were victors there, too, finally putting Clevelandās pro championship sports drought to bed after (wait for it) 30 years! .

It was a venerable championship feast. The teamās family-friendly success and humble nature (none of the players were the multimillionaire athletes of today) was a key part of many a Clevelanderās growing up in the 1990s. The āDynamic Duoā of NPSL career scoring leader and six-time league MVP, Hector Marinaro, and all-time NPSL assists leader Zoran Karic were Crunch fan favorites ā not to mention goalkeeper Otto Orf and Crunch superfan Daniel āDancing Guyā Cullen, who would bust his unmistakable dance moves with every Cleveland goal scored⦠If you know, you know.
During the past 30 years, Wolstein Center has also served as the host for NCAA championships for gymnastics, fencing and wrestling; has held monster truck rallies, motocross, roller derby, Cirque du Soleil, family-friendly programming and boxing matches, not even to mention a cornucopia of concerts by performers across all musical disciplines.

Country Music Hall of Famers Randy Travis and Alan Jackson christened the venue with its first concert; rock legends Jethro Tull were right behind them.
In all, some 30 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees have performed at Wolstein in as many years. They include (deep breath) Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, David Bowie, Sting, Prince, Neil Young, Elton John, Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers, ZZ Top, Rod Stewart, Aerosmith, The Cure, Beastie Boys, Janet Jackson, Joan Jett, Pearl Jam, Nine Inch Nails, Green Day, Joe Walsh, Cheap Trick, Ramones, Jay-Z, Foo Fighters, Ice Cube and Lynyrd Skynyrd.
Another dozen or so legendary country, rap and rock acts that have performed at Wolstein are poised to become hall of fame inductees in their respective genres.

Speaking of legends, did you know that future NFL hall-of-famer and coaching legend Bill Belichick and his wife sat in on Rock Hall inductees Bon Jovi when the band performed there on March 4, 1993? Well, now you do. The former Cleveland Browns coach was both cheered and jeered in equal measure.
Then thereās future NBA hall-of-famer, Akronite and former Cleveland Cavaliers basketball team captain/ champion LeBron James, who played his first nationally televised game at Wolstein. . Get this: tickets were a mere five bucks. Three teams and four titles later, James is considered the best in the game and one of the best to ever play basketball.
We all āknew him when,ā but the rest of the world met him at Wolstein Center that day.
In fact, the world has had a front row seat at the arena for many dignitaries in the form of political debates, rallies and more. Former U.S. presidents Bill Clinton and from Wolstein. One-time presidential hopefuls Al Gore, Hillary Clinton, Rev. Jesse Jackson, Rev. Al Sharpton and John Glenn have, too. Same goes for director Spike Lee and singer-actresses BeyoncƩ and Erykah Badu.

But perhaps the most important and creative face time at the arena happened within the past year. When the state of Ohio needed a mass vaccination clinic to address the global pandemic, . Tens of thousands of coronavirus vaccines were administered to Northeast Ohioans at the venue.
After all that āpomp and circumstance,ā itās easy to forget that Wolstein has also been the home of 51ĀŅĀ×ās graduation ceremonies ā and will be again next month for both 2020 and 2021 graduates. Many a 51ĀŅĀ× graduate in regalia has āwalked the stageā there over the last 30 years, after working hard to earn their college degrees. The next group of Viking grads (around 1,300 or so) will walk December 12.
With 13,610 permanent seats and 1512 telescopic seats, Wolstein Center is the largest basketball arena in the Horizon League, the second largest college basketball arena in the state of Ohio and⦠well, if its walls could talk, it would have a lot more to say than even this birthday serenade does.

At one point several years ago, the venue was actually ā with a smaller arena and housing for 1,000+ students taking its place. But that plan never came to fruition. Now in its fourth decade of service, the Wolstein Center story is still unfolding. At 30 years young, it remains home to Vikings menās and womenās basketball and is now the home court for the Cleveland Charge of the NBA G-League as well.
Happy birthday, Wolstein Center! Your legacy looms large over the campus and all of Cleveland. And yes, 30 looks good on you.
Historical photos courtesy of the Cleveland Memory Project/Special Collections, Michael Schwartz Library at 51ĀŅĀ×.
