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  1. It is named for Charles R. Ferrell, a Baylor student and legacy who died in 1967, and whose family's estate was a major benefactor of the arena. The building replaced the Heart O' Texas Coliseum as the school's primary indoor athletic facility.

  2. The Ferrell Center, home to Baylor's basketball and volleyball programs for more than 25 years, continues to undergo upgrades to maintain its standard as one of the region's finest facilities. The improvements have given the Bears the type of arena necessary to compete in the Big 12 Conference.

  3. Nov 16, 2023 · The first Baylor sporting event in the Ferrell Center — Nov. 17, 1988 — was a men’s basketball exhibition game against the Adelaide 36ers, an Australian professional basketball team that’s actually still in existence today. (Many years later, Baylor fan favorite Aaron Bruce would go on to play for the 36ers.) The Baylor men, led by head ...

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    • President Ronald Reagan was the featured guest at the Ferrell Center’s first event, just a few months before he left office. (Here’s what preparations for the Ferrell Center opening looked like in a classic news clip from 1988).
    • Its name honors the memory of a former Baylor student. Charles Robert Ferrell tragically lost his life in a car accident in 1967 while a Baylor sophomore.
    • This is the fourth permanent home for Baylor basketball. Before the early 1920s, the Bears played their home games outside on Carroll Field (located where the Bill Daniel Student Center sits today).
    • The Ferrell Center wasn’t always planned for its current location. In 1982, it was announced that a new special events center would be built “adjacent to Russell Gymnasium, on a site bordered by Waco Creek, University Parks Drive, Bagby Street and Speight Avenue” (where the McLane SLC and Baylor Sciences Building are now).
  5. Built in 1988 and located adjacent to the Brazos River, it is home to the Baylor University Bears volleyball, acrobatics, and tumbling teams. It is named for Charles R. Ferrell, a Baylor student and legacy who died in 1967, and whose family's estate was a major benefactor of the arena.

  6. Built in 1988, the Ferrell Center has paved the way to a bright vision of 2024. The banks of the Brazos River, home to almost all of Baylor’s athletic venues, will soon welcome the new Paul and Alejandra Foster Basketball Pavilion.

  7. Oct 4, 2013 · The $10 million, 150,000-square-foot Ferrell Center is named in memory of Charles Robert Ferrell, who died in an automobile accident in 1967 while a student attending Baylor. A lead gift used to build the gold-domed facility came from the estate of his father, Monroe Ferrell of Houston.

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