µþ±ð´Ú´Ç°ù±ðÌýMark Harlan arrived at Thursday’s Utah-ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ basketball game in Salt Lake City wearing a bright red Utah pullover, he appeared before a Utah state legislative committee to get consent to build an $80 million addition to the Utes’ Rice-Eccles football stadium.
Now in his first year as Utah’s athletic director, Harlan is a University of ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ graduate who spent 19 years working for Dick Tomey’s UA football operation and later, under athletic director Jim Livengood’s command as a UA events manager and fundraiser.
When Harlan worked at ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥, the UA football program spent essentially nothing on its football plant. UA, UCLA, USC, ASU, Washington State, Cal and Stanford were tardy keeping up with big-spending, football-first Oregon and Washington.
Now ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ is a few days away from celebrating the completion of the $16 million Cole and Jeannie Davis Indoor Sports Center, which already has a mammoth presence on campus.
At best, the Davis Center will turn heads of future UA recruiting prospects. More to the point, it keeps ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ competitive in the latest round of Pac-12 eye candy.
The Davis Center is a 45,000-square foot facility with a 90-yard artificial turf and a roof height of 65 feet.
Here’s how it fits with the Pac-12’s other indoor facilities:
Oregon:Â The Ducks built the massive 117,000-square foot Moshofsky Center 21 years ago. Cost: $14 million. It can hold as many as 5,000 fans for events. Donor:Â Ed Moshofsky, a 1943 UO grad who made his money in the lumber industry.
Oregon State:Â The Beavers built the Truax Indoor Center in 2001. It is 85,000 square feet. Cost: $12 million. Donor:Â Merritt Truax, a 1935 OSU grad who made his fortune in the oil business.
Washington: Built in 2001, the Dempsey Indoor facility is 80,000 square feet, with a full track facility included. Cost: $17 million. Donor: 1964 UW grad Neal Dempsey, who became a venture capitalist.
Washington State: The Cougars’ Indoor Performance Center, with its 100,000 square feet, cost $14 million when it was built in 1999. It is an old-fashioned “bubble†that has become dated. The Cougars are in the process of planning a $28 million arena. A title donor is being sought.
ÃÛèÖÖ±²¥ State:Â Built in 2008, the Verde Dickey Dome is also a bubble (that once collapsed in a monsoon storm). Cost: $2 million. It has 103,000-square feet. Donor:Â Verde Dickey, a SMU grad who worked in the steel industry.
Colorado:Â Built in 2016, the Indoor Performance Facility is 120,000 square feet, with a six-lane track. It was part of a $145 million athletic department facelift. No title donor has been identified.
Utah:Â The Eccles Fieldhouse was built in 2013 for $7 million. It has 74,000 square feet and was part of a $32 million athletics project. Donor:Â Spence Eccles, a 1956 Utah grad who became a Salt Lake City banker.
None of the league’s four California schools have an indoor sports center.
If you think athletic spending and debt service in the Pac-12 is excessive, keep this in mind: According to the UA’s 2018 capital projects financial report, the school has $1.6 billion in such debt campus-wide. It retired $74 million of debt a year ago and incurred $191 million of new capital projects debt.
In that perspective, the Davis Center is just another (but very large) building.