photo of
Cowboy Morgan Evans at the late 1920s
Tex Austin Rodeo in Chicago Stadium
Basketball •
1973,
1988: Chicago was the host city for the
NBA All-Star Game. • 1987:
Michael Jordan of the
Chicago Bulls scored 61 points on April 16 to become the only NBA player other than Wilt Chamberlain to top 3,000 points in a single season. • 1991: Chicago Bulls won their first championship. • 1992:
Great Midwest Conference men's basketball tournament. • 1992:
Chicago Bulls won the second of three straight NBA titles in Game 6 of the
NBA Finals. This would be the only time the Bulls clinched the championship while playing on the Stadium's floor, though they did it twice at the new
United Center (in
1996 and again in
1997). • 1993: Chicago Bulls won their third championship. • 1994: The final Bulls home game at Chicago Stadium was played on May 20, a 93-79 Bulls win over the New York Knicks in game 6 of the Eastern Conference semifinals (the team would lose game 7 at
Madison Square Garden in New York City). • 1994: The final event at Chicago Stadium was
Scottie Pippen's Ameritech Classic charity basketball game, which was organized through Reverend
Jesse Jackson's Push-Excel program and was held on September 9, 1994.
Michael Jordan, despite being in retirement at the time (he would return to basketball six months later), participated and scored 52 points, leading the White team to a 187–150 victory over Pippen's Red team. At the end of the game, Jordan kneeled and kissed the Bulls logo at center court.
Hockey • 1934: The Blackhawks win the
Stanley Cup on home ice by defeating the
Detroit Red Wings 1–0 in the second overtime in game four of the
Stanley Cup Final. • 1938: The Blackhawks win the
Stanley Cup on home ice by defeating the
Toronto Maple Leafs 4–1 in game four of the
Stanley Cup Final. This was the Blackhawks' last Stanley Cup win in Chicago Stadium. • 1961:
Bobby Hull scored twice in Game 1 of the
Stanley Cup Final, won 3–2 by the
Chicago Blackhawks over the
Detroit Red Wings. The Blackhawks would go on to win the Stanley Cup at Detroit's
Olympia Stadium, winning the series 4–2. Later, the team made it to the Final five more times (
1962,
1965,
1971,
1973, and
1992), but they lost in all those series. •
1961,
1974 and
1991: Stadium was host for the
NHL All-Star Game. • 1992: The last
Stanley Cup Final game at Chicago Stadium was played on June 1. The
Pittsburgh Penguins swept the series 4–0 and won game 4 6–5, capturing their second consecutive Stanley Cup. • 1994: The final ice hockey game at Chicago Stadium was played on April 28. The Blackhawks lost to the
Toronto Maple Leafs 1–0, eliminating them from the first round of the
1994 Stanley Cup playoffs. The only goal in the game, and last goal ever scored, came from
Mike Gartner in the first period.
Football • 1932: Due to a snowstorm followed by frigid temperatures, the
Chicago Bears played the
1932 NFL championship game inside Chicago Stadium against the
Portsmouth Spartans (later the
Detroit Lions). The Bears won 9–0.
Soccer home game at Chicago Stadium, circa 1982 • 1984: The
NASL held the only All-Star game ever played in its 17 outdoor and 4 indoor seasons. The All Stars defeat the host
Chicago Sting 9–8 before 14,328 fans.
Boxing • 1929: Stadium opened with bout between
Tommy Loughran and
Mickey Walker on March 28. • 1943: Lee Savold scored three consecutive knockouts. Nate Bolden in January, Lem Franklin in February and April. 13,000 fans at third match against Franklin. • 1947: Often cited as one of the great bouts of the 20th Century,
Rocky Graziano scored a sixth-round technical knockout of
Tony Zale before 18,547 on July 16, 1947. • 1951: In their sixth and final fight,
Sugar Ray Robinson defeated Jake LaMotta on Valentine's Day with a 13th-round TKO. • 1953: Undefeated heavyweight champion
Rocky Marciano knocked out Jersey Joe Walcott on May 15 in the first round.
Concerts • 1972: June 16-17:
Elvis Presley He played 3 shows, afternoon and evening on the 17th • 1972: November 10–11:
Jethro Tull • 1974: January 3–4: Bob Dylan with the Band • 1974: May 11:
Grand Funk Railroad with
Wet Willie • 1974: November 1–2:
Elton John Caribou Tour with
Kiki Dee • 1975: April 01
Alice Cooper Welcome to My Nightmare Tour with
Suzi Quatro • 1975: June 1–5 & 7th:
Beach Boys and
Chicago (Beachago Tour). • 1975:
Santana's
Borboletta Tour came here on July 5. • 1975:
The Rolling Stones' Tour of the Americas '75 stopped here July 22–24. • 1975:
The Who performed here on December 4–5 during their
1975 tour. • 1975–76: December 31-January 1:
Frank Sinatra met the new year in Chicago Stadium, performing a concert with 23 songs. • 1976:
Paul McCartney's first three concerts in Chicago in 10 years; he performed May 31 through June 2 in his
Wings Over America Tour. • 1977-78:
Queen, 3 concerts:
A Day at the Races Tour - January 28, 1977 with Special Guest
Thin Lizzy,
News of the World Tour - December 5, 1977,
Jazz Tour - December 7, 1978 • 1977: In the spring of 1977,
Led Zeppelin played four shows here during their final
North American tour (they had previously played three concerts at this venue on their
1975 North American Tour and two concerts on their
1973 North American Tour). Two more were scheduled for later in the tour but were cancelled due to the death of
Robert Plant's son. Tickets from the cancelled partial show on April 9 were to be honored at the rescheduled shows, which never materialized. (The band was booked to perform four concerts at the stadium as part of another North American tour in November 1980, but the tour was officially cancelled on September 27, two days after
John Bonham's death.) • 1977:
Elvis Presley's last concert in Chicago was in the Stadium on May 1–2. • 1977: Fleetwood Mac, July 23–24 • 1978:
Billy Joel October 13, 1978. For his 52nd Street Tour. • 1979: The
Bee Gees performed two sold-out shows during their
Spirits Having Flown Tour on July 30–31. • 1979-81:
Michael Jackson and his brothers performed in the Stadium during their
Destiny Tour on November 2, 1979, and their
Triumph Tour on August 28, 1981. • 1981: November 5, Electric Light Orchestra with opening act
Hall & Oates. • 1994: The final concert was held on March 10, featuring
Pearl Jam,
Urge Overkill and
The Frogs.
In film • 1961: Scenes from the 1962 version of
The Manchurian Candidate depicting the Republican
nomination convention, were filmed in the stadium. The scenes are set in New York's
Madison Square Garden.
Other events • 1930: Funeral of Stadium builder
Paddy Harmon, benefit boxing match for Harmon's widow and children. • 1932, 1940 and 1944:
Democratic National Conventions, at which
Franklin D. Roosevelt won his first, third and fourth nominations from the
Democratic Party for
President of the United States. • 1932 and 1944:
Republican National Conventions, at which
Herbert C. Hoover and
Thomas E. Dewey, respectively, would win the
Republican Party's nomination for President of the United States. Both lost to Roosevelt. • 1933: Funeral of Chicago mayor
Anton J. Cermak, the sole fatality in
an assassination attempt on President-elect Franklin Roosevelt. • 1936: Presidential election rallies for both Republican
Alfred Landon and Democrat
Franklin D. Roosevelt. Roosevelt's rally drew a crowd of over 1 million, with more than 200,000 attendees overwhelming the stadium's capacity of 25,000. • 1946: While waiting in a backstage area to go onto the arena floor during a rodeo,
Roy Rogers proposed to
Dale Evans. • 1968: Months after winning a
1968 Winter Olympics gold medal,
Peggy Fleming drew large crowds to the Stadium with the
Ice Capades. • 1969: In a joint venture between
NBC and
Walt Disney Productions,
Disney on Parade launched on December 25. ==See also==