Before the construction of the facility, the teams played in the much smaller
OU Field House, now known as McCasland Field House, located on campus near
Oklahoma Memorial Stadium. The success of Sooner basketball teams in the early 1970s including star forward
Alvan Adams, motivated the building of a larger, state-of-the-art, arena, the Lloyd Noble Center (LNC), which was built in 1973-75 at a cost of $6 Million. The center is named after
Samuel Lloyd Noble (1896–1950), a Houston oilman and philanthropist, and founder of the
Noble Corporation and the Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation. Noble is an OU alumnus and former member of the OU Board of Regents; his foundation provided OU's first ever $1 million gift to finance the center. The Sooners frequently sold out the arena during the Coach
Billy Tubbs era, with
All-American forward
Wayman Tisdale leading the high-scoring team to several
Big Eight Conference titles and
NCAA Tournament appearances. This led to the popular colloquialism around Norman that Lloyd Noble Center is "the house that Alvan built and Wayman filled." Other notable basketball stars who played at the LNC include
Mookie Blaylock,
Stacey King,
Blake Griffin,
Buddy Hield and
Trae Young, all of whom also played in the
NBA, as well as
Stacey Dales,
Courtney Paris and
Danielle Robinson, who went on to play in the
WNBA. The LNC has hosted
NIT men's basketball games and
NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament Opening Round games, NCAA Women's Gymnastics Regional and National Semifinal competitions, an NCAA Wrestling Championship, as well as one NBA game. In January 2006, the NBA and the
New Orleans Hornets decided to move two games from the
Pete Maravich Assembly Center in
Baton Rouge to
Oklahoma City due to the devastation of
Hurricane Katrina and the subsequent low attendance it caused. The
Ford Center in Oklahoma City was unavailable for one of the games against the
Sacramento Kings, so it was played in the Lloyd Noble Center. OU and OU Athletics donors have made several investments in the arena over the years to update it, including a $17.1 M renovation in 2001, the addition of the $7 M 18,000 sq ft Griffin Family Performance Center in 2018, and extensive expansion and modernization of the men's and women's basketball locker rooms, offices and meeting facilities, updated video and sound systems, and renovated concourse amenities in 2023 ($9.5 M). During a men's basketball game on February 14, 2026, a popcorn machine caught fire inside the arena, leading to evacuations and a game delay. ==Facilities Description==