Professional and college basketball The
San Francisco Warriors of the
National Basketball Association called the Cow Palace home from 1962 to 1964 and from 1966 to 1971. From 1964 to 1966, the Warriors played predominantly at the
San Francisco Civic Auditorium. The franchise then moved across the bay to the new
Oakland Coliseum Arena and changed their name to
Golden State Warriors. In 2019, the Warriors moved to the
Chase Center in San Francisco. The Warriors lost to the
Boston Celtics in the
1964 NBA Finals. The
1967 NBA Finals between San Francisco and the
Philadelphia 76ers saw three games held at the Cow Palace. The two NBA Finals games hosted by the Warriors in their 1974–75 championship season were also held at the Cow Palace because of other events at the Oakland Coliseum.
Professional football In 2010, the Cow Palace once again had a regular sports tenant when the
American Indoor Football Association's
San Jose Wolves kicked off. However, the next year they would move to
Stockton as the independent
Stockton Wolves.
Professional soccer On and off between 1975 and 1984, the
San Jose/Golden Bay Earthquakes of the
NASL played indoor soccer at the Cow Palace, including hosting the
1975 NASL indoor championship game, which they won 8–5 over the
Tampa Bay Rowdies. The 'Quakes spent several seasons playing at the
Oakland Coliseum Arena before splitting time between the two arenas for the
1983–84 NASL Indoor season. The
Major Indoor Soccer League came to the Cow Palace for the 1980–81 season, when David Schoenstadt relocated his
Detroit Lightning there, renaming them the
San Francisco Fog. After a dismal season with an 11–29 record and less than five thousand fans per game, Schoenstadt moved the franchise again, this time to
Kemper Arena in
Kansas City, Missouri, where the team flourished as the
Kansas City Comets.
Professional ice hockey The
San Francisco Shamrocks (
PHL) called the Cow Palace home from 1977 to 1979. They won the championship their first season, but ended up disbanding in January 1979 part way through their second season. It also hosted the
San Jose Sharks of the
NHL from 1991 to 1993 before the completion of their new home, the
San Jose Arena. From 1991 to 1993, the Sharks sold out every game played at the building. It was one of the last buildings to house a smaller than NHL-regulation rink. The NHL had previously rejected the building in 1967 as a home for the expansion
California Seals franchise, who instead played home games out of the Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum Arena. San Jose lost their first game at the Cow Palace to the
Vancouver Canucks 5–2 on October 5, 1991.
Wayne Presley scored the first Sharks goal at the arena. Three nights later, San Jose won their first game in franchise history there, a 4–3 win over the
Calgary Flames. The Sharks' second season in the Cow Palace included a 17-game losing streak and a league record 71 losses. The Sharks ended their run at the Cow Palace at the conclusion of the 1992–93 season with a 3–2 loss to eventual Campbell Conference champion
Los Angeles on April 10, 1993. The team moved to the new
San Jose Arena (now the SAP Center) to start 1993–94 after going 22–56–4 at their first home. At the Cow Palace, the Sharks recorded the franchise's first win, shutout (
Artūrs Irbe) and hat trick (
Rob Gaudreau). The team also introduced their mascot,
S.J. Sharkie, on the Cow Palace ice in mid-1992 when he climbed out of the front of a
Zamboni. He later bungee-jumped from the rafters near the end of the first season. In 1995, the IHL's
San Francisco Spiders played their only season at the Cow Palace. Several players who played for the Sharks during their Cow Palace years suited up for the Spiders that year. Due to poor attendance, the team ceased operations at the end of the 1995–96 season. On September 27, 2011, the
ECHL formally announced that pro hockey would return to the Cow Palace after a 16-year hiatus with the arrival of the
San Francisco Bulls the following fall. To accommodate the new team its ownership spent $2 million on renovating the team locker rooms, upgrading the concession stands, food improvements and installing new widescreen HD monitors to observe gameplay, installing a new ice system (as the old ammonia-based system that was in place for the Seals, Shamrocks, Sharks & Spiders had since become outdated and illegal) and a new custom-made wraparound LED video scoreboard with its game presentation system and ten sets of Custom Piston speakers from Claire Brothers Audio formerly used by AC/DC. The center hung video board has a 360° view for game presentation and full timekeeping and statistics. The new Colosseo Cube scoreboard – made by Colosseo USA – was custom built in order to agree with some of the weight bearing limitations for the roof. The engineers designed new structural steel beams and had them installed in the rafters to provide the additional support required. The Bulls folded on January 28, 2014, 40 games into their second season.
Professional tennis From 1974 to 1989, the Cow Palace was the site of the
Pacific Coast Championships, a yearly tournament on the men's professional tennis tour. Some of the biggest names in tennis played there, such as
Jimmy Connors,
John McEnroe and
Ivan Lendl.
Professional wrestling The Palace has also hosted professional wrestling events under various promoters, most notably
Roy Shire, who ran
cards there from the early 1960s to 1981, oftentimes to sold-out houses headlined by
Ray Stevens,
Pat Patterson and others. After Shire ended operations, other promotions such as
World Wrestling Federation (WWF) and
World Championship Wrestling (WCW) moved in. Notable cards included WCW's
SuperBrawl in
1997,
1998, and
2000 and
WWE's
No Way Out in 2004. In 2018, the Cow Palace hosted
New Japan Pro-Wrestling's
G1 Special in San Francisco. On March 1 and 3, 2023, the Cow Palace hosted
AEW Dynamite and
AEW Rampage, leading into
AEW Revolution, which was hosted at the
Chase Center in San Francisco. ==Events==