What are the maddest of the mad American basketball-mad cities?
WalletHub, which compiles statistics on United States metropolitan areas and states, has used several metrics to measure the craziest basketball cities. Among those metrics: number and performance of National Basketball Association (NBA) and National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division 1 teams; average ticket prices; stadium accessibility (stadium capacity divided by city population); number of sports bars per capita; number of those following basketball on Twitter; attendance; and TV viewership of local teams.
The craziest: Storrs, Connecticut, home of last year's NCAA champs, the University of Connecticut; Chapel Hill, North Carolina, home of perennial power University of North Carolina, and San Antonio, home of last year's NBA champs.
San Diego State has had a powerhouse in recent years, but the city has no NBA team. So San Diego dribbles in at 177th of 300 cities. But that's better than nearby Riverside (299th) and Jersey City (300th).
What are the maddest of the mad American basketball-mad cities?
WalletHub, which compiles statistics on United States metropolitan areas and states, has used several metrics to measure the craziest basketball cities. Among those metrics: number and performance of National Basketball Association (NBA) and National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division 1 teams; average ticket prices; stadium accessibility (stadium capacity divided by city population); number of sports bars per capita; number of those following basketball on Twitter; attendance; and TV viewership of local teams.
The craziest: Storrs, Connecticut, home of last year's NCAA champs, the University of Connecticut; Chapel Hill, North Carolina, home of perennial power University of North Carolina, and San Antonio, home of last year's NBA champs.
San Diego State has had a powerhouse in recent years, but the city has no NBA team. So San Diego dribbles in at 177th of 300 cities. But that's better than nearby Riverside (299th) and Jersey City (300th).
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