Big East Conference Tournament Tickets
The 2003
Big East Conference Tournament will be held in "Piscataway, NJ" at the Louis Brown Athletic Center
from March 8 - 11. Event Tickets Direct carries tickets to the Big East
Tournament at low prices.
Click here to buy
Big East Conference Tickets
Big East Tournament Ticket Inventory
Event Tickets Direct
sells Big East Conference
Tournament tickets. We specialize in selling tickets to
sold out college basketball games and tournaments at low prices. If we
don't have the tickets that you are looking for in stock we will do our
best to locate them in our national database.
|
|
About Big East Conference
"Entering the 2003 season the Big East is celebrating its 24th year of existence. The Big East became a reality on May 31, 1979, following a meeting of athletic directors from Providence College, St. John's, Georgetown University, Syracuse University, Seton Hall, Connecticut and Boston College. In the 2001-02 season, the Big East had undefeated national champions in football and women's basketball, 32 student-athletes who earned Academic All-America honors, and two student- athletes who were named the national player of the year in their sports. Miami won the Rose Bowl for its fifth national title and second for the league. The Connecticut women's basketball team garnered its third national title with a record-setting 39-0 mark. That national championship gave the Conference a three-peat in women's basketball following the Huskies' second title in 2000 and Notre Dame's crown in 2001. Big East teams have won 10 national championships since 1995 in six different sports. The newest team to the Conference is Virginia Tech who joined in 2000. The Big East has conducted its championship tournament at Madison Square Garden since 1983. It’s the longest run at one site of any Division I postseason tournament. The Conference is split into two divisions the East, comprised of Villanova, Connecticut, Boston College, St. John’s Providence, Virginia Tech and Miami. The West division houses Syracuse, Georgetown, Notre Dame, Pittsburgh, Rutgers, Seton Hall and West Virginia." |