The Brief

San Jose is hosting Sweet 16 and Elite Eight games at SAP Center, drawing teams and thousands of fans to the city.

City leaders are building on Super Bowl momentum with fan events, a drone show and a Shaquille O’Neal DJ performance.

Local businesses expect a major boost, with some anticipating crowds rivaling or exceeding Super Bowl week.

SAN JOSE, Calif. – San Jose is preparing to host March Madness as the SAP Center welcomes the Sweet 16 on Thursday and the Elite Eight days later.

Major year for sports in South Bay

What we know

The tournament is part of a major year for sports in the South Bay, which has already hosted Super Bowl events and will also welcome World Cup matches.

Advertisement

City leaders say they are determined to build on that momentum.

SAP Center prepares for tournament action

Local perspective

Inside the SAP Center, crews have installed the basketball court, added extra seating and finalized preparations as teams get ready to compete.

“The hotels are sold out. I hope you have a room already,” said John Poch, executive director of the San Jose Sports Authority. “We’re pretty excited, especially [with] the teams we have. Arizona, No. 1 team in the nation. You have Arkansas, with one of the biggest superstar freshman there is, and then Texas and Purdue.”

Advertisement

Teams are set to arrive Tuesday, with thousands of fans expected to follow.

City plans events to draw crowds downtown

San Jose officials say they want visitors to stay and explore downtown before and after games.

“We want to make sure that people have a reason to stay in downtown San Jose and things to do before and after the games, and that it’s open and free to everyone in the community,” said Mayor Matt Mahan.

Planned events include a drone show, fan fests and a free show featuring DJ Diesel, also known as Shaquille O’Neal.

‘This is home base’

What they’re saying

Businesses in San Pedro Square are anticipating a surge in customers, potentially rivaling Super Bowl week, when sales were up 30% over previous records.

Advertisement

“A lot of people [who] came for the Super Bowl were spread out throughout the Bay Area, especially in San Francisco,” said Randy Musterer of Sushi Confidential. “This is in our backyard. This is SAP Center. This is home base, so we expect to be extremely busy over the next few days.”

The Source

San Jose Sports Authority, San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan and Randy Musterer of Sushi Confidential.