Time For Change

The Ford Center displays a new scoreboard.

The Evansville Thunderboltsโ€™ 2024-25 opening game Oct. 18 doubled as the unveiling of the Ford Centerโ€™s new scoreboard. โ€œEveryone likes a big, new electronic,โ€ says Scott Schoenike, executive director of VenuWorks, which manages the Ford Center and Victory Theatre. โ€œIt gives you a better experience โ€” bigger, brighter, clearer.โ€

The Ford Center, featured in November/ December 2011 Evansville Living when it opened in 2011, cost $127.5 million to design and build. More than a decade later, updates required an additional $9 million, including nearly $3 million for the new scoreboard.

Schoenike says challenges with replacement parts and outdated software prompted a new scoreboard, made by Brookings, South Dakota-based Daktronics. Its primary display is one 360-degree screen, 15 feet high and 97 feet around, with 5.9-millimeter pixel spacing. Schoenike says the new scoreboard has 500 extra square feet of screen compared to the previous model. Two more screens circle the new scoreboard: an upper ring display, 2.5 feet by 97 feet, and a lower ring display, 2 feet by 77 feet. The screens boast improved HD display, and Daktronics updated displays throughout the center to produce crisper, cleaner images.

โ€œIt competes with the big Division I schools,โ€ says Schoenike, who hopes it will help recruit players to the University of Evansvilleโ€™s menโ€™s basketball team, which plays home games at the Ford Center. โ€œThere is nothing better than seeing your face 20 feet high.โ€

During the Thunderboltsโ€™ first home game, fans witnessed a new feature โ€” a race on the ice with a track projected by the scoreboard. Schoenike says the projections are customizable to a hockey rink or basketball court.

โ€œYou can do a million things with this one,โ€ Schoenike says.

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