The Live Sport Abroad Series Starts Here
This is Part 1 of Live Sport Abroad – a series about attending sports events in cities you don’t live in, from the perspective of someone who cares about the experience more than the scoreline. Part 2 compares baseball and basketball head-to-head, and later in the series we’ll look at attending a Premier League match and Formula 1 for the first time. Start here, in Brooklyn, where the Nets play at one of the more interesting arenas in American sport.
I’ll be honest upfront: I am not a basketball obsessive. I followed the Nets for about one season with genuine enthusiasm and now follow them the way you follow a soap opera you watched too many episodes of to fully give up on. That outsider-adjacent perspective is, I think, useful here. Because a lot of people attending their first NBA game are in exactly the same position.
The Barclays Center opened in 2012, sits directly above the Atlantic Avenue subway hub in Flatbush, and was controversial in Brooklyn in the way all large arena developments are controversial. It also happens to be a genuinely excellent sports venue once you’re inside it. The two things can coexist and do.
Getting There: This Part Is Actually Easy
Atlantic Avenue-Barclays Center station connects the 2, 3, 4, 5, B, D, N, Q, and R trains plus the LIRR. On a game night, you will know when you’re getting close because a significant proportion of the train will be heading there too. The walk from station exits to the arena entrance is under three minutes. You will not get lost. This is not always true of American sports venues, where “accessible by transit” sometimes means a 20-minute walk from the nearest stop. Barclays is legitimately walkable from the subway and that is worth noting.
Arrive 45 minutes before tip-off. Not an hour, not 20 minutes. 45 minutes gives you enough time to find your section, get food without being in a queue during the opening entertainment, and actually settle into your seat before anything meaningful happens. The opening ceremony for any home game – the player introductions, the team presentation – is worth being seated for. It’s a genuine spectacle.
If you’re eating before the game rather than inside: Atlantic Avenue has options. Junior’s for cheesecake if you’re committed to the New York experience. Circa Brewing nearby if you want a proper meal. The neighbourhood around Barclays is much better for pre-game food than the arena concessions, so eating before and drinking inside is a solid strategy that saves money too.

Inside the Arena: What the Experience Is Actually Like
The Barclays Center has a circular design that wraps around the court in a way that feels more intimate than its 17,700 seat capacity would suggest. There are very few bad seats in the sense of seats where you genuinely can’t follow the game. The sightlines are good across almost every section, and the screens are large and well-positioned so you can catch replays even from distance.
The sound is aggressively managed. Music between plays, dancer performances at timeouts, DJ sets, PA announcements – the arena does not let you have more than about 30 seconds of quiet at any point. This is intentional, it’s how NBA arenas work, and you either find it energising or exhausting. I find it energising for about three quarters and then I want someone to turn it down about 15%. That’s a personal threshold but it’s worth knowing going in.
The Nets’ current situation, honestly: they are in a rebuild phase. This means that on many nights, especially against strong opponents, the result is not going to be close. That is fine for a first-timer who is primarily there for the atmosphere, but it’s worth having realistic expectations. A competitive Nets game feels electric. A blowout loss against a conference leader can feel long by the fourth quarter even when the production values are excellent.
“The Barclays Center experience doesn’t require the Nets to win. It requires the Nets to play. The arena does the rest.”
What to Eat and What It Will Cost

Barclays concessions have improved significantly. The standard hot dog and beer baseline of American arena food has been joined by a Brooklyn-appropriate range of options including decent tacos, a proper burger that’s actually worth the price, and various specialty food vendors that rotate. A beer runs $12-$16 depending on brand and size. A meal will be $15-$25. Plan to spend $30-$50 per person on food and drink inside the arena if you’re doing it properly.
The arena also has a full cocktail bar in the lower bowl concourse area that is genuinely pleasant to stand at between plays. It doesn’t feel like a sports venue bar – it feels like a bar that happens to be inside a sports venue. Small distinction, real difference in how you feel about being there.
| Item | Approx Price | Worth It? |
|---|---|---|
| Standard beer (16oz) | $14 | If you’re having one, yes |
| Hot dog | $8 | Solid, classic |
| Burger | $18-$22 | Yes, better than expected |
| Specialty food vendor | $16-$25 | Worth exploring |
When the Atmosphere Is Electric vs When It Falls Flat
A playoff game, a game against a rival, a game where a star player is returning to their old team – these nights at Barclays are genuinely remarkable. The sound level goes up, the crowd engagement is constant rather than intermittent, and even in a loss, those games have a charge to them that justifies the ticket price completely.
A mid-week regular season game against a lower-seeded opponent when the Nets are well behind in the standings? The crowd can feel thin and the arena can feel big. It’s not a bad experience – the production still runs well – but you feel the emptiness of those higher rows more than you do on a big night.
My recommendation: check the schedule for games against the Celtics, Knicks, Heat, or any team with a superstar who will draw attention. Those matchups sell better and feel better. Buying a ticket to a good matchup even at a higher price makes the whole experience more likely to reward you. The live sport abroad experience is about finding the right game as much as the right venue – and that’s a theme I’ll come back to in Part 2 of this series, when baseball and basketball go head-to-head.
