List of ECHL arenas
The following is a list of ECHL arenas including past and present arenas:
Eastern Conference
Eastern Conference | |||||
North Division | |||||
Team | Arena | Years used | Capacity | Opened | City |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Adirondack Thunder Stockton Thunder (2005–2015) Atlantic City Boardwalk Bullies (2001–2005) Birmingham Bulls (1992–2001) Cincinnati Cyclones (1990–1992) | Cool Insuring Arena Glens Falls Civic Center (1979–2017) | 2015–present | 4,794 | 1979 | Glens Falls, New York |
Stockton Arena | 2005–2015 | 9,737 | 2005 | Stockton, California | |
Boardwalk Hall | 2001–2005 | 10,500 | 1926 | Atlantic City, New Jersey | |
Birmingham–Jefferson Convention Complex | 1992–2001 | 17,654 | 1976 | Birmingham, Alabama | |
Cincinnati Gardens | 1990–1992 | 10,208 | 1949 | Cincinnati, Ohio | |
Maine Mariners Alaska Aces (2003–2017) | Cross Insurance Arena | 2018–present | 6,733 | 1977 | Portland, Maine |
Sullivan Arena | 1995–2017[1] | 6,290 | 1983 | Anchorage, Alaska | |
Newfoundland Growlers | Mary Brown's Centre Mile One Centre (2001–2021) | 2018–present | 6,287 | 2001 | St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador |
Reading Royals Columbus Chill (1991–1999) | Santander Arena Sovereign Center (2001–2013) | 2001–present | 7,083 | 2001 | Reading, Pennsylvania |
Ohio Expo Center Coliseum | 1991–1999 | 7,000 | 1918 | Columbus, Ohio | |
Trois-Rivières Lions | Colisée Vidéotron | 2021–present | 4,390 | 2021 | Trois-Rivières, Quebec |
Worcester Railers | DCU Center | 2017–present | 12,239 | 1982 | Worcester, Massachusetts |
South Division | |||||
Team | Arena | Years used | Capacity | Opened | City |
Atlanta Gladiators Gwinnett Gladiators (2003–2015) Mobile Mysticks (1995–2002) | Gas South Arena Infinite Energy Arena (2015–2021) Arena at Gwinnett Center (2004–2015) Gwinnett Civic Center Arena (2003–2004) | 2003–present | 11,355 | 2003 | Duluth, Georgia |
Mobile Civic Center | 1995–2002 | 10,112 | 1964 | Mobile, Alabama | |
Florida Everblades | Hertz Arena Germain Arena (2004–2018) TECO Arena (1998–2004) Everblades Arena (1998) | 1998–present | 7,181 | 1998 | Estero, Florida |
Greenville Swamp Rabbits Greenville Road Warriors (2010–2015) Johnstown Chiefs (1988–2010) | Bon Secours Wellness Arena BI-LO Center (1998–2013) | 2010–present | 13,707 | 1998 | Greenville, South Carolina |
Cambria County War Memorial Arena | 1988–2010 | 3,745 | 1950 | Johnstown, Pennsylvania | |
Jacksonville Icemen Evansville IceMen (2012–2016) | VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena Jacksonville Veterans Memorial Arena (2003–2019) | 2017–present | 13,141 | 2003 | Jacksonville, Florida |
Ford Center | 2011–2016[2] | 9,437 | 2011 | Evansville, Indiana | |
Norfolk Admirals Bakersfield Condors (2003–2015) | Norfolk Scope | 2015–present | 8,701 | 1971 | Norfolk, Virginia |
Rabobank Arena Bakersfield Centennial Garden (1998–2005) | 1998–2015[3] | 8,700 | 1998 | Bakersfield, California | |
Orlando Solar Bears | Kia Center | 2012–present | 17,353 | 2010 | Orlando, Florida |
Savannah Ghost Pirates | Enmarket Arena | 2022-present | 7,300 | 2022 | Savannah, Georgia |
South Carolina Stingrays | North Charleston Coliseum | 1993–present | 10,537 | 1993 | North Charleston, South Carolina |
Western Conference
Western Conference | |||||
Central Division | |||||
Team | Arena | Years used | Capacity | Opened | City |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cincinnati Cyclones Miami Matadors (1998–1999) Louisville RiverFrogs (1995–1998) | Heritage Bank Center U.S. Bank Arena (2001–2019) | 2001–present | 14,453 | 1975 | Cincinnati, Ohio |
Miami Arena | 1998–1999 | 14,823 | 1988 | Miami, Florida | |
Broadbent Arena | 1995–1998 | 6,600 | 1977 | Louisville, Kentucky | |
Fort Wayne Komets | Allen County War Memorial Coliseum | 1990–present[4] | 10,480 | 1952 | Fort Wayne, Indiana |
Indy Fuel | Indiana Farmers Coliseum Fairgrounds Coliseum (Apr. 2014–Dec. 2014) | 2014–present | 6,300 | 1939 | Indianapolis, Indiana |
Iowa Heartlanders | Xtream Arena | 2021–present | 5,100 | 2021 | Coralville, Iowa |
Kalamazoo Wings | Wings Event Center Wings Stadium (1974–2015) | 2000–present[5] | 5,133 | 1974 | Kalamazoo, Michigan |
Toledo Walleye Toledo Storm (1991–2007)[6] | Huntington Center Lucas County Arena (2009–2010) | 2009–present | 7,389 | 2009 | Toledo, Ohio |
Toledo Sports Arena | 1991–2007 | 5,230 | 1947 | Toledo, Ohio | |
Wheeling Nailers Wheeling Thunderbirds (1992–1996) Carolina/Winston-Salem Thunderbirds (1988–1992) | WesBanco Arena Wheeling Civic Center (1977–2003) | 1992–present | 5,406 | 1977 | Wheeling, West Virginia |
Winston–Salem Memorial Coliseum | 1988–1992 | 8,500 | 1955 | Winston-Salem, North Carolina | |
Mountain Division | |||||
Team | Arena | Years used | Capacity | Opened | City |
Allen Americans | Allen Event Center | 2009–present[7] | 6,275 | 2009 | Allen, Texas |
Idaho Steelheads | Idaho Central Arena CenturyLink Arena Boise (2011–2020) Qwest Arena (2005–2011) Bank of America Centre (1997–2005) | 1997–present[8] | 5,002 | 1997 | Boise, Idaho |
Kansas City Mavericks Missouri Mavericks (2014–2017)[9] | Cable Dahmer Arena Silverstein Eye Centers Arena (2015–20) Independence Events Center (2009–15) | 2009–present[10] | 5,800 | 2009 | Independence, Missouri |
Rapid City Rush | Rushmore Plaza Civic Center | 2008–present[11] | 5,132 | 1977 | Rapid City, South Dakota |
Tulsa Oilers | BOK Center | 2008–present[12] | 17,096 | 2008 | Tulsa, Oklahoma |
Utah Grizzlies Lexington Men O' War (2002–2003) Macon Whoopee (2001–2002) Tallahassee Tiger Sharks (1994–2001) Huntsville Blast (1993–1994) Roanoke Valley Rebels/Rampage (1990–1993) Virginia Lancers (1988–1990) | Maverik Center E Center (1997–2010) | 2005–present | 10,100 | 1997 | West Valley City, Utah |
Rupp Arena | 2002–2003 | 23,500 | 1976 | Lexington, Kentucky | |
Macon Coliseum | 2001–2002 | 7,182 | 1968 | Macon, Georgia | |
Tallahassee–Leon County Civic Center | 1994–2001 | 12,100 | 1981 | Tallahassee, Florida | |
Von Braun Center | 1993–1994 | 6,602 | 1975 | Huntsville, Alabama | |
LancerLot | 1988–1993 | – | – | Vinton, Virginia | |
Wichita Thunder | Intrust Bank Arena | 2010–present[13] | 13,450 | 2010 | Wichita, Kansas |
Future teams
Future teams arenas | |||||
Team | Arena | Years used | Capacity | Opened | City |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tahoe Knight Monsters | Tahoe Blue Event Center | Beginning in 2024–25 season | 4,200 | 2023 | Stateline, Nevada |
Bloomington Bison | Grossinger Motors Arena | Beginning in 2024–25 season | 7,000 | 2006 | Bloomington, Illinois |
Defunct teams
Notes
- ^ Alaska played in the West Coast Hockey League from 1995 to 2003. They joined the ECHL for the 2003–04 season.
- ^ Evansville played in the Central Hockey League (CHL) before joining the ECHL in 2012. Voluntarily suspended operations after the 2015–16 season.
- ^ Bakersfield played in the West Coast Hockey League from 1995 to 2003. They joined the ECHL for the 2003–04 season.
- ^ Fort Wayne played in the International Hockey League from 1990 to 1999 (for the current franchise, there had been another Komets franchise that played in the IHL from 1952 to 1990), the UHL/IHL from 1999 to 2010, and the CHL from 2010 to 2012. They joined the ECHL as of the 2012–13 season.
- ^ Kalamazoo previously played in the UHL/IHL from 2000 to 2009. They joined the ECHL as of the 2009–10 season.
- ^ The Toledo franchise had an original run from 1991 until 2007, but voluntarily suspended their membership after the 2006–07 ECHL season in order to demolish the Toledo Sports Arena in order to build the Lucas County Arena. The new owners of the team also changed its nickname from Storm to Walleye.
- ^ Allen played in the CHL from 2009 to 2014 before joining the ECHL for the 2014–15 season
- ^ Idaho played in the West Coast Hockey League from 1997 to 2003. They joined the ECHL for the 2003–04 season.
- ^ The team changed its name but did not relocate.
- ^ Missouri played in the CHL from 2009 to 2014 before joining the ECHL for the 2014–15 season.
- ^ Rapid City played in the CHL from 2008 to 2014 before joining the ECHL for the 2014–15 season.
- ^ Tulsa played in the CHL from 1992 to 2014 before joining the ECHL for the 2014–15 season.
- ^ Wichita played in the CHL from 1992 to 2014 before joining the ECHL for the 2014–15 season.
- ^ Brampton played in the CHL before joining the ECHL for the 2014–15 season.
- ^ Colorado played in the CHL from 2003 to 2011 before joining the ECHL for the 2011–12 season.
- ^ Columbia voluntarily suspended their membership for the 2008–09 season as it tried to build a new arena. The team never returned and was removed as a "future market" by the ECHL in 2014.
- ^ Elmira played in the United Hockey League from 2000 to 2007. They joined the ECHL as of the 2007–08 season.
- ^ Las Vegas took a voluntary suspension from the league after Orleans Arena declined to renew the team's lease in 2014.
- ^ Quad City played in the IHL from 2009 to 2010 and the CHL from 2010 to 2014 before joining the ECHL for the 2014–15 season.
- ^ San Diego played in the West Coast Hockey League from 1995 to 2003. They joined the ECHL for the 2003–04 season.
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Current arenas in the ECHL
Conference
- Bon Secours Wellness Arena (Greenville, SC)
- Colisée Vidéotron (Trois-Rivières, QC)
- Cool Insuring Arena (Glens Falls, NY)
- Cross Insurance Arena (Portland, ME)
- DCU Center (Worcester, MA)
- Enmarket Arena (Savannah, GA)
- Gas South Arena (Duluth, GA)
- Hertz Arena (Estero, FL)
- Kia Center (Orlando, FL)
- Norfolk Scope (Norfolk, VA)
- North Charleston Coliseum (North Charleston, SC)
- Santander Arena (Reading, PA)
- VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena (Jacksonville, FL)
- WesBanco Arena (Wheeling, WV)
Conference
- Allen County War Memorial Coliseum (Fort Wayne, IN)
- BOK Center (Tulsa, OK)
- Cable Dahmer Arena (Independence, MO)
- Credit Union of Texas Event Center (Allen, TX)
- Fishers Event Center (Fishers, IN)
- Grossinger Motors Arena (Bloomington, IL)
- Heritage Bank Center (Cincinnati, OH)
- Huntington Center (Toledo, OH)
- Idaho Central Arena (Boise, ID)
- Intrust Bank Arena (Wichita, KS)
- Maverik Center (West Valley City, UT)
- The Monument (Rapid City, SD)
- Tahoe Blue Event Center (Stateline, NV)
- Wings Event Center (Kalamazoo, MI)
- Xtream Arena (Coralville, IA)