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Pages in category "Egg Harbor City, New Jersey" The following 10 pages are in this category, out of 10 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. ...
Egg Harbor City is a city in Atlantic County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey. The city, and all of Atlantic County, is part of the Atlantic City - Hammonton metropolitan statistical area , which in turn is included in the Philadelphia - Reading - Camden combined statistical area and the Delaware Valley . [ 18 ]
Ice, Floor (Rink 1 can be configured for non ice purposes also) Opened: 1958: Tenants; NJ Devils Youth Hockey Essex Skating Club New Jersey Daredevils (2002–present) New York Sirens (PWHL, practice facility) (2024–present) New Jersey Gems (1980–1981) New Jersey Devils (NHL, practice facility) (1986–2007) Jersey Rockhoppers (2008–2009)
In 2013, NJ.com described the rink as "a symbol of revitalization for Newark" and "a literal savior of urban skating". It praised its relationship to the community, including events like roller derby, style skating, gospel skaters, and DJ nightlife. [2] [3] The rink has been called a "hidden gem" and a "staple of the [Newark] community". [4]
Sports Illustrated Stadium is a soccer-specific stadium in Harrison, New Jersey, that is home to the New York Red Bulls of Major League Soccer and NJ/NY Gotham FC of the National Women's Soccer League. [6] It opened under its former name, Red Bull Arena, in 2010.
Eurosport 2 HD, a high-definition version of the channel, is also available. Eurosport 2 HD Xtra is a German pay-TV channel launched in 2017. Eurosport bought Germany-only rights for Bundesliga, Supermoto and other broadcasting rights. Eurosport 2 has no German-only signal and Eurosport 1 is free-to-air, so the new channel was needed.
The Essex Skating Club has sponsored many skating events and clinics featuring famous skaters such as Olympic medalists [29] and Disney on Ice skaters. [30] It also hosts annual competition Winter ESCapade sanctioned by U.S. Figure Skating in January with competitors from clubs along the Northern parts of the East coast. [1] [31]
It had two regulation-size hockey rinks. The main rink had an open seating area and a glassed-in executive suite for watching the venue. General skating sessions for the public, and youth and adult hockey practices and games were regularly scheduled. It was the home for the New Jersey Rockets youth and semi-professional ice hockey club.