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Amalie Arena (officially stylized as AMALIE Arena) is a multipurpose arena in Tampa, Florida, United States, that has been used for ice hockey, basketball, arena football, concerts, and other events. It is mainly used as the home for the Tampa Bay Lightning of the National Hockey League .
The Mohegan Sun Arena is a 10,000 seat multi-purpose arena in the Uncasville area of Montville, Connecticut located inside the Mohegan Sun casino resort. The arena facility features 30,000 square feet (2,800 m 2 ) of configurable exhibition space and a 400-foot (120 m) clear span .
Arena Location Team Capacity Opened Season of first NHL game Ref(s) Amalie Arena: Tampa, Florida: Tampa Bay Lightning: 19,092 1996 1996–97 [1] Amerant Bank Arena: Sunrise, Florida: Florida Panthers: 19,250 1998 1998–99 [2] American Airlines Center: Dallas, Texas: Dallas Stars: 18,532 2001 2001–02 [3] Ball Arena: Denver, Colorado: Colorado ...
From 2003 to 2017, the arena was home to the San Antonio Stars of the Women's National Basketball Association. It was the home of the San Antonio Rampage of the American Hockey League from 2002 until 2020.
SAP Center at San Jose* 17,562 [27] San Jose United States: San Jose Sharks (1993–present), San Jose Barracuda (2015–2022) 29: Value City Arena: 17,500 [28] Columbus United States: Ohio State Buckeyes men's ice hockey (1998–present) 30: T-Mobile Arena* 17,500 [29] Las Vegas United States: Vegas Golden Knights (2017–present) 31
The Lightning moved into a new arena in downtown Tampa, the Ice Palace (later the St. Pete Times Forum, Tampa Bay Times Forum and now Amalie Arena) for the 1996–97 season. They had acquired goal-scorer Dino Ciccarelli from the Detroit Red Wings during the 1996 off-season, and he did not disappoint, scoring 35 goals while Chris Gratton notched ...
Kacey Musgraves didn't hold back after a fan was allegedly disrespectful toward her.. On Saturday, Nov. 30, the country star, 36, called out a fan who appeared to grab her during her concert in ...
During this time, the team's home rink was the UConn Ice Arena, an outdoor facility. The team was finally promoted to D-I in 1998 when the Mark Edward Freitas Ice Forum was completed. The Huskies used the Forum as their home for the next 18 years. In 2014, UConn joined Hockey East despite the Ice Forum not meeting the league's requirements. [2]