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The Philadelphia 76ers warming up prior to a game vs the New Jersey Nets, now the Brooklyn Nets, on the arena's old floor design in October 2007 Philadelphia Flyers fans leaving Wachovia Center after a playoff game in 2010 Rink-side view of Wells Fargo Center's hockey rink during a game between the Philadelphia Flyers and the Columbus Blue ...
The Philadelphia Flyers Junior Hockey Club (also known as the Philadelphia Flyers Elite or the USPHL Flyers) were a Tier III junior ice hockey team in the United States Premier Hockey League Premier Division. The franchise was originally based in Voorhees, New Jersey, at the Flyers Skate Zone.
One of the first teams to make the Arena home was the Yale University men's ice hockey team. Yale did not have a suitable on-campus venue in 1920 and played home games in Philadelphia. [2] During the 1920–1921 season, Yale, Princeton, and Penn made the Arena their home ice. [3]
Indoor arenas in Philadelphia (2 C) V. Esports venues in Pennsylvania (3 P) ... York City Ice Arena This page was last edited on 2 April 2017, at 21:27 (UTC). Text ...
The Devils were formed when the Philadelphia Ramblers, a member of the Eastern Hockey League (EHL), relocated from Philadelphia to Cherry Hill at the end of the 1963–64 season. The Devils played their home games at the Cherry Hill Arena until 1973, when the team folded along with the entire Eastern Hockey League.
The facility's main competitors are Ice Line in West Chester, The Pond in Newark, Delaware, and the Oaks Center Ice in Phoenixville. IceWorks is also home to two Special Hockey International teams, the Philadelphia Fearless Flyers and the Bucks County Admirals. The Bucks County Admirals use IceWorks as its second home arena.
The Class of 1923 Arena is the skating rink of the University of Pennsylvania. In 1968, alumni from the Class of 1923 formed the group "Friends of Pennsylvania Hockey," led by Howard Butcher, III. Butcher himself donated over $3 million for the creation of the facility, and along with John Cleveland and Bill R. Wise, organized the largest class ...
The referee ruled no goal and a replay review confirmed the call. Afterwards, a fan threw a road flare onto the ice that caused smoke to halt play. The fan who threw the flare ran out of the 11th Street exit of the arena but when the PA announcer asked the crowd to point out the culprit, the home crowd pointed out an innocent Devils fan. [6]