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Mariucci Arena

Mariucci Arena
Mariucci Arena 11-16-12.jpg
Location 1901 4th St SE
Minneapolis, MN 55455-2004
Coordinates 44°58′41″N 93°13′41″W / 44.97806°N 93.22806°W / 44.97806; -93.22806Coordinates: 44°58′41″N 93°13′41″W / 44.97806°N 93.22806°W / 44.97806; -93.22806
Owner University of Minnesota
Operator University of Minnesota
Capacity 10,000 (Ice hockey)
Surface Multi-surface
200 feet (61 m) x 100 feet (30 m)
Opened 1993
Tenants
Minnesota Golden Gophers Men's Hockey (NCAA)
(1993–present)
Minnesota Golden Gophers Women's Hockey (NCAA)
(1997–2002)

Mariucci Arena is the home arena for the Minnesota Golden Gophers men's ice hockey team of the University of Minnesota. The arena is located on the Minneapolis campus and seats approximately 10,000 fans (9,600 in the main bowl plus club room and suite seating). The arena opened in 1993 and is named after John Mariucci, the longtime Gopher coach who is considered the "godfather of Minnesota hockey." Under the gate is a quote from Mariucci: "Through these gates walk the greatest fans in college hockey." The ice sheet is Olympic sized (200 feet by 100 feet). The women's ice hockey team played at Mariucci from 1997 until 2002 when they moved to Ridder Arena, a smaller on-campus arena.

Mariucci Arena has been host to prominent regional, national, and international competitions, including the 2005 and 2009 West Regional of the NCAA Men's Ice Hockey Championship, the 2006 NCAA Women's Division I Ice Hockey Tournament, and the 2006 World Short Track speed skating event. Mariucci Arena also hosted the inaugural Women's Frozen Four on March 23 and March 25, 2001.

The Minnesota State High School League state hockey tournament holds its consolation bracket at Mariucci. On November 6, 2004, 10,587 fans watched the Gophers complete the sweep of the arch-rival Wisconsin Badgers, the largest crowd to watch a game at Mariucci Arena.

From 1950 to 1993 the hockey team played in the hockey arena section of Williams Arena. That arena was renamed Mariucci Arena in 1985. People now generally refer to that as the "old" Mariucci Arena.


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