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Miami Matadors

Miami Matadors
MiamiMatadors.png
City Miami, Florida
League ECHL
Division Southeast Division
Founded 1995
Operated 1998–99
Home arena Miami Arena
Colors Black, gold, white
              
Owner(s) Davis-Snyder Sports Management, Inc.
General manager Robert M. Snyder
Head coach Terry Christensen
Captain Wes Swinson
Affiliates Florida Panthers (NHL)
Franchise history
1995–98 Louisville RiverFrogs
1998–99 Miami Matadors
1999–2001 inactive
2001–present Cincinnati Cyclones
Championships
Regular season titles None
Division Championships None
Conference Championships None
Kelly Cups None

The Miami Matadors were an ice hockey team in the East Coast Hockey League. They played in Miami, Florida, United States at the Miami Arena for one season before folding. The Matadors franchise would resurface two years later as the Cincinnati Cyclones.

The franchise began as the Louisville RiverFrogs in 1995. Robert Snyder bought the team in February 1998 with intentions of moving the team to South Florida. Upon buying the team, he made the team a family business of sorts. His wife Michelle Dannin was named Vice President Of Communications, and his father Richard Snyder handled the team's legal matters.

On May 12, 1998, Matadors Owner-President Robert Snyder signed a five-year agreement with Miami Arena that would allow the arena to host 35 games from October until April 4. A coaching decision was made several days later when Snyder would name former Tallahassee Tiger Sharks head coach Terry Christensen as their head coach on May 16, 1998. Prior to the start of the 1998-99 ECHL season, the Matadors would announce that they would be the ECHL affiliate of the NHL's Florida Panthers

On October 16, 1998, the Matadors made their ECHL debut against the South Carolina Stingrays. Fans that attended the opening night game received a Miami Matadors cape. With an opening night crowd of 3,368 fans, the Matadors lost to the Stingrays 5-2

In their only season as an ECHL franchise, the Matadors finished with a 28-32-10 record, finishing seventh in the ECHL's Southeast Division. The team's leading scorer was ex-Brown University center Michael Flynn, with 20 goals and 50 assists; center Greg Clancy was the leading goal scorer with 28. Among other notable Matadors were veteran minor league star Sheldon Gorski and goaltender Brent Belecki.

One of the Matadors' prime selling points were the inexpensive ticket prices. Snyder claimed a family of four could see a Matadors game for $50, compared to $223 to see the NBA's Miami Heat and $273 to see the Matadors' NHL affiliate, the Florida Panthers. (All three teams were tenants of Miami Arena.)


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