RiverCentre Arena
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RiverCentre Arena (originally the St. Paul Civic Center) was an indoor arena located in St. Paul, Minnesota. The arena was part of a larger convention complex, named the RiverCentre in 1998. The arena, which was opened on January 1, 1973, was the home of both incarnations of the Minnesota Fighting Saints of the WHA - the first from 1973-1976 and the second from 1976-1977. The arena seats 16,000. It was renamed in 1998. The arena was torn down in 1998 to make way for the Xcel Energy Center which opened in 2000. The boys' state high school hockey and basketball tournaments were also held at the Civic Center as well as three NCAA Frozen Fours.
The Civic Center was unique, in that the hockey boards were made of clear plexiglas all the way down to the ice. This was because the seating configuration was round, meaning the closest seats at center ice were not right up against the glass. The clear boards made for better sightlines for those spectators.
The clear boards were replaced with normal wood boards when the IHL Minnesota Moose played there, as the professional team needed to be able to sell advertising on the boards. This wrecked the sightlines for what should have been the best seats, and proved that to get an expansion NHL team a new arena was needed.
Categories: Indoor arenas in the United States | Indoor ice hockey venues in the United States | NCAA Men's Frozen Four venues | Saint Paul, Minnesota | Sports venues in Minneapolis-St. Paul | World Hockey Association venues | Midwestern United States sports venue stubs | Minnesota building and structure stubs