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SaskTel Centre

Multi-use indoor arena in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
SaskTel Centre
SaskTel Centre is located in Saskatchewan
SaskTel Centre
SaskTel Centre
Location within Saskatchewan
Show map of Saskatchewan
SaskTel Centre is located in Canada
SaskTel Centre
SaskTel Centre
Location within Canada
Show map of Canada
Former namesSaskatchewan Place (1988–2004)
Credit Union Centre (2004–2014)
Address3315 Thatcher Avenue
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
S7R 1C4
Coordinates 52°11′20′′N 106°40′44′′W / 52.189°N 106.679°W / 52.189; -106.679
OwnerCity of Saskatoon
Executive suites51
Capacity 15,100[1]
Lacrosse: 15,195[2]
Record attendance16,874 Metallica WorldWired Tour, September 15, 2018
SurfaceIce, Turf, Court
Construction
Broke ground11 September 1986 (1986年09月11日)[3]
Opened9 February 1988; 37 years ago (1988年02月09日)
Expanded1990, 2009
Construction costC$24.8 million
(59ドル.4 million in 2023 dollars[4] )

6ドル.7 million (2009 expansion)[5]
(9ドル.22 million in 2023 dollars[4] )
ArchitectThomas Ferguson Architect, Ltd[6]
PBK Architects, Inc.[6]
Structural engineerCochrane Lavalin Consulting Engineers[6]
General contractorCarlson Constructors, Ltd.
Tenants
Saskatoon Blades (WHL) (1988–present)
Saskatchewan Rush (NLL) (2016–present)
Saskatchewan Rattlers (CEBL) (2019–present)
Saskatchewan Storm (WBL) (1990–92)
Saskatoon Slam (NBL) (1992–94)
Saskatchewan Hawks (IBA/CBA) (2000–02)
Saskatoon Accelerators (CMISL) (2007–09)
Saskatoon Sirens (LFL Canada) (2012)
Website
www.sasktelcentre.com

SaskTel Centre (formerly Credit Union Centre, and originally Saskatchewan Place; informally also known as Sask Place) is an arena located in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada. The facility opened in February 1988 and is currently the home venue of the Saskatoon Blades of the Western Hockey League, the Saskatchewan Rattlers of the Canadian Elite Basketball League, and the Saskatchewan Rush of the National Lacrosse League, with the arena being referred to as Co-op Field at SaskTel Centre during Rush games.[7]

History

[edit ]
The interior of SaskTel Centre prior to a Saskatchewan Rush game.

SaskPlace was constructed as a replacement for Saskatoon Arena, a concrete building constructed in Saskatoon's downtown core in the 1930s. The building was in use until 1988, hosting its final hockey game only a week before SaskPlace opened.[8] Nicknamed "The Barn", the facility had outlived its usefulness some 20 years earlier and had become infamous for leaky roofs and substandard amenities.[9] Yet the city was hesitant to lose the landmark, and a number of years passed between the 1970s proposal to replace the structure and the eventual demolition of the Arena and the opening of SaskPlace in the late 1980s.[10] [11]

In 1982, the city approved a proposal to build a new 5,000 seat arena at the city's Exhibition grounds south of the downtown core.[11] However, by 1983 local sports promoter Bill Hunter was attempting to purchase the St. Louis Blues of the National Hockey League with a plan to relocate the team to Saskatoon; part of this plan included building an 18,000-seat arena.[12] Two locations for this much larger arena were suggested: the site of a decommissioned power plant downtown, just west of Saskatoon Arena, and a site north of the city's airport in the North Industrial area. Despite Hunter's best efforts, the NHL ultimately rejected his offer and plans to relocate an NHL team collapsed.[12] Even so, the city had shifted planning to building a larger arena, and debate continued about the preferred location. City Council narrowly approved the north industrial proposal in a 6–5 vote in 1985. While mayor Cliff Wright and alderman and future mayor Henry Dayday championed the location, some of council, including alderman Pat Lorje, advocated for a new downtown arena instead, wary of the long-term effects that losing the arena would have on the city's downtown.[8] In addition, concern was expressed about the accessibility of the location north of the city. Public reaction to the council vote was mixed, and a petition with more than 16,000 signatures demanding a public vote resulted in a public plebiscite being held in conjunction with the 1985 civic election.[13] In that plebiscite, Saskatoon residents rejected the downtown option, with 64% voting against it.[8] A second plebiscite was held in 1986 to approve the north industrial location, which passed with 70% in favour.[14] Construction thus proceeded on the north industrial location, and an 8,000-seat Saskatchewan Place was completed in 1988, expanded to 11,000 in 1990.[13]

Despite the votes that led to the arena, the location remained polarizing in ensuing decades, especially as many hoped-for benefits of the north location, including an influx of new services and a relocation of the city's exhibition grounds adjacent to the site, failed to materialize.[13] Moreover, the hoped-for NHL franchise never arrived either; Hunter tried again in the early 1990s, applying for an expansion team, but ultimately fell just short of securing adequate funding.[15] However, the arena did host the NHL's first neutral-site game on October 13, 1992, a game between the Calgary Flames and Minnesota North Stars.[16]

In the early 2000s, Saunders Avenue, a street leading into the parking lot of the arena, was renamed Bill Hunter Avenue in honour of Hunter, who died in 2002. This was considered ironic by many Saskatonians, given Hunter lobbied for the facility to be built in another location near the old Saskatoon Arena. The city then transferred the 'Saunders' name to a new street in the River Landing redevelopment area—running through the former site of the Saskatoon Arena.

Expansion

[edit ]

In 2008–09, the arena, then called the Credit Union Centre,[17] was renovated for the 2010 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships.[18] There were 2,981 seats added to the arena, increasing the capacity to more than 15,000. The cost of the expansion was pegged at 6ドル.7 million. 2ドル million was requested as a loan from the city of Saskatoon and 3ドル million from a provincial grant. Hockey Canada may have also contributed about 500,000ドル.[19]

At this time, there was a proposal from Ice Edge Holdings to purchase the Phoenix Coyotes and begin playing five of the Coyotes' home games each season at Credit Union Centre, beginning in December 2009. The logic behind the move, which parallels the Bills Toronto Series in the NFL, was that although Saskatoon was likely too small to support an NHL team of its own, it would easily be able to sell out the Credit Union Centre for one game each month.[20] However, by May 2011, Ice Edge Holdings had abandoned its plan to purchase the team.[21]

In August 2014, SaskTel acquired the naming rights to the arena, renaming it SaskTel Centre.[17]

In 2016, the Edmonton Rush of the National Lacrosse League relocated to Saskatoon as the Saskatchewan Rush, playing their home games at SaskTel Centre.[22] In 2017, the team reached a naming rights sponsorship with Saskatoon Co-op, under which the arena is referred to as Co-op Field at SaskTel Centre during Rush games.[23]

Future

[edit ]

A 2018 study recommended the construction of a new arena and convention centre in downtown Saskatoon to replace SaskTel Centre and TCU Place. Both venues were assessed as needing replacement, failing to meet standards in comparison to venues in equivalent markets, including the arena's inadequate space for large event staging and rigging, and poor location and accessibility.[24]

In August 2022, following an evaluation of five potential sites, a report recommending one of two sites—one in the north downtown city yard, and one in the north parking lot of Midtown—was presented to city council.[25] On November 16, 2022, the Midtown site was selected.[26] A proposed design of the Downtown Entertainment and Event District, anchored by the new arena under the working title "Saskatchewan Place", was unveiled in February 2024.[27]

Major events

[edit ]

The arena's inaugural event was the Saskatoon Blades' first WHL game at the arena, in which they defeated the Brandon Wheat Kings 4–3. Troy Kennedy scored the first goal in the arena's history, while Kory Kocur scored the game's winning goal in front of a sell-out crowd of 9,343.[16]

The Saskatoon Blades have hosted the Memorial Cup twice at SaskTel Centre. The first time was in 1989, the year after the arena opened; the Blades made it to the final, but lost 4–3 in overtime to the WHL champion Swift Current Broncos.[28] They hosted again in 2013, but won just one match and failed to advance to final round.[29]

Saskatchewan Place has twice hosted the IIHF World Junior Championship, first in 1991, and again in 2010, when Saskatoon co-hosted the tournament with Regina.[30] The arena also hosted the 2018 4 Nations Cup women's tournament.[31]

The arena has hosted several men's and women's national championships, including four Brier championships–1989, 2000, 2004, 2012–and one Tournament of Hearts, in 1991. SaskTel Centre also hosted the 2021 Canadian Olympic Curling Trials ahead of the 2022 Winter Olympics.[32]

The Saskatchewan Rattlers hosted the inaugural CEBL Championship Weekend in 2019, which saw the Rattlers win the league's first title with a 94–83 win over the Hamilton Honey Badgers.[33]

During a World Wrestling Federation taping at the arena on October 12, 1992 for a Coliseum Video release, Bret Hart of Calgary (whose father, Stu, was a Saskatoon native) defeated Ric Flair to win his first WWF World Heavyweight Championship. In a match taped for Superstars , Calgary's Bill Jordan was squashed by the debuting Yokozuna, who dethroned Hart the following April at WrestleMania IX.[34] In March 2023, All Elite Wrestling (AEW) announced that it would broadcast Dynamite from SaskTel Centre on July 12, 2023, as part of a pair of shows in the province.[35] [36]

Concerts

[edit ]

Metallica performed at the arena in 1992.

In June 1988, the arena hosted a show by Tiffany.

In 2005, the arena hosted a gala command performance for Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, hosted by Brent Butt, as part of a royal visit to Saskatchewan commemorating the province's centennial.[37]

The arena hosted the 2007 Juno Awards. The Juno Awards were to return to SaskTel Centre in 2020, but the ceremony was cancelled on March 12 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[38] [39]

In October 2014, the arena hosted a show by Demi Lovato of her Demi World Tour.

From June 9 to 12, 2016, SaskTel Centre hosted six sold-out performances by Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood as part of their World Tour. The shows broke a record for concert attendance at the arena—set by Brooks in 1996—averaging 15,776 per show and an estimated total of 94,655 attendees.[40]

The single-concert record would be exceeded by Metallica's WorldWired Tour stop at SaskTel Centre in September 2018, attracting 16,874 attendees in one of only two Canadian stops on the tour. The band dedicated their performance of "Nothing Else Matters" to those who had died in the Humboldt Broncos bus crash.[41]

In October 2019, SaskTel Centre hosted a two-night stop on Elton John's Farewell Yellow Brick Road tour.[42]

Attendance records

[edit ]
The Saskatoon Blades face off against the Regina Pats at SaskTel Centre
  • The current attendance record for SaskTel Centre is 16,874, which was set on September 15, 2018 for a concert by Metallica.[43]
  • The largest crowd for a hockey game at the arena is 15,171, set on December 31, 2009 for a round robin game of the 2010 World Juniors between Canada and the United States; this was equalled on January 5, 2010 for the gold medal game of the tournament, which featured a re-match of the same teams.
  • The largest crowd for a Saskatoon Blades game verses an out of province team is 12,588, set on February 9, 2013 in a game against the Lethbridge Hurricanes; the largest crowd for any Blades games is 14,768, first set in a game against the Regina Pats on March 19, 2023; this was equalled less than a week later on March 24 when the Blades hosted the Pats again, and then once more on April 10, 2023, for game 7 of the first round playoff series between the Blades and Pats.[44] [45]
  • The largest crowd for a Saskatchewan Rush game is 15,192 set on May 21, 2016 in a game against the Calgary Roughnecks.[46]

Tenants

[edit ]

Current

[edit ]
Team League Since Notes
Saskatoon Blades Western Hockey League 1988 Host of the 1989 and 2013 Memorial Cups
Saskatchewan Rush National Lacrosse League 2015 Won NLL Championship in their inaugural season, winning at SaskTel Centre on 4 June, 2016. Won their second NLL Championship at SaskTel Center on 9 June, 2018.
Saskatchewan Rattlers Canadian Elite Basketball League 2019 Host of the inaugural CEBL Championship Weekend; the Rattlers won the title on 25 August, 2019

Former

[edit ]
Team League Years Notes
Saskatchewan Storm World Basketball League 1990–92 The WBL folded during the 1992 season
Saskatoon Slam National Basketball League 1992–94 The NBL replaced the WBL for Canadian franchises, but itself folded in 1994
Saskatchewan Hawks International Basketball Association, Continental Basketball Association 2000–02 The IBA folded after the 2000–01 season; the Hawks folded after the 2001–02 CBA season
Saskatoon Accelerators Canadian Major Indoor Soccer League 2007–09 Moved to the Henk Ruys Soccer Centre for the 2010 season, after which the team folded
Saskatoon Sirens Lingerie Football League 2012 Part of LFL Canada, which lasted only one season

Major tournaments and events hosted

[edit ]
Tournament/Event Sport/Event Year(s)
The Brier Curling 1989; 2000; 2004; 2012
Scotties Tournament of Hearts Curling 1991
Canadian Olympic Curling Trials Curling 2021
Grand Slam of Curling Curling 2008, 2019
Memorial Cup Hockey 1989, 2013
IIHF World Junior Championship Hockey 1991; 2010
4 Nations Cup Hockey 2018
CHL Top Prospects Game Hockey 1992, 2002
U Sports University Cup Hockey 1998, 1999, 2000, 2013, 2014
Canada/Russia Super Series Hockey 2007
Canadian Figure Skating Championships Figure skating 1991, 2003, 2009
Canadian Ringette Championships Ringette 1994, 2010
FIVB Volleyball Women's U21 World Championship Volleyball 1999
CEBL Championship Weekend Basketball 2019
Juno Awards Music awards 2007
Warped Tour Music festival 2008

Gordie Howe memorial

[edit ]

A bronze statue of former Detroit Red Wings player and Saskatoon native Gordie Howe has been located outside the arena since 2005. The statue was created by Michael Martin but remained in Eston, Saskatchewan until 1993, when private donations were used to fund its completion. As city property, Saskatoon's city council rejected a proposal to place the statue outside the arena, as they felt it had no artistic value or "enduring quality." The statue would be purchased by the owners of Midtown Plaza, and installed on a street corner near the mall. The placement was criticized by a Saskatoon Star-Phoenix columnist, who felt (as per a survey the paper conducted, and an opinion from Howe himself) that the arena would be a more appropriate location for the statue. In 2005, the Gordie Howe statue was moved outside the arena's main entrance.[47]

Following Howe's death in June 2016, the statue became a memorial site for the player. In September 2016, the cremated remains of Howe and his wife Colleen Howe were buried at the statue's base.[48]

References

[edit ]
  1. ^ "Technical Information". Credit Union Centre. Retrieved January 11, 2013.
  2. ^ "2018–2019 NLL Media Guide" (PDF). National Lacrosse League.
  3. ^ Kenney, John (11 September 1986). "Ground Breaking Ceremony for the New Arena in Saskatoon". The StarPhoenix. Saskatoon, Saskatchewan . Retrieved 7 December 2013.
  4. ^ a b 1688 to 1923: Geloso, Vincent, A Price Index for Canada, 1688 to 1850 (December 6, 2016). Afterwards, Canadian inflation numbers based on Statistics Canada tables 18-10-0005-01 (formerly CANSIM 326-0021) "Consumer Price Index, annual average, not seasonally adjusted". Statistics Canada. Retrieved April 17, 2021. and table 18-10-0004-13 "Consumer Price Index by product group, monthly, percentage change, not seasonally adjusted, Canada, provinces, Whitehorse, Yellowknife and Iqaluit". Statistics Canada. Retrieved 2024年05月08日.
  5. ^ "SASKATOON CREDIT UNION CENTRE RECEIVES 3ドル MILLION" (Press release). Regina, Saskatchewan: Government of Saskatchewan. 4 November 2008. Retrieved 8 December 2013.
  6. ^ a b c Yanko, Dave (21 December 1985). "B.C. firm may get piece of arena action". The StarPhoenix. Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. p. A1. Retrieved 7 December 2013.
  7. ^ "Introducing Co-Op Field at SaskTel Centre". Saskatchewan Rush. 2017年09月28日. Retrieved 2017年11月21日.
  8. ^ a b c Quenneville, Guy (2018年10月21日). "The Great Arena Debate". CBC News . Archived from the original on 2018年10月21日. Retrieved 2023年08月01日.
  9. ^ Tank, Phil (2023年02月24日). "Timing is exactly right for debate on new Saskatoon arena". Saskatoon StarPhoenix . Archived from the original on 2023年03月19日. Retrieved 2023年12月28日.
  10. ^ "Saskatoon's last downtown arena". CBC News. 2016年04月07日. Archived from the original on 2016年04月08日. Retrieved 2023年08月01日.
  11. ^ a b Hoknes, Terry (2021年03月10日). "The Final Decade of the Saskatoon Arena and the Birth of SaskPlace". Saskatchewan History & Folklore Society. Archived from the original on 2023年01月24日. Retrieved 2023年08月01日.
  12. ^ a b Mitchell, Kevin (2019年05月30日). "The big one that got away: Blues were bought, the deal done, but then NHL intervened". Saskatoon StarPhoenix. Archived from the original on 2019年05月30日. Retrieved 2023年08月01日.
  13. ^ a b c Tank, Phil (2016年04月23日). "Three decades reveal dashed arena dream". Saskatoon StarPhoenix. Archived from the original on 2016年04月24日. Retrieved 2023年08月01日.
  14. ^ Tank, Phil (2019年01月02日). "Referendums were once common in Saskatoon". Saskatoon StarPhoenix. Archived from the original on 2023年08月01日. Retrieved 2023年08月01日 – via pressreader.
  15. ^ Young, Matt (2023年05月23日). "Saskatoon's second NHL bid that almost materialized". CTV News . Archived from the original on 2023年05月25日. Retrieved 2023年08月01日.
  16. ^ a b Wolfe, Cory (2008年02月09日). "Grand opening for Blades in '88". The StarPhoenix. Archived from the original on 2013年09月28日. Retrieved 2013年09月24日.
  17. ^ a b "Credit Union Centre to be re-named SaskTel Centre". CBC News. 2014年08月22日. Archived from the original on 2014年08月24日. Retrieved 2014年08月22日.
  18. ^ "Renovations". Credit Union Centre. Retrieved December 27, 2010.
  19. ^ Nickel, Rod (September 3, 2008). "CUC Adds 3,000 Seats Council Gives Preliminary Nod to Howe Bowl, Arena Expansion". The StarPhoenix . Saskatoon. pp. A1.
  20. ^ "Bidder has ice booked in Saskatoon". Faceoff.com. September 1, 2009. Archived from the original on March 18, 2012. Retrieved January 11, 2013.
  21. ^ Francis, Eric (May 7, 2011). "NHL Exec Says Officials Won't Stand for Diving". Toronto Sun . Retrieved January 11, 2013.
  22. ^ "NLL's Rush leaving Edmonton for Saskatoon". TSN.ca . 2015年07月21日. Archived from the original on 2015年09月05日. Retrieved 2015年07月21日.
  23. ^ Hanna, Claire (2017年09月29日). "Saskatchewan Rush ink five-year partnership with Co-op". Global News . Archived from the original on 2017年10月04日. Retrieved 2019年01月12日.
  24. ^ Deibert, Dave; Tank, Phil (2018年03月19日). "New downtown joint-use arena, convention centre 'most practical, profitable option': report". Saskatoon StarPhoenix. Archived from the original on 2018年04月01日. Retrieved 2019年12月20日.
  25. ^ Langager, Brody (2022年08月24日). "Future downtown Saskatoon arena site whittled down to two possibilities". Global News. Archived from the original on 2022年08月28日. Retrieved 2022年08月28日.
  26. ^ "Saskatoon chooses its downtown arena site, the teams are here and ready for Grey Cup". CBC Saskatchewan News. 2022年11月16日. Archived from the original on 2023年03月24日. Retrieved 2023年03月24日 – via CBC Saskatchewan YouTube.
  27. ^ "Saskatoon unveils design concepts for downtown arena, entertainment district | Globalnews.ca". Global News. Retrieved 2024年04月10日.
  28. ^ Morrison, Scott (2019年02月06日). "From Tragedy to Triumph: The story of the Swift Current Broncos". Sportsnet . Archived from the original on 2023年07月31日. Retrieved 2023年08月01日.
  29. ^ Clipperton, Joshua (2013年05月24日). "Knights top Blades in Memorial Cup tiebreaker". Global News. Archived from the original on 2013年05月24日. Retrieved 2023年08月01日.
  30. ^ "Regina, Saskatoon to host 2010 world juniors". CBC Sports . 2008年07月07日. Archived from the original on 2023年08月01日. Retrieved 2023年08月01日.
  31. ^ Zary, Darren (2018年11月06日). "Canada ready for 4 Nations Cup opener Tuesday night without Saskatoon's Emily Clark". Saskatoon StarPhoenix. Archived from the original on 2018年11月06日. Retrieved 2023年08月01日.
  32. ^ "Curling fans rejoice: Olympic trials coming to Saskatoon in 2021". Saskatoon StarPhoenix. 2019年02月23日. Archived from the original on 2019年02月26日. Retrieved 2019年03月03日.
  33. ^ Heroux, Devin (2019年08月25日). "Saskatchewan Rattlers complete storybook ending with 1st-ever CEBL Championship". CBC Sports. Archived from the original on 2019年08月26日. Retrieved 2023年08月01日.
  34. ^ Deibert, Dave (2017年02月16日). "'I didn't believe it until it happened': WWE returns to Saskatoon, the site of Hart's history-making night". Saskatoon StarPhoenix. Archived from the original on 2017年02月17日. Retrieved 2019年10月08日.
  35. ^ Prisciak, David (2023年03月15日). "Regina included in All Elite Wrestling 2023 summer schedule". CTV News Regina. Archived from the original on 2023年03月15日. Retrieved 2023年03月15日.
  36. ^ "AEW Collision rolls into Regina this Saturday". SaskToday.ca. 2023年07月07日. Retrieved 2023年10月11日.
  37. ^ O'Connor, Kevin (2005年05月19日). "Royal visit diary". CBC News. Archived from the original on 2014年09月26日. Retrieved 2019年10月08日.
  38. ^ Piller, Thomas (2019年02月28日). "Junos running back to Saskatoon in 2020". Global News. Archived from the original on 2019年03月01日. Retrieved 2019年03月03日.
  39. ^ Wong, Jessica (2020年03月12日). "Juno Awards cancelled over coronavirus concerns". CBC News. Archived from the original on 2020年03月13日. Retrieved 2020年03月12日.
  40. ^ Deibert, Dave (2016年06月14日). "A look back at Garth Brooks' record-smashing stay in Saskatoon". Saskatoon StarPhoenix. Archived from the original on 2016年06月15日. Retrieved 2019年10月09日.
  41. ^ Giles, David (2018年09月17日). "Metallica sets SaskTel Centre attendance record, makes Saskatoon Food Bank donation". Global News. Archived from the original on 2018年09月17日. Retrieved 2019年10月09日.
  42. ^ "Sir Elton's farewell tour comes to Saskatoon". 650 CKOM. 2019年10月01日. Retrieved 2019年10月08日.
  43. ^ David Giles (2018年09月17日). "Metallica sets SaskTel Centre attendance record, makes Saskatoon Food Bank donation". globalnews.ca. Retrieved 2018年09月20日.
  44. ^ Fominoff, Lara (2023年03月24日). "Sellout crowd expected again at SaskTel Centre for Pats-Blades game". 650 CKOM. Archived from the original on 2023年05月12日. Retrieved 2023年08月01日.
  45. ^ Mitchell, Kevin (2023年04月11日). "'What a series': Blades pull out Game 7 win over Pats; Connor Bedard's WHL career comes to a close". Saskatoon StarPhoenix. Archived from the original on 2023年04月11日. Retrieved 2023年08月01日.
  46. ^ [1], http://nll_stats.stats.pointstreak.com/boxscore.html?gameid=2888351
  47. ^ Mitchell, Kevin (2016年06月18日). "The rough 'n tumble tale of Gordie Howe's statue". Saskatoon Star-Phoenix. Retrieved 2019年03月03日.
  48. ^ "Gordie Howe's ashes laid to rest in Saskatoon". CBC News. 2016年09月26日. Archived from the original on 2016年09月28日. Retrieved 2016年09月26日.
[edit ]
Current arenas in the Western Hockey League
Eastern
Conference
Western
Conference

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