"The Hart" | |
Location | 1834 Commercial Avenue Madison, Wisconsin 53704 |
---|---|
Coordinates | 43°06′26″N89°21′38″W / 43.10723°N 89.36042°W |
Public transit | Metro Transit |
Operator | Madison Ice, Inc. |
Capacity | 3,500 |
Surface | Ice |
Opened | 1960 |
Tenants | |
Wisconsin Badgers (NCAA) (1963–1967) Madison Blues (USHL/CnHL) (1973–1977) Madison/Wisconsin Capitals (USHL) (1984–1995) Madison Ice Muskies (AAHL) (2009–2010) Wisconsin Wolfpack (CIFL) (2010) Wisconsin Whalers (NA3HL) (2013–2015) |
Hartmeyer Ice Arena is a 3,500 seat multi-purpose arena in Madison, Wisconsin. It has ice surfaces for hockey, figure skating, and open skating, but can also have the ice removed for other events, such as indoor football.
The building was constructed to play host to the Wisconsin Badgers men's ice hockey team, but only served that purpose for four years before the team moved to the Dane County Coliseum, now known as the Veterans Memorial Coliseum on the campus of the Alliant Energy Center.
Hartmeyer Ice Arena was constructed by Fenton Kelsey, Jr., a Madison business owner and avid hockey supporter. [1] In the late 1950s and early 1960s, University of Wisconsin Athletics Director Ivy Williamson grew to enjoy watching youth hockey in Madison and began envisioning bringing the sport back to the varsity level at the university, which had not formally fielded a team since 1934. [2] Sensing the need for a stadium-like facility were such a team to come to fruition, Kelsey stepped up to construct the Hartmeyer Ice Arena in 1960. [2]
In 1962, the university agreed to pick up hockey again and fielded a team by posting fliers around campus. The team played its first game in front of 695 fans at the Hartmeyer, losing to St. Mary's of Winona, Minn., 13-6. [3]
Wisconsin Hockey grew quickly and spectator demand soon strained the capacity of the arena. While legendary coach Bob Johnson led the team through his first season at the helm, construction neared completion on the Dane County Coliseum, which featured a multi-purpose design capable of hosting hockey and a capacity almost three times that of the Hartmeyer. The Badgers would move their hockey program to the Coliseum for the 1967-1968 season and play there until moving to the Kohl Center in 1998, winning five NCAA and 11 WCHA championships in that span. [3]
Scheduling conflicts would force Wisconsin to move postseason hockey games back to Hartmeyer twice in 1977 and twice more in 1978. [3] [4]
Though no longer suitable for collegiate hockey, Hartmeyer was still the premier skating, amateur hockey and youth hockey facility in Madison for many years and one of few in the region capable of holding over 3,000 spectators. The Patriots Youth Hockey Association began using the arena in 1984 and still holds many events in the facility. Since 2006, Hartmeyer Ice Arena has also been home to the Madison Eastside Lakers Hockey team a Co-Op team consisting of Madison La Follette High School and Madison East High School. Prior to 2006 La Follette and East had separate hockey teams. The Eastside Lakers formed another co-op that still occasionally uses Hartmeyer. Monona Grove High School calls Hartmeyer its home ice, having their own locker rooms for Varsity and Junior Varsity.
The City of Madison operated Hartmeyer into the 21st century, despite the arena beginning to show signs of age. With an older surface that did not fare well in warmer months and competition from newer facilities, the arena became a financial strain to the city. In 2004, it was sold, along with the Madison Ice Arena, to Madison Ice, Inc., a not-for-profit organization committed to supporting skating and youth hockey in the Madison area. [5]
In 2008, Madison Ice paid for improvements to the surface, allowing for the facility to be used year-round. [6]
On September 25, 2010, Hartmeyer celebrated its 50th anniversary with a free, open-skating day for the general public. [7]
In 2010, the Wisconsin Wolfpack of the Continental Indoor Football League announced plans to play its games at Hartmeyer. [8] The move had historic overtones as the Wolfpack's inaugural indoor season was played at the Veterans Memorial Coliseum, meaning the Wolfpack was essentially reversing the course taken by Badger Hockey over 40 years earlier.
To facilitate the games, the ice was removed from the arena surface and the Wolfpack's turf, recycled from the Pensacola Barracudas, was laid. On April 3, 2010, a game between the Wisconsin Wolfpack and the Miami Valley Silverbacks became the first non-skating event to ever take place in the facility. The Wolfpack won the game, 38-32. [9]
Among CIFL facilities, Hartmeyer quickly developed a reputation as a very unwelcoming building for opponents due to its age, loud environment and low ceiling, which frequently obstructed kicks and passes. The Wolfpack won six of its seven home games in 2010, including a playoff game against the Fort Wayne Firehawks, before announcing the team would not return in 2011. [10]
In 2013, the North American 3 Hockey League approved the relocation of the Quad City Jr. Flames from Davenport, Iowa to Madison. The team was renamed the Wisconsin Whalers and has used Hartmeyer Ice Arena as the home venue since the 2013–14 season. [11] In 2015, the Whalers moved to the Oregon Ice Arena in Oregon, Wisconsin.
Matthews Arena is a multi-purpose arena in Boston, Massachusetts. It is the world's oldest multi-purpose athletic building still in use, as well as the oldest arena in use for ice hockey.
The Kohl Center is a multi-purpose arena located at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, United States. The arena opened in 1998 and is the home of the university's men's basketball and ice hockey teams, and the women's basketball team.
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The Wisconsin Badgers men's ice hockey team is the college ice hockey team that represents the University of Wisconsin–Madison in Madison, Wisconsin. The team plays at the Kohl Center and is currently coached by Mike Hastings. The Badgers ice hockey team competes in the Big Ten Conference.
The Sheridan Hawks are a USA Hockey-sanctioned Tier III junior ice hockey team in the North American 3 Hockey League (NA3HL). The team plays home games at the Sheridan Ice M&M’s Center in Sheridan, Wyoming.
The 2011 Continental Indoor Football League season was the league's sixth overall season. The regular season started on Saturday, February 26, with the expansion Port Huron Predators defeating the expansion Indianapolis Enforcers 69-12, and ended with the 2011 CIFL Championship Game on June 11, 2011, at the Cincinnati Gardens in Cincinnati, Ohio, where the Cincinnati Commandos defeated the Marion Blue Racers 44-29 to clinch their second consecutive CIFL Championship.
The 2010 Fort Wayne Firehawks season was the first season for the Continental Indoor Football League (CIFL) franchise. In November 2009, the FireHawks were announced as the successor team to the Fort Wayne Freedom. Owners J. Michael Loomis and John Christner purchased the assets left from the Freedom franchise, who had played the two seasons before the FireHawks were announced. Christner's first action as General Manager was naming former Freedom head coach Willie Davis as the team's first head coach. On December 9, 2009, it was confirmed that Loomis and Christner would take over the entities that used to run the Freedom. Before the season started, the team announced they had signed Katie Hnida as the team's placekicker. Hnida is best known for becoming the first woman to score a point in an NCAA football game and speaking out during the recruiting scandal at her first school, the University of Colorado.
The 2010 Cincinnati Commandos season was the 1st season for the Continental Indoor Football League (CIFL) franchise. The Commandos were able to finish the season with a 9–1 record, and qualified for the playoffs as the 1st seed, where they went on to defeat the Wisconsin Wolfpack in the CIFL Championship Game.
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