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Category: Sports arenas and stadiums
Category: Sports arenas and stadiums
It opened in 1984 and holds 17,100 people.
Category: Sports arenas and stadiums
Category: Sports arenas and stadiums
Construction began in August 1991 after it was announced that the team would be moving from Williamsport, Pennsylvania. The park opened the following season, in April 1992, and seats 6,012 fans.
Category: Sports arenas and stadiums
The Coliseum is 19 miles (30 km) from New York City. It is home to the New York Islanders National Hockey League team and the New York Dragons Arena Football League team.
Category: Sports arenas and stadiums
The arena also hosts the men's basketball games of Seton Hall University. Official seating capacity as of 2004 is 19,040 for hockey; 20,029 for college basketball; 19,968 for NBA games; and a maximum 20,000 for concerts.
Category: Sports arenas and stadiums
It is located in East Rutherford, New Jersey in the Meadowlands Sports Complex, which also hosts the Meadowlands Racetrack and the Continental Airlines Arena.
Official seating capacity as of 2004 is 80,242.
Category: Sports arenas and stadiums
It is also the name of the entity which owns the arena and several of the professional sports franchises which play there. There have been four incarnations of the arena. The first two were located at Madison Square, thus the name. Subsequently a new 20,000-seat Garden was built at 50th Street and 8th Avenue, and the current Garden is at 7th Avenue between 31st and 33rd Streets, situated on top of Pennsylvania Station. The present arena is informally known to some by its advertising slogan, "The World's Most Famous Arena".
Category: Baseball
For the 1974-1975 seasons, the Yankees relocated across town to Shea Stadium while the Stadium underwent extensive renovations (which significantly changed the look of the ballpark). It was reopened on April 15, 1976.
The first night game was played on May 28, 1946.
Category: Baseball
It is the longtime home of the New York Mets Major League Baseball club, and the fourth-oldest ballpark in the National League.
In 1962, the New York Mets began their history playing in the Polo Grounds. Because of the stadium's delapidation, however, the Mets demanded that a stadium of their own be built.
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