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Honda Center

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<tr><td>Broke ground</td><td>June 1991</td></tr>
Honda Center

<tr><td colspan="2" style="text-align: center;">Image:Hondcentlogo.gif
Image:Honda Center playoff06.jpg "The Pond"
</td></tr>

Location 2685 E. Katella Avenue Anaheim, California 92806
Opened June 19, 1993
Owner City of Anaheim

<tr><td>Operator</td><td>Anaheim Arena Management, LLC</td></tr><tr><td>Construction cost</td><td>$123 million USD</td></tr><tr><td>Architect</td><td>HOK Sport</td></tr><tr><th style="background: #efefef;" colspan="2">Former names</th></tr><tr><td colspan="2">Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim (1993-2006)</td></tr>

Tenants
Los Angeles Clippers (NBA) (occasional games 1994-1999)
Anaheim Ducks (NHL) (1993-present)
Anaheim Bullfrogs (RHI) (1993-1997)
Anaheim Splash (CISL) (1994-1997)
Anaheim Piranhas (AFL) (1996-1997)
Anaheim Storm (NLL) (2003-2005)
Seats
Basketball: 17,600
Hockey: 17,174
Concert: 18,325
Theatre: 8,400

The Honda Center, previously known as the Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim, is an indoor arena in Anaheim, California. The arena is home to the NHL's Anaheim Ducks and was home of the former NLL's Anaheim Storm, which folded in 2005. It was completed in 1993 at a cost of $123 million. Arrowhead paid $15 million for the naming rights over 10 years a few months after the arena opened. Honda Motor Company has acquired the naming rights to the Pond and the arena changed its name in October 2006.

It opened on June 19, 1993, its first event a Barry Manilow concert. Since then, it has been host to a number of high profile events, such as the Stanley Cup Finals (2003), various WWE events such as WrestleMania XII, WrestleMania 2000 (XVI), and the Royal Rumble in 1999, UFC 59, and UFC 63. It has also hosted high profile concerts since, such as Aerosmith, Coldplay, U2, Shakira, Madonna, Queen, Britney Spears, The Rolling Stones, Paul McCartney, and many more. From 1994 to 1998, it served as a second home for the NBA's Los Angeles Clippers. Also served as the home arena for the Anaheim Bullfrogs of Roller Hockey International from 1993 to 1999 and for the Anaheim Piranhas of the Arena Football League from 1996 to 1997. It also hosts the annual John R. Wooden Classic (since 1994). The arena has also hosted the NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament three times as the West Regional site - 1998, 2001, and 2003. It even hosted the Frozen Four in 1999, underscoring the popularity of hockey even in the desert southwest.

The Honda Center lies across the street from Angel Stadium (where MLB's Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim play) and roughly 5 miles away from Disneyland.

The arena seats up 17,174 for its primary tenant, the Ducks. There are 84 luxury suites in the building, which has hosted 17.5 million people as of 2003.

Broadcom chairman and billionaire Henry Samueli owns both the company which operates the arena, Anaheim Arena Management, LLC, and the arena's primary tenant, the Ducks, giving him great flexibility in scheduling events and recruiting new tenants. Samueli has made it known that he hopes to bring an NBA franchise to the arena.

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[edit] External links


Preceded by:
first arena
Home of the
Anaheim Ducks
1993–present
Succeeded by:
current

Coordinates: 33°48′28.37″N, 117°52′35.60″W

Current arenas in the National Hockey League
Eastern Conference Western Conference
Air Canada Centre | BankAtlantic Center | Bell Centre | Continental Airlines Arena | HSBC Arena | Madison Square Garden | Mellon Arena | Nassau Coliseum | Philips Arena | RBC Center | St. Pete Times Forum | Scotiabank Place | TD Banknorth Garden | Verizon Center | Wachovia Center American Airlines Center | Gaylord Entertainment Center | GM Place | HP Pavilion | Honda Center | Jobing.com Arena | Joe Louis Arena | Nationwide Arena | Pengrowth Saddledome | Pepsi Center | Rexall Place | Scottrade Center | Staples Center | United Center | Xcel Energy Center
et:Arrowhead Pond

fr:Arrowhead Pond

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