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  1. #1

    Default It surprised the hell out of this Canadian

    Would you care to guess who was #2 in NHL attendance this past year after the Montreal Canadiens?

    If you haven't guessed, it is a non-traditional market.

    Tampa Bay Lightning.

    Okay they're the defending champs so it's not as surprising as if, say, Nashville started calling themselves Hockeytown - but I was surprised.

    SBR Founder Join Date: 7/21/2005


  2. #2

    Default

    A related article


    NEW YORK - NHL attendance was up 2.4 percent from the last season before the lockout, with the league setting records for average and total fans and the Montreal Canadiens selling out all of their home games to set a team record.

    The NHL played to 91.7 percent of capacity, drawing 20,854,169 fans for 1,230 regular-season games for an average of 16,955. In 2003-04 — the last season before the lockout — the league drew 20,356,199 for an average of 16,550. The previous records of 16,760 a game and 20,614,613 overall were set in 2001-02.

    "We can't thank our fans enough for the record support they showed," commissioner Gary Bettman said. "For all our clubs, a terrific season was made even better by the enthusiasm and encouragement our fans displayed night after night."

    Montreal sold out all 41 homes games at 21,273-seat Bell Centre to set a team record with 872,193. The Canadiens broke the mark of 861,072 — or 21,002 per game — they set in 1996-97.

    The Canadiens, New York Rangers, Calgary, Colorado, Detroit, Edmonton, Los Angeles, Minnesota, Ottawa, Philadelphia, Tampa Bay, Toronto and Vancouver played to 98 percent of capacity or better over the full season.

    The Avalanche sold out each game at 18,007-seat Pepsi Center, extending the NHL's longest current sellout streak to 480 games, including the playoffs. The streak began in November 1995 during the team's inaugural season in Denver.

    Twenty-four of the 30 NHL clubs finished even with or ahead of their 2003-04 performance. The top gainers were Pittsburgh (up 33 percent), Carolina (27 percent), Calgary (16 percent), Tampa Bay (15 percent), Nashville (10 percent), Buffalo (10 percent), Ottawa (10 percent), Boston (7 percent) and San Jose (6 percent).

    SBR Founder Join Date: 7/21/2005


  3. #3

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    i'm suprised it wasn't toronto.

    SBR Founder Join Date: 8/10/2005


  4. #4

    Default

    Toronto is 6th. They sell out all their games - in fact they are listed as selling to 103.2% of capacity (???) - but Tampa just has a bigger building.

    the whole breakdown


    Speaking of traditional hockey markets, that is a sad state of affairs in Chicago.

    SBR Founder Join Date: 7/21/2005


  5. #5

    Default

    thanks for the link mudcat. i think the blues at #27 is due to the fire sale stuff. they have always had solid fan support in years past.

    as far as the blackhawks goes. well, the Chicago Blackhawks owner is just in it for the money. he reminds me of bill bidwell of the AZ. cardnails.

    SBR Founder Join Date: 8/10/2005


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