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Alexander C. Bright Hockey Center
Harvard-BrightHockey1
Location Harvard University Athletics Complex
Soldiers Field Rd
Allston, MA
Broke ground 1978
Opened November 19, 1979
Owner Harvard University
Operator Harvard University
Surface 204x87 ft (hockey)
Former names Donald C. Watson Rink
(*see article)
Tenants Harvard University Crimson
(men's and women's hockey)
Capacity 2,850 (hockey)

The Bright-Landry Hockey Center (known as Bright Hockey Center unitl 2013) is a 2,850-seat ice hockey arena in Boston, Massachusetts, United States. It is home to the Harvard University Crimson men's and women's ice hockey teams. It is named for Alec Bright '19, a former hockey player.

Bright Hockey Center, Harvard

Inside Bright Center

In 1956, the Donald C. Watson Rink was opened just north of Harvard Stadium at Soldiers Field, the area in the Allston neighborhood of Boston used by Harvard athletics, just across the Charles River from campus. The rink held approximately 2,000 people, but did not have many modern amenities. When plans were made to upgrade facilities, the $5 million cost became prohibitive, and the decision was made to renovate Watson Rink. In 1978, following the hockey season, the walls were removed and the roof was extended before the new arena itself was installed. After a season without a full-time home, the "new" arena opened on November 19, 1979 with an exhibition between Harvard and the 1980 USA Olympic hockey team.

In November 2006, Bright Arena was home to the 2006 Friendship Cup, the Cup's debut year. Team USA Alumni, Team Canada Alumni, Team Gazprom and the Boston Bruins Alumni team all participated in the event. The Bruins defeated Team USA, while Gazprom defeated Team Canada.

The arena was also home to the Boston Pride of the National Women's Hockey League for the 2015–16 NWHL season in which the Pride won the Isobel Cup Championship.

BrightHockey2

2008

BrightHockey1

2008

External links[]


This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Bright-Landry Hockey Center. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Ice Hockey Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike License 3.0 (Unported) (CC-BY-SA).


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