Liverpool Catholic Club Ice Rink
Location | Liverpool Catholic Club Corner Joadja and Hoxton Park Roads, Liverpool West NSW 2170 |
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Coordinates | 33°55′44″S 150°52′30″E / 33.928877°S 150.874883°E |
Capacity | 500 (seating) |
Surface | 60 m × 30 m (197 ft × 98 ft) |
Opened | 1979 |
Tenants | |
LCC Saints Ice Hockey Club (1979-present) Sydney Ice Dogs (2009-2016) | |
Website | |
Liverpool Catholic Club Ice Rink |
The Liverpool Catholic Club Ice Rink (also known as LCC Sports Complex Liverpool) is an ice sports and public skate centre, built in 1979 and located at the Hoxton Park precinct of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. It is the home of the LCC Saints Ice Hockey Club, with Junior and Senior Teams and home to LCC Ice Skating Club (LCCISC), producing Olympic and international figure skating athletes. It has previously served as the home ice rink of the Sydney Ice Dogs in the Australian Ice Hockey League until 2017.
Facilities
[edit]Facilities at LCC Ice Rink are detailed below:[1][2]
- 60 m × 30 m (197 ft × 98 ft) ice rink (Olympic sized with nets around the rink)
- Capacity of 500 spectators (both seating and standing)
- Skate hire
- Cafe
- Onsite parking
Events
[edit]The rink opened in 2004 and has been the continuous home of the Saints Ice Hockey Club since that time. The club is community based and offers hockey to players of all ages and abilities. Sled hockey is also offered. Between 2009 and 2016, the ice rink annually hosted regular season Australian Ice Hockey League matches involving the Sydney Ice Dogs (originally known as Western Sydney Ice Dogs until 2009) between the months of April and August. In 2016 the Ice Dogs appointed a new general manager, Jason Juba, who bought a change in direction for the organisation.[3] Jason Juba held negotiations with Macquarie Ice Rink in the off-season and the Sydney Ice Dogs agreed to move to Macquarie for the 2017 AIHL season.[4]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "LCC Sports Complex Liverpool". www.eurohockey.com. Retrieved 29 April 2019.
- ^ "Ice Rink". www.liverpoolcatholic.com.au. Retrieved 29 April 2019.
- ^ "AIHL news: 3 March 2016". icehockeynewsaustralia.com. 3 March 2017. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
- ^ Besley, John (24 January 2017). "Australian International Hockey League returns to Macquarie with two teams in tow". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 1 May 2018.