Ice Breaker Heading to Missouri
The Hockey Commissioners Association (HCA) announced today that
the annual Ice Breaker Tournament, the season-opening event
involving teams from four NCAA Division I conferences, has been
awarded for the years 2010 through 2012. The 2010 and 2011 events
will take place at the Scottrade Center in St. Louis, Missouri,
site of the 2007 NCAA Division I Men’s Ice Hockey
Championships. The 2012 tournament will take place in the Sprint
Center in Kansas City, Missouri, a state of the art arena that
opened in October of 2007.
“We are very excited at the prospect of bringing our event
to these outstanding venues,” said CCHA Commissioner Tom
Anastos, President of the HCA. “We know that the commitments
made by the two sports commissions will ensure a successful event
and an appropriate launch to the 2010-2012 college hockey
seasons.”
The St. Louis Sports Commission, the group awarded the first
back-to-back events, is the privately funded nonprofit organization
that focuses on attracting, creating and managing major sporting
events for the St. Louis region – and contributing to its
quality of life. The organization plays an integral role in hosting
NCAA championships and other high profile collegiate sporting
events that take place in the community. In the past decade, the
Sports Commission helped produce 10 NCAA Division I championships,
including the Frozen Four. The organization also represents St.
Louis in the NCAA’s new Championship City pilot program,
which features multiple host op¬portunities of Division I, II
and III men’s and women’s championships through 2012.
St. Louis is one of six cities designated as an NCAA
“Championship City.”
“St. Louis is honored to host the 2010 and 2011 Ice Breaker
Tournaments,” said St. Louis Sports Commission President
Frank Viverito. “We were thrilled to host the NCAA Frozen
Four two years ago, and that opportunity opened the door to
developing greater interest and exposure for college hockey in our
community and throughout the Midwest. Being able to host two Ice
Breakers along with the previ¬ously awarded 2011 Men’s
Ice Hockey West Regional further raises the profile of college
hockey in St. Louis and helps grow participa¬tion and passion
for the sport. We salute Scottrade Center and the St. Louis Blues
for their commitment to the Ice Breaker and to college
hockey.”
St. Louis has been a two-time host of the NCAA Men’s Frozen
Four. The event took place at the St. Louis Arena in 1975 and
Scottrade Center in 2007, where the all-time attendance record was
set when 19,432 watched Michigan State defeat Boston College for
the NCAA title.
The Kansas City Sports Commission and Foundation is the
organization awarded the 2012 tournament. The Kansas City Sports
Com¬mission is a privately funded nonprofit organization that
benefits Kansas City through sports. Its mission is to enhance the
economic development and quality of life of greater Kansas City
through sports and promote the lifelong benefits of sports for
youth.
“The Ice Breaker Tournament is a great event that provides
Kansas City an opportunity to show off our passion for college
hockey. It is an honor for the Kansas City Sports Commission to be
awarded this tournament,” said Cindy Smith, national events
director of the nonprofit organization.
In just 17 months of operation, the Sprint Center has already
hosted the Big 12 Basketball Championships, NCAA men’s
basketball first and second rounds, the NABC’s “College
Basketball Experience,” and an NHL pre-season game. The
facility has also been awarded an NCAA women’s basketball
regional and the NCAA Division I Women’s Volleyball
Championship for 2010.
The Hockey Commissioners Association (HCA) represents the
nation’s six NCAA Division I ice hockey playing conferences.
The HCA has sponsored the Ice Breaker Tournament since its
inception in 1997 with 28 different schools participating in the12
years of play. The 2009 Ice Breaker was previously awarded to the
University of Nebraska-Omaha.












