Posted: Thu Jan 14, 2010 10:22 am
Minnetonka has some pretty lame rinks...I know the bottom one I believe that is almost like a practice rink...I played there a few times, it always smelled like fish....
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You are completley right. Northfield has the worst rink in the state by far. You can maybe fit 8 players in a single locker room.WB6162 wrote:If there is a need for a 2nd sheet of ice, Northfield is the place no doubt. St Olaf still hasn't build a rink? I'm surprised they don't do a cooperative effort with Carlton, maybe Carlton doesn't have a team?northshore guy wrote:I know the girls coach in northfield and 1.2 million was put into renovations. It is much more comfortable temperature wise in there but locker rooms are tiny. They added a dehumidifier that really helped the temp and the quality of the ice. Sad to think that this one sheet has to house an entire youth association, both high school programs and men's and women's college programs.WB6162 wrote: I think they may have improved it now but 10 years ago it was horrible, I agree. When you went up the stairs to the bleachers you had to really be paying attention to the game because at that point the glass was only about 3 ft high.
I totally forgot about old cloquet! When I was a squirt i had to jump those boards due to the one door. The boards were super high and we basically had to skate full steam and hurl ourselves over the boards. Our parents thought it was the funniest thing they ever saw.#4 wrote:The older rink in Cloquet prior to the roof renovation.
The glass was notched for low ceiling support beams, players bench had only one door, the press box over the penalty box was forehead high and the locker rooms were horrible.
Osseo West goes with Cloquet at the bottom of the list.
Heh, that sounds awesomeMNHockeyFan wrote:Most here are way too young to remember, but Albert Lea used to have a rink that was literally squeezed into an old barn. The ice surface, at best, was half the size of a regular rink, both way shorter and way narrower. The blue lines were only 30-35 feet from the goal so any shot from the point was a "quality scoring chance".
Also to make maximum use of the limited space in the barn the corners were just that - corners - so a puck going around the boards would take all kinds of weird bounces and usually end up in the middle some place. Since this was Albert Lea's home rink, they of course knew all of the places to angle the puck and be in a position to receive it. It was like pinball on ice where skating skills became secondary.
The 1.2 million would have been better spent as seed money toward a new rink. The benches are so small, the varsity can barely fit on it... the backup goalie has to sit on a folding chair. And the locker rooms are so small even a squirt team of 13 players has trouble moving around in there. Most of the improvements were to the entrance... at least they have a workable concession stand now, but does anyone remember the french fry vending machine they used to ahve there? Between varsity adn JV games I'd duck out across the parking lot to the burger king that was tehre . before someone firebombed it... I think it's a Wendy's now.northshore guy wrote:I know the girls coach in northfield and 1.2 million was put into renovations. It is much more comfortable temperature wise in there but locker rooms are tiny. They added a dehumidifier that really helped the temp and the quality of the ice. Sad to think that this one sheet has to house an entire youth association, both high school programs and men's and women's college programs.WB6162 wrote:I think they may have improved it now but 10 years ago it was horrible, I agree. When you went up the stairs to the bleachers you had to really be paying attention to the game because at that point the glass was only about 3 ft high.hockey74 wrote:My guess there is a few bad rinks I have not been in, but the Northfield rink was not very good.
Exactly. And your no where else. Coldest place on earth and at it feels like you've driven to the end of the world. WOW. Who could forget those basement lockerrooms - scary.HockeyMN1 wrote:The rink in Hallock. If you're there, you're in Hallock.
The nostalgia wears off pretty quick when it's -40.hollywoodsmom wrote:Exactly. And your no where else. Coldest place on earth and at it feels like you've driven to the end of the world. WOW. Who could forget those basement lockerrooms - scary.HockeyMN1 wrote:The rink in Hallock. If you're there, you're in Hallock.
must be a Virginia haterrangefan wrote:Not a huge fan of miners memorial building in virginia
When we visited to play AL, locker rooms were actually former animal pens, complete with pieces of straw in the corners and certain farm animal excrement aromas still lingering...MNHockeyFan wrote:Most here are way too young to remember, but Albert Lea used to have a rink that was literally squeezed into an old barn. The ice surface, at best, was half the size of a regular rink, both way shorter and way narrower. The blue lines were only 30-35 feet from the goal so any shot from the point was a "quality scoring chance".
Also to make maximum use of the limited space in the barn the corners were just that - corners - so a puck going around the boards would take all kinds of weird bounces and usually end up in the middle some place. Since this was Albert Lea's home rink, they of course knew all of the places to angle the puck and be in a position to receive it. It was like pinball on ice where skating skills became secondary.
Opened in 1975... The day it opened it was the worst rink in MN...Nodak Sioux wrote:You are completley right. Northfield has the worst rink in the state by far. You can maybe fit 8 players in a single locker room.WB6162 wrote:If there is a need for a 2nd sheet of ice, Northfield is the place no doubt. St Olaf still hasn't build a rink? I'm surprised they don't do a cooperative effort with Carlton, maybe Carlton doesn't have a team?northshore guy wrote: I know the girls coach in northfield and 1.2 million was put into renovations. It is much more comfortable temperature wise in there but locker rooms are tiny. They added a dehumidifier that really helped the temp and the quality of the ice. Sad to think that this one sheet has to house an entire youth association, both high school programs and men's and women's college programs.
Are you honestly worried about ice on the walls in a hockey arena???Northhcky wrote:For those of you that came up to the Duluth area to play youth hockey it has to be a tossup between Cloquet's "barn" and Fryberger "freezeberger" and the Peterson arena that burned down.
In a previous post someone mentioned Proctor. It ALWAYS seems colder in there than outside. Ice covering the walls is not uncommon lol.