Northeastern Athletics

Facilities

Matthews Arena
Home of Husky Men's and Women's Ice Hockey

The men's hockey team takes on Boston College before a sold-out crowd of 5,402 on Oct. 22, 2005 at Matthews Arena. Full-size photo
The men's basketball team plays Towson in its first CAA home game on Dec. 7, 2005 at Matthews Arena.
Directions to Matthews Arena & Public Parking
From the West (Massachusetts Turnpike): Follow turnpike into tunnel and take Prudential exit; proceed westbound on Huntington Avenue through underpass and take left at lights onto Gainsborough Street. Gainsborough Garage (paid event parking) will be directly one block ahead and adjacent to the Arena.

From the South &West (128/95): Take 128/95 to Route 93. Take Mass. Ave exit and take right at lights onto Mass. Ave. Follow Mass. Ave about two miles (seven sets of lights) to St. Botolph Street. Take left and the Arena is directly on your left. Gainsborough Garage (paid event parking) will be directly one block ahead and adjacent to the Arena.

From the North (93 & 95 across Tobin Bridge): Take Storrow Drive exit and follow signs for Storrow Drive West. Take Fenway exit and proceed straight off exit ramp, following signs for Boylston Street Inbound (do not bear right). Continue on Boylston Street and take a right onto Mass. Ave. (third set of lights). Proceed down Mass. Ave. and take third right onto St. Botolph Street (second right past Symphony Hall). Arena is on your left. Gainsborough Garage (paid event parking) will be directly one block ahead and adjacent to the Arena.

Public Transportation: Take the "E" car of the Green Line to Symphony stop. Walk up Mass. Ave, away from Symphony Hall. Take a right onto St. Botolph Street, Arena is on the left. Via the Orange Line, exit the Massachusetts Avenue stop to Mass. Ave. and take a left. The first left is St. Botolph Street and Arena is directly on the left.

Matthews Arena Summary and History
The world's oldest ice hockey arena and one of the nation's exemplary athletic facilities is Matthews Arena, a repolished gem named for George J. Matthews, Class of '56, and his wife, the late Hope M. Matthews. The original home of the Boston Bruins, the Celtics and the Beanpot, the Arena has served as the center of Northeastern hockey since the program's inception for the 1929-30 season.

Matthews is chairman emeritus of the Northeastern Board of Trustees and the former national chairperson of the Century Fund at Northeastern. As a respected member of the Boston business community, Matthews is president of the Matthews Group, a Boston-based company, and former owner of the Boston Breakers of the United States Football League.

Perhaps more widely known as the Boston Arena, Matthews Arena is home to Northeastern's men's and women's hockey teams. The building is one of the bastions of the country's sporting history and a spectator's dream for live athletic contests. In September 1995, the Arena officially made its fourth "reopening" when it unveiled a spectacular new ice surface and lobby at its St. Botolph Street address.

A state-of-the-art ice surface expansion to standard-sized 90-by-200-foot dimensions added 2,000 square feet of skating area to the Arena, which for decades was one of the nation's smallest rinks. Completion of the renovation involved a $1.6 million capital campaign designed to make the larger rink compatible with more creative play, the specifications of world championship and international competition, and the needs of figure skating performances.

The old ice house that gave birth to the Boston Bruins, the Boston Olympics and the New England Whalers also was the cradle of high school and college hockey in Greater Boston. The hockey programs at Boston College, Boston University, Harvard, MIT, Tufts and, of course, Northeastern all had their geneses at Matthews.

Tournaments that brighten New England winters such as the Beanpot and ECAC had their start at the Arena, as did competitive figure skating. In 1994, Nancy Kerrigan graced the ice at Matthews with an entourage that included Paul Wylie and Scott Hamilton, continuing an 85-year tradition of figure skating that numbers Sonja Henie, Dick Button and Tenley Albright.

The Matthews Arena chronology reads like a Who's Who in American sports, and starts with ground-breaking on Oct. 11, 1909. Legendary pugilists Jack Dempsey, Gene Tunney and Joe Louis graced ringside, Finnish distance star Paavo Nurmi ran at the Arena in a BAA track meet, and Olympian Henie wove her magic-on-blades to phonograph music. The Boston Bruins played their first home game in the building and defeated the Montreal Maroons, 2-1, on Dec. 1, 1924. Less fortunate in their Arena debut were the Northeastern hockey Huskies, who lost, 2-1, to MIT on Jan. 17, 1930.

The Arena also has played host to such professional hockey teams as the Boston Olympics, Whalers, Tigers and Cubs. Even the great Babe Ruth, then a young lefthanded pitcher for the Red Sox, was a frequent visitor to the Arena. The Sultan of Swat passed idle time in the winter by playing in hockey scrimmages with the Arena A.C. team. Chuck Connors, alias The Rifleman, jumped center and smashed the glass backboard in the first-ever Boston Celtics game on Nov. 5, 1946. And, the world famous Texas Rangers brought their rodeo in 1932, complete with outlaw horses and wild steers.

Today, the stately Victorian lobbies that welcomed the modest and the mighty for nearly a century cater to the academic and athletic needs of Northeastern. Convocations and a large portion of the intramural docket are conducted at the Arena, whose walls once echoed with the podium entreaties of presidents Teddy Roosevelt, Franklin Delano Roosevelt and John F. Kennedy. Past Arena dignitaries include Charles Lindbergh, Amelia Earhardt, James Michael Curley, Reverend Billy Graham, Admiral Chester Nimitz and General Dwight D. Eisenhower. In the summer of 1993, the city of Boston and NU paid tribute to one of its heroes when it held funeral services at the Arena for Reggie Lewis, Class of 1988.

The Arena has survived two crippling fires, one in 1918 and another in 1948, to prosper as a stationary jewel of the community. Structurally, the Arena has undergone numerous renovations - most recently new seats and new locker rooms for the men's and women's varsity hockey teams.

Northeastern's association with the Arena covers more than 75 years, since hockey became a varsity sport at the University in 1929. Husky basketball adopted the Arena as its home in 1981, although the Huskies played a game there in 1936, losing to Rhode Island. For decades, the Arena has been home to countless scholastic hockey teams - particularly those in the Boston City League - and to its next door neighbor, Wentworth Institute.

The Arena is also home to the Northeastern Varsity Club in its handsome headquarters, which includes a theater-style viewing box. The Varsity Club now hosts "Fight to Educate Night" and NU Hall of Fame ceremonies at the Arena.

Neither time nor materiality has disrupted the daily patterns of Arena life, though. In quiet afternoons, there are special hours set aside for free public skating. As the ancient edifice improves by age, her sensitivity to the common good remains as high as ever.


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