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・ Honda Insight
・ Honda Inspire
・ Honda Integra
・ Honda Integra (disambiguation)
・ Honda Integra DC5
・ Honda Interceptor
・ Honda Interceptor VF750F
・ Honda J engine
・ Honda J-VX
・ Honda Jade
・ Honda Jazz
・ Honda Joker
・ Honda CD175
・ Honda CD200 RoadMaster
・ Honda CD250U
Honda Center
・ Honda CG125
・ Honda Challenge
・ Honda CHF50
・ Honda City
・ Honda City (AA)
・ Honda Civic
・ Honda Civic (eighth generation)
・ Honda Civic (fifth generation)
・ Honda Civic (first generation)
・ Honda Civic (fourth generation)
・ Honda Civic (ninth generation)
・ Honda Civic (second generation)
・ Honda Civic (seventh generation)
・ Honda Civic (sixth generation)


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Honda Center : ウィキペディア英語版
Honda Center
in dollars)
| architect = HOK Sport (now Populous)
| structural engineer = Thornton Tomasetti〔http://s3.amazonaws.com/tt_assets/pdf/SportsEntertainmentBrochure.pdf〕
| services engineer = Syska Hennessy Group, Inc.〔(Syska Hennessy Group - Honda Center )〕
| project_manager = Turner Construction
| general_contractor = Huber, Hunt & Nichols
| former_names = Anaheim Arena (planning/construction)
Pond of Anaheim (1993)
Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim (1993–2006)
| tenants = Anaheim Ducks (NHL) (1993–present)
Anaheim Bullfrogs (RHI) (1993–1997)
Anaheim Splash (CISL) (1994–1997)
Los Angeles Clippers (NBA) (1994–1999)
Anaheim Piranhas (AFL) (1996–1997)
Anaheim Storm (NLL) (2004–2005)
UCLA Bruins (NCAA) (2011–2012)
Los Angeles Kiss (AFL) (2014-present)
| seating_capacity = Hockey: 17,174
Basketball: 18,336;
Concerts (center stage) 18,900; Concerts (end stage) 18,325
Theatre at the Honda Center: 8,400
| dimensions =
| publictransit = ARTIC (Anaheim Regional Transportation Intermodal Center)
}}
The Honda Center (formerly known as the Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim) is an indoor arena located in Anaheim, California. The arena is home to the Anaheim Ducks of the National Hockey League and is also home to the Los Angeles Kiss of the Arena Football League.
Originally named the Anaheim Arena during construction, it was completed in 1993 at a cost of $123 million. Arrowhead Water paid $15 million for the naming rights over 10 years in October 1993.〔(ovguide.com )〕 In the short period of time between the enfranchisement of the Mighty Ducks and the naming rights deal with Arrowhead, Disney referred to the Arena as the Pond of Anaheim.〔In the 1993–94 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim media guide, Disney and the Ducks organization referred to the arena as the "Pond of Anaheim." This was prior to the naming rights deal with Arrowhead Water. ASIN: B001EBD3BM〕 In October 2006, Honda paid $60 million for the naming rights for over 15 years. The Honda Center is often referred to by the locals as the "Ponda Center" or "Ponda" paying homage to its beloved old name The Pond.
==History==
The arena opened on June 19, 1993, with a Barry Manilow concert as its first event. Since then, it has been host to a number of events, such as the 2003 and 2007 Stanley Cup Finals. On June 6, 2007, the Anaheim Ducks defeated the Ottawa Senators, 6–2, in game five of the Final at Honda Center to clinch the franchise's first Stanley Cup championship. The Ducks have never lost a Finals game played at the arena.〔In 2003, all the games in the final were won by the home team. In 2007, the Ducks had home ice advantage during the finals and the only game they lost was game three, held in Ottawa.〕
UFC 59, UFC 63, and UFC 76, UFC 121 have been at Honda Center and with UFC on FOX next as well. It hosted the 2005 IBF World Championships for badminton in 2005.
From 1994 to 1998, it served as a second home for the NBA's Los Angeles Clippers. It was the home arena for the Anaheim Bullfrogs of Roller Hockey International from 1993 to 1999 and for the Anaheim Piranhas of the Arena Football League from 1996 to 1997. This arena has also hosted a PBR Bud Light Cup (later Built Ford Tough Series) event annually since 1998. Since 1994, the arena has hosted the annual John R. Wooden Classic. In 2011, the arena began hosting the Big West Conference Men's and Women's Basketball tournaments. The arena has also hosted the NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament six times, as the West Regional site - 1998, 2001, 2003, 2008, 2011, 2014 and 2016. It even hosted the Frozen Four, the semifinals and final of the NCAA Men's Ice Hockey Championship, in 1999, underscoring the popularity of hockey in the region. On December 6, 2000, music legend Tina Turner played her last concert at the arena for the record breaking Twenty Four Seven Tour, but after popular demand, Turner returned to the arena before a sellout crowd on October 14, 2008, for her Tina!: 50th Anniversary Tour.
The arena has hosted a number of WWE events including WrestleMania XII, Royal Rumble (1999), WrestleMania 2000, as well as various episodes of Monday Night Raw and Smackdown.
The Honda Center lies northeast across California State Route 57 from Angel Stadium (where Major League Baseball's Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim play) and roughly from Disneyland Park. It is also across the street from Anaheim Regional Transportation Intermodal Center with service by Amtrak (''Pacific Surfliner''), Metrolink (''Orange County Line''), Anaheim Resort Transit, Orange County Transportation Authority and private transportation companies.
The arena seats up 17,174 for its primary tenant, the Ducks. It takes only five hours to convert Honda Center from a sporting arena to an 8,400-seat amphitheater. There are 84 luxury suites in the building, which has hosted 17.5 million people, as of 2003. In 2005, the arena became the first in the U.S. to have two full levels of 360-degree ribbon displays installed. Daktronics out of Brookings, South Dakota, designed, manufactured and installed the of full-color LED technology. Outside the venue, the marquee was upgraded with two large video displays measuring high by , and a new marquee was built with more LED video displays.
Broadcom chairman and billionaire, Henry Samueli, owns the company that operates the arena, Anaheim Arena Management, LLC, and the arena's primary tenant, the Ducks, giving him great flexibility in scheduling events and recruiting new tenants. Samueli hopes to bring an NBA franchise to the arena, and the Sacramento Kings expressed an interest in the past to relocate to Anaheim from their current stadium, Sleep Train Arena (formerly ARCO Arena). On March 3, 2011 a lawyer representing the Maloof brothers, owners of the Kings, filed applications to trademark possible names for a new basketball team at the Honda Center, including the ''Anaheim Royals'', ''Los Angeles Royals'', ''Orange County Royals'', and ''Anaheim Royals of Southern California''. The Maloof brothers had until May 2, 2011 to file paperwork officially requesting a relocation to the Honda Center, but the brothers decided to keep the team in Sacramento for the 2011–12 season. On March 7, 2012, the city of Sacramento, the NBA, and the Kings organization initially reached an agreement on a $391 million arena deal which would have kept the Kings in Sacramento; however, one month later, the Maloof family backed out of the agreement, reviving rumors regarding potential relocation. The later purchase of the Kings by Vivek Ranadivé, along with a firm deal to build a new Sacramento arena has now made a move by the Kings to Anaheim unlikely. In 2015, Samueli purchased the Norfolk Admirals of the American Hockey League and, with the AHL incarnation of the Admirals relocating to San Diego to become the reactivated San Diego Gulls, it is anticipated that Samueli through Anaheim Arena Management will purchase Valley View Casino Center in that city in time for the 2015-16 AHL season. During the 2014-2015 NHL Season, it was announced that Honda Center would get a new scoreboard that will replace the one that was in place since its opening in 1993. The new scoreboard made its debut in a Ducks Preseason game against the Los Angeles Kings. 〔http://ducks.nhl.com/club/news.htm?id=776852〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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