Miami Arena
Defunct arena in Miami, Florida, United States
This article is about the defunct arena in Downtown Miami. For one of its successors temporarily renamed Miami-Dade Arena, see
Kaseya Center .
Miami Arena was an indoor arena located in Miami, Florida . The venue served as the home of the Miami Heat of the National Basketball Association (NBA) and the Florida Panthers of the National Hockey League (NHL).[ 5] [ 6] From 1988 until 1999, it also was the indoor arena for the Miami Hurricanes .
Seating capacity
Basketball
1988–1993 – 15,008
1993–2008 – 15,200
Ice hockey/arena football
Concerts
Full house: 16,627
3/4 house: 9,878
1/2 house: 7,485
In the round: 16,694
the space in arena is 1,560
Other
Events
List of Events
Julio Iglesias – July 13, 1988 (Arena's opening concert)
Robert Plant – July 14, 1988, with Cheap Trick and October 23, 1990, with The Black Crowes
AC/DC – August 11, 1988, with White Lion ,
Eazy-E - August 23,1989 (Eazy Duz It Tour),
February 21, 1991, with King's X and January 21, 1996, with The Poor
Elton John – September 9–10, 1988, October 13–14, 1989, May 5, 1993 and May 4 and October 2, 1998
Bob Dylan – September 23, 1988
Frank Sinatra – September 24, 1988 and January 20–21, 1989, with Sammy Davis Jr. and Liza Minnelli
Gloria Estefan & Miami Sound Machine – October 1, 1988 (Broadcast Live on Showtime and later released on Home Video as The Homecoming Concert )
The Grateful Dead – October 14, 1988 (two shows), October 25–26, 1989 and April 6–8, 1994
Poison – October 15, 1988, with Lita Ford and Britny Fox , March 15, 1989, with Ratt and Tesla and March 23, 1991, with Slaughter
The Moody Blues – November 9, 1988
Neil Diamond – December 18–20, 1988, February 21–22, 1993 and December 9, 1996
Duran Duran – January 14, 1989, with The Pursuit of Happiness
Bon Jovi – February 9, 1989, with Skid Row and September 9, 1995
Ratt – April 28, 1989, with Kix and Great White
R.E.M. – April 29, 1989, with Drivin' N' Cryin' (Tracks from this show and from April 30th at Orlando Arena were broadcast on the radio) and September 8, 1995, with Radiohead
Rod Stewart – April 30, 1989 and October 13, 1991
Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers – July 5, 1989, with The Replacements , October 22, 1991, with Chris Whitley and May 15 and 17, 1995, with Pete Droge
Jimmy Buffett & The Coral Reefer Band – August 5, 1989, with The Neville Brothers , January 24, 1991, with Greg "Fingers" Taylor & The Ladyfingers Revue and January 24, 1992, with Evangeline
The Doobie Brothers – September 1, 1989
Stevie Nicks – September 30, 1989, with The Hooters
The Beach Boys – October 7, 1989, with Chicago
Stevie Ray Vaughan & Double Trouble and Jeff Beck – November 21, 1989
Mötley Crüe – January 21, 1990, with Raging Slab
Rush – February 22, 1990, with Mr. Big , February 28, 1992, with Primus and February 27, 1994, with Candlebox (Recording of "Show Don't Tell " from 1994 show was included on Different Stages )
Janet Jackson – March 1 (her debut concert) and July 12, 1990, with Chuckii Booker and January 20, 1994
Billy Joel – March 12, 1990 and February 8, 14 and 18–19 and April 15–16, 1994
Whitesnake – March 24, 1990
Dolly Parton – April 21, 1990
Aerosmith – April 22, 1990, with Joan Jett and the Blackhearts and February 2, 1994, with Brother Cane
David Bowie – April 27, 1990
Depeche Mode – May 31, 1990, with Nitzer Ebb , October 2, 1993, with The The and November 13, 1998, with Stabbing Westward
Heart – June 8, 1990
MC Hammer – June 30, 1990 Please Hammer Don't Hurt 'Em World Tour , April 10, 1992 Too Legit to Quit World Tour
Eric Clapton – July 21–23, 1990, May 25, 1992, September 5–6, 1995, with Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown and April 25, 1998, with Distant Cousins
The B-52's – July 28, 1990
KISS – August 3, 1990, with Danger Danger and Slaughter, October 31, 1992 and September 17, 1996, with The Verve Pipe
Billy Idol – September 29, 1990, with Faith No More
Fleetwood Mac – October 24, 1990, with Squeeze
Judas Priest – December 20, 1990, with Testament and Megadeth
INXS – January 22 and February 5, 1991
Sting – February 27, 1991 and February 23, 1994, with Melissa Etheridge
Gloria Estefan – March 1–2 and 6–7, 1991 and September 20–22 and 24, 1996 (Sept 20–21 gigs were filmed live on HBO Telecast, also released on VHS/DVD as The Evolution Tour : Live in Miami )
Neil Young & Crazy Horse – March 9, 1991, with Sonic Youth
Cinderella – March 11, 1991
ZZ Top – April 5–7, 1991, with Dreams So Real
Scorpions – May 26, 1991, with Great White and Trixter
Whitney Houston – June 11, 1991, with After 7
David Lee Roth – June 15, 1991, with Cinderella and Extreme
Don Henley – June 29, 1991
Queensrÿche – July 3, 1991 and June 25, 1995, with Type O Negative
Yes – July 6, 1991 and August 10, 1994
Slayer – July 14, 1991, with Megadeth, Anthrax and Alice in Chains
The Allman Brothers Band – October 31, 1991, with Little Feat
Van Halen – December 13, 1991, with Alice in Chains and March 17, 1995
U2 – March 1, 1992, with The Pixies
Metallica – March 14, 1992, with Metal Church and April 19, 1997, with Corrosion of Conformity
Bryan Adams – April 12, with The Storm and December 4, 1992
The Cure – June 3–4, 1992, with The Cranes and August 30, 1996
Michael Bolton – July 30, 1992, with Celine Dion
Ozzy Osbourne – August 14, 1992, with Slaughter and Ugly Kid Joe
Tesla – October 1, 1992, with FireHouse
Bruce Springsteen – November 24, 1992
Def Leppard – February 2, 1993
Peter Gabriel – August 4, 1993
Tina Turner – August 22, 1993
Sade – September 22, 1993
Mariah Carey – November 3, 1993 (her debut concert)
Phil Collins – May 30–31, 1994 and March 3, 1997
Meat Loaf & His Neverland Express – July 29, 1994
Steely Dan – August 21, 1994
Luis Miguel – October 6–9, 1994, October 9–10, 1995, November 30, 1997, February 7–8, 1998 and February 16–17, 2002
Nine Inch Nails – November 20, 1994, with Marilyn Manson and The Jim Rose Circus and May 17, 2000, with A Perfect Circle
The Eagles – February 27, 1995
Page & Plant – March 6, 1995 and May 22, 1998
Boston – June 30, 1995
Melissa Etheridge – July 3, 1995, with Joan Osborne
Live – July 30, 1995, with Buffalo Tom
AC/DC - January 21, 1996, with The Poor
White Zombie – February 2, 1996, with Filter
Bob Seger & The Silver Bullet Band – February 9, 1996
Garth Brooks – April 18–20, 1996
LL Cool J – June 7, 1996, with R. Kelly , Xscape and Solo
The 1996 Stanley Cup Finals – June 8 and 10–11 (Florida Panthers vs. Colorado Avalanche) This was the first appearance the Panthers made in the Stanley Cup Finals. They were swept by the Avalanche 4-0.
Pantera – July 6, 1996, with White Zombie
The Smashing Pumpkins – November 17, 1996, with Garbage
New Edition – January 24, 1997, with Keith Sweat , Blackstreet and 702
Bush – March 20, 1997, with Veruca Salt
Prince & The New Power Generation – August 15, 1997
The Fugees – September 13, 1997
Bone Thugs-n-Harmony – September 21, 1997
Enrique Iglesias – December 12–13, 1997
The Backstreet Boys – July 10, 1998, with Aaron Carter
Brooks & Dunn – July 17, 1998, with Reba McEntire , Terri Clark and David Kersh
The Family Values Tour – May 11, 1999
Los Van Van – October 9, 1999
Ricky Martin – October 20–21, 1999, with Jessica Simpson
System of a Down – November 5, 1999, with Limp Bizkit and Method Man
Alejandro Fernández – November 14, 1999, with Elvis Crespo
Shakira – April 22, 2000
Blink-182 – May 19, 2000, with Bad Religion and Fenix TX
Marc Anthony – July 27–29, 2000
Juan Luis Guerra – August 27, 2000 and May 9, 2005, with Ricardo Montaner and Gian Marco Zignago
Carlos Vives – September 16, 2000
Juan Gabriel – November 18, 2000, with Ana Gabriel
Vicente Fernández – July 21, 2001, with Alejandro Fernández
Marcos Witt – May 21, 2002 for Dios de Pactos (God of Covenants)
Sasha & John Digweed – March 23, 2002, with Jimmy Van M
Maná – October 25, 2002
Marco Antonio Solís – May 25, 2003
The Damned – August 13, 2003
Berlin – October 4, 2003
Chayanne – April 2, 2004
Disney on Ice – December 6, 2004
Kutless – March 5, 2005
Wisin & Yandel – July 9, 2005
The SCREAM Tour – September 4, 2005
Molotov – November 6, 2005, with Rata Blanca and Jarabe de Palo
References
^ Liff, Robert A. (August 5, 1986). "Miami Breaks Ground For 16,000-seat Arena" . Orlando Sentinel . Retrieved March 28, 2012 .
^ "Miami Arena's Opening Bash is a Hit With Colorful Crowd" . Miami Herald . July 14, 1988. Retrieved March 28, 2012 .
^ 1634–1699: McCusker, J. J. (1997). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda (PDF) . American Antiquarian Society . 1700–1799: McCusker, J. J. (1992). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States (PDF) . American Antiquarian Society . 1800–present: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–" . Retrieved February 29, 2024 .
^ Walter P Moore – Arenas (archived)
^ "LAST TICKET FROM MIAMI ARENA, 1998" . Florida Panthers Virtual Vault . Retrieved 2024-12-27 .
^ Ganzi, Joey (2021-09-27). "Florida Panthers' Arena History - The Hockey Writers Panthers History Latest News, Analysis & More" . The Hockey Writers . Retrieved 2024-12-27 .
External links
Franchise Arenas Personnel G League affiliate Retired numbers NBA championships Rivalries Culture and lore
Venues Culture & lore People Seasons NCAA Final Four appearance in italics
Franchise History Personnel Arenas Rivalries Affiliates Media Culture and lore
Franchise Arenas Head coaches Playoff appearances (2) Hall of Fame members