"Hockeytown" nickname: Difference between revisions

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Hockeytown is a nickname for Detroit, Michigan, and the surrounding metropolitan area, initially adopted as a marketing campaign by the city’s National Hockey League (NHL) franchise, the Detroit Red Wings, in 1996.<ref>{{cite web |title=Hockeytown |url=https://grokipedia.com/page/Hockeytown |work=grokipedia.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> The moniker signifies the city’s strong connection to and enthusiasm for ice hockey, a relationship cultivated over decades of professional play and fan dedication. While the term’s origins predate its formal adoption by the Red Wings, the 1996 campaign cemented “Hockeytown” as a defining characteristic of Detroit’s identity.<ref>{{cite web |title=Why did the Red Wings start calling Detroit 'Hockeytown?' |url=https://octopusthrower.com/why-did-the-red-wings-start-calling-detroit-hockeytown |work=octopusthrower.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
```mediawiki
'''Hockeytown''' is a nickname for Detroit, Michigan, and the surrounding metropolitan area, initially adopted as a marketing campaign by the city's National Hockey League (NHL) franchise, the Detroit Red Wings, in 1996.<ref>{{cite web |title=Why did the Red Wings start calling Detroit 'Hockeytown?' |url=https://octopusthrower.com/why-did-the-red-wings-start-calling-detroit-hockeytown |work=octopusthrower.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> The moniker reflects the city's deep connection to ice hockey, a relationship built over decades of professional play, fan dedication, and a roster of Hall of Fame talent. While the term predates its formal adoption by the Red Wings, the 1996 campaign cemented "Hockeytown" as a defining element of Detroit's civic identity and one of the most recognized sports nicknames in North America.


== History ==
== History ==


The roots of the “Hockeytown” nickname extend back to the 1950s, initially applied to Warroad, Minnesota, a small town with a disproportionately large number of NHL players.<ref>{{cite web |title=Hockeytown |url=https://grokipedia.com/page/Hockeytown |work=grokipedia.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> However, Detroit’s claim to the title gained prominence through the success and enduring legacy of the Detroit Red Wings. As an Original Six franchise, the Red Wings have a long and storied history, amassing 24 Stanley Cup appearances and 11 championships.<ref>{{cite web |title=Why did the Red Wings start calling Detroit 'Hockeytown?' |url=https://octopusthrower.com/why-did-the-red-wings-start-calling-detroit-hockeytown |work=octopusthrower.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> This historical success laid the foundation for a deeply ingrained hockey culture within the city.
The roots of the "Hockeytown" nickname reach back to the 1950s, when the term was first applied to Warroad, Minnesota a small border town that produced an outsized number of NHL players relative to its population.<ref>{{cite web |title=Why did the Red Wings start calling Detroit 'Hockeytown?' |url=https://octopusthrower.com/why-did-the-red-wings-start-calling-detroit-hockeytown |work=octopusthrower.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> Warroad, home to the Christian and Marvin hockey families among others, still uses the nickname today, though its application to a small town in northern Minnesota has never carried the national commercial weight that Detroit's claim eventually would.


In 1996, facing the need for innovative marketing strategies, the Detroit Red Wings formally adopted “Hockeytown” as a slogan.<ref>{{cite web |title=Why did the Red Wings start calling Detroit 'Hockeytown?' |url=https://octopusthrower.com/why-did-the-red-wings-start-calling-detroit-hockeytown |work=octopusthrower.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> The team trademarked the name on October 19, 1995, and prominently featured it on the center-ice logo at Joe Louis Arena, the Red Wings’ home at the time. This marketing initiative coincided with a period of significant success for the team, further solidifying the association between Detroit and hockey. The campaign resonated with fans and helped to amplify the city’s reputation as a hockey stronghold.
Detroit's association with the title grew through the success and enduring legacy of the Red Wings. As one of the Original Six NHL franchises, the Red Wings have one of the longest and most decorated histories in professional hockey, with 11 Stanley Cup championships.<ref>{{cite web |title=Detroit Red Wings History |url=https://www.nhl.com/redwings/history |work=NHL.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> That track record — stretching from the Gordie Howe era of the 1950s through the dynasty years of the late 1990s and early 2000s — laid the groundwork for a hockey culture in Detroit that few other American cities can match.
 
In 1996, the Red Wings formally adopted "Hockeytown" as a marketing slogan. The team had filed for a federal trademark on the name on October 19, 1995, with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, and soon after began featuring it prominently on the center-ice logo at Joe Louis Arena, their home on the Detroit riverfront.<ref>{{cite web |title=Why did the Red Wings start calling Detroit 'Hockeytown?' |url=https://octopusthrower.com/why-did-the-red-wings-start-calling-detroit-hockeytown |work=octopusthrower.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> The timing was deliberate. Detroit was entering one of the most competitive stretches in franchise history, with a roster that included Steve Yzerman, Nicklas Lidstrom, Sergei Fedorov, and Brendan Shanahan. The Red Wings won Stanley Cup championships in 1997, 1998, 2002, and 2008, each victory reinforcing what the branding had claimed: that Detroit was, in fact, hockey's home.
 
The franchise achieved one of the longest playoff streaks in major North American professional sports, qualifying for the Stanley Cup playoffs in 25 consecutive seasons from 1990–91 through 2015–16.<ref>{{cite web |title=Detroit Red Wings playoff history |url=https://www.nhl.com/redwings/history |work=NHL.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> That streak, which spanned the entire peak period of the Hockeytown brand, gave the nickname genuine credibility. It wasn't just a slogan. Detroit's teams were winning.
 
When the Red Wings moved from Joe Louis Arena to Little Caesars Arena in the fall of 2017, the Hockeytown branding moved with them. The new arena, located in the Corktown-adjacent District Detroit development area near downtown, features Hockeytown signage and branding throughout, continuing the visual identity the team established more than two decades earlier.<ref>{{cite web |title=Little Caesars Arena opens in Detroit |url=https://www.nhl.com/redwings/news/little-caesars-arena-opens |work=NHL.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> Joe Louis Arena was subsequently demolished in 2022, ending its physical presence on the riverfront, though it remains a significant reference point in the team's history.


== Culture ==
== Culture ==


The “Hockeytown” designation has permeated Detroit’s culture, extending beyond simply attending Red Wings games. The nickname represents a collective identity and a source of civic pride for residents of Detroit and the surrounding metropolitan area.<ref>{{cite web |title=Hockeytown: The Fandom Surrounding The Detroit Red Wings |url=https://blog.ticketmaster.com/detroit-red-wings-fans/ |work=blog.ticketmaster.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> The devotion to the Red Wings is multigenerational, with fandom passed down through families, creating a strong sense of community among fans. The team’s success has historically provided a focal point for local morale and a shared experience for the city’s population.
The "Hockeytown" designation has worked its way into Detroit's broader civic identity in ways that go beyond the Red Wings' marketing department. For generations of Detroit-area families, following the Red Wings isn't just a seasonal habit — it's a tradition passed down alongside other markers of local identity. The team's sustained success from the 1990s onward gave fans something to anchor that identity to, and the nickname gave it a name.


The culture surrounding “Hockeytown” is characterized by a dedicated and knowledgeable fanbase. Red Wings fans are known for their unwavering support, even during periods of less competitive play.<ref>{{cite web |title=Why did the Red Wings start calling Detroit 'Hockeytown?' |url=https://octopusthrower.com/why-did-the-red-wings-start-calling-detroit-hockeytown |work=octopusthrower.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> This loyalty is reflected in consistent attendance at games and a strong demand for Red Wings merchandise. The tradition of throwing octopuses onto the ice during games, a practice originating in 1995 during the playoffs, is a unique and iconic element of the “Hockeytown” experience.
Red Wings fans are known for consistent support across winning and losing stretches alike. Season ticket waiting lists at Joe Louis Arena remained substantial even during transitional periods in the team's competitive cycle, and the move to Little Caesars Arena was accompanied by strong early ticket demand.<ref>{{cite web |title=Hockeytown: The Fandom Surrounding The Detroit Red Wings |url=https://blog.ticketmaster.com/detroit-red-wings-fans/ |work=blog.ticketmaster.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
 
One of the most recognizable traditions in "Hockeytown" is the throwing of octopuses onto the ice during Red Wings playoff games. The practice dates to April 15, 1952, when brothers Pete and Jerry Cusimano threw an octopus onto the ice at the old Olympia Stadium — the eight legs symbolizing the eight playoff wins then required to claim the Stanley Cup.<ref>{{cite web |title=The history of the octopus-throwing tradition |url=https://octopusthrower.com/why-did-the-red-wings-start-calling-detroit-hockeytown |work=octopusthrower.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> The tradition has continued for over 70 years and remains one of the most distinctive rituals in professional hockey. Al Sobotka, the longtime Zamboni driver and building operations manager at Joe Louis Arena and later Little Caesars Arena, became famous for swinging octopuses overhead when they were removed from the ice — a moment that itself became part of the game-night experience.
 
Detroit's hockey culture extends beyond the professional game. The greater metropolitan area has a robust youth hockey infrastructure, with dozens of rinks and travel programs spread across Oakland, Wayne, and Macomb counties. The University of Michigan and Michigan State University both compete at the NCAA Division I level, and the Big Ten conference's investment in college hockey has deepened the regional pipeline of players and fans. That college and youth base helps explain why the Hockeytown identity resonates across a wide demographic range, not just among older fans who remember the championship years.
 
Notable players from the franchise's peak era became cultural figures in the city in their own right. Steve Yzerman, who captained the Red Wings for 20 seasons, is widely regarded as one of the most respected figures in Detroit sports history. Nicklas Lidstrom, a four-time Norris Trophy winner and seven-time All-Star, spent his entire 20-year career in Detroit. Sergei Fedorov, Pavel Datsyuk, and Henrik Zetterberg each brought distinct playing styles that made the dynasty-era Red Wings one of the most watched teams in the league during the late 1990s and 2000s, drawing fans who might not have otherwise followed hockey.


== Economy ==
== Economy ==


The “Hockeytown” brand has had a demonstrable economic impact on Detroit. The Detroit Red Wings are a significant contributor to the local economy, generating revenue through ticket sales, merchandise, and related tourism.<ref>{{cite web |title=Hockeytown: The Fandom Surrounding The Detroit Red Wings |url=https://blog.ticketmaster.com/detroit-red-wings-fans/ |work=blog.ticketmaster.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> The team’s presence attracts visitors to the city, benefiting local hotels, restaurants, and other businesses. The economic benefits extend beyond game days, as the Red Wings organization is involved in various community initiatives and development projects.
The "Hockeytown" brand has had a concrete economic impact on Detroit. The Red Wings generate significant local revenue through ticket sales, merchandise, arena concessions, and related tourism activity. Game-day traffic at Little Caesars Arena draws visitors to the surrounding District Detroit area, benefiting nearby restaurants, bars, and hotels in a neighborhood that has seen sustained redevelopment investment since the arena opened in 2017.<ref>{{cite web |title=Hockeytown: The Fandom Surrounding The Detroit Red Wings |url=https://blog.ticketmaster.com/detroit-red-wings-fans/ |work=blog.ticketmaster.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
 
The trademark on the "Hockeytown" name, held by the Red Wings organization, creates licensing revenue through branding agreements with retail partners, apparel manufacturers, and hospitality businesses.<ref>{{cite web |title=Hockeytown: The Fandom Surrounding The Detroit Red Wings |url=https://blog.ticketmaster.com/detroit-red-wings-fans/ |work=blog.ticketmaster.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> The team controls commercial use of the nickname, meaning any business that wants to market itself under the Hockeytown name — on merchandise, signage, or promotional materials — must do so through a licensing arrangement with the franchise. That control has made the nickname a revenue-generating asset independent of the team's on-ice performance in any given season.


The trademarking of the “Hockeytown” nickname by the Detroit Red Wings has also created economic opportunities for the team through licensing and branding agreements.<ref>{{cite web |title=Hockeytown: The Fandom Surrounding The Detroit Red Wings |url=https://blog.ticketmaster.com/detroit-red-wings-fans/ |work=blog.ticketmaster.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> The team controls the use of the nickname and can generate revenue by allowing other businesses to use it in connection with their products or services. This control over the “Hockeytown” brand contributes to the Red Wings’ overall financial success and strengthens their position as a major economic force in the city.
The Red Wings' parent company, Ilitch Holdings, has used the team's presence and the Hockeytown brand as part of a broader development strategy in downtown Detroit. The District Detroit project, which encompasses Little Caesars Arena and the surrounding blocks, represents a multi-billion-dollar investment in the city's core, and the Red Wings' identity as an anchor tenant was central to the project's public financing and marketing.<ref>{{cite web |title=District Detroit development overview |url=https://www.nhl.com/redwings/news/district-detroit |work=NHL.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


== Attractions ==
== Attractions ==


While not a physical attraction in itself, the “Hockeytown” atmosphere is a significant draw for visitors to Detroit. A visit to Little Caesars Arena, the current home of the Detroit Red Wings, offers an immersive experience for hockey fans.<ref>{{cite web |title=Hockeytown: The Fandom Surrounding The Detroit Red Wings |url=https://blog.ticketmaster.com/detroit-red-wings-fans/ |work=blog.ticketmaster.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> The arena features state-of-the-art facilities and a vibrant atmosphere, particularly during Red Wings games. The nearby Hockeytown Cafe provides a themed dining experience for fans.
Little Caesars Arena, which opened on September 5, 2017, serves as the primary physical hub of the Hockeytown experience for visitors and local fans alike. Located at 2645 Woodward Avenue in Detroit, the arena seats approximately 19,515 for hockey and features a concourse design that wraps around the seating bowl, giving fans access to food, retail, and gathering spaces even during play.<ref>{{cite web |title=Little Caesars Arena |url=https://www.nhl.com/redwings/arena |work=NHL.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> The Hockeytown branding is visible throughout the building, from the center-ice logo to signage in the concourses, maintaining the visual continuity established at Joe Louis Arena before the move.
 
The Hockeytown Café, a restaurant and sports bar located near the old Joe Louis Arena site, operated for years as one of the most directly branded commercial expressions of the nickname. The venue offered a themed dining experience built around Red Wings history and memorabilia, drawing fans on game days and serving as a gathering point for the team's fanbase.
 
Joe Louis Arena, which opened in 1979 and hosted the Red Wings until 2017, was demolished in 2022 after years of debate over its future. The building hosted four Stanley Cup championship celebrations and was the venue where much of the Hockeytown identity was forged during the dynasty years. Its footprint on the Detroit riverfront has since been cleared, and the site's future redevelopment remains a subject of ongoing planning discussions in the city.


Beyond the arena, the historical significance of Joe Louis Arena, the Red Wings’ former home, remains a point of interest for hockey enthusiasts. Although no longer in use for games, the arena holds a special place in the hearts of many fans and serves as a reminder of the team’s storied past. The area surrounding Little Caesars Arena and the former Joe Louis Arena often features pre- and post-game festivities, creating a lively and engaging environment for fans.
Beyond the arena district, the broader Detroit sports landscape — which includes the Detroit Tigers at Comerica Park and the Detroit Lions at Ford Field, both within walking distance of Little Caesars Arena — makes the area around downtown Detroit one of the more concentrated sports venue corridors in the country. For hockey fans visiting Detroit, the proximity of these venues and the surrounding bars, restaurants, and Red Wings-themed retail gives the neighborhood a consistently active atmosphere during the hockey season.


== See Also ==
== See Also ==
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[[Joe Louis Arena]]
[[Joe Louis Arena]]
[[Little Caesars Arena]]
[[Little Caesars Arena]]
[[Gordie Howe]]
[[Steve Yzerman]]


{{#seo: |title="Hockeytown" nickname — History, Facts & Guide | Detroit.Wiki |description=Explore the history and cultural impact of "Hockeytown," Detroit's nickname rooted in its passionate hockey fanbase and the success of the Detroit Red Wings. |type=Article }}
{{#seo: |title="Hockeytown" nickname — History, Facts & Guide | Detroit.Wiki |description=Explore the history and cultural impact of "Hockeytown," Detroit's nickname rooted in its passionate hockey fanbase and the success of the Detroit Red Wings. |type=Article }}
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[[Category:Ice hockey in Michigan]]
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Revision as of 02:26, 16 April 2026

```mediawiki Hockeytown is a nickname for Detroit, Michigan, and the surrounding metropolitan area, initially adopted as a marketing campaign by the city's National Hockey League (NHL) franchise, the Detroit Red Wings, in 1996.[1] The moniker reflects the city's deep connection to ice hockey, a relationship built over decades of professional play, fan dedication, and a roster of Hall of Fame talent. While the term predates its formal adoption by the Red Wings, the 1996 campaign cemented "Hockeytown" as a defining element of Detroit's civic identity and one of the most recognized sports nicknames in North America.

History

The roots of the "Hockeytown" nickname reach back to the 1950s, when the term was first applied to Warroad, Minnesota — a small border town that produced an outsized number of NHL players relative to its population.[2] Warroad, home to the Christian and Marvin hockey families among others, still uses the nickname today, though its application to a small town in northern Minnesota has never carried the national commercial weight that Detroit's claim eventually would.

Detroit's association with the title grew through the success and enduring legacy of the Red Wings. As one of the Original Six NHL franchises, the Red Wings have one of the longest and most decorated histories in professional hockey, with 11 Stanley Cup championships.[3] That track record — stretching from the Gordie Howe era of the 1950s through the dynasty years of the late 1990s and early 2000s — laid the groundwork for a hockey culture in Detroit that few other American cities can match.

In 1996, the Red Wings formally adopted "Hockeytown" as a marketing slogan. The team had filed for a federal trademark on the name on October 19, 1995, with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, and soon after began featuring it prominently on the center-ice logo at Joe Louis Arena, their home on the Detroit riverfront.[4] The timing was deliberate. Detroit was entering one of the most competitive stretches in franchise history, with a roster that included Steve Yzerman, Nicklas Lidstrom, Sergei Fedorov, and Brendan Shanahan. The Red Wings won Stanley Cup championships in 1997, 1998, 2002, and 2008, each victory reinforcing what the branding had claimed: that Detroit was, in fact, hockey's home.

The franchise achieved one of the longest playoff streaks in major North American professional sports, qualifying for the Stanley Cup playoffs in 25 consecutive seasons from 1990–91 through 2015–16.[5] That streak, which spanned the entire peak period of the Hockeytown brand, gave the nickname genuine credibility. It wasn't just a slogan. Detroit's teams were winning.

When the Red Wings moved from Joe Louis Arena to Little Caesars Arena in the fall of 2017, the Hockeytown branding moved with them. The new arena, located in the Corktown-adjacent District Detroit development area near downtown, features Hockeytown signage and branding throughout, continuing the visual identity the team established more than two decades earlier.[6] Joe Louis Arena was subsequently demolished in 2022, ending its physical presence on the riverfront, though it remains a significant reference point in the team's history.

Culture

The "Hockeytown" designation has worked its way into Detroit's broader civic identity in ways that go beyond the Red Wings' marketing department. For generations of Detroit-area families, following the Red Wings isn't just a seasonal habit — it's a tradition passed down alongside other markers of local identity. The team's sustained success from the 1990s onward gave fans something to anchor that identity to, and the nickname gave it a name.

Red Wings fans are known for consistent support across winning and losing stretches alike. Season ticket waiting lists at Joe Louis Arena remained substantial even during transitional periods in the team's competitive cycle, and the move to Little Caesars Arena was accompanied by strong early ticket demand.[7]

One of the most recognizable traditions in "Hockeytown" is the throwing of octopuses onto the ice during Red Wings playoff games. The practice dates to April 15, 1952, when brothers Pete and Jerry Cusimano threw an octopus onto the ice at the old Olympia Stadium — the eight legs symbolizing the eight playoff wins then required to claim the Stanley Cup.[8] The tradition has continued for over 70 years and remains one of the most distinctive rituals in professional hockey. Al Sobotka, the longtime Zamboni driver and building operations manager at Joe Louis Arena and later Little Caesars Arena, became famous for swinging octopuses overhead when they were removed from the ice — a moment that itself became part of the game-night experience.

Detroit's hockey culture extends beyond the professional game. The greater metropolitan area has a robust youth hockey infrastructure, with dozens of rinks and travel programs spread across Oakland, Wayne, and Macomb counties. The University of Michigan and Michigan State University both compete at the NCAA Division I level, and the Big Ten conference's investment in college hockey has deepened the regional pipeline of players and fans. That college and youth base helps explain why the Hockeytown identity resonates across a wide demographic range, not just among older fans who remember the championship years.

Notable players from the franchise's peak era became cultural figures in the city in their own right. Steve Yzerman, who captained the Red Wings for 20 seasons, is widely regarded as one of the most respected figures in Detroit sports history. Nicklas Lidstrom, a four-time Norris Trophy winner and seven-time All-Star, spent his entire 20-year career in Detroit. Sergei Fedorov, Pavel Datsyuk, and Henrik Zetterberg each brought distinct playing styles that made the dynasty-era Red Wings one of the most watched teams in the league during the late 1990s and 2000s, drawing fans who might not have otherwise followed hockey.

Economy

The "Hockeytown" brand has had a concrete economic impact on Detroit. The Red Wings generate significant local revenue through ticket sales, merchandise, arena concessions, and related tourism activity. Game-day traffic at Little Caesars Arena draws visitors to the surrounding District Detroit area, benefiting nearby restaurants, bars, and hotels in a neighborhood that has seen sustained redevelopment investment since the arena opened in 2017.[9]

The trademark on the "Hockeytown" name, held by the Red Wings organization, creates licensing revenue through branding agreements with retail partners, apparel manufacturers, and hospitality businesses.[10] The team controls commercial use of the nickname, meaning any business that wants to market itself under the Hockeytown name — on merchandise, signage, or promotional materials — must do so through a licensing arrangement with the franchise. That control has made the nickname a revenue-generating asset independent of the team's on-ice performance in any given season.

The Red Wings' parent company, Ilitch Holdings, has used the team's presence and the Hockeytown brand as part of a broader development strategy in downtown Detroit. The District Detroit project, which encompasses Little Caesars Arena and the surrounding blocks, represents a multi-billion-dollar investment in the city's core, and the Red Wings' identity as an anchor tenant was central to the project's public financing and marketing.[11]

Attractions

Little Caesars Arena, which opened on September 5, 2017, serves as the primary physical hub of the Hockeytown experience for visitors and local fans alike. Located at 2645 Woodward Avenue in Detroit, the arena seats approximately 19,515 for hockey and features a concourse design that wraps around the seating bowl, giving fans access to food, retail, and gathering spaces even during play.[12] The Hockeytown branding is visible throughout the building, from the center-ice logo to signage in the concourses, maintaining the visual continuity established at Joe Louis Arena before the move.

The Hockeytown Café, a restaurant and sports bar located near the old Joe Louis Arena site, operated for years as one of the most directly branded commercial expressions of the nickname. The venue offered a themed dining experience built around Red Wings history and memorabilia, drawing fans on game days and serving as a gathering point for the team's fanbase.

Joe Louis Arena, which opened in 1979 and hosted the Red Wings until 2017, was demolished in 2022 after years of debate over its future. The building hosted four Stanley Cup championship celebrations and was the venue where much of the Hockeytown identity was forged during the dynasty years. Its footprint on the Detroit riverfront has since been cleared, and the site's future redevelopment remains a subject of ongoing planning discussions in the city.

Beyond the arena district, the broader Detroit sports landscape — which includes the Detroit Tigers at Comerica Park and the Detroit Lions at Ford Field, both within walking distance of Little Caesars Arena — makes the area around downtown Detroit one of the more concentrated sports venue corridors in the country. For hockey fans visiting Detroit, the proximity of these venues and the surrounding bars, restaurants, and Red Wings-themed retail gives the neighborhood a consistently active atmosphere during the hockey season.

See Also

Detroit Red Wings Joe Louis Arena Little Caesars Arena Gordie Howe Steve Yzerman ```