Former names | Deja Blue Arena (2003–2008) Dr Pepper Arena (2009–2019) |
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Address | 2601 Avenue of the Stars |
Location | Frisco, Texas |
Coordinates | 33°06′04″N 96°49′11″W / 33.101026°N 96.819624°W |
Owner | City of Frisco |
Operator | Dallas Stars |
Executive suites | 12 |
Capacity | Ice hockey: 3,500 Basketball: 4,000–4,500 Concerts: 7,000 (standing room only) |
Surface | Multi-surface |
Construction | |
Broke ground | 2002.5.24 |
Opened | 2003.9.19 |
Renovated | 2008–2009 |
Construction cost | US$27 million US$39 million (renovation) |
Architect | Balfour Beatty/HKS, Inc. |
Tenants | |
Dallas Stars Practice Facility (NHL) (2003–2008, 2009–present) Texas Legends (NBAGL) (2010–present) Frisco Fighters (IFL) (2021–present) Past tenants: Texas Tornado (NAHL) (2003-2008, 2009–2013) Frisco Thunder (IntenseFL) (2007–2008) Dallas Desire (LFL) (2016) Texas Revolution (CIF) (2018) |
Comerica Center (previously Deja Blue Arena and Dr Pepper Arena) is a multi-purpose arena in Frisco, Texas. It is the home of the Texas Legends of the NBA G League and the Frisco Fighters of the Indoor Football League, as well as the executive offices and practice facility of the National Hockey League's Dallas Stars. The arena is also used for concerts and other live entertainment events. It seats between 5,000 and 7,000 people and has a 2,100-vehicle parking garage.[1]
Most G League teams play in arenas smaller than the Coliseum with the smallest attendance average this season being the South Bay Lakers' 614 at the Los Angeles Lakes' practice facility, the Toyota Sports Center, and the largest being the Texas Legends' 5,628 at Comerica Center.