sport.wikisort.org - StadiumThe Paul Sauvé Arena was an indoor arena located at 4000 Beaubien Est. in Montreal, Quebec, in its Rosemont district. Built in 1960 and demolished in 1992–93, the arena had a capacity of 4,000 people. It was named after Paul Sauvé (March 24, 1907 – January 2, 1960), a Quebec Premier with the Union Nationale.
Indoor arena located in Montreal, Quebec
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The arena hosted some of the most important events in modern Quebec political history. It was the site of the Parti Québécois election victory celebrations on November 15, 1976 and on April 13, 1981. Additionally, it was the site of two of the most important moments of the 1980 referendum. On May 14, 1980 Pierre Trudeau delivered his "first among equals" speech that was his major contribution to the campaign battle, and René Lévesque delivered his passionate concession speech on May 20, 1980.
The Paul Sauvé Arena was, most popularly, the home to Quebec professional wrestling. In the mid-1960s, Johnny Rougeau and partner Bob Langevin created "Les As de la Lutte" (Wrestling Aces, known in English as All-Star Wrestling) and made the arena its main venue for wrestling shows, which ran from 1965 to 1975; its successor, Lutte Internationale, also used the arena as its home base for regular cards from 1980 until it folded in 1987 due to competition from the WWF. The arena was also home to a founding franchise in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League. The Rosemont National played two seasons (from 1969 to 1971, finishing 8th and 9th) before moving to Laval. In the late 1960s the Montreal Canadiens lacrosse team played in the arena, and rock concerts including those performed by Jimi Hendrix, Cream, and Eric Burdon and The Animals. Finally, boxing was always a big draw, and the arena saw many memorable fights.
On a more prestigious note, it also hosted preliminary volleyball matches at the 1976 Summer Olympics. Before decay, costs and low attendances doomed the arena, it was used for curling hall, and later a bingo hall, a gymnasium, a bowling alley, and trade shows.
References
 Venues of the 1976 Summer Olympics ( Montreal) |
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Montreal Olympic Park | | |
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Greater Montreal | |
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Football venues | |
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Handball venues | |
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Other venues | |
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Olympic venues in volleyball |
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20th century |
- 1964: Komazawa Volleyball Courts, Yokohama Cultural Gymnasium (final)
- 1968: Juan de la Barrera Olympic Gymnasium (final), Juan Escutia Sports Palace, Revolution Ice Rink
- 1972: Volleyballhalle
- 1976: Montreal Forum (final), Paul Sauvé Centre
- 1980: Druzhba Multipurpose Arena, Minor Arena of the Central Lenin Stadium (final)
- 1984: Long Beach Arena
- 1988: Hanyang University Gymnasium, Jamsil Gymnasium (final), Saemaul Sports Hall
- 1992: Palau dels Esports de Barcelona, Palau Sant Jordi (final), Pavelló de la Vall d'Hebron
- 1996: Clayton County International Park (2-man), Omni Coliseum (indoor final), Stegeman Coliseum
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21st century |
- 2000: Bondi Beach, Sydney Entertainment Centre (indoor final), Sydney Showground Pavilion 4
- 2004: Faliro Olympic Beach Volleyball Centre, Peace and Friendship Stadium
- 2008: Beijing Institute of Technology Gymnasium, Capital Indoor Stadium (indoor final), Chaoyang Park Beach Volleyball Ground
- 2012: Earls Court Exhibition Centre, Horse Guards Parade
- 2016: Copacabana Beach, Maracanãzinho
- 2020: Ariake Arena, Shiokaze Park
- 2024: Paris Expo Porte de Versailles, Champ de Mars
- 2028: Honda Center, Anaheim Convention Center, Santa Monica State Beach
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На других языках
- [en] Paul Sauvé Arena
[es] Arena Paul Sauvé
La Arena Paul Sauvé[1] (en francés: Aréna Paul-Sauvé) era un pabellón deportivo situado en Montreal, Quebec, al este de Canadá en el distrito de Rosemont. Construido en 1960 y demolido en 1996, el campo tenía una capacidad de 4.000 personas. Debe su nombre a Paul Sauvé (24 de marzo de 1907 a 2 de enero de 1960), un primer ministro de Quebec de la Union Nationale. El estadio fue sede algunos de los eventos más importantes de la historia política moderna de Quebec. El 15 de octubre de 1970, durante la Crisis de Octubre 3000 estudiantes se manifestaron en apoyo del Frente de Liberación de Quebec después de los secuestros de James Cross y Pierre Laporte. Fue el sitio de las celebraciones de la victoria de las elecciones del Partido Quebequense el 15 de noviembre de 1976 y el 13 de abril de 1981.
[fr] Aréna Paul-Sauvé
L'aréna Paul-Sauvé est un aréna autrefois situé dans le quartier montréalais de Rosemont, au Québec à l'angle de la rue Beaubien et du Boulevard Pie-IX. Construit en 1960 et démoli en 1992[1], il avait une capacité de 4 000 personnes. L'aréna fut nommé en l'honneur de Paul Sauvé, premier ministre du Québec de septembre 1959 à janvier 1960.
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