Sports News

Consol Energy gets naming rights for arena

Published: Dec. 16, 2008 at 3:30 PM
Related Company

PITTSBURGH, Dec. 16 (UPI) -- The coal and gas company Consol Energy Inc. has won the naming rights for the new Pittsburgh Penguins hockey arena.

The deal means that the arena will be known as the Consol Energy Center for 21 years after its opening for the 2010-2011 season, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reported. The team has not released the amount of money involved, but Consol is believed to be paying millions of dollars.

Marc Ganis of Sportscorp Ltd., a Chicago company, suggested that Consol is paying $2 million a year.

Mario Lemieux, co-owner of the Penguins, announced the awarding of the naming rights Monday at a news conference. He said that Consol's money would help keep the Penguins a competitive NHL team.

Several years ago, H.J. Heinz Inc. agreed to pay $2.85 million a year for 20 years for naming rights to Heinz Field, where the NFL Pittsburgh Steelers play. PNC Financial Services Inc. is putting up $1.8 million a year for PNC Park, the Pirates' stadium.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
UPI NewsTrack Sports (19 min)
UPI NewsTrack Quirks in the News (34 min)
Cat survives long, cold drive under SUV (36 min)
Woman reunited with cornet after 41 years (44 min)
U.S. markets close higher Monday (47 min)
Single-month cellular bill nears $22,000 (56 min)
Therapy may reverse sickle cell disease (59 min)
fark
Teacher cuts off a student's braid after she wouldn't stop playing with it in class. "I wasn't playing...
Legionnaire's invade hotel in Florida, killing 1 and injuring two others
Animal rescue organization asks that if you see a seagull looking "sad" in 2010, don't make an emergency...
Pair of shadey characters robbing optometry stores last seen driving away in a 20/10 Cataract. Police...
The nominees for Time's Person of the Year 2009 are Steve Jobs, Ben Bernanke, The Chinese Worker,...
46 injured in 50-car pileup that stretches across entire width of Connecticut