Sports in New Jersey

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MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, Bergen County, home to the NFL's New York Giants and New York Jets and the most expensive stadium ever built.[1]

As of 2021, New Jersey has six teams from major professional sports leagues playing in the state, with only one team identifying themselves as being from the state. The other remaining teams identify themselves as being from the New York metropolitan area with the exception of the National Women's Soccer League team that has chosen a team name that does not identify with New Jersey or New York.

Major League professional sports[]

The Prudential Center in Newark, home of the NHL's New Jersey Devils.
Red Bull Arena in Harrison, Hudson County, home of the MLS's New York Red Bulls.

The National Hockey League's New Jersey Devils, based in Newark at the Prudential Center, is the only major league franchise to bear the state's name. Founded in 1974 in Kansas City, Missouri as the Kansas City Scouts, the team played in Denver, Colorado as the Colorado Rockies from 1976 until the spring of 1982 when naval architect, businessman, and Jersey City native John J. McMullen purchased and relocated the franchise to Brendan Byrne Arena in East Rutherford's Meadowlands Sports Complex under its current identity. While the organization was largely a failure on the ice in Kansas City, Denver, and its first years in New Jersey, the Devils would ultimately begin their rise to prominence in the late 1980s and early 1990s under the tenure of Hall of Fame president and general manager Lou Lamoriello, winning the Stanley Cup in 1995, 2000, and 2003, and act as an annual fixture in the Stanley Cup playoffs for the majority of two decades. The organization is the youngest out of all nine "Big Four" major league teams within the New York Metropolitan Area and media market dominated in terms of ice hockey by the New York Rangers and Islanders prior to the Devils' arrival, but has ultimately been successful in establishing a visible and dedicated following throughout the northern and central portions of the state. In 2018, one of the Devils' fiercest rivals, the Philadelphia Flyers, renovated and expanded their training facility, The Virtua Center Flyers Skate Zone, in Voorhees Township in the southern portion of the state.[2]

The National Women's Hockey League's Metropolitan Riveters currently play at the ProSkate Ice Arena in Monmouth Junction, New Jersey. While initially beginning in Brooklyn as the New York Riveters, they moved to New Jersey in their 2016 season, where the team has played since, initially playing out of the Barnabas Health Hockey House at the Prudential Center.[3] In 2016 the team formed an affiliation with the New Jersey Devils where the team renamed to the Metropolitan Riveters along with changing their uniform and team colors to match the Devils.[4] In 2019, this affiliation was terminated between the Devils and the Riveters,[5][6] which caused the team to revert to their original colors along with finding a new home at the ProSkate Ice Arena in Monmouth Junction, NJ.[7][8]

The New York Metropolitan Area's two National Football League teams, the New York Giants and the New York Jets, both play at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford's Meadowlands Sports Complex.[9] At completion, with a construction cost of approximately $1.6 billion,[10] the venue is the most expensive stadium ever built.[1] On February 2, 2014, MetLife Stadium was the host for Super Bowl XLVIII. There have been multiple short lived attempts at starting a competing league to the NFL, with teams based in New Jersey. The New Jersey Generals played with the United States Football League at Giants Stadium for three seasons from 1982 until 1985 when the league went bankrupt after an antitrust lawsuit against the NFL. Two attempts by Vince McMahon at creating a competing league, both named the XFL, have been attempted in New Jersey. The first XFL league was created as a joint venture between World Wrestling Entertainment and NBC[11] in 2001, had the New York/New Jersey Hitmen playing at Giants Stadium for the only season they played before the league folded. The New York/New Jersey Hitmen finished in third for the XFL Eastern Division for the season they played.[12] In 2020, the New York Guardians of the newly revived XFL began playing at MetLife Stadium.[13] After the XFL filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on April 13, 2020,[14] citing the premature suspension of their season due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the New York Guardians no longer play in the state.

The New York Red Bulls of Major League Soccer play in Red Bull Arena, a soccer-specific stadium located in Harrison immediately across the Passaic River from downtown Newark. The team was founded in 1994 as the Empire Soccer Club, and renamed to New York/New Jersey Metrostars in 1995[15] and played under this name until the acquisition of the team by Red Bull GmbH in 2006, where the team was renamed to the New York Red Bulls and dropped their association with New Jersey in the team's name.[16][17][18] For the entire team's history, the team has always played in New Jersey, where Giants Stadium served as the team's home stadium, prior to the opening of Red Bull Arena in 2010.[19] On July 27, 2011, Red Bull Arena hosted the 2011 MLS All-Star Game.[20]

Sky Blue FC was founded in 2008 and began playing in the 2009 Women's Professional Soccer season. After the league was folded in 2012,[21] SkyBlue FC transferred to the National Women's Soccer League beginning in the 2013 season. In November 2019 it was announced that SkyBlue FC will move from Yurcack Field at Rutgers University to Red Bull Arena, for the 2020 NWSL season[22] Despite SkyBlue FC being the only NWSL team in both the New York Metropolitan area and New Jersey, the team does not have any regional identifiers to either location.

From 1977 to 2012, New Jersey had a National Basketball Association team, the New Jersey Nets, which last played at the Prudential Center in Newark. In 2012, the team was moved to Brooklyn and now plays under the Brooklyn Nets. WNBA's New York Liberty played in New Jersey from 2011 to 2013. In 2016, the Philadelphia 76ers of the NBA opened their new headquarters and training facility, the Philadelphia 76ers Training Complex, in Camden.[23]

The Meadowlands Sports Complex is also home to the Meadowlands Racetrack, one of two major harness racing tracks in the state. The Meadowlands Racetrack along with Freehold Raceway in Freehold are two of the major harness racing tracks in North America. Monmouth Park Racetrack in Oceanport is also a popular spot for thoroughbred racing in New Jersey and the northeast. It hosted the Breeders' Cup in 2007, and its turf course was renovated in preparation.

Major league sports[]

New Jersey teams[]

Club Sport League Stadium (capacity) Established Titles
New Jersey Devils Ice hockey National Hockey League Prudential Center (16,514) 1974 3
Metropolitan Riveters National Women's Hockey League ProSkate Ice Arena 2015 1
NJ/NY Gotham FC Soccer National Women's Soccer League Red Bull Arena (25,000) 2007 1

New York metropolitan teams that play in New Jersey[]

Club Sport League Stadium (capacity) Established Titles
New York Jets Football National Football League MetLife Stadium (82,500) 1959 1
New York Giants 1925 8
New York Red Bulls Soccer Major League Soccer Red Bull Arena (25,000) 1994 0

Major league professional championships[]

New Jersey Devils (NHL)[]

3 Stanley Cup titles

Newark Eagles (NNL)[]

1 Negro World Series title

Semi-pro and minor league sports[]

New Jersey teams[]

Club Sport League Stadium (capacity) Established Titles
Somerset Patriots Baseball MiLB (AA-Northeast) TD Bank Ballpark (6,100) 1997 6
Jersey Shore BlueClaws MiLB (A+-East) FirstEnergy Park (8,000) 1987 3
Trenton Thunder MLB Draft League Trenton Thunder Ballpark (6,440) 1980 3
New Jersey Jackals Frontier League Yogi Berra Stadium (5,000) 1998 5
Sussex County Miners Skylands Stadium (4,200) 2015 1
Jersey Express Basketball American Basketball Association Joseph Battin School No.4 2005 0
Jersey Expressions Women's American Basketball Association The Waterfront Center 2013 2
Jersey Flight Indoor football National Arena League CURE Insurance Arena (10,000) 2018 0
Jersey Bearcats American Arena League SportsPlex at Metuchen 2018 0
Garden State Rollergirls Roller Derby Women's Flat Track Derby Association Inline Skating Club of America Roller Skating Rink 2006 0
Jersey Shore Roller Girls Asbury Park Convention Hall (3,600) 2007 0
Hoboken FC 1912 Soccer Cosmopolitan Soccer League Sinatra Park, Hoboken and Laurel Hill Park, Secaucus 1912 1
Cedar Stars Rush USL League Two Fairleigh Dickinson University 2018 0
FC Motown Ranger Stadium (1,200) 2021 0
Morris Elite SC Livingston High School 2016 0
New Jersey Copa FC St. John Vianney High School 2015 0
Ocean City Nor'easters Carey Stadium (4,000) 1996 3
Real Central New Jersey Mercer County Community College 2020 0
Atlantic City FC National Premier Soccer League Egg Harbor Township High School 2018 0
FC Monmouth Count Basie Park 2018 0
FC Motown Ranger Stadium (1,200) 2012 0
New Jersey Teamsters FC National Independent Soccer Association Don Ahern Veterans Memorial Stadium 2017 0
New Jersey Copa FC United Women's Soccer Mercer County Community College 2015 0
PSA Wildcats Women's Premier Soccer League Woodbridge High School 1996 0
NJ Wizards SC Cedar Grove High School - 0

New York Metropolitan minor league teams that play in New Jersey[]

Club Sport League Stadium (capacity) Established Titles
New York Red Bulls II Soccer USL Championship MSU Soccer Park at Pittser Field (5,000) 2015 1
New York Red Bulls U-23 USL League Two Red Bulls Training Facility 2009 2

College sports[]

Major schools[]

New Jerseyans' collegiate allegiances are predominantly split among the three major NCAA Division I programs in the state – the Rutgers University (New Jersey's flagship state university) Scarlet Knights, members of the Big Ten Conference; the Seton Hall University (the state's largest Catholic university) Pirates, members of the Big East Conference; and the Princeton University (the state's Ivy League university) Tigers.

Rutgers and Princeton athletics share an intense rivalry – stemming from the first intercollegiate football game in 1869 – though the two schools have not met on the football field since 1980. They continue to play each other annually in all other sports offered by the two universities.

Rutgers, which fields 24 teams in various sports, is nationally known for its excellent football and women's basketball programs, owning a 6-4 all-time bowl record and appearing in a National Final in 2007, respectively. In 2008 and 2009, Rutgers expanded their football home HighPoint.com Stadium on the Busch Campus, and the basketball teams play at Louis Brown Athletic Center on Livingston Campus. Both venues and campuses are located in Piscataway, immediately across the Raritan River from New Brunswick. The university also fields rising men's basketball and baseball programs. Rutgers' fan base is mostly derived from the western parts of the state and Middlesex County, not to mention its alumni base, which is the largest in the state.

Rutgers' satellite campuses in Camden and Newark each field their own athletic programs. The Rutgers–Camden athletic teams are called the Scarlet Raptors. The Rutgers–Newark athletic teams are called the Scarlet Raiders. The Scarlet Raiders and the Scarlet Raptors both compete within NCAA Division III.

Seton Hall, unlike Rutgers and Princeton, does not field a football team. Its men's basketball team, however, is one of the Big East's storied programs, New Jersey's most successful representative in the NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament by number of wins, the state's only men's basketball program to reach a modern National Final, and plays its home games at Prudential Center in downtown Newark approximately four miles from the university's South Orange campus. The Pirates, while lacking as large an alumni base as the state university, have a large well of support in the predominantly Roman Catholic areas of the northern part of the state and the Jersey Shore. The annual inter-conference rivalry game between Seton Hall and Rutgers which alternates between Newark and Piscataway, the Garden State Hardwood Classic, has been renewed through 2026.[24]

Other schools[]

The state's other Division I schools include the Monmouth University Hawks (West Long Branch), the New Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT) Highlanders (Newark), the Rider University Broncs (Lawrenceville), and the Saint Peter's University Peacocks and Peahens (Jersey City).

Fairleigh Dickinson University competes in both Division I and Division III. It has two campuses, each with its own sports teams. The teams at the Metropolitan Campus are known as the FDU Knights, and compete in the Northeast Conference and NCAA Division I. The College at Florham (FDU-Florham) teams are known as the FDU-Florham Devils and compete in the Middle Atlantic Conferences' Freedom Conference and NCAA Division III.

Among the various Division III schools in the state, the Stevens Institute of Technology Ducks have fielded the longest continuously running collegiate men's lacrosse program in the country. 2009 marked the 125th season.

High school sports[]

New Jersey high schools are divided into divisions under the New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association.(NJSIAA) [25]'[26] Founded in 1918, the NJSIAA currently represents 22,000 schools, 330,000 coaches, and almost 4.5 million athletes. Sports are divided between 3 seasons (fall, winter, and spring).

Academies and clubs[]

New Jersey also features a collection of sports leagues, clubs, and academies for athletic training. Like many suburban communities, most New Jersey towns have individual leagues for America's most popular sports - baseball, softball, football, cheerleading, basketball, soccer, etc.[27]

Stadiums and arenas[]

Venue City Capacity Type Tenants Opened
SHI Stadium Piscataway 52,454 Stadium Rutgers Scarlet Knights 1994
Jadwin Gymnasium Princeton 6,854 Arena Princeton Tigers 1969
Louis Brown Athletic Center Piscataway 8,000 Arena Rutgers Scarlet Knights 1977
MetLife Stadium East Rutherford 82,500 Stadium New York Giants, New York Jets 2010
Princeton Stadium Princeton 27,800 Stadium Princeton Tigers 1998
Prudential Center Newark 18,711 Arena New Jersey Devils, Seton Hall Pirates 2007
Red Bull Arena Harrison 25,189 Stadium New York Red Bulls, Sky Blue FC 2010
FirstEnergy Park Lakewood 8,000 Stadium Jersey Shore BlueClaws 2001

Other notable sports venues[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b Esteban (October 27, 2011). "11 Most Expensive Stadiums In The World". Total Pro Sports. Retrieved September 2, 2012.
  2. ^ "Check out the Flyers renovated & expanded South Jersey training facility". Philadelphia Business Journal. February 22, 2018. Retrieved April 3, 2018.
  3. ^ Cimini, Kaitlin (August 1, 2016). "From The Ice New York Riveters leave Brooklyn for Newark". Slapshot.
  4. ^ "NEW JERSEY DEVILS ENTER FIRST OF ITS KIND AGREEMENT AND FORM MULTI-YEAR STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIP WITH THE NWHL'S RIVETERS". NWHL. October 5, 2017. Archived from the original on October 6, 2017. Retrieved October 6, 2017.
  5. ^ "New Jersey Devils dissolving partnership with Metropolitan Riveters". theicegarden.com. May 17, 2019.
  6. ^ "NJ Devils dissolve partnership with Metropolitan Riveters ahead of schedule". northjersey.com. May 17, 2019.
  7. ^ "RIVETERS UNVEIL NEW SWEATER DESIGN FOR SEASON 5". NWHL. September 27, 2019.
  8. ^ "NWHL Reveals Expanded Schedule for the 2019-20 Season". NWHL. July 29, 2019.
  9. ^ New Meadowlands Stadium official website Archived 2014-10-09 at the Wayback Machine New Meadowlands Stadium Corporation. Retrieved June 14, 2010.
  10. ^ Belson, Ken (April 8, 2010). "New Stadium, a Football Palace, Opens Saturday With Lacrosse". The New York Times. Retrieved March 21, 2011.
  11. ^ "DeVito says NBC not necessary for next year". ESPN. ESPN Inc. Associated Press. March 27, 2001. Retrieved January 23, 2014.
  12. ^ "XFL Standings". USA Today. May 12, 2001. Retrieved February 18, 2011.
  13. ^ "ESNY Exclusive: New York Guardians take over MetLife Stadium". elitesportsny.com. February 6, 2020. Retrieved February 6, 2020.
  14. ^ "XFL Files For Bankruptcy Lost '10s Of Millions' Due To COVID-19". TMZ. April 13, 2020. Retrieved April 20, 2020.
  15. ^ "Team History". New York Red Bulls. Archived from the original on February 8, 2015. Retrieved February 27, 2012.
  16. ^ "Red Bull takes over the MetroStars" (Press release). Red Bull New York. March 9, 2006. Archived from the original on July 8, 2006. Retrieved July 27, 2016.
  17. ^ Havsy, Jane (March 8, 2006). "MetroStars sold to Red Bull". USA Today. Retrieved July 27, 2016.
  18. ^ "MetroStars sold and renamed Red Bull New York". ESPN FC. March 9, 2006. Retrieved July 27, 2016.
  19. ^ Bell, Jack (July 1, 2004). "MetroStars' New Home Is Nearly a Reality". The New York Times. Retrieved February 27, 2010.
  20. ^ Bondy, Filip (July 28, 2011). "Manchester United's 4-0 Romp Over MLS All-Stars More Proof U.S. Pro Soccer Not Up to Snuff". Daily News. New York. Retrieved December 26, 2017.
  21. ^ "WPS Suspends Play for 2012 Season". WPS – Communications. WomensProSoccer.com. January 30, 2012. Archived from the original on February 18, 2012. Retrieved January 30, 2012.
  22. ^ cite web|title=New York Red Bulls and Sky Blue FC Announce New Partnership|url=https://skybluefc.com/2019/11/18/new-york-red-bulls-and-sky-blue-fc-announce-new-partnership/
  23. ^ Seltzer, Brian (September 23, 2016). "On the Beat: New Training Complex Brings Modern Feel, Promise". NBA.com. Retrieved January 31, 2018.
  24. ^ https://www.app.com/story/sports/college/2018/04/30/rutgers-seton-hall-basketball-garden-state-hardwood-classic/563768002/
  25. ^ NJSIAA
  26. ^ New Jersey High School News and Sports Archived 2009-04-18 at the Wayback Machine. iHigh.com, Inc – The High School Internet Network. Retrieved January 26, 2011.
  27. ^ Jersey Club Sports - Have Fun. Play Sports. Be Social!

External links[]

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