Everything perfect
by Vincent on 11/9/22Centre Videotron - QuébecEnverything perfect no problem at all we had a great night
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About Remparts de Québec
The city of Québec has a long legacy of hockey excellence, and the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League's Remparts de Québec (Quebec Ramparts) continues the tradition established by the original Remparts and by the Quebec Nordiques of the WHA and NHL. The Remparts are named after the ramparts of Quebec City, which have fortified the provincial capital for centuries. Legendary goaltender Patrick Roy is the head coach and general manager of the Remparts. The Hall of Famer previously led the Remparts from 2005 to 2013, winning the Memorial Cup in 2006. Roy returned to the organization as coach and GM in 2018 after spending three seasons as coach of the Colorado Avalanche.
The history of Remparts de Québec spans two different franchises over the last 50 years. The original Remparts de Québec played at Le Colisée from 1969 to 1985, developing numerous hockey talents including future Hockey Hall of Famers Guy LaFleur and Michel Goulet, while winning the five QMJHL championships (1970, 1971, 1973, 1974 and 1976), and the 1971 Memorial Cup. The current iteration of the Remparts was founded in 1990 as the Beauport Harfangs, and it moved to Quebec in 1997, a year after the NHL's Nordiques moved to Colorado.
The Remparts play at the $370 million Videotron Centre, which opened in 2015 and seats 18,259 for hockey. The world-class facility also hosts the Quebec International Pee-Wee Hockey Tournament, which has given the world an opportunity to see some of the greatest players in NHL history while still in their youth. Remparts de Québec are in the East Division of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League, where they face the Baie-Comeau Drakkar, Chicoutimi Saguenéens, Rimouski Océanic, Shawinigan Cataractes and the Victoriaville Tigres. Follow all the action online at remparts.ca, and on Twitter @quebec_remparts.
Enverything perfect no problem at all we had a great night
Kids running all over the place. This isn't supposed to be a kindergarten.
Very easy to pass Covid Passport, Security and Ticket check. The arena is fantastic with very comfortable seating. Jumbotron is super HD - great for viewing replays. Loads of kids - glad to see them out of the house interested in sport as way too many are into indoor activities like video games. That being said, bring earplugs because when they scream (and they will) it is extreme! Oh, don’t get the hotdogs - most disgusting thing I’ve ever tasted - LOL Anyway, super fun - great team to watch!
Great place to see a hockey match place still as the new car smell
Great venue. Fans are enthusiastic and knowledgeable. This is a city ready for the NHL too bad that the league is focused on making as much money as possible. The current NHL has no place for die hard passion in cities like Quebec. So, please go to a game here you'll love it!
From Maryland and decided while on vacation to take my wife and daughter to a game. Way better quality of hockey then I expected. For $18 a seat had 2nd row from glass. The arena was also way better then expected with a high res video scoreboard and fun vibe between stoppages of play. Highly recommend seeing a game here.
My wife and I were in Quebec City for New Years and decided we wanted to find an indoor activity after several fun, but cold, days outdoors. Despite the fact that Quebec has been without an NHL franchise since the Nordiques left for Denver, we stumbled upon the Remparts du Quebec, a junior league team with an afternoon game. We were able to score second row seats for under $30 US!!! While the level of play was what one would expect from a junior team, the game was a blast, the fans enthusiastic and upbeat (despite a 5 goal loss), and the Centre Videotron a wonderful venue which was clean, accessible, and filled with tremendous food and drink options. We could not have been more pleased with our last minute decision to attend, and highly recommend a Remparts game to anyone finding themselves in beautiful Quebec City!
The first 2 periods saw the Sags score once each frame and stake a 2-0 lead, but the home squad came back with 2 in the third to force overtime. The 3-on-3 OT saw many chances, most by the Remparts, and at the 4:10 mark captain Matthew Boucher got a breakaway and scored to give Quebec the win!
It was a fun game to watch, unfortunately the home team lost, but Maxime Comtois a top-10 rated prospect for the 2017 NHL draft was on display. The new Quebec arena is a very nice modern facility, is spacious, and has a nice feel.
A really nice, state of the art arena in Quebec City. I saw the Remparts de Quebec, a team in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League play the Drakkar de Baie-Comeau, along with 14,000 other hockey fans. THe arena has wide concourses, lots of restrooms and lots of concession stands. It will make an awesome home for the new Nordiques if the NHL puts a team back in Quebec. As for Quebec City, we stayed in the Old (Vieux) City. Tons of restaurants, shopping and museums.
The animation was lively, the ambiance was fun and relaxed and the space was spacious, modern and bright. The Remparts played excellent hockey!