2000 Stanley Cup Finals: Difference between revisions

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The 2000 Stanley Cup Finals was a huge deal. The New Jersey Devils won their first championship, beating the Dallas Stars in six games between June 1 and June 7, 2000. It capped off a decade of hard work, driven by a resilient team culture and smart coaching. Both teams played with incredible intensity, trading leads throughout the series. When the Devils clinched Game 6 with a 3-2 win at the Reunion Arena in Dallas, the whole state celebrated. For hockey fans in New Jersey, it was a defining moment they'd never forget.
{{Infobox NHL playoffs
| year = 2000
| image =
| alt =
| champion = New Jersey Devils
| challenger = Dallas Stars
| champwins = 4
| chalwins = 2
| series = 4–2
| champgoals = 16
| chalgoals = 11
| MVP = Scott Stevens
| arena1 = Continental Airlines Arena
| arena2 = Reunion Arena
}}


The 2000 Stanley Cup Finals also showed just how much New Jersey had become a real hub for professional sports. The Devils' triumph wasn't just about the team. It reflected the state's serious investment in sports infrastructure and community support for athletes. Millions tuned in to watch the series, and the Devils' victory sparked a real uptick in hockey interest across the state. The Finals cemented the Devils' place in New Jersey sports history and set up future achievements. People still reference this moment when talking about how the team evolved and what the NHL has meant to New Jersey's culture.
The '''2000 Stanley Cup Finals''' was the championship series of the [[2000 NHL playoffs]], contested between the [[New Jersey Devils]] of the Eastern Conference and the [[Dallas Stars]] of the Western Conference. The Devils won the series four games to two, clinching their second Stanley Cup championship with a 2–1 double-overtime victory in Game 6 at Reunion Arena in Dallas on June 10, 2000. The series-winning goal was scored by [[Jason Arnott]] at 8:20 of the second overtime period, assisted by [[Patrik Elias]], in one of the most celebrated moments in Devils franchise history.<ref>[https://www.nhl.com/news/2000-stanley-cup-finals-new-jersey-devils-dallas-stars "2000 Stanley Cup Finals"], ''NHL.com''.</ref> [[Scott Stevens]] was awarded the [[Conn Smythe Trophy]] as the playoffs' most valuable player, recognizing his dominant defensive performance throughout the postseason.


== History ==
The series victory represented the Devils' second Stanley Cup title, following their first championship in 1995. Dallas entered the series as the defending Stanley Cup champions, having defeated the Buffalo Sabres in 1999. The 2000 Finals were notable for their defensive intensity, low-scoring games, and the exceptional goaltending of New Jersey's [[Martin Brodeur]], who anchored a team built around disciplined positional play and physical defense. The Devils' triumph confirmed their status as one of the premier franchises of the NHL's modern era and reinforced the team's deep roots in New Jersey sports culture.


The 2000 Stanley Cup Finals represented decades of effort finally paying off. Since their inception in 1982, the New Jersey Devils had made the playoffs consistently but never gotten past the second round. That changed in the 1990s. They became a dominant force in the Eastern Conference, winning the Presidents' Trophy in both 1995 and 1996. By the 1999-2000 season, everything clicked. The Devils reached the Finals for the first time, powered by a balanced roster with stars like Scott Stevens, Martin Brodeur, and John LeClair. Their style was gritty, defensive, and uncompromising. They'd overcome serious obstacles too, including injuries and fierce battles against teams like the Philadelphia Flyers and New York Rangers.
== Background and Context ==


The Finals themselves turned out to be incredibly tight. Both the Devils and Stars showed exceptional skill and determination, trading wins through the first four games. New Jersey took Games 1 and 3 at the Continental Airlines Arena in East Rutherford. Dallas answered back with Games 2 and 4 at home. Game 6 was the decider. The Devils' defense and Brodeur's goaltending proved the difference. This was a historic achievement for New Jersey, validating years of hard work by players, coaches, and fans alike. Stevens and Brodeur emerged as icons of the team's success. For the Devils organization, this moment became a crucial chapter in their history and a source of real pride for the entire state.
The New Jersey Devils were founded in 1982, relocating to the Meadowlands from Colorado, where they had operated as the Colorado Rockies. Through much of the 1980s the franchise struggled to establish itself, but the organization undertook a significant rebuild that began producing results in the early 1990s. Under the defensive system implemented by coach [[Jacques Lemaire]] and later refined by his successors, the Devils became one of the Eastern Conference's most consistent teams. Their first Stanley Cup championship, won in 1995 over the Detroit Red Wings, established the franchise's identity as a defensively disciplined, goaltending-driven team built on depth and structure rather than individual star power.


== Geography ==
By the 1999–2000 season, the Devils had reloaded around a core group of veteran players. [[Martin Brodeur]] had developed into one of the premier goaltenders in the league. [[Scott Stevens]], the team's captain, was regarded as one of the most physically imposing and technically sound defensemen in the NHL. Forward contributors included [[Patrik Elias]], [[Jason Arnott]], acquired from the Edmonton Oilers, and [[Scott Gomez]], who had emerged as a dynamic young player during the regular season. [[Claude Lemieux]], a veteran forward with a well-documented reputation as one of the Devils' most tenacious playoff performers, also contributed to the team's postseason run.<ref>[https://sports.yahoo.com/articles/claude-lemieux-devils-playoff-hero-183927628 "Claude Lemieux, Devils playoff hero who delivered Stanley Cup moments"], ''Yahoo Sports''.</ref>


The 2000 Stanley Cup Finals unfolded across two cities: East Rutherford, New Jersey, and Dallas, Texas. The Continental Airlines Arena in East Rutherford, now called the Prudential Center, was a state-of-the-art facility that had hosted the Devils all season long. It sat right in the Meadowlands Sports Complex, making it a regional center for major events and drawing fans from across New Jersey and beyond. The arena's design prioritized fan accessibility and comfort, which created an electric atmosphere during the Finals. Dallas's Reunion Arena was smaller and older, but it had its own charm, with an intimate setting that amplified the intensity of each game.
Dallas, meanwhile, arrived at the Finals as the defending champions. The Stars were built around [[Mike Modano]], [[Brett Hull]], and goaltender [[Ed Belfour]], and had benefited from the same sort of structured defensive approach that defined the Devils. The matchup between two defensively oriented, goaltending-driven teams produced a series characterized by tight margins and physical play rather than high-scoring exchanges.


The distance between the two cities mattered. Travel and logistics influenced how both teams approached the series. Playing at home in East Rutherford gave the Devils a real advantage: familiar surroundings and a passionate local crowd that energized them during crucial moments. The Stars' home games in Dallas posed a different challenge, forcing New Jersey to adjust to an unfamiliar environment and hostile crowd support. The Finals also showed off the NHL's national reach, as fans in both New Jersey and Texas got invested in the outcome. The locations of these games became woven into the story itself, shaping what the experience meant for players, coaches, and fans.
== The Series ==


== Culture ==
The Devils and Stars split the first four games of the series, each team winning on home ice. New Jersey took Games 1 and 3 at the Continental Airlines Arena in East Rutherford, while Dallas won Games 2 and 4 at Reunion Arena. The games were consistently close, reflecting the defensive capabilities of both rosters and the quality of goaltending on each side. Brodeur and Belfour each made significant saves throughout the series, limiting scoring chances and prolonging possessions.


The 2000 Stanley Cup Finals transformed New Jersey's cultural identity in lasting ways. The Devils' victory generated widespread celebration, with parades, fan events, and media coverage that made the state's pride unmistakable. The Finals became a unifying event, bringing together people from all backgrounds to share in something genuinely historic. Local businesses and organizations jumped on the momentum, hosting themed events and promotions that locked the victory into the state's cultural memory.
New Jersey reasserted control with a victory in Game 5, returning to Dallas for a potential series-clinching Game 6. That game, played on June 10, 2000, remained scoreless through regulation and a full overtime period before Arnott ended it in double overtime. Elias carried the puck into the Dallas zone and found Arnott in the slot, who beat Belfour to give the Devils the championship. The goal set off an immediate celebration among the traveling contingent of Devils fans inside Reunion Arena and touched off extended celebrations across New Jersey.<ref>[https://www.facebook.com/groups/1812875322281712/posts/4461433744092510/ "Devils win 2000 Stanley Cup with Jason Arnott's goal"], ''NHL Goalies: Past & Present'', Facebook.</ref>


What happened next mattered just as much. The Finals shaped the long-term bond between the Devils and New Jersey's people. Young hockey players started signing up for programs across the state, inspired by what they'd seen. The victory became a reference point in conversations about New Jersey sports legacy, a benchmark for measuring future achievements. Sports had proven it could build community spirit, and the Devils' triumph was now the symbol of that. Nearly two decades later, the 2000 Stanley Cup win still resonates as the defining moment in New Jersey hockey history.
The full series results were as follows:


== Notable Residents ==
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|+ 2000 Stanley Cup Finals Results
|-
! Game !! Date !! Home Team !! Score !! Away Team !! Venue
|-
| 1 || May 30 || Dallas Stars || 7–3 || New Jersey Devils || Reunion Arena
|-
| 2 || June 1 || New Jersey Devils || 2–1 || Dallas Stars || Continental Airlines Arena
|-
| 3 || June 3 || Dallas Stars || 2–1 || New Jersey Devils || Reunion Arena
|-
| 4 || June 5 || New Jersey Devils || 3–1 || Dallas Stars || Continental Airlines Arena
|-
| 5 || June 8 || Dallas Stars || 1–0 || New Jersey Devils || Reunion Arena
|-
| 6 || June 10 || New Jersey Devils || 2–1 (2OT) || Dallas Stars || Reunion Arena
|}


Several notable New Jersey residents played crucial roles in the Finals. Scott Stevens, a native of East Orange, anchored the team's defense with his leadership and physical presence on the ice. He could shut down whatever Dallas threw at them, and as team captain, he earned widespread admiration. Martin Brodeur was another key player, though he was born in France, he grew up in New Jersey and became central to the Devils' success. His goaltending, especially in high-pressure moments, proved to be the difference.
== Key Players ==


Off the ice, the organization had strong New Jersey connections too. Head coach Larry Robinson, a former player and Hall of Famer, brought his expertise to shape the team's playoff approach. The Devils' commitment to developing local talent also mattered, with players from New Jersey often integrated into the roster. These ties deepened the relationship between the team and the state, reinforcing that the Devils belonged to New Jersey. The residents who contributed to the Finals victory highlight how much the 2000 championship affected the state's sports culture.
[[Scott Stevens]] anchored the Devils' defensive corps throughout the 2000 playoffs and was the central reason for his Conn Smythe Trophy selection. Stevens was known for delivering punishing open-ice hits that altered the physical and psychological dynamics of games, and his ability to neutralize opposing forwards proved especially consequential against Dallas's skilled offensive players. His leadership as team captain unified the roster during high-pressure moments.


== Economy ==
[[Martin Brodeur]] was equally essential. His goaltending through the playoffs reflected the consistency and composure that had made him one of the league's most respected players since the mid-1990s. In the Finals specifically, Brodeur's performance in tight-score situations gave the Devils the margin they needed to withstand Dallas's offensive pushes.


The 2000 Stanley Cup Finals injected serious money into New Jersey's economy, especially in the Meadowlands region. Fans, media, and visitors poured in, generating significant revenue for hotels, restaurants, and retail stores. The arena itself became an economic engine, with ticket sales, merchandise, and concessions all contributing to regional prosperity. Success like this also spurred investment in sports infrastructure, signaling to others that major events could drive economic growth.
[[Jason Arnott]], acquired by New Jersey from Edmonton during the 1999–2000 season, proved to be a defining acquisition. His series-winning goal in Game 6 double overtime was the culmination of a strong playoff run and cemented his place in Devils history. [[Patrik Elias]], whose assist on that goal demonstrated his playmaking ability, was one of the team's most productive forwards throughout the postseason. [[Scott Gomez]] contributed offensive energy and was recognized as one of the team's young cornerstones.


The benefits rippled outward too. The Devils' victory raised New Jersey's profile as a sports destination, attracting other events and sponsorships that continued to boost the economy. The team's financial position improved substantially as well, with higher revenue from tickets, broadcasting rights, and endorsements. The 2000 Stanley Cup Finals demonstrate something real: major sports achievements and regional prosperity are connected, and big events can spark genuine economic development.
[[Claude Lemieux]] brought veteran playoff experience to the lineup. Known throughout his career as a player who elevated his performance in the postseason, Lemieux's role with the 2000 Devils represented the continuation of a tenure during which he had become closely associated with the franchise's championship identity.<ref>[https://www.allaboutthejersey.com/devils-news/69865/celebrating-the-life-of-claude-lemieux "Celebrating the Life of Claude Lemieux"], ''All About The Jersey''.</ref>


== Attractions ==
Head coach [[Larry Robinson]], a Hall of Fame defenseman who took over from Robbie Ftorek late in the regular season, guided the team through the playoffs with a veteran's understanding of the structural demands of playoff hockey. His arrival stabilized the team at a critical juncture and his management of the roster through the Finals contributed directly to the championship outcome.


The 2000 Stanley Cup Finals put the spotlight on key attractions across New Jersey, especially the Continental Airlines Arena, now known as the Prudential Center. Located in the Meadowlands Sports Complex, the arena became a symbol of the Devils' success and a hub for sports tourism. Its modern design and advanced facilities made it a premier destination, with the Finals serving as a showcase for what the venue could do. The Prudential Center still hosts major events today, including concerts, conventions, and other sports, maintaining its status as a significant regional draw.
== Venues ==


Beyond the arena itself, the broader Meadowlands area benefited from increased visibility. The region's proximity to New York City and solid transportation infrastructure made it accessible to fans nationwide. Local businesses like restaurants and shops near the arena saw real surges in activity during the Finals, boosting the area's economic vitality. The legacy of the 2000 Stanley Cup Finals extended well past the event itself, reinforcing the Meadowlands as a complex destination for sports and entertainment.
The 2000 Stanley Cup Finals unfolded across two arenas in geographically and architecturally distinct settings. The Continental Airlines Arena, located within the [[Meadowlands Sports Complex]] in East Rutherford, New Jersey, served as the Devils' home venue throughout the 1999–2000 season and during home games of the Finals. The arena had opened in 1981 as the Brendan Byrne Arena and underwent a naming rights arrangement with Continental Airlines during the 1990s. It was later renamed the Izod Center and subsequently closed in 2015, with the Devils relocating to the [[Prudential Center]] in Newark, which opened in 2007. The two arenas are distinct facilities; the Continental Airlines Arena and the Prudential Center are separate venues and should not be conflated.


== Getting There ==
Reunion Arena in Dallas, which served as the Stars' home for Games 1, 2, 3, 5, and 6, was an older, smaller facility with a more intimate configuration. It hosted the series-clinching Game 6 on June 10, 2000. Reunion Arena was subsequently demolished in 2009 after the Stars relocated to what is now the American Airlines Center.


Fans could reach the 2000 Stanley Cup Finals through multiple transportation options, reflecting careful planning for the event. The Continental Airlines Arena in East Rutherford had excellent highway connections, including the New Jersey Turnpike and the Garden State Parkway, which made it easy for visitors to arrive from across the state and beyond. Public transportation options like the New Jersey Transit rail system and bus services offered convenient alternatives for those who didn't want to drive. These networks kept the arena accessible to a broad audience and enhanced the overall experience.
The distance between East Rutherford and Dallas required both teams to manage travel logistics across an extended series, and home-ice dynamics played a meaningful role in early games before New Jersey ultimately clinched on the road.


The surrounding infrastructure supported accessibility even further. The Meadowlands Sports Complex featured ample parking, pedestrian-friendly pathways, and amenities like restrooms, concessions, and souvenir stands designed with fans in mind. Getting to the arena during the Finals was straightforward, which allowed people to attend games without major logistical headaches. This focus on accessibility underscored how important infrastructure is for hosting major sporting events and made sure the 2000 Stanley Cup Finals stayed memorable for everyone involved.
== Cultural and Economic Impact ==
 
The Devils' 2000 championship generated significant celebration across New Jersey, including public parades and events that drew substantial crowds. The victory marked the second time in five years the franchise had won the Stanley Cup, reinforcing the Devils' standing as one of the sport's dominant franchises of that era and deepening the relationship between the team and its regional fan base.
 
The broader Meadowlands area, which had developed through the 1980s and 1990s into a major regional sports and entertainment hub, benefited from the visibility the Finals provided. Hotels, restaurants, and retail establishments near the arena reported elevated activity during home game dates, and merchandise sales associated with the championship generated additional revenue for local businesses. The Devils' success during this period contributed to increased youth hockey participation in New Jersey, as the team's championship profile attracted new interest in the sport throughout the state.
 
The 2000 championship is frequently referenced in discussions of the Devils' broader dynasty period, which encompasses the 1995, 2000, and 2003 Stanley Cup titles. That three-championship window established the franchise as one of the most successful organizations in the NHL over a roughly decade-long span and remains the primary lens through which the team's historical identity is understood.<ref>[https://blackoutdallas.com/the-dallas-stars-look-to-exorcise-the-new-jersey-devils-before-the-playoffs "The Dallas Stars look to exorcise the New Jersey Devils before the playoffs"], ''Blackout Dallas''.</ref>
 
== Transportation and Accessibility ==
 
Fans attending home games at the Continental Airlines Arena in East Rutherford had access to the venue through several transportation corridors. The arena was served by major highway routes including the New Jersey Turnpike and the Garden State Parkway, and the Meadowlands Sports Complex provided substantial parking capacity for those arriving by car. New Jersey Transit operated rail and bus services that connected the complex to communities across the state, providing a viable alternative to driving for fans traveling from Newark, New York City, and other population centers. The accessibility of the venue, combined with its location within the densely populated metropolitan area, contributed to strong home attendance throughout the series.


== Neighborhoods ==
== Neighborhoods ==


The neighborhoods surrounding the Continental Airlines Arena in East Rutherford came alive during the 2000 Stanley Cup Finals. Local residents, many of them lifelong Devils fans, participated in parades, fan events, and celebrations that marked the team's historic victory. The sense of pride and unity in the area was unmistakable.
The neighborhoods surrounding the Continental Airlines Arena in East Rutherford experienced a pronounced surge in activity during the 2000 Stanley Cup Finals. Local residents, many of them longtime Devils supporters, participated in the broader celebrations that followed the championship. The sense of community investment in the team's success was a consistent feature of the Devils' relationship with the Meadowlands region, and the 2000 championship deepened that connection in ways that persisted well beyond the conclusion of the series.


[[Category:2000 Stanley Cup Finals]]
[[Category:2000 Stanley Cup Finals]]
[[Category:Stanley Cup Finals]]
[[Category:Stanley Cup Finals]]
[[Category:New Jersey Devils]]
[[Category:New Jersey Devils seasons]]
[[Category:Dallas Stars]]
[[Category:Dallas Stars seasons]]
[[Category:2000 in ice hockey]]
[[Category:2000 in New Jersey]]
[[Category:2000 in Texas]]

Latest revision as of 03:37, 16 June 2026

Template:Infobox NHL playoffs

The 2000 Stanley Cup Finals was the championship series of the 2000 NHL playoffs, contested between the New Jersey Devils of the Eastern Conference and the Dallas Stars of the Western Conference. The Devils won the series four games to two, clinching their second Stanley Cup championship with a 2–1 double-overtime victory in Game 6 at Reunion Arena in Dallas on June 10, 2000. The series-winning goal was scored by Jason Arnott at 8:20 of the second overtime period, assisted by Patrik Elias, in one of the most celebrated moments in Devils franchise history.[1] Scott Stevens was awarded the Conn Smythe Trophy as the playoffs' most valuable player, recognizing his dominant defensive performance throughout the postseason.

The series victory represented the Devils' second Stanley Cup title, following their first championship in 1995. Dallas entered the series as the defending Stanley Cup champions, having defeated the Buffalo Sabres in 1999. The 2000 Finals were notable for their defensive intensity, low-scoring games, and the exceptional goaltending of New Jersey's Martin Brodeur, who anchored a team built around disciplined positional play and physical defense. The Devils' triumph confirmed their status as one of the premier franchises of the NHL's modern era and reinforced the team's deep roots in New Jersey sports culture.

Background and Context

The New Jersey Devils were founded in 1982, relocating to the Meadowlands from Colorado, where they had operated as the Colorado Rockies. Through much of the 1980s the franchise struggled to establish itself, but the organization undertook a significant rebuild that began producing results in the early 1990s. Under the defensive system implemented by coach Jacques Lemaire and later refined by his successors, the Devils became one of the Eastern Conference's most consistent teams. Their first Stanley Cup championship, won in 1995 over the Detroit Red Wings, established the franchise's identity as a defensively disciplined, goaltending-driven team built on depth and structure rather than individual star power.

By the 1999–2000 season, the Devils had reloaded around a core group of veteran players. Martin Brodeur had developed into one of the premier goaltenders in the league. Scott Stevens, the team's captain, was regarded as one of the most physically imposing and technically sound defensemen in the NHL. Forward contributors included Patrik Elias, Jason Arnott, acquired from the Edmonton Oilers, and Scott Gomez, who had emerged as a dynamic young player during the regular season. Claude Lemieux, a veteran forward with a well-documented reputation as one of the Devils' most tenacious playoff performers, also contributed to the team's postseason run.[2]

Dallas, meanwhile, arrived at the Finals as the defending champions. The Stars were built around Mike Modano, Brett Hull, and goaltender Ed Belfour, and had benefited from the same sort of structured defensive approach that defined the Devils. The matchup between two defensively oriented, goaltending-driven teams produced a series characterized by tight margins and physical play rather than high-scoring exchanges.

The Series

The Devils and Stars split the first four games of the series, each team winning on home ice. New Jersey took Games 1 and 3 at the Continental Airlines Arena in East Rutherford, while Dallas won Games 2 and 4 at Reunion Arena. The games were consistently close, reflecting the defensive capabilities of both rosters and the quality of goaltending on each side. Brodeur and Belfour each made significant saves throughout the series, limiting scoring chances and prolonging possessions.

New Jersey reasserted control with a victory in Game 5, returning to Dallas for a potential series-clinching Game 6. That game, played on June 10, 2000, remained scoreless through regulation and a full overtime period before Arnott ended it in double overtime. Elias carried the puck into the Dallas zone and found Arnott in the slot, who beat Belfour to give the Devils the championship. The goal set off an immediate celebration among the traveling contingent of Devils fans inside Reunion Arena and touched off extended celebrations across New Jersey.[3]

The full series results were as follows:

2000 Stanley Cup Finals Results
Game Date Home Team Score Away Team Venue
1 May 30 Dallas Stars 7–3 New Jersey Devils Reunion Arena
2 June 1 New Jersey Devils 2–1 Dallas Stars Continental Airlines Arena
3 June 3 Dallas Stars 2–1 New Jersey Devils Reunion Arena
4 June 5 New Jersey Devils 3–1 Dallas Stars Continental Airlines Arena
5 June 8 Dallas Stars 1–0 New Jersey Devils Reunion Arena
6 June 10 New Jersey Devils 2–1 (2OT) Dallas Stars Reunion Arena

Key Players

Scott Stevens anchored the Devils' defensive corps throughout the 2000 playoffs and was the central reason for his Conn Smythe Trophy selection. Stevens was known for delivering punishing open-ice hits that altered the physical and psychological dynamics of games, and his ability to neutralize opposing forwards proved especially consequential against Dallas's skilled offensive players. His leadership as team captain unified the roster during high-pressure moments.

Martin Brodeur was equally essential. His goaltending through the playoffs reflected the consistency and composure that had made him one of the league's most respected players since the mid-1990s. In the Finals specifically, Brodeur's performance in tight-score situations gave the Devils the margin they needed to withstand Dallas's offensive pushes.

Jason Arnott, acquired by New Jersey from Edmonton during the 1999–2000 season, proved to be a defining acquisition. His series-winning goal in Game 6 double overtime was the culmination of a strong playoff run and cemented his place in Devils history. Patrik Elias, whose assist on that goal demonstrated his playmaking ability, was one of the team's most productive forwards throughout the postseason. Scott Gomez contributed offensive energy and was recognized as one of the team's young cornerstones.

Claude Lemieux brought veteran playoff experience to the lineup. Known throughout his career as a player who elevated his performance in the postseason, Lemieux's role with the 2000 Devils represented the continuation of a tenure during which he had become closely associated with the franchise's championship identity.[4]

Head coach Larry Robinson, a Hall of Fame defenseman who took over from Robbie Ftorek late in the regular season, guided the team through the playoffs with a veteran's understanding of the structural demands of playoff hockey. His arrival stabilized the team at a critical juncture and his management of the roster through the Finals contributed directly to the championship outcome.

Venues

The 2000 Stanley Cup Finals unfolded across two arenas in geographically and architecturally distinct settings. The Continental Airlines Arena, located within the Meadowlands Sports Complex in East Rutherford, New Jersey, served as the Devils' home venue throughout the 1999–2000 season and during home games of the Finals. The arena had opened in 1981 as the Brendan Byrne Arena and underwent a naming rights arrangement with Continental Airlines during the 1990s. It was later renamed the Izod Center and subsequently closed in 2015, with the Devils relocating to the Prudential Center in Newark, which opened in 2007. The two arenas are distinct facilities; the Continental Airlines Arena and the Prudential Center are separate venues and should not be conflated.

Reunion Arena in Dallas, which served as the Stars' home for Games 1, 2, 3, 5, and 6, was an older, smaller facility with a more intimate configuration. It hosted the series-clinching Game 6 on June 10, 2000. Reunion Arena was subsequently demolished in 2009 after the Stars relocated to what is now the American Airlines Center.

The distance between East Rutherford and Dallas required both teams to manage travel logistics across an extended series, and home-ice dynamics played a meaningful role in early games before New Jersey ultimately clinched on the road.

Cultural and Economic Impact

The Devils' 2000 championship generated significant celebration across New Jersey, including public parades and events that drew substantial crowds. The victory marked the second time in five years the franchise had won the Stanley Cup, reinforcing the Devils' standing as one of the sport's dominant franchises of that era and deepening the relationship between the team and its regional fan base.

The broader Meadowlands area, which had developed through the 1980s and 1990s into a major regional sports and entertainment hub, benefited from the visibility the Finals provided. Hotels, restaurants, and retail establishments near the arena reported elevated activity during home game dates, and merchandise sales associated with the championship generated additional revenue for local businesses. The Devils' success during this period contributed to increased youth hockey participation in New Jersey, as the team's championship profile attracted new interest in the sport throughout the state.

The 2000 championship is frequently referenced in discussions of the Devils' broader dynasty period, which encompasses the 1995, 2000, and 2003 Stanley Cup titles. That three-championship window established the franchise as one of the most successful organizations in the NHL over a roughly decade-long span and remains the primary lens through which the team's historical identity is understood.[5]

Transportation and Accessibility

Fans attending home games at the Continental Airlines Arena in East Rutherford had access to the venue through several transportation corridors. The arena was served by major highway routes including the New Jersey Turnpike and the Garden State Parkway, and the Meadowlands Sports Complex provided substantial parking capacity for those arriving by car. New Jersey Transit operated rail and bus services that connected the complex to communities across the state, providing a viable alternative to driving for fans traveling from Newark, New York City, and other population centers. The accessibility of the venue, combined with its location within the densely populated metropolitan area, contributed to strong home attendance throughout the series.

Neighborhoods

The neighborhoods surrounding the Continental Airlines Arena in East Rutherford experienced a pronounced surge in activity during the 2000 Stanley Cup Finals. Local residents, many of them longtime Devils supporters, participated in the broader celebrations that followed the championship. The sense of community investment in the team's success was a consistent feature of the Devils' relationship with the Meadowlands region, and the 2000 championship deepened that connection in ways that persisted well beyond the conclusion of the series.