Mayer said both the Lightning and Panthers had been clamoring to play in an outdoor game, and the NHL figured this was a great time to allow both teams to hold one in the same season.
“This is a hotbed, in many different ways,” Mayer said. “Miami has become such a hockey town. … This is quite the Florida celebration for the NHL and outdoor games.”
As for how ice can be built in the tropical climate of Miami, loanDepot park is basically a very big arena. Its retractable roof, which is closed most of the time, will help enable the NHL to install the ice surface that will run across the infield and over the pitcher’s mound.
When the sun has set for the Winter Classic, the plan is for the roof to be open, with the large sliding windows that face Miami’s sparkling skyline to the east opened up as well.
“Over the years, we have refined the making of ice to the point where it is quite the science,” Mayer said. “We are comfortable building it in this climate. The game will be played in an open-air stadium. … There are zero plans not to open it.”
With the roof and windows closed, the building can get quite cold. Mayer said the NHL is taking no risks when it comes to lowering the temperature inside the ballpark.
It was 83 degrees in Miami on Thursday, and it could be that warm again for the Winter Classic, so extra air conditioning units are being brought in to help lower the temperature further.
The average low in Miami around New Year’s Day is in the 60s. Humidity, the biggest challenge to ice, is usually low in the region in the winter months.
“Right now, it’s 80 degrees, which probably isn’t good for ice,” Mayer said. “But at night? It’s good. This place deserves an outdoor game.”
Mayer said an announcement is coming soon regarding a major act performing an hourlong concert outside loanDepot park before the Winter Classic, and the 2026 Enterprise NHL Pregame will be a fan fest held just outside the ballpark.
“This is a sports bucket list experience,” Mayer said. “It starts from the second they park their car. The second they arrive, fans are going to be hit with a giant fan fest. … You could spend 10 minutes or two hours here. We have some really cool plans, and it will be an experience from the moment you get here.”
The field will be completely transformed. One half will represent Florida’s beach and water culture, with the other depicting a more traditional Winter Classic setting.
“It’s going to be winter meets summer, fire meets ice, hot meets cold,” Mayer said. “Imagine left field from third base to home plate, that’s summer. That’s the beach, that’s Miami. Everything from right field, first base to home plate, that’s winter. That’s the cold. There is going to be this cool dynamic. … With the mix of the two, we’re going to have some fun.”
A number of Panthers players have been to the ballpark for Marlins games and are looking forward to seeing how the venue is turned into a house of hockey.
“The stadium itself looks awesome, and when it’s dark, you can see the Miami skyline from the windows,” center Anton Lundell said. “It’s just a super-cool place.
“I was watching a baseball game there and could not picture a hockey game, but I know it is going to be great. This is going to be my first time playing in a Winter Classic, and it’s cool that we are going to make some history by doing so.”