Rugby in Toronto

Toronto – a mecca for Sport Lovers

7 tips for all sports fans.

Photo: Shutterstock
October 2022
Toronto, the Big Six, is a major North American sports city and can offer almost anything a sports fan desires, from the National Hockey League to lacrosse and Indy cars. But sometimes it’s worth looking past the obvious choices. Here are seven tips for sports fans.
Dominico Field

Not those Leafs

Dominico Field

Map marker
S.W., Christie St & Barton Ave
Toronto
Show on map

Hockey fans know the Toronto Maple Leafs, the team that hasn’t won the Stanley Cup since 1967, but there’s another Leaf team in town. They play baseball in the Intercounty league that’s been around for more than 100 years. The players in the summer league are amateurs, mostly college players and former pros. All eight teams are from Southern Ontario.The Maple Leafs play their home games at Dominico Field at Christie Pits, in downtown Toronto.

Coca-Cola Coliseum
Photo: Destination Toronto

Back to the farm

Coca-Cola Coliseum

Map marker
45 Manitoba Drive
Toronto
Show on map

The Toronto Maple Leafs NHL tickets are a hot commodity and prices can easily get out of hand. But it’s Canada. There’s hockey. The Leafs’ farm team, the Toronto Marlies play their American Hockey League games at a renovated horse palace arena built for the Canadian National Exhibition (CNE) and the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair (the Royal) in 1921. Where the past meets the future (of hockey).

Paramount Fine Foods Centre
Photo: Destination Toronto

How about some hoops?

Paramount Fine Foods Centre

Map marker
5500 Rose Cherry Place
Mississauga
Show on map

Just like with the Maple Leafs, the other tenant of the Scotiabank Arena, getting tickets to a Toronto Raptors NBA game may prove to be difficult and expensive. And again, a glance sideways will bring into focus the Raptors 905 team, their affiliate in the developmental NBA G League. The 905 in its name comes from the area code for the Toronto suburbs, as they play most of their games at the Paramount Fine Foods Centre in Mississauga.

Canlan Ice Sports, York University
Photo: iStock

Ladies first

Canlan Ice Sports, York University

Map marker
989 Murray Ross Pkwy
North York
Show on map

And of course, there’s the Toronto Six, the only Canadian team in the Premier Hockey Federation, a professional women’s hockey league. The Six play their home games at the York University rink. While the PHF is currently the only pro league for women in North America, most of the national team players have thus far stayed in their national team programs. The Six are coached by Hockey Hall of Famer, Angela James.

Honda Indy Toronto
Photo: iStock

For the racing fans

Honda Indy Toronto race

Map marker
100 Princes' Blvd
Toronto
Show on map

Formula 1 racing fans have to go to the neighboring province of Quebec. However, the Indy car circuit is also still alive and well and if you’re in Toronto in mid-July, you can see that for yourself. The 2023 Honda Indy Toronto race, the 37th edition of the event, takes place on the Exhibition grounds.

Lamport Stadium
Photo: iStock

Canadians love contact sports

Lamport Stadium

Map marker
King Street West
Toronto
Show on map

While the noise may make you want to cover your ears at an Indy car event, in rugby it’s the players who have to do that. Canada’s past as part of the Commonwealth is evident in the popularity of rugby. The Toronto Wolfpack was the first fully professional rugby league team in Canada in 2014 and competed in the UK Super League system. The pandemic made travel difficult, and the team is now making a comeback in the new North American Rugby League.

FirstOntario Centre
Photo: iStock

Go Canadian!

FirstOntario Centre

Map marker
101 York Blvd
Hamilton
Show on map

The most Canadian of all sports may just be lacrosse. In 1856, William George Beers, a Canadian dentist, founded Montreal Lacrosse Club and came up with codified rules for the game originally invented by Native Americans. The first game played under Beers’ rules was at Upper Canada College in 1867.The local team, Toronto Rock has its origins in the nearby Hamilton in the late 1990s, but they played there only one season until 2022, when the team relocated back to Hamilton, a steel town about 60km outside the city but still inside the GTHA, or Greater Toronto & Hamilton Area. With their six titles, the Rock is one of the most successful teams in the National Lacrosse League.

Text by Risto Pakarinen