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The '''Beanpot Tournament''' is an annual [[ice hockey]] competition held in [[Boston, Massachusetts]], bringing together four of the city's major university hockey programs in a single-elimination format each February. Widely considered among the most celebrated collegiate sporting events in New England, the tournament has served as a defining fixture of Boston's sports calendar for decades, drawing thousands of fans to [[TD Garden]] and generating intense civic pride across the city's university communities. The event takes place over two consecutive Mondays in February and crowns a champion from among the four competing institutions, with the title carrying enormous prestige in a city that considers collegiate hockey a cornerstone of its athletic identity.
The '''Beanpot Tournament''' is an annual [[ice hockey]] competition held in [[Boston, Massachusetts]], bringing together four of the Boston area's major university hockey programs in a single-elimination format each February. One of the most celebrated collegiate sporting events in New England, the tournament has served as a defining fixture of Boston's sports calendar for decades, drawing thousands of fans to [[TD Garden]] and generating intense civic pride across the city's university communities. The event takes place over two consecutive Mondays in February and crowns a champion from among the four competing institutions, with the title carrying significant prestige in a city that considers collegiate hockey a cornerstone of its athletic identity.


== History ==
== History ==


The Beanpot Tournament was first held in December 1952, bringing together [[Boston University]], [[Boston College]], [[Harvard University]], and [[Northeastern University]] in what was then an informal holiday gathering of local college hockey teams. The event was initially conceived as a way to showcase Boston-area collegiate hockey talent and to give local fans an opportunity to watch intra-city rivalries play out on the ice during the winter season. The name "Beanpot" itself is a nod to Boston's historic association with baked beans, a culinary tradition that earned the city the nickname "Beantown," and the trophy awarded to the winning team takes the form of a ceramic beanpot, cementing the connection between the sport and the city's cultural heritage.
The Beanpot Tournament was first held in December 1952, bringing together [[Boston University]], [[Boston College]], [[Harvard University]], and [[Northeastern University]] in what was then an informal holiday gathering of local college hockey teams. The event was initially conceived as a way to showcase Boston-area collegiate hockey talent and to give local fans an opportunity to watch intra-city rivalries play out on the ice during the winter season. The name "Beanpot" itself is a nod to Boston's historic association with baked beans, a culinary tradition long linked to the city's nickname "Beantown," and the trophy awarded to the winning team takes the form of a ceramic beanpot, cementing the connection between the sport and the city's cultural heritage.<ref>[https://www.ncaa.com/news/icehockey-men/article/2026-01-26/everything-you-need-know-about-2026-beanpot-hockey-tournament "Everything you need to know about the 2026 Beanpot Hockey Tournament"], ''NCAA.com'', January 26, 2026.</ref>


Over the following decades, the tournament grew from a modest holiday event into among the most anticipated fixtures on the New England sports calendar. By the 1960s and 1970s, the Beanpot had moved to February, where it became entrenched as a midwinter tradition. Attendance grew steadily, and the event eventually found a permanent home at the [[Boston Garden]] before later moving to the [[TD Garden]] following that arena's opening in 1995. The tournament's growth reflected the broader expansion of collegiate hockey culture in Boston, a city that produces a disproportionate share of the nation's college hockey talent and commands a deeply engaged fanbase for the sport at every level.<ref>{{cite web |title=Boston Globe |url=https://www.bostonglobe.com |work=bostonglobe.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
Over the following decades, the tournament grew from a modest holiday event into one of the most anticipated fixtures on the New England sports calendar. By the 1960s and 1970s, the Beanpot had moved to February, where it became entrenched as a midwinter tradition. Attendance grew steadily, and the event eventually found a permanent home at [[Boston Garden]] before later moving to [[TD Garden]] following that arena's opening in September 1995.<ref>[https://www.ncaa.com/news/icehockey-men/article/2026-01-26/everything-you-need-know-about-2026-beanpot-hockey-tournament "Everything you need to know about the 2026 Beanpot Hockey Tournament"], ''NCAA.com'', January 26, 2026.</ref> The tournament's growth reflected the broader expansion of collegiate hockey culture in Boston, a city that produces a disproportionate share of the nation's college hockey talent and commands a deeply engaged fanbase for the sport at every level.


The tournament format has remained largely consistent throughout its history. The four teams compete in two semifinal games on the first Monday of February, with the winners advancing to the championship game and the losers meeting in a consolation match on the second Monday. This compact structure creates a concentrated burst of hockey action that local fans anticipate eagerly, and the back-to-back Monday scheduling has become a beloved quirk of the event's identity. The format ensures that all four programs remain invested across both evenings, and consolation games have historically been competitive affairs that carry their own sense of pride and consequence.
The tournament format has remained largely consistent throughout its history. The four teams compete in two semifinal games on the first Monday of February, with the winners advancing to the championship game and the losers meeting in a consolation match on the second Monday. This compact structure creates a concentrated burst of hockey action that local fans anticipate each winter, and the back-to-back Monday scheduling has become a beloved quirk of the event's identity. The format ensures that all four programs remain invested across both evenings, and consolation games have historically been competitive affairs that carry their own sense of pride and consequence.
 
Boston University has historically dominated the tournament, winning more Beanpot titles than any other program. The Terriers entered the 2026 tournament as defending champions, looking to add to their all-time record total.<ref>[https://www.bu.edu/articles/2026/mens-hockey-terriers-out-to-defend-beanpot-title/ "Men's Hockey Terriers Out to Defend Their Reigning Beanpot Title"], ''Boston University'', 2026.</ref> Boston College, Harvard, and Northeastern have each claimed the title multiple times as well, and the competitive balance among the four programs — which has shifted across different eras — contributes to the tournament's enduring appeal. No single decade has belonged entirely to one team, and the possibility of an upset or an unexpected champion is part of what keeps fans invested year after year.
 
The tournament was not immune to outside disruption. The [[COVID-19 pandemic]] forced the cancellation or significant alteration of many collegiate sporting events in the 2020–2021 period, and the Beanpot was no exception. The interruption to the event's unbroken annual run underscored how much the tournament had come to be taken for granted as a fixture of the Boston winter — its absence was felt acutely by fans and programs alike, and its return was welcomed with heightened enthusiasm.
 
== Women's Beanpot Tournament ==
 
A separate Women's Beanpot Tournament runs alongside the men's competition and features the same four institutions: Boston University, Boston College, Harvard, and Northeastern. The women's event has its own distinct history and competitive record, and it has grown considerably in profile over the years as women's collegiate hockey has expanded nationally. The tournament is currently sponsored by [[Dunkin']] and is officially branded the '''Dunkin' Women's Beanpot Tournament'''.<ref>[https://gocrimson.com/news/2026/1/20/womens-ice-hockey-womens-hockey-wins-first-dunkin-womens-beanpot-since-2022-bests-boston-university-in-overtime-2-1.aspx "Women's Hockey Wins First Dunkin' Women's Beanpot Since 2022, Bests Boston University in Overtime, 2–1"], ''Harvard Crimson Athletics'', January 20, 2026.</ref>
 
In January 2026, Harvard's women's hockey program claimed the Dunkin' Women's Beanpot title for the first time since 2022, defeating Boston University 2–1 in overtime in a closely contested final.<ref>[https://gocrimson.com/news/2026/1/20/womens-ice-hockey-womens-hockey-wins-first-dunkin-womens-beanpot-since-2022-bests-boston-university-in-overtime-2-1.aspx "Women's Hockey Wins First Dunkin' Women's Beanpot Since 2022, Bests Boston University in Overtime, 2–1"], ''Harvard Crimson Athletics'', January 20, 2026.</ref> The result demonstrated the competitive parity that has characterized the women's tournament in recent years, with the title rotating among programs rather than being concentrated in any single school. The women's event typically takes place earlier in January than the men's tournament, giving it a distinct place on the calendar.
 
== Format ==
 
The tournament uses a straightforward single-elimination bracket involving all four teams across two Monday evenings in February. On the first Monday, two semifinal games are played at TD Garden, typically back to back in the same evening. The two winning programs return the following Monday for the championship game, while the two losing semifinalists meet in a consolation contest on the same night. The consolation game precedes the title match, meaning both games are played on the second Monday before a single arena crowd.
 
This format has a practical elegance: every team plays twice, the tournament concludes in just two evenings spread across a single week, and the structure maximizes the number of head-to-head matchups among the four rivals. Seeding and bracket placement have varied over the years, with the draw occasionally matching traditional rivals in the semifinals rather than saving those matchups for the final. The bracket setup for each year's tournament is announced in advance and generates significant discussion among fans of all four programs.


== Culture ==
== Culture ==


The Beanpot Tournament occupies a singular place in the cultural life of Boston's university communities. For students, alumni, and fans affiliated with the four competing schools, the tournament functions as much more than a sporting event — it is an annual assertion of institutional identity and neighborhood pride. Each of the four programs draws from distinct communities within the city, and their rivalries carry histories measured not just in wins and losses but in decades of shared urban proximity. The competition between [[Boston University]] and [[Boston College]], for example, has long been characterized as one of the fiercest intra-city rivalries in collegiate athletics, with both programs boasting strong alumni networks and dedicated fan bases that extend well beyond current student populations.<ref>{{cite web |title=Boston Globe |url=https://www.bostonglobe.com |work=bostonglobe.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
The Beanpot Tournament occupies a singular place in the cultural life of Boston's university communities. For students, alumni, and fans affiliated with the four competing schools, the tournament functions as much more than a sporting event — it is an annual assertion of institutional identity and neighborhood pride. Each of the four programs draws from distinct communities within the city and its immediate surroundings, and their rivalries carry histories measured not just in wins and losses but in decades of shared urban proximity. The competition between [[Boston University]] and [[Boston College]], for example, has long been characterized as one of the fiercest intra-city rivalries in collegiate athletics, with both programs boasting strong alumni networks and dedicated fan bases that extend well beyond current student populations.


The tournament also serves as a showcase for hockey in a city that has historically claimed a special relationship with the sport. Boston's universities have collectively produced a remarkable number of professional players, Olympic athletes, and coaches, and the Beanpot provides an early-season stage on which future stars often announce themselves to wider audiences. The games are broadcast regionally and attract coverage from outlets across New England, amplifying the tournament's reach beyond the arena and into living rooms, bars, and dormitories across the metropolitan area. This media presence has helped cement the Beanpot's reputation as a cultural institution rather than merely a sporting competition.
The tournament also serves as a showcase for hockey in a city that has historically claimed a special relationship with the sport. Boston's universities have collectively produced a substantial number of professional players, Olympic athletes, and coaches, and the Beanpot provides a mid-season stage on which future stars often announce themselves to wider audiences. The games are broadcast regionally and attract coverage from outlets across New England, amplifying the tournament's reach beyond the arena and into living rooms, bars, and dormitories across the metropolitan area. This media presence has helped cement the Beanpot's reputation as a cultural institution rather than merely a sporting competition.


Beyond the games themselves, the Beanpot has become associated with a set of rituals and traditions that reinforce its status as a rite of winter in Boston. Students line up for tickets in the cold, alumni return to the city specifically to attend, and local sports media devotes significant coverage to previewing, analyzing, and revisiting the results. The tournament's simplicity — four local teams, two nights, one trophy — is part of its enduring appeal. In an era of increasingly complex and commercialized collegiate athletics, the Beanpot retains a relatively intimate character that resonates with fans who value the sense of community it fosters.
Beyond the games themselves, the Beanpot has become associated with a set of rituals and traditions that reinforce its status as a rite of winter in Boston. Students line up for tickets in the cold, alumni return to the city specifically to attend, and local sports media devotes significant coverage to previewing, analyzing, and revisiting the results. The tournament's simplicity — four local teams, two nights, one trophy — is part of its enduring appeal. In an era of increasingly complex and commercialized collegiate athletics, the Beanpot retains a relatively intimate character that resonates with fans who value the sense of community it fosters.
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== Attractions ==
== Attractions ==


The games themselves are the central attraction of the Beanpot weekend, but the surrounding environment at TD Garden adds to the overall experience. The arena, located in the [[West End]] neighborhood adjacent to [[North Station]], is easily accessible by public transit and sits within walking distance of numerous bars, restaurants, and hotels that cater to the influx of fans each February. The concentration of fan activity in the hours before and after games creates a distinctive atmosphere in the surrounding streets, particularly along [[Causeway Street]], where establishments fill with supporters from all four schools mixing in close quarters.
The games themselves are the central attraction of the Beanpot weekend, but the surrounding environment at TD Garden adds to the overall experience. The arena, located in the [[West End, Boston|West End]] neighborhood adjacent to [[North Station]], is easily accessible by public transit and sits within walking distance of numerous bars, restaurants, and hotels that fill with fans each February. The concentration of fan activity in the hours before and after games creates a distinctive atmosphere in the surrounding streets, particularly along [[Causeway Street]], where establishments fill with supporters from all four schools mixing in close quarters.


The Beanpot also draws visitors to the broader city of Boston during what is otherwise a quieter period of the winter tourism calendar. Hotels in the vicinity of the arena and across the downtown area report elevated occupancy during Beanpot weekends, and the event contributes to the local economy in ways that extend beyond ticket sales. Restaurants, transportation services, and retail businesses in the vicinity of the participating universities all experience increased activity during tournament week, as alumni travel from across the country to attend or as local fans organize gatherings around game broadcasts.<ref>{{cite web |title=Commonwealth of Massachusetts |url=https://www.mass.gov |work=mass.gov |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
The Beanpot also draws visitors to the broader city of Boston during what is otherwise a quieter period of the winter tourism calendar. Hotels in the vicinity of the arena and across the downtown area report elevated occupancy during Beanpot weekends, and the event contributes to the local economy in ways that extend beyond ticket sales. Restaurants, transportation services, and retail businesses near the participating universities all experience increased activity during tournament week, as alumni travel from across the country to attend or as local fans organize gatherings around game broadcasts.


For visitors to Boston who are unfamiliar with the tournament, attending a Beanpot game offers an accessible and affordable introduction to live collegiate hockey in one of the sport's most storied cities. The atmosphere inside TD Garden during Beanpot games is notably intense compared to typical regular-season collegiate matchups, with student sections from all four schools present and vocal throughout. The relatively small scale of collegiate hockey compared to professional sports means that fans are often seated close to the ice, creating a sense of immediacy and connection to the action that distinguishes the event from larger professional spectacles.
For visitors to Boston who are unfamiliar with the tournament, attending a Beanpot game offers an accessible introduction to live collegiate hockey in one of the sport's most storied cities. The atmosphere inside TD Garden during Beanpot games is notably intense compared to typical regular-season collegiate matchups, with student sections from all four schools present and vocal throughout. The relatively small scale of collegiate hockey compared to professional sports means that fans are often seated close to the ice, creating a sense of immediacy and connection to the action that distinguishes the event from larger professional spectacles.


== Getting There ==
== Getting There ==


TD Garden, the home of the Beanpot Tournament, is among the most accessible major sports venues in New England. The arena sits directly atop [[North Station]], one of the busiest transit hubs in [[Massachusetts]], serving both the [[Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority]] (MBTA) commuter rail network and the Green and Orange Lines of the MBTA subway system. This positioning makes TD Garden reachable from virtually every corner of the greater Boston metropolitan area without the need for a private vehicle, and public transit is the strongly recommended mode of arrival for Beanpot attendees given the limited and expensive parking options in the surrounding neighborhood.<ref>{{cite web |title=Commonwealth of Massachusetts |url=https://www.mass.gov |work=mass.gov |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
TD Garden, the home of the Beanpot Tournament, is one of the most accessible major sports venues in New England. The arena sits directly atop [[North Station]], one of the busiest transit hubs in [[Massachusetts]], serving both the [[Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority]] (MBTA) commuter rail network and the Green and Orange Lines of the MBTA subway system. This positioning makes TD Garden reachable from virtually every corner of the greater Boston metropolitan area without a private vehicle, and public transit is the strongly recommended mode of arrival for Beanpot attendees given the limited and expensive parking options in the surrounding neighborhood.


For fans traveling from outside the immediate Boston area, [[South Station]] and [[Back Bay Station]] provide connections to Amtrak intercity rail service, with frequent MBTA connections from those hubs to North Station. Logan International Airport, located across the [[Inner Harbor]] from downtown Boston, is served by the MBTA Silver Line, which connects to the subway network and allows airport arrivals to reach TD Garden via public transit with a single transfer. For those who do choose to drive, numerous parking garages are located within several blocks of the arena, though prices are substantially higher during major events than on ordinary evenings.
For fans traveling from outside the immediate Boston area, [[South Station]] and [[Back Bay Station]] provide connections to Amtrak intercity rail service, with frequent MBTA connections from those hubs to North Station. Logan International Airport, located across the [[Inner Harbor]] from downtown Boston, is served by the MBTA Silver Line, which connects to the subway network and allows airport arrivals to reach TD Garden via public transit with a single transfer. For those who do choose to drive, numerous parking garages are located within several blocks of the arena, though prices are substantially higher during major events than on ordinary evenings.
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* [[North Station]]
* [[North Station]]


The Beanpot Tournament continues to stand as among the most distinctive and locally beloved annual sporting events in the United States, drawing on the unique concentration of major universities within a compact urban environment to create a competition that carries genuine civic meaning. For the thousands of students, alumni, and fans who gather at TD Garden each February, the tournament represents not only a contest for hockey supremacy but an affirmation of Boston's identity as a college town, a hockey city, and a community defined in part by the rivalries and traditions that its institutions have cultivated over generations.
The Beanpot Tournament continues to stand as one of the most distinctive and locally beloved annual sporting events in the United States, drawing on the unique concentration of major universities within a compact urban environment to create a competition that carries genuine civic meaning. For the thousands of students, alumni, and fans who gather at TD Garden each February, the tournament represents not only a contest for hockey supremacy but an affirmation of Boston's identity as a college town, a hockey city, and a community defined in part by the rivalries and traditions that its institutions have cultivated over generations.


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Revision as of 02:40, 19 April 2026

The Beanpot Tournament is an annual ice hockey competition held in Boston, Massachusetts, bringing together four of the Boston area's major university hockey programs in a single-elimination format each February. One of the most celebrated collegiate sporting events in New England, the tournament has served as a defining fixture of Boston's sports calendar for decades, drawing thousands of fans to TD Garden and generating intense civic pride across the city's university communities. The event takes place over two consecutive Mondays in February and crowns a champion from among the four competing institutions, with the title carrying significant prestige in a city that considers collegiate hockey a cornerstone of its athletic identity.

History

The Beanpot Tournament was first held in December 1952, bringing together Boston University, Boston College, Harvard University, and Northeastern University in what was then an informal holiday gathering of local college hockey teams. The event was initially conceived as a way to showcase Boston-area collegiate hockey talent and to give local fans an opportunity to watch intra-city rivalries play out on the ice during the winter season. The name "Beanpot" itself is a nod to Boston's historic association with baked beans, a culinary tradition long linked to the city's nickname "Beantown," and the trophy awarded to the winning team takes the form of a ceramic beanpot, cementing the connection between the sport and the city's cultural heritage.[1]

Over the following decades, the tournament grew from a modest holiday event into one of the most anticipated fixtures on the New England sports calendar. By the 1960s and 1970s, the Beanpot had moved to February, where it became entrenched as a midwinter tradition. Attendance grew steadily, and the event eventually found a permanent home at Boston Garden before later moving to TD Garden following that arena's opening in September 1995.[2] The tournament's growth reflected the broader expansion of collegiate hockey culture in Boston, a city that produces a disproportionate share of the nation's college hockey talent and commands a deeply engaged fanbase for the sport at every level.

The tournament format has remained largely consistent throughout its history. The four teams compete in two semifinal games on the first Monday of February, with the winners advancing to the championship game and the losers meeting in a consolation match on the second Monday. This compact structure creates a concentrated burst of hockey action that local fans anticipate each winter, and the back-to-back Monday scheduling has become a beloved quirk of the event's identity. The format ensures that all four programs remain invested across both evenings, and consolation games have historically been competitive affairs that carry their own sense of pride and consequence.

Boston University has historically dominated the tournament, winning more Beanpot titles than any other program. The Terriers entered the 2026 tournament as defending champions, looking to add to their all-time record total.[3] Boston College, Harvard, and Northeastern have each claimed the title multiple times as well, and the competitive balance among the four programs — which has shifted across different eras — contributes to the tournament's enduring appeal. No single decade has belonged entirely to one team, and the possibility of an upset or an unexpected champion is part of what keeps fans invested year after year.

The tournament was not immune to outside disruption. The COVID-19 pandemic forced the cancellation or significant alteration of many collegiate sporting events in the 2020–2021 period, and the Beanpot was no exception. The interruption to the event's unbroken annual run underscored how much the tournament had come to be taken for granted as a fixture of the Boston winter — its absence was felt acutely by fans and programs alike, and its return was welcomed with heightened enthusiasm.

Women's Beanpot Tournament

A separate Women's Beanpot Tournament runs alongside the men's competition and features the same four institutions: Boston University, Boston College, Harvard, and Northeastern. The women's event has its own distinct history and competitive record, and it has grown considerably in profile over the years as women's collegiate hockey has expanded nationally. The tournament is currently sponsored by Dunkin' and is officially branded the Dunkin' Women's Beanpot Tournament.[4]

In January 2026, Harvard's women's hockey program claimed the Dunkin' Women's Beanpot title for the first time since 2022, defeating Boston University 2–1 in overtime in a closely contested final.[5] The result demonstrated the competitive parity that has characterized the women's tournament in recent years, with the title rotating among programs rather than being concentrated in any single school. The women's event typically takes place earlier in January than the men's tournament, giving it a distinct place on the calendar.

Format

The tournament uses a straightforward single-elimination bracket involving all four teams across two Monday evenings in February. On the first Monday, two semifinal games are played at TD Garden, typically back to back in the same evening. The two winning programs return the following Monday for the championship game, while the two losing semifinalists meet in a consolation contest on the same night. The consolation game precedes the title match, meaning both games are played on the second Monday before a single arena crowd.

This format has a practical elegance: every team plays twice, the tournament concludes in just two evenings spread across a single week, and the structure maximizes the number of head-to-head matchups among the four rivals. Seeding and bracket placement have varied over the years, with the draw occasionally matching traditional rivals in the semifinals rather than saving those matchups for the final. The bracket setup for each year's tournament is announced in advance and generates significant discussion among fans of all four programs.

Culture

The Beanpot Tournament occupies a singular place in the cultural life of Boston's university communities. For students, alumni, and fans affiliated with the four competing schools, the tournament functions as much more than a sporting event — it is an annual assertion of institutional identity and neighborhood pride. Each of the four programs draws from distinct communities within the city and its immediate surroundings, and their rivalries carry histories measured not just in wins and losses but in decades of shared urban proximity. The competition between Boston University and Boston College, for example, has long been characterized as one of the fiercest intra-city rivalries in collegiate athletics, with both programs boasting strong alumni networks and dedicated fan bases that extend well beyond current student populations.

The tournament also serves as a showcase for hockey in a city that has historically claimed a special relationship with the sport. Boston's universities have collectively produced a substantial number of professional players, Olympic athletes, and coaches, and the Beanpot provides a mid-season stage on which future stars often announce themselves to wider audiences. The games are broadcast regionally and attract coverage from outlets across New England, amplifying the tournament's reach beyond the arena and into living rooms, bars, and dormitories across the metropolitan area. This media presence has helped cement the Beanpot's reputation as a cultural institution rather than merely a sporting competition.

Beyond the games themselves, the Beanpot has become associated with a set of rituals and traditions that reinforce its status as a rite of winter in Boston. Students line up for tickets in the cold, alumni return to the city specifically to attend, and local sports media devotes significant coverage to previewing, analyzing, and revisiting the results. The tournament's simplicity — four local teams, two nights, one trophy — is part of its enduring appeal. In an era of increasingly complex and commercialized collegiate athletics, the Beanpot retains a relatively intimate character that resonates with fans who value the sense of community it fosters.

Attractions

The games themselves are the central attraction of the Beanpot weekend, but the surrounding environment at TD Garden adds to the overall experience. The arena, located in the West End neighborhood adjacent to North Station, is easily accessible by public transit and sits within walking distance of numerous bars, restaurants, and hotels that fill with fans each February. The concentration of fan activity in the hours before and after games creates a distinctive atmosphere in the surrounding streets, particularly along Causeway Street, where establishments fill with supporters from all four schools mixing in close quarters.

The Beanpot also draws visitors to the broader city of Boston during what is otherwise a quieter period of the winter tourism calendar. Hotels in the vicinity of the arena and across the downtown area report elevated occupancy during Beanpot weekends, and the event contributes to the local economy in ways that extend beyond ticket sales. Restaurants, transportation services, and retail businesses near the participating universities all experience increased activity during tournament week, as alumni travel from across the country to attend or as local fans organize gatherings around game broadcasts.

For visitors to Boston who are unfamiliar with the tournament, attending a Beanpot game offers an accessible introduction to live collegiate hockey in one of the sport's most storied cities. The atmosphere inside TD Garden during Beanpot games is notably intense compared to typical regular-season collegiate matchups, with student sections from all four schools present and vocal throughout. The relatively small scale of collegiate hockey compared to professional sports means that fans are often seated close to the ice, creating a sense of immediacy and connection to the action that distinguishes the event from larger professional spectacles.

Getting There

TD Garden, the home of the Beanpot Tournament, is one of the most accessible major sports venues in New England. The arena sits directly atop North Station, one of the busiest transit hubs in Massachusetts, serving both the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) commuter rail network and the Green and Orange Lines of the MBTA subway system. This positioning makes TD Garden reachable from virtually every corner of the greater Boston metropolitan area without a private vehicle, and public transit is the strongly recommended mode of arrival for Beanpot attendees given the limited and expensive parking options in the surrounding neighborhood.

For fans traveling from outside the immediate Boston area, South Station and Back Bay Station provide connections to Amtrak intercity rail service, with frequent MBTA connections from those hubs to North Station. Logan International Airport, located across the Inner Harbor from downtown Boston, is served by the MBTA Silver Line, which connects to the subway network and allows airport arrivals to reach TD Garden via public transit with a single transfer. For those who do choose to drive, numerous parking garages are located within several blocks of the arena, though prices are substantially higher during major events than on ordinary evenings.

See Also

The Beanpot Tournament continues to stand as one of the most distinctive and locally beloved annual sporting events in the United States, drawing on the unique concentration of major universities within a compact urban environment to create a competition that carries genuine civic meaning. For the thousands of students, alumni, and fans who gather at TD Garden each February, the tournament represents not only a contest for hockey supremacy but an affirmation of Boston's identity as a college town, a hockey city, and a community defined in part by the rivalries and traditions that its institutions have cultivated over generations.