Originally called the Pee Dee Cyclones , the Twin City Cyclones were a minor league ice hockey team based in Winston-Salem, North Carolina . They began play in the Southern Professional Hockey League (SPHL) in the 2005–06 season . In the 2005–06 season, they finished sixth out of seven teams in the regular season standings, made the playoffs, but lost in the first round to the Knoxville Ice Bears . In the 2006–07 season , their final in Florence, South Carolina , the Cyclones finished in seventh place and failed to make the playoffs. They were called the Pee Dee Cyclones as the region of South Carolina around Florence that is usually named after the Pee Dee River .
4-771: Unable to reach a new lease agreement with the Florence Civic Center , the Cyclones relocated Winston-Salem for the 2007–08 season. Two seasons later, on March 31, 2009, the Cyclones ceased operations, citing the American economic downturn as a reason for their folding. In 2010, the Kerzners, the former owners of the folded Cyclones, were granted another expansion franchise in the Augusta RiverHawks . This American ice hockey team-related article
8-635: A storm knocked out the power and thus the broadcast signal during the event. The card was re-telecast two nights later from North Charleston, South Carolina , at the North Charleston Coliseum . Since 2005 it is home to the annual Darlington Car Hauler Parade that kicks off Goodyear 400 race week at Darlington Raceway . In 2019, an indoor football team called the Carolina Havoc of the American Arena League ,
12-641: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This article about a sports team in North Carolina is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Florence Civic Center The Florence Center is a 10,000-seat multi-purpose arena in Florence, South Carolina . The arena was known as the Florence Civic Center until it rebranded in November 2017. It hosted the infamous eighth WWE In Your House pay-per-view in 1996, during which
16-769: Is announced to begin play at the Florence Center for the 2019 season. The building was the home of the South Carolina Fire Ants of Major League Roller Hockey in 1998, two ice hockey teams : the Pee Dee/Florence Pride (1997–2005) and the Pee Dee Cyclones (2005–2007), two indoor football teams: Carolina Stingrays (2004) and Florence Phantoms (2006–2009), two basketball teams : the Florence Flyers and
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