This year, in addition to Salzburg and Munich, Helsinki IFK and the Züricher Schlittschuh Club Lions will face off for the title. Helsinki is a seven-time Finnish champion and is one of the absolute top teams in the country. In the first participation in the Red Bulls Salute 2019, the guests finished in third place.
For the ZSC Lions, it is already the fourth participation in the Red Bulls Salute. The Zurich team has already lifted the winner's trophy once in 2006. This year, the competition will be held at our tourism partner Zell am See-Kaprun. It will be played in the KE Kelit Arena. The home of EK Die Zeller Eisbären holds 2,600 spectators.
Ticket offers
Decide for yourself whether you want to experience the entire weekend, a single day or selected games live on site. You can choose between different ticket bundles. This allows you to put together your own individual package for the games of the international invitational tournament. Best of all, Red Bulls season ticket holders get a 20 percent discount on all tickets. Our season ticket holders will receive the codes automatically via e-mail.
Prices
Standing room single game: 13 Euro (children up to 13 years: 9 Euro)
Standing room day ticket: 25 Euro (children up to 13 years: 18 Euro)
Standing room for all games: 45 Euro (children up to 13 years: 32 Euro)
Seating single game: 19 Euro (children up to 13 years: 13 Euro)
Seating Day ticket: 35 Euro (children up to 13 years: 25 Euro)
Seat all games: 65 Euro (children up to 13 years: 46 Euro)
The tournament
The Red Bulls Salute will be opened on August 26 by the teams from Salzburg and Helsinki at 5 p.m.. Afterwards, our EHC Red Bull München and Zurich will fight for the second final ticket at 8:30 p.m.. The winners of the two semi-finals will then fight for the title in the final on August 27 at 7 p.m.. Before that, the small final for third place will take place at 3 p.m..
The Red Bulls Salute was already held between 2005 and 2013 as an international invitation tournament for top European teams, and from 2010 it served as the final tournament of the European Trophy. In 2014, it gave way to the newly established Champions League (CHL), and in 2017, after a four-year hiatus, it was continued. Since then, the format has had a permanent place in the ice hockey calendar.