Redbergslid IK's former home arena Lisebergshallen has been demolished and the team has moved in to Scandinavium, which is also an ice rink. On Wednesday, RIK's first home game was canceled after one minute and 43 seconds due to condensation on the pitch.

Coach Jasmin Žuta wrote a post on social media expressing his disappointment about more than the sports league.

"It was a betrayal of the sport and the youth, which is completely unacceptable to me," he says.

One betrayal to the younger ones

He says that RIK has an annual presentation of all teams in connection with the premiere match and during Wednesday it was thought that the younger players would run into the plane to be photographed, something that could not happen.

"Obviously it is a tragic fact that the match was not allowed to play, but it is not as dangerous as seeing a ten-year-old lower his head and leave, that betrayal is the biggest thing from yesterday," Jasmin Žuta said on Thursday.

A parent of one of the girls tells how the youth team experienced the incident.

- The girls thought it was really sad not to see the match. The fun thing was seeing the home premiere, it was mostly what they were disappointed with, says the parent of SVT News West.

"Extremely Alarming"

Lotta Nibell, CEO of Got Event, who is responsible for, among other things, Scandinavium.

Lotta Nibell is the CEO of Got Event, which is responsible for, among other things, Scandinavium. She says that there is a high load on Scandinavium since before.

- We have done everything we can to make this work and in the past it has done so, but the theory we have now is that the floor has not been left on the ice long enough and then there is a risk that condensation will form. It is the short transition times between the events that make it so, she says.

She says that the problem is known before.

- It's extremely alarming. When we can't meet our goals and ambitions, it doesn't feel good.

The City Building Office in Gothenburg is conducting an investigation into a compensation arena.

- What we can do now is look at other technical solutions and we are doing that right now, says Lotta Nibell.