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Everything about East Coast Hockey League totally explainedThe ECHL (formerly the East Coast Hockey League) is a professional ice hockey league based in Princeton, New Jersey, with teams scattered across the United States and Canada, generally regarded as a tier below the American Hockey League. The ECHL's official website lists the league as "The Premier AA" league of hockey in North America, because most teams serve as feeder teams for American Hockey League teams. Hockey generally doesn't use letter-designations to define their league's levels, but the ECHL has tried for years to establish such a pecking order, with some success.
History
The league, which combined teams from the defunct Atlantic Coast Hockey League and All-American Hockey League, began play as the East Coast Hockey League in 1988 with 5 teams, the Carolina Thunderbirds (now the Wheeling Nailers), the Erie Panthers (now the Victoria Salmon Kings), the Johnstown Chiefs, the Knoxville Cherokees (the franchise, as the Pee Dee Pride, is currently suspended, to resume play in Conway, South Carolina in 2008-09), and the Virginia Lancers (now the Utah Grizzlies).
Since that time, the ECHL has met with a mixture of failures and successes, reaching its largest size in 2003 of 31 teams before being reduced to 28 teams for the 2004 season. In September 2002, the West Coast Hockey League ceased operations, and the ECHL Board of Governors approved membership applications from the Anchorage (now Alaska) Aces, the Bakersfield Condors, the Fresno Falcons, the Idaho Steelheads, the Las Vegas Wranglers, the Long Beach Ice Dogs and the San Diego Gulls as well as from teams in Ontario, California and Reno, Nevada. Alaska, Bakersfield, Fresno, Idaho, Las Vegas, Long Beach and San Diego began play in the 2003-04 season as expansion teams.
The teams from the defunct lower-level WCHL, along with Las Vegas, joined as expansion teams for the ECHL’s 16th season in 2003-04. In a change reflective of the nationwide presence of the ECHL, the East Coast Hockey League changed its name to simply ECHL on May 19, 2003.
The league, because of geographical anomalies, continues to use unbalanced conferences and divisions, which has in the past made for some extremely varied playoff formats. Due to travel costs, the league has attempted to placate owners in keeping those costs down, which has led to the sometimes-odd playoff structures.
The league currently (as of 2008) consists of nine West Coast-based teams in the National Conference, and sixteen eastern, midwestern and southern teams in the American Conference. There is limited interconference play, because of the distances between the teams of the two conferences.
Teams
| National Conference |
| Division |
Team |
Arena |
City/Area |
Affiliate Team(s) |
| West | Alaska Aces |
Sullivan Arena |
Anchorage, AK |
St. Louis Blues, Peoria Rivermen
|
| Idaho Steelheads |
Qwest Arena |
Boise, ID |
Dallas Stars, Iowa Stars |
| Phoenix RoadRunners |
US Airways Center |
Phoenix, AZ |
San Jose Sharks, Worcester Sharks |
| Utah Grizzlies |
E Center |
West Valley City, UT |
New York Islanders, Bridgeport Sound Tigers |
| Victoria Salmon Kings |
Save-On-Foods Memorial Centre |
Victoria, BC |
Vancouver Canucks, Manitoba Moose |
| Pacific | Bakersfield Condors |
Rabobank Arena |
Bakersfield, CA |
Anaheim Ducks, Portland Pirates
|
| Fresno Falcons |
Save Mart Center |
Fresno, CA |
|
| Las Vegas Wranglers |
Orleans Arena |
Las Vegas, NV |
Calgary Flames, Quad City Flames |
| Stockton Thunder |
Stockton Arena |
Stockton, CA |
Edmonton Oilers, Springfield Falcons |
| American Conference |
| Division |
Team |
Arena |
City/Area |
Affiliate Team(s) |
| North | Cincinnati Cyclones |
US Bank Arena |
Cincinnati, OH |
Montreal Canadiens, Hamilton Bulldogs; Nashville Predators, Milwaukee Admirals
|
| Dayton Bombers |
Nutter Center |
Dayton, OH |
|
| Elmira Jackals |
First Arena |
Elmira, NY |
Columbus Blue Jackets, Syracuse Crunch; Ottawa Senators, Binghamton Senators |
| Johnstown Chiefs |
Cambria County War Memorial Arena |
Johnstown, PA |
Colorado Avalanche, Lake Erie Monsters; Boston Bruins, Providence Bruins |
| Reading Royals |
Sovereign Center |
Reading, PA |
Los Angeles Kings, Manchester Monarchs |
| Trenton Devils |
Sovereign Bank Arena |
Trenton, NJ |
New Jersey Devils, Lowell Devils |
| Wheeling Nailers |
WesBanco Arena |
Wheeling, WV |
Philadelphia Flyers, Philadelphia Phantoms; Pittsburgh Penguins, Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins |
| South | Augusta Lynx |
James Brown Arena |
Augusta, GA |
|
| Charlotte Checkers |
Time Warner Cable Arena |
Charlotte, NC |
New York Rangers, Hartford Wolf Pack |
| Columbia Inferno |
Carolina Coliseum |
Columbia, SC |
Toronto Maple Leafs, Toronto Marlies |
| Florida Everblades |
Germain Arena |
Estero, FL |
Carolina Hurricanes, Albany River Rats; Florida Panthers |
| Gwinnett Gladiators |
Arena at Gwinnett Center |
Duluth, GA |
Atlanta Thrashers, Chicago Wolves |
| Mississippi Sea Wolves |
Mississippi Coast Coliseum |
Biloxi, MS |
Tampa Bay Lightning, Norfolk Admirals |
| Pensacola Ice Pilots |
Pensacola Civic Center |
Pensacola, FL |
Chicago Blackhawks, Rockford IceHogs |
| South Carolina Stingrays |
North Charleston Coliseum |
North Charleston, SC |
Washington Capitals, Hershey Bears |
| Texas Wildcatters |
Ford Arena |
Beaumont, TX |
Minnesota Wild, Houston Aeros |
Future teams
One team is scheduled to relocate for the 2008-09 season and two which were previously under suspension will return with new home arenas.
- Ontario Reign, 2008-09; previously the Texas Wildcatters franchise, the membership was transferred from Beaumont, Texas to Ontario, California.
- Myrtle Beach ECHL team, 2009-10; previously the Pee Dee Pride franchise, pending completion of YRT2 Arena (on the campus of Coastal Carolina University) in Conway, South Carolina, between Florence and Myrtle Beach.
- Toledo Walleye, 2009-10; franchise previously known as the Toledo Storm (which had played from 1991-2007), 2009-10; The Toledo Sports Arena is being demolished, and the Lucas County Arena on the site is expected to be completed in time for the start of the 2009 season.
Defunct and relocated teams
Teams that no longer play within the ECHL are listed below. Many of the former teams which hadn't moved are considered to have suspended operations and the franchises placed for sale, but in reality are and were simply financial failures, similar to defunct teams in all other minor league sports histories.
While the ECHL stated in recent years they wouldn't grant voluntary suspensions of franchises for more than one year, both the Toledo Storm and Mississippi Sea Wolves have had two-year suspensions -- the Sea Wolves because of Hurricane Katrina and the Storm in order to demolish their present arena and construct a new arena on the site. The new owners of the Toledo franchise, the businessmen who own the area AAA-baseball team the Toledo Mud Hens, have stated that'll choose a new name for the team. Toledo Arena Sports General Manager Joe Napoli and Toledo Arena Sports President Mike Miller unveiled the new name on February 20, 2008 . The Mississippi Sea Wolves resumed play for the 2007-2008 season, while the Toledo Walleye will return to play for the 2009-2010 season.
| Arkansas RiverBlades (1999-2003)
Atlantic City Boardwalk Bullies (2001-2005; moved to Stockton, CA)
Baton Rouge Kingfish (1996-2003; moved to Victoria, BC)
Birmingham Bulls (1992-2001; moved to Atlantic City, NJ)
Chesapeake Icebreakers (played in Upper Marlboro, MD, 1997-1999; moved to Jackson, MS)
Columbus Chill (1991-1999; moved to Reading, PA)
Columbus Cottonmouths (GA) (2001-2004; moved to Bradenton-Sarasota, FL to play as Gulf Coast Swords, franchise revoked in summer 2006 after construction halted on proposed home arena)
Erie Panthers (1988-1996; moved to Baton Rouge, LA)
Greensboro Generals (1999-2004; team franchise revoked)
Greensboro Monarchs (1989-1995; replaced by the Carolina Monarchs of the AHL)
Greenville Grrrowl (1998-2006) (franchise revoked)
Hampton Roads Admirals (1989-2000; replaced by the Norfolk Admirals of the AHL)
Huntington Blizzard (1993-2000; now in Beaumont as Texas Wildcatters)
Huntsville Blast (1993-1994; moved to Tallahassee, FL)
Jackson Bandits (1999-2003)
Jacksonville Lizard Kings (1995-2000)
Knoxville Cherokees (1988-1997; moved to Florence, SC)
Lexington Men O' War (2002-2003; moved to West Valley City, UT)
Long Beach Ice Dogs (1993-2007) (franchise revoked)
Louisiana IceGators (1995-2005) (franchise revoked)
Louisville IceHawks (1990-1994; moved to Jacksonville, FL)
Louisville River Frogs (1995-1998; moved to Miami, FL)
|
Macon Whoopee (2001-2002; moved to Lexington, KY)
Miami Matadors (1998-1999; moved to Cincinnati, OH)
Mobile Mysticks (1995-2002; moved to Duluth, GA)
Nashville Knights (1989-1996; moved to Pensacola, FL when NHL arrived)
New Orleans Brass (1997-2002; team suspended operations after the arrival of the NBA's Hornets when arena lease wasn't given)
Pee Dee Pride (1997-2005; team suspended operations after the 2004-05 season and will become the Myrtle Beach Thunderboltz once a new arena is completed in nearby Conway, SC)
Peoria Rivermen (1996-2005; replaced by the Peoria Rivermen of the AHL)
Raleigh IceCaps (1991-1998; moved to Augusta, GA when NHL arrived)
Richmond Renegades (1990-2003; Replaced by UHL Richmond RiverDogs whom were replaced by the Richmond Renegades of the SPHL)
Roanoke Express (1993-2004; franchise revoked)
San Diego Gulls (2003-2006) (franchise revoked)
Tallahassee Tiger Sharks (1994-2001; moved to Macon, Georgia)
Texas Wildcatters (2003-2008) Ceased operations at the end 2007-08 season due to a failure in securing a new arena lease and moved to Ontario, California to become the Ontario Reign
Virginia Lancers (1988-1993 in Vinton, VA; franchise later renamed the Roanoke Valley Rebels and Rampage; moved to Huntsville, AL)
Winston-Salem Thunderbirds (1988-1992; originally called Carolina before reverting to city name; moved to Wheeling, WV, and eventually become the Nailers in 1995)
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ECHL Hall of Fame
In celebration of the league's 20th year of play, the ECHL Board of Governors created the ECHL Hall of Fame in 2008, to recognize the achievements of players, coaches, and personnel who dedicated their careers to the league. Hall of Fame members are selected in four categories: Player, Developmental Player, Builder, and Referee/Linesman. Players must have concluded their career as an active player for a minimum of three playing seasons, though not continuous or full seasons. Development Players must have begun their career in the ECHL and went on to a distinguished career in the NHL, playing a minimum of 260 regular season games in the NHL, AHL and ECHL. Builders may be active or inactive whereas Referee/Linesman must have concluded their active officiating career for a minimum of three playing seasons.
No more than five candidates are elected to the Hall of Fame each year with no more than three Players, one Developmental Player, two Builders and one Referee/Linesman. The Builder and the Referee/Linesman categories are dependent upon the number of candidates in the Player category.
The nomination and subsequent selection of candidates is determined by the ECHL Hall of Fame Selection Committee which is appointed by the ECHL.
The ECHL Hall of Fame Inaugural Class was inducted during the 2008 ECHL All-Star Game festivities at Stockton Arena in Stockton, California and included ECHL founder Henry Brabham, the ECHL's first commissioner Patrick J. Kelly, and former players Nick Vitucci and Chris ValicevicFurther Information
Get more info on 'East Coast Hockey League'.
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