Showing posts with label baltimore clippers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label baltimore clippers. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

1968-69 AHL Scoring Leaders


guy trottier ottawa nationals 1972-73 o-pee-chee
The American Hockey League in 1968-69 consisted of eight teams, a far cry from the 30 clubs today. The Hershey Bears won the Calder Cup with a 4-1 final series win over the Quebec Aces. There was just one player in 1968-69 to reach the 100 point plateau and the league lacked a 50 goal scorer.

Jeannot Gilbert – Hershey Bears


Jeannot Gilbert of the Hershey Bears led the league, and earned the John B. Sollenberger Trophy, with 100 points on 35 goals and 65 assists over 71 games. 1968-69 was Gilbert’s fourth of eight years in Hershey. He played nine games in the NHL over his career, five with the Boston Bruins in 1962-63 and four with the Bruins in 1964-65. Gilbert ended his pro career with two years in the World Hockey Association, 1973-74 and 1974-75, with the Quebec Nordiques.

Michel Harvey – Hershey Bears


Another member of the Hershey Bears finished second with 93 points. Michel Harvey scored 41 goals and assisted on 52 while playing the full 74 game schedule. A veteran of the AHL, playing eleven years in the league, Harvey got his chance at major league hockey in 1972-73 with the Quebec Nordiques of the WHA. 1973-74 proved to be his last year in professional hockey, playing 26 games for the Maine Nordiques in the North American Hockey League.

Guy Trottier – Buffalo Bisons


Guy Trottier of the Buffalo Bisons led the league in goals with 45 and finished third in points with 82. Trottier also played two games for the New York Rangers of the National Hockey League in 1968-69. The following season, Guy led the AHL in goals again, this time with 55.

Ron Ward – Rochester Americans


Ron Ward of the Rochester Americans finished fourth with 78 points on 35 goals and 43 points over 73 games. Ward played 18 games in the NHL the following season with the Toronto Maple Leafs. In 1971-72, with the Vancouver Canucks, Ron played 71 games in what would be his last appearance in the NHL.

Ward played 359 games in the World Hockey Association between 1972-73 and 1976-77, contributing 380 points. In Ward’s first year in the WHA, he finished second in points with 118 as a member of the struggling New York Raiders. He would also play for the Vancouver Blazers, Los Angeles Sharks, Cleveland Crusaders, Winnipeg Jets, Minnesota Fighting Saints and Calgary Cowboys during his WHA career.

Willie Marshall – Baltimore Clippers


Willie Marshall of the Baltimore Clippers also finished with 78 points but played one more game that Ron Ward. Marshall is one of the greatest players in the history of the AHL. He played 1,205 regular season games with the Pittsburgh Hornets, Hershey Bears, Providence Reds, Baltimore Clippers and Rochester Americans. He scored 523 career goals and totalled 1,375 points.

Marshall was a charter member of the AHL Hall of Fame in 2006. To date, no player has played more games or had more goals, assists and points over an AHL career than Willie. Since 2003-04, the Willie Marshall Award has been handed out to the AHL player with the most goals scored during the regular season.

 

Friday, January 31, 2014

4 AHL Teams To Fold Midseason


baltimore clippers american hockey league
This past week, the San Francisco Bulls of the ECHL folded up shop 40 games into the 2013-14 season. The ECHL began operations with five teams back in 1988-89 and crew to 31 by 2003-04 before settling back to the current 23. San Francisco was granted a franchise for the 2011-12 season and have now become the first team in ECHL history not to complete a full season.

Since this was an unprecedented event in ECHL history, we thought we’d take a step up the ladder and look at the American Hockey League. The history of the AHL dates back to 1936. In all that time, just four teams have ceased operations before completing a season. Two of those teams were the same franchise.

New Haven Eagles 1942-43


The New Haven franchise started out in the CAHL for 1926-27 and were an AHL original for the 1936-37 season. In 1942-43, the Eagles played 32 games before folding on January 17, 1943. They were set to play a 56 game regular season schedule that year. The Eagles finished with nine wins and five ties for 23 points.

It was a bitter end to a great coaching career for Eddie Powers. Powers coached the Boston Tigers to a Calder Cup championship in 1928-29. He followed that up with the 1936-37 Syracuse Stars also capturing the Calder. In a weird twist of fate, Powers died January 17, 1943, the same day that the Eagles played their final game. The Eddie Powers Memorial Trophy is handed out each season to the player in the Ontario Hockey League with the most points.

New Haven Eagles 1950-51


The Eagles franchise was revived for the 1945-46 season and spent four years between 1946-47 and 1949-50 as the Ramblers. The name was changed back to the Eagles for the 1950-51 and seemed to curse the team. On December 11, 1950, the Eagles folded again, this time for good. New Haven played 28 of 70 games, winning just five for ten points.

The head coach in New Haven at the time was Frank Beisler. Frank was a veteran of two NHL games, one in 1936-37 and one in 1939-40, both with the New York Americans. He played for the original Eagles from 1934-35 to 1937-38. Beisler won a Calder Cup as a player with the 1942-43 Buffalo Bisons, coached by Eddie Shore. Ironically, that was the year the original Eagles folded. In 1945-46, Frank won the Calder Cup as a head coach, also with Buffalo.

Baltimore Clippers 1974-75


The Clippers had been in the American Hockey League since 1962-63 when they called it quits on January 23, 1975. The team had played 46 of 76 games with 14 wins and 38 points. The reason for folding was unique. The Michigan Stags of the World Hockey Association relocated to Baltimore midseason and were then known as the Baltimore Blades. The Clippers basically gave up their arena and even their jerseys for the WHA franchise.

The Clippers returned to the AHL for the 1975-76 season. However, the following year, they made the ill-fated decision to join the Southern Hockey League. Baltimore had 47 games in the books in 1976-77 when the whole league folded.

Hampton Gulls 1977-78


The Gulls were in the AHL for just the 1977-78 season. The franchise was born in 1974-75 and played three years in the SHL before than league ceased operations. Hampton was 46 games into the 80 game season when they closed up shop on February 10, 1978. The Gulls had won 15 games and totalled 33 points.

Hampton was coached by the legendary John Brophy. Two of the six goalies that would make an appearance for the Gulls were Michel Plasse and Eddie Mio. Rod Langway played 30 games with the club in his first year of pro hockey. Langway spent the rest of the year in the WHA with the Birmingham Bulls. He went on to play 994 regular season games in the National Hockey League with the Montreal Canadiens and Washington Capitals. Rod won the Norris Trophy twice with the Capitals.