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The Knoxville Cherokees were an East Coast Hockey League (ECHL) team based in Knoxville, Tennessee. History. The franchise was formed in 1988 along with the ECHL.
Players for the Knoxville Cherokees of the East Coast Hockey League. Pages in category "Knoxville Cherokees players" The following 50 pages are in this category, out of 50 total.
Knoxville Cherokees: 1988–1997: Moved to Florence, South Carolina. Raleigh IceCaps: 1991–1998: Moved to Augusta, Georgia, and replaced by the Carolina Hurricanes of the NHL. Louisville RiverFrogs: 1995–1998: Moved to Miami, Florida. Columbus Chill: 1991–1999: Moved to Reading, Pennsylvania, and replaced by the Columbus Blue Jackets of ...
A second concerted effort brought the sport back to the Volunteer State in the form of the Knoxville Cherokees. The team had four winning seasons in nine years and never made it past the first round of the playoffs, however, the Cherokees were still able to bring in crowds of increasing size.
Knoxville Cherokees; Knoxville Giants; Knoxville Ice Bears; Knoxville Indians; Knoxville Knights; Knoxville Noise; Knoxville Reds; Knoxville Smokies; Knoxville Speed; Knoxville Tennessee–Alabama League team
Knoxville Cherokees (46–13–5) Hampton Roads Admirals: 4 1991–92: 15 64 Toledo Storm (46–15–3) Hampton Roads Admirals: 5 1992–93: 15 64 Wheeling Thunderbirds (40–16–8) Toledo Storm: 6 1993–94: 19 68 Knoxville Cherokees (44–18–6) Toledo Storm: 7 1994–95: 18 68 Wheeling Thunderbirds (46–17–5) Richmond Renegades: 8 1995 ...
In 1988, Brabham and Bill Coffey founded the East Coast Hockey League (ECHL) as a minor professional ice hockey league with five teams, three of which were owned by Brabham — the Erie Panthers, Johnstown Chiefs, and the Virginia Lancers [9] — as well as being a co-founder of a fourth team, the Knoxville Cherokees. [10]
She played for seven different teams between 1992 and 1997, including Atlanta, the Knoxville Cherokees, Nashville Knights, the Las Vegas Aces, the Tallahassee Tiger Sharks, Las Vegas Thunder, and the Reno Renegades, appearing in a total of 24 games. [4] While in Atlanta, Rhéaume wrote her autobiography, Manon: Alone in Front of the Net. She ...