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Ice hockey: League Team City Years NHL: Winnipeg Jets: Winnipeg: 1979-1996 WHA: Winnipeg Jets: Winnipeg: 1972-1979 AHL: Manitoba Moose: Winnipeg: 2001-2011 IHL: Manitoba Moose: Winnipeg: 1996-2001 WHL: Brandon Regals: Brandon: 1955-1957 Winnipeg Warriors: Winnipeg: 1955-1961 MPHL: Brandon Wheat City: Brandon: 1906-1908 Portage la Prairie Cities ...
Category: Ice hockey teams in Detroit. ... Wayne State Warriors women's ice hockey This page was last edited on 17 November 2024, at 06:51 (UTC). ...
The Manitoba Bisons men's ice hockey team is an ice hockey team representing the Manitoba Bisons athletics program of University of Manitoba. The team is a member of the Canada West Universities Athletic Association conference and compete in U Sports. The Bisons play their home games at the Wayne Fleming Arena in Winnipeg, Manitoba. [1]
The next season, due to the collapse of the since-renamed Great Plains Athletic Conference's (GPAC) hockey division, Canada West absorbed the three remaining schools. With the conference doubling its size in just two years, the playoff was expanded to include four teams for the first time in 1986.
Category: Sports clubs and teams in Detroit. 10 languages. ... Ice hockey teams in Detroit (3 C, 18 P) M. Motor City Mustangs (1 C, 1 P) W. Wayne State Warriors (10 C ...
Former teams Team City Existed President's Cups Memorial Cups Notes Flin Flon Bombers: Flin Flon: 1967-78: 2: 0: Became Edmonton Oil Kings in 1978 Winnipeg Jets: Winnipeg: 1967-73: 0: 0: Became the Winnipeg Clubs in 1973 Winnipeg Clubs: Winnipeg: 1973-76: 0: 0: Became the Winnipeg Monarchs in 1976 Winnipeg Ice: Winnipeg: 2019-23: 0: 0
The following is a list of the 64 schools that fielded men's ice hockey teams in NCAA Division I in the most recent 2023–24 season, plus the 44 schools that fielded women's teams in the de facto equivalent of Division I, the NCAA's National Collegiate division. [a] Conference affiliations reflect those in place for the current 2024–25 season.
In 1947, a team from Toledo, Ohio, joined the league, and the following year the IHL expanded significantly, with teams in four additional U.S. cities. The expansion did not take hold, and for 1949–50, the league was back down to teams in Detroit and Windsor as well as two nearby Canadian cities, Sarnia, Ontario, and Chatham, Ontario.