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Swift Current is the smallest city with a team in the WHL, and the second smallest across the entire Canadian Hockey League. The Broncos are three-time WHL playoff champions, and won the 1989 Memorial Cup. Before any of their championships, the Broncos were known for a 1986 team bus crash that resulted in the deaths of four players.
The Swift Current Broncos of the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League were created in the wake of the Western Canada Hockey League's (WCHL) Swift Current Broncos departure to Lethbridge in 1974. The new SJHL team adopted the nickname "Broncos" for its first nine seasons, from the 1974-75 through the 1982–83 seasons, despite the fact that another ...
The 1989 Memorial Cup was the first time that the Broncos had appeared in the tournament since the team relocated back to Swift Current in 1986. The Lethbridge Broncos participated at the 1983 Memorial Cup , as they club finished in fourth place at the tournament.
Swift hasn't attended any of the Chiefs' away games so far this season. Swift last showed up to root for Kelce and his teammates in person on Dec. 21 when the Chiefs beat the Texans at home.
The 1988–89 WHL season was the 23rd season of the Western Hockey League (WHL), featuring fourteen teams and a 72-game regular season. Less than three years after the 1986 team bus crash that killed four players, the Swift Current Broncos put together the best season in the club's history.
Swift was not at the Chiefs’ last game against the Pittsburgh Steelers on Christmas Day. The pop star tends to avoid away games, reportedly due to security concerns.
The Broncos' lead is up to 23 points. It's 26-3 Denver with roughly 21 minutes to play. Wil Lutz now 4-for-4 as Broncos extend lead. Denver's kicker is the lead scorer in tonight's "Thursday Night ...
The 1926 Calgary Canadians were Alberta's first Memorial Cup champion. [2]The Memorial Cup was presented to the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association (CAHA) in 1919 by the Ontario Hockey Association (OHA) in remembrance of the soldiers who died fighting for Canada in World War I. [3] It was to be awarded to the junior hockey champions of Canada in an east versus west format.