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Moncton Motion (ECBL) (2023) Avenir Centre ( French : Centre Avenir ) is an indoor arena in Moncton, New Brunswick . Opened in September 2018, it serves as the home to the Moncton Wildcats of the Quebec Maritimes Junior Hockey League .
The Wildcats finished in first place in the league, going 52-15-0-3 for 107 points and winning the Jean Rougeau Trophy for the first time. The Wildcats defeated the Quebec Remparts to the President's Cup. In the Memorial Cup, Moncton finished second in the round-robin after defeating Peterborough and Vancouver but losing to Quebec. The Wildcats ...
The Moncton Coliseum (French: Colisée de Moncton) is an event venue and former ice hockey arena in Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada. Atlantic Canada's largest trade show facility, the Coliseum has over 125,000 square feet (11,600 m 2) of exhibition space and a drawing power of 1.4 million people within a 2½ hour drive.
Most of the teams were within a few hours' drive of Montreal. From the first season in 1969–70, only Shawinigan remains in the same city with an uninterrupted history, although the team's name has changed to the Cataractes. In 1972 the QMJHL had been in operation for three years, and wanted a team in the province's largest city.
This is a list of head & assistant coaches of the Moncton Wildcats of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League Pages in category "Moncton Wildcats coaches" The following 8 pages are in this category, out of 8 total.
President's Cup - Playoff Champions, Moncton Wildcats; Jean Rougeau Trophy - Regular Season Champions, Moncton Wildcats; Luc Robitaille Trophy - Team that scored the most goals, Quebec Remparts; Robert Lebel Trophy - Team with best GAA, Moncton Wildcats; Player. Michel Brière Memorial Trophy - Most Valuable Player, Alexander Radulov, Quebec ...
On June 9, 2023, Desnoyers was drafted first overall by the Moncton Wildcats in the 2023 QMJHL Draft. [2] [3] During the 2023–24 season, in his rookie season, he recorded 20 goals and 36 assists in 60 regular season games. Among rookies, he ranked third in points, power-play assists (18) and face-off efficiency (53.9%). [4]
The Jean-Louis Lévesque Arena (French: Aréna Jean-Louis Lévesque) is an arena in Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada. The arena has only one rink and is home of the Université de Moncton Aigles Bleus hockey team. [2] The Arena has a 60 m x 26 m rink and 1,650 permanent seats. [3]