1988–89 WHL season explained

1988–89 WHL season
League:Western Hockey League
Sport:Ice hockey
Playoffs:Playoffs
Finals Champ:Swift Current Broncos (1)
Finals Runner-Up:Portland Winter Hawks
No Of Teams:14
Season:Regular season
Season Champ Name:Scotty Munro Memorial Trophy
Season Champs:Swift Current Broncos (1)
Mvp Link:Four Broncos Memorial Trophy
Mvp:Stu Barnes (Tri-City Americans)
Top Scorer Link:Bob Clarke Trophy
Top Scorer:Dennis Holland (Portland Winter Hawks)
Seasonslistnames:WHL
Prevseason Year:1987–88
Nextseason Year:1989–90
1988–89 CHL season
Color:
  1. 4B489D
Color Text:
  1. FFFFFF
League:Canadian Hockey League
Sport:Ice hockey
No Of Teams:40
Season:OHL
Season2:QMJHL
Season3:WHL
Playoffs:Memorial Cup
Finals Champ:Swift Current Broncos (WHL)
Num Championships:1
Finals Runner-Up:Saskatoon Blades (WHL)

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. The Broncos won their first Scotty Munro Memorial Trophy for the best regular season record, and in the playoffs defeated the Portland Winter Hawks to win their first President's Cup as league champions—the Broncos went undefeated throughout the playoffs. This earned the Broncos a berth in the 1989 Memorial Cup tournament, which was hosted in Saskatoon. At the tournament, the Broncos defeated the host Saskatoon Blades to win the Memorial Cup title.[1]

This was the first season for the Tri-City Americans after the New Westminster Bruins relocated to Kennewick, Washington prior to the season. The Americans became the fourth WHL club based in the United States.

Regular season

Final standings

East DivisionGPWLTPtsGFGA
x Swift Current Broncos72 55 16 1 111 447 319
x Saskatoon Blades 72 42 28 2 86 366 335
x Medicine Hat Tigers 72 41 27 4 86 359 326
x Prince Albert Raiders 72 37 33 2 76 302 286
x Lethbridge Hurricanes72 27 39 6 60 356 380
x Moose Jaw Warriors72 27 42 3 57 318 372
Brandon Wheat Kings 72 25 43 4 54 286 331
Regina Pats72 23 43 6 52 306 358
West DivisionGPWLTPtsGFGA
x Portland Winter Hawks 72 40 28 4 84 408 395
x Victoria Cougars 72 36 32 4 76 341 351
x Kamloops Blazers 72 34 33 5 73 326 309
x Tri-City Americans 72 33 34 5 71 300 299
Seattle Thunderbirds 72 33 35 4 70 315 276
Spokane Chiefs 72 25 45 2 52 326 419

Scoring leaders

Note: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalties in minutes

PlayerTeamGPGAPtsPIM
69 82 85 167 120
70 59 82 141 117
68 51 82 139 89
71 70 68 138 70
66 49 87 136 70
72 54 81 135 66
72 58 73 131 46
72 53 78 131 52
71 52 73 125 92
71 67 55 122 83

1989 WHL Playoffs

First round

Division semi-finals

Division finals

WHL Championship

All-Star game

On January 24, the West Division defeated the East Division 5–1 at Brandon, Manitoba before a crowd of 2,933.

WHL awards

Most Valuable Player - Four Broncos Memorial Trophy: Stu Barnes, Tri-City Americans
Scholastic Player of the Year - Daryl K. (Doc) Seaman Trophy: Jeff Nelson, Prince Albert Raiders
Top Scorer - Bob Clarke Trophy: Dennis Holland, Portland Winter Hawks
Most Sportsmanlike Player - Brad Hornung Trophy: Blair Atcheynum, Moose Jaw Warriors
Top Defenseman - Bill Hunter Trophy: Dan Lambert, Swift Current Broncos
Rookie of the Year - Jim Piggott Memorial Trophy: Wes Walz, Lethbridge Hurricanes
Top Goaltender - Del Wilson Trophy: Danny Lorenz, Seattle Thunderbirds
Coach of the Year - Dunc McCallum Memorial Trophy: Ron Kennedy, Medicine Hat Tigers
Executive of the Year - Lloyd Saunders Memorial Trophy: Dennis Beyak, Saskatoon Blades
Regular season champions - Scotty Munro Memorial Trophy: Swift Current Broncos
WHL Plus-Minus Award

Darren Stolk, Medicine Hat Tigers

All-Star Teams

East Division
First Team Second Team
Goal Moose Jaw Warriors
Defense Gord Kruppke (tied) Prince Albert Raiders
Todd Nelson (tied) Prince Albert Raiders
- - Bob Woods (tied) Brandon Wheat Kings
Center Swift Current Broncos
Left Wing Regina Pats
Right Wing Swift Current Broncos
West Division
First Team Second Team
Goal Tri-City Americans
Defense Kamloops Blazers
Kamloops Blazers
Center Tri-City Americans
Left Wing Portland Winter Hawks
Right Wing Spokane Chiefs

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. News: Morrison . Scott . 2019-02-06 . From Tragedy to Triumph: The story of the Swift Current Broncos . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20230731211504/https://www.sportsnet.ca/hockey/juniors/tragedy-triumph-story-swift-current-broncos/ . 2023-07-31 . 2023-07-31 . Sportsnet.