Les Canadiennes de Montréal explained

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Team:Les Canadiennes de Montréal
Logosize:200px
City:Montreal, Quebec
League:Canadian Women's Hockey League
Arena:Centre Étienne Desmarteau
Colours:Red, blue, white
Gm:Meg Hewings
Coach:Caroline Ouellette and Danièle Sauvageau
Captain:Marie-Philip Poulin
Championships:4 (2008–09, 2010–11, 2011–12, 2016–17)
Name1:Montréal Stars
Dates1:2007–2015
Name2:Les Canadiennes
Dates2:2015–2019

Les Canadiennes de Montréal were a professional women's ice hockey team based in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Founded in 2007 as the Montreal Stars (Stars de Montréal), they competed in the Canadian Women's Hockey League (CWHL) in every season. The team appeared in and won the Clarkson Cup the most times out of any CWHL teams with four championships.

In 2015, the team became an affiliate of the Montreal Canadiens of the National Hockey League, with the franchise providing resources and marketing support to the team as part of their efforts to help promote women's hockey. This affiliation also led to its re-branding as Les Canadiennes for the 2015–16 CWHL season, adopting colours and jerseys resembling those of their men's counterpart. In December 2015, the Canadiennes and the Boston Pride played the first outdoor game in women's hockey as part of festivities for the 2016 NHL Winter Classic in Foxborough, Massachusetts.

In 2019, the CWHL ceased operations, as well as all teams that it directly owned including Les Canadiennes.[1]

Team history

Team origins

The Montreal Stars joined the CWHL during its formation in 2007. The Stars were formed from players from the Montreal Axion, a team that played in the National Women's Hockey League before its demise.[2]

In their first season, 2007–08, Montreal won 23 games out of 30 regular season contests and finished first overall in the regular season,[3] but lost to Mississauga Chiefs in the playoffs that year in a two-game contest.

In 2008–09, the Stars won the Clarkson Cup on March 19, 2009, in Kingston, Ontario, the first year that the Clarkson Cup was openly played for between competitive professional women's hockey clubs rather than national teams such as before with Team Canada and Team Sweden in 2006. The Clarkson Cup was won by Montreal by defeating the Minnesota Whitecaps in the final. Initially, the game was tied at one goal apiece until Montreal scored two goals. Sabrina Habrec ultimately scored the game winner, in a 3–1 final score. Former Canadian Governor General Adrienne Clarkson was on hand to present the trophy to team captain Lisa-Marie Breton-Lebreux.[4] It was Adrienne Clarkson's hope that the Clarkson Cup be the women's equivalent to the Stanley Cup.[5] That same season, three players were named to the First and Second team all stars: Caroline Ouellette, Kim St.Pierre and Sabrina Habrec.[6]

The team had early success with league awards to its players. Kim St. Pierre won the CHWL's award for top goaltender in back-to-back seasons, 2007–08 and 2008–09. Caroline Ouellette was the CWHL MVP for the 2008–09, Marie-Phillip Poulin was the CWHL's rookie of the year in 2007–08 at the age of 16 scoring over 40 points in 16 games, and Sabrina Harbec led the CWHL in scoring with 54 points in 29 games that into the 2009–10 season.[7] In 2009–10, the team finished in first place but did not defend the Clarkson Cup in the playoffs.

During the 2013–14 CWHL season, three members of the Stars reached the milestone of 100 career points during the season. It marks the first time in CWHL history that three players from the same franchise reach the century mark in the same season.[8] It began on January 11, when CWHL co-founder Lisa-Marie Breton registered the 100th point of her career.[9] On February 8, Vanessa Davidson earned the 100th point in her CWHL career[10] and Emmanuelle Blais became the third in a March 8 match against the Boston Blades.

Montreal Canadiens partnership

In March 2015, the Montreal Canadiens of the National Hockey League entered into a resource-sharing and marketing partnership with the Stars. Team CEO Geoff Molson explained that given the Canadiens' support of minor hockey in Quebec and the growth of Women's hockey, he felt that it "[was] the right time to concretely support women who play professional hockey, and, at the same time, promote the sport among up-and-coming players". Brenda Andress, commissioner of the CWHL, also stated that the partnership "affords the CWHL an opportunity to grow women's hockey hand in hand with one of the most storied franchises in professional sport."[11] [12]

In September 2015, the team unveiled a new identity as Les Canadiennes, adopting a rounded "C" and star as its logo (alluding to the Canadiens' logo, and the team's former name), and a blue-white-red kit similar to that of the Canadiens.[13] [14]

In a game against the Brampton Thunder on December 13, 2015, Noemie Marin registered the 200th point of her CWHL career.[15] She would record two assists in the game, including one on the game-winning tally, to reach the milestone.

On December 10, 2016, Les Canadiennes played a regular season game against the Calgary Inferno at the Bell Centre. They beat the Inferno 1–0, with the goal by captain Marie-Philip Poulin, in regulation in front of nearly 6000 spectators, marking a great success for the first ever CWHL hockey game to be played at the home of the Montreal Canadiens.[16]

On December 11, 2016, Caroline Ouellette, already the league's all-time leader in points and assists, registered her 300th career point. She then tied Jayna Hefford's league record of 130 goals on January 29, 2017, finishing the season with 309 career points and 130 career goals.[17]

In 2018, Les Canadiennes moved team operations to the home arena of the Montreal Canadiens' American Hockey League affiliate, the Laval Rocket. Les Canadiennes then scheduled some of their home games at Place Bell for the 2018–19 season.[18]

2016 Outdoor Women's Winter Classic

On December 31, 2015, the Canadiennes participated in an outdoor game, the 2016 Outdoor Women's Classic, against the Boston Pride of the National Women's Hockey League (NWHL) at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts. The game was held as an undercard to the following day's NHL Winter Classic, which featured their teams' NHL counterparts—the Canadiens and the Boston Bruins, and was the first ever outdoor professional women's hockey game.[19]

Olympics

The team included notable forwards Caroline Ouellette, Sarah Vaillancourt and goaltender Kim St. Pierre,[20] all members of the 2010 Canadian Women's Hockey Olympic team who won the Olympic gold medal in Vancouver.[21] [22]

For the 2014 Sochi Winter Games, Stars players Ouellette, Haley Irwin, Charline Labonté and Catherine Ward competed for Team Canada, while Julie Chu was a member of Team USA.

After the 2018 Winter Games, Hilary Knight signed as a free agent with Les Canadiennes on March 8, 2018, joining the team for the 2018 Clarkson Cup playoffs.[23]

Social work

Les Canadiennes support the fight against breast cancer with a Breast Cancer Fundraising event.[24] For the occasion, Les Canadiennes play with pink jerseys at their annual breast cancer fundraiser.[25] Les Canadiennes are also committed to supporting amateur girls' hockey teams and take their role as examples to the young girls growing up playing the sport, very seriously. The "Canadiennes Camps"[26] are just one way that these athletes connect with young players. They are also available to meet the girls at the autograph sessions following most of their games, they are accessible through social media, and many of them are involved in various community outreach events and school girls' hockey teams.

Seasons

Les Canadiennes won a total of eight regular season championships and four Clarkson Cups in 12 seasons. From 2012 to 2019, the Clarkson Cup has been awarded to the CWHL playoff champion after previously being awarded to the top women's hockey team in Canada when there was multiple leagues.

Season-by-season

YearGPWLT/OTLGFGAPtsFinishPlayoffsClarkson Cup
30 23 6 1 112 55 48 1st Lost in second round Not awarded
30 25 4 1 135 65 51 1st Won CWHL championship Won 2009 Clarkson Cup
30 23 5 2 122 70 48 1st Won CWHL championship Lost 2010 Clarkson Cup semifinal
26 22 2 2 125 70 46 1st Won CWHL championship Won 2011 Clarkson Cup
27 22 4 1 160 66 51 1st align=left colspan=2Won 2012 Clarkson Cup championship game, 4–2 vs. Brampton Thunder
24 18 5 1 105 58 37 2nd align=left colspan=2Lost 2013 Clarkson Cup championship game, 2–5 vs. Boston Blades
23 19 2 2 96 47 42 1st align=left colspan=2Eliminated in 2014 Clarkson Cup round-robin
24 14 9 1 67 49 29 3rd align=left colspan=2Lost 2015 Clarkson Cup championship game, 2–3 (OT) vs. Boston Blades
24 21 3 0 114 36 42 1st align=left colspan=2Lost 2016 Clarkson Cup championship game, 3–8 vs. Calgary Inferno
24 17 5 2 91 48 36 2nd align=left colspan=2Won 2017 Clarkson Cup championship game, 3–1 vs. Calgary Inferno
28 22 5 1 117 59 45 1st align=left colspan=2Lost 2018 Clarkson Cup semifinals, 0–2 vs. Markham Thunder
28 21 6 1 118 45 43 2nd align=left colspan=2Lost 2019 Clarkson Cup championship game, 2–5 vs. Calgary Inferno
Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, OTL = Overtime losses, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against, Pts = Points.

2018–19 roster

Updated October 2, 2018.[27]

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Awards and honours

Captains

Season Captain Assistant captains
2009–10
Nathalie Dery, Caroline Ouellette, Kelly Sudia
Nathalie Dery, Caroline Ouellette, Kelly Sudia
Caroline Ouellette, Ann-Sophie Bettez, Noémie Marin
Caroline Ouellette, Cathy Chartrand, Ann-Sophie Bettez

Scoring leaders

Season-by-season

Season Leader (F)GPGAPtsLeader (D)GPGAPtsPPGSHGGWG
2010–11[28] Caroline Ouellette29 24 47 712913 19 32Noemie Marin (6) Three tied with 2 Noemie Marin (7)
2011–12[29] Meghan Agosta27 41 39 80Catherine Ward 27 2 29 31 Four tied with 5 Agosta (2) Agosta (5)
2012–13[30] Meghan Agosta23 16 30 46235 15 20Emmanuelle Blais (4) Three tied with 1 Five tied with 3
2013–14[31] Ann-Sophie Bettez23 16 24 4023 9 21 30 Vinny Davidson (8) Two tied with 2 Bettez (7)
2014–15 Caroline Ouellette22 818 26Cathy Chartrand 225 12 17 Noemie Marin (7) Ouellette (2)
2015–16 Marie-Philip Poulin 22 23 23 46 22 2 17 19 Ann-Sophie Bettez (7) Caroline Ouellette (2) Ouellette (7)
2016–17 Marie-Philip Poulin 23 15 22 3724 3 1518Caroline Ouellette tied with Jess Jones (5)Ann-Sophie Bettez (3)Marie-Philip Poulin (6)

See also

Other sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Final Public Communication . CWHL . 2 July 2019.
  2. Web site: Kamila Hinkson. Breton a Busy Bee After the Stingers' Life. Concordian Magazine . March 10, 2009 . 2010-01-21.
  3. Web site: Canadian Women's Hockey League. 2007–08 CWHL Review. HockeyMedia.ca. 2009. 2010-01-21. https://web.archive.org/web/20111007191443/http://www.hockeymedia.ca/Womens_2009_pdf.pdf. 2011-10-07. dead.
  4. Web site: Andrew Podnieks. Montreal Wins First Clarkson Cup. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20140227042409/http://www.iihf.com/home-of-hockey/news/news-singleview/article/montreal-wins-first-clarkson-cup.html?tx_ttnews%5BpS%5D=1235862000&tx_ttnews%5BpL%5D=2674799&tx_ttnews%5Barc%5D=1&tx_ttnews%5BbackPid%5D=187&cHash=93f761d353. 27 February 2014. IIHF News. 2009 . 2010-01-21.
  5. Web site: Donna Spencer . Clarkson will be on hand to award her cup . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100206150911/http://www.ctvolympics.ca/hockey/news/newsid%3D7324.html . 6 February 2010 . CTV Globemedia . 2009 . 2010-01-21 .
  6. Web site: Caroline Ouellette Named 2008–09 CWHL Most Valuable Player . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100423070507/http://www.cwhl.ca/news_18_jun.html . 23 April 2010 . CWHL . June 18, 2009 . 2010-01-21.
  7. Web site: CWHL . CWHL Player stats 2009–10 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100911134730/http://www.cwhl.ca/player_stats.asp. 11 September 2010 . 2010. 2010-01-21.
  8. Web site: Emmanuelle Blais becomes third Montreal Star to reach century mark this season. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20140506014954/http://www.cwhl.ca/view/cwhl/news-644/news_144156. 6 May 2014. 17 Mar 2014. Mark. Staffieri. CWHL.
  9. Web site: Memorable milestone for CWHL co-founder and Montreal Stars veteran Lisa-Marie Breton-Lebreux. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20140506023206/http://www.cwhl.ca/view/cwhl/news-644/news_120944. 6 May 2014. 30 January 2014. Mark. Staffieri. CWHL.
  10. Web site: Vinny Davidson becomes second Montreal Star to reach century mark in 2013-14 season. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20140506010733/http://www.cwhl.ca/view/cwhl/news-644/news_130227. 6 May 2014. 13 February 2014. Mark . Staffieri. CWHL.
  11. News: Canadiens partner with CWHL's Montreal Stars to grow women's game. 12 January 2016. The Globe and Mail. 19 March 2015.
  12. Web site: The Montreal Canadiens enter a partnership with the Montreal Stars. Montreal Canadiens. 19 March 2015. 12 January 2016.
  13. Web site: Montreal Stars reborn as Les Canadiennes de Montréal. NWHL. 24 September 2015. 2016-08-23.
  14. News: Montreal women's team gets new logo, name: Les Canadiennes. 24 September 2015. 12 January 2016. Sportsnet.ca. The Canadian Press.
  15. Web site: MARIN HITS MILESTONE AS LES CANADIENNES SPLIT WEEKEND SET VS. BRAMPTON THUNDER. CWHL – Canadiennes de Montréal. 2015-12-13. 2017-01-25. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20170202003004/http://pointstreaksites.com/view/lescanadiennes-en/news-786/news_369168. 2017-02-02.
  16. Web site: Un match historique et une victoire pour les Canadiennes au Centre Bell. ICI.Radio-Canada.ca. Zone Sports -. CBC/Radio-Canada. fr-ca. 2017-06-05.
  17. News: Caroline Ouellette on verge of CWHL history. CBC Sports. 2017-06-05.
  18. News: LES CANADIENNES TO PLAY AT PLACE BELL STARTING THIS FALL - Les Canadiennes de Montréal. 2018-09-20. Les Canadiennes de Montréal. 2018-09-20.
  19. News: Ice Problems and Injury Plague Women's Debut at the Winter Classic. The New York Times. Seth. Berkman. 31 December 2015. 13 January 2016.
  20. Web site: TSN . Clarkson Cup's namesake ready to honour winning women's team . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110604054240/http://www.tsn.ca/canadian_hockey/story/?id=271859. 4 June 2011. 19 March 2009. 2010-01-21.
  21. Web site: 3 Stars selected go to the 2010 Olympic Games in Vancouver . Montreal Stars . 2010. 2010-01-21.
  22. Web site: Hockey Canada . 2010 Women's Olympic Hockey team Roster . dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110608191350/http://www.hockeycanada.ca/index.php/ci_id/69249/la_id/1.htm. 8 June 2011. 2010. 2010-01-21.
  23. Web site: Hilary Knight to join Les Canadiennes . National Hockey League . Les Canadiennes Press Release . 8 March 2018 . 3 August 2018.
  24. Web site: Montreal players and fans give from the heart. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110822113055/http://montrealstars.ca/community-communaut%C3%A9/87/montreal-players-and-fans-give-from-the-heart/. 22 August 2011. Helene. 6 March 2011. Montreal Stars.
  25. Web site: Photo Gallery. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110827124317/http://montrealstars.ca/category/photo-gallery/. 27 August 2011. Montreal Stars.
  26. News: CAMPS . Les Canadiennes de Montréal. 2017-06-05.
  27. Web site: Les Canadiennes Roster . Les Canadiennes . October 2, 2018.
  28. Web site: Active Players. Cwhlboston.hocket.stats.pointstreak.com. 9 August 2018.
  29. Web site: Active Players. Cwhlboston.hocket.stats.pointstreak.com. 9 August 2018.
  30. Web site: Active Players. Cwhlboston.hocket.stats.pointstreak.com. 9 August 2018.
  31. Web site: Active Players. Cwhlboston.hocket.stats.pointstreak.com. 9 August 2018.