Straubing Tigers Explained

Team:Straubing Tigers
Colour:background:#FFFFFF; border-top:#00004C 5px solid; border-bottom:#6B88D3 5px solid;
Logosize:205px
Name2:Straubing Tigers
Founded:1941
City:Straubing
Arena:Eisstadion am Pulverturm
Capacity:5,635
League:Deutsche Eishockey Liga
Gm:Jason Dunham
Coach:Tom Pokel
Captain:Sandro Schönberger
Website:straubing-tigers.de
Color Text:Navy Blue Baby Blue White

The Straubing Tigers are a professional men's ice hockey team, based in Straubing, Germany, that competes in the Deutsche Eishockey Liga. Straubing plays its home games at the Eisstadion am Pulverturm, which has a capacity of 5,635 spectators.

Promoted to the DEL in 2006, and operating with one of the league's smallest budgets, the team could finish no better than twelfth before the 2011–12 DEL season, when it reached the semi-finals of the playoffs. Their greatest success so far is the qualification for the Champions Hockey League seasons 2020–21 (cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic), 2022-23 and 2024-25. In 2022-23, Straubing finished first in the CHL group stage and reached the round of 16 against Frölunda HC.

History

Bann Straubing (1941–1943)

In 1941, the then 14-year-old Max Pielmaier and his friends Max Pellkofer and Harry Poiger founded the first hockey team in Straubing.[1] The first official game took place on the first of February 1942 in Hof, which Straubing lost by a score of 0:1. In the following year there were several games against other Bavarian teams. The game against Landshut on 31 January 1943 was the last game during the Second World War, as the younger players had to join the military after that.

TSV 1861 Straubing (1946–1981)

After the end of the war the players of Bann Straubing decided to join the TSV 1861 Straubing. Their home games were played on a pond near the medieval Pulverturm (powder tower) in Straubing where the ice stadium Eisstadion am Pulverturm is located today.

The construction of the Eisstadion am Pulverturm began in 1967 and consisted of an open ice rink surrounded by stands. The first game in the new arena was played on the 13. November 1967 against Preussen Berlin. The TSV Straubing started their first Season in the Kunsteis-Bayernliga where they got to the second place. The TSV Straubing rose to the Regionalliga (3. league) in 1970 and the Oberliga (2. league) in 1971, but had to go back to the third league when the 2nd Bundesliga, which replaced the Oberliga, was founded with fewer teams than the Oberliga had. They got back to the 2nd Bundesliga in 1975 when they won the playoff finals against the EV Regensburg.

EHC Straubing (1981–2002)

The EHC Straubing was founded when the hockey team split from the TSV Straubing in 1981. The ice hockey stadium has belonged to the city of Straubing since the foundation of the EHC Straubing. Although the EHC reached the 7th place in the Season 1982/83 they had to start again in 4. league because of financial problems. The EHC Straubing adapted the nickname "Die Tiger" (the tigers) in 1994 and mainly played in the Oberliga (third league) until they rose back to the 2nd Bundesliga in the year 2000. The professional section split from the EHC Straubing when it had to register bankruptcy in April 2002 and the Straubing Tigers AG was founded. Since then the EHC trains the junior teams of the Straubing Tigers, and also includes a recreational team.

Straubing Tigers (since 2002)

After Straubing lost the finals of the 2nd Bundesliga against EV Duisburg in 2005, they won the championship in 2006 and were promoted to the DEL for the first time in history. Straubing is by far the smallest town which has a team in the DEL and also has one of the lowest budgets in the entire league. When the Straubing Tigers reached a playoff rank for the first time in 2012 they miraculously won the quarter-finals against the Grizzly Adams Wolfsburg with a sweep and got to the semi-finals where they lost to the later German champion Eisbären Berlin. With one of the lowest budgets in the entire league Straubing regularly manages to get to the playoffs since 2012 and even qualified for the Champions Hockey League when they finished in the top three in the 2019–20 season. Their first season in the CHL was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic but they qualified again for the season 2022-2023, where they won the group stage and played against Frölunda HC in the round of 16.

Season records

SeasonGames WonOTWSOWLostOTLSOLPointsGoals
for
Goals
against
Rank Playoffs
2006–0752124428315613518912No playoffs
2007–0856120434425013219714No playoffs
2008–0952173425126814416413No playoffs
2009–1056183227067014919313No playoffs
2010–1152155424316714515913No playoffs
2011–125220442013801611516Lost in semi-finals
2012–135221222322741331459Lost in first round
2013–1452172123366313615312No playoffs
2014–1552101432234510316813No playoffs
2015–165222122421751471599Lost in first round
2016–175218302443671471689Lost in first round
2017–1852170227246113717713No playoffs
2018–195221331951811591518Lost in wild card
2019–205226441431981751363Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[2]
2020–213715201613531031028Lost in quarterfinals
2021–225429101734961881584Lost in quarterfinals
2022–235625541723981901664Lost in quarterfinals
2023–245225521514941671303Lost in semifinals

Players

Current roster

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Historie . 2022-08-18 . EHC Straubing e.V. . de-DE . 18 August 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220818020319/https://www.ehc-straubing.com/historie/ . live .
  2. Web site: Deutsche Eishockey Liga beendet Saison vorzeitig. del.org. de. 10 March 2020. 13 March 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200313011239/https://www.del.org/news/deutsche-eishockey-liga-beendet-saison-vorzeitig/11283. live.