Kamloops Blazers Explained

Team:Kamloops Blazers
Colour:background:#FFFFFF; border-top:#08007B 5px solid; border-bottom:#FF6200 5px solid;
Colour Text:
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City:Kamloops, British Columbia
League:Western Hockey League
Conference:Western
Division:B.C.
Founded:1966
Arena:Sandman Centre
Colours:Blue, white, orange
Championships:Memorial Cup
3 (1992, 1994, 1995)
Ed Chynoweth Cup
6 (1984, 1986, 1990, 1992, 1994, 1995)
Division Titles
9 (1984, 1985, 1986, 1988, 1990, 1992, 1994, 1995, 1999)
Reg Season Titles:7 (1983–84, 1986–87, 1989–90, 1990–91, 1991–92, 1993–94, 1994–95)
Owner:Tom Gaglardi (majority)[1]
Shane Doan
Jarome Iginla
Mark Recchi
Darryl Sydor
Gm:Shaun Clouston[2]
Coach:Shaun Clouston[3]
Name1:Estevan Bruins
Dates1:1966–1971
Name2:New Westminster Bruins
Dates2:1971–1981
Name3:Kamloops Junior Oilers
Dates3:1981–1984
Name4:Kamloops Blazers
Dates4:1984–present

The Kamloops Blazers are a Canadian major junior ice hockey team based in Kamloops, British Columbia. The team plays in the B.C. Division of the Western Hockey League's Western Conference and plays its home games at the Sandman Centre. The Blazers originated as the Estevan Bruins in 1966, became the New Westminster Bruins in 1971, and relocated to Kamloops in 1981 as the Kamloops Junior Oilers. After moving to Kamloops, the Blazers became the WHL's most successful club, winning a record six President's Cups, a record seven Scotty Munro Memorial Trophies, and three Memorial Cup titles, all between 1983 and 1995.

History

The Blazers franchise originated as one of the league's founding clubs, the Estevan Bruins, when the league launched in 1966.[4] After winning a league title in 1968, owner and manager Scotty Munro sold his stake in the club in 1969 and moved on to the Calgary Centennials; two years later, the team moved to New Westminster, British Columbia, as part of the Western Canada Hockey League's effort to span the four Western Canadian provinces. The New Westminster Bruins established a WCHL dynasty in the 1970s, winning four consecutive league titles between 1975 and 1978 and the 1977 and 1978 Memorial Cups.[5] Despite the team's success, it was relocated again in 1981, moving to Kamloops, where the team—supported directly by the National Hockey League's Edmonton Oilers—was initially known as the Junior Oilers.[6] In 1984, the team came under community ownership and was renamed the Blazers.[7]

In Kamloops, the Blazers quickly established a dynasty of their own. The team made three straight finals appearances from 1984 to 1986, winning in their first and third appearances; after a finals loss in 1988, the team would win four more President's Cups between 1990 and 1995. Led at various times by future NHL stars Scott Niedermayer, Darryl Sydor, Jarome Iginla, Shane Doan, Darcy Tucker, Corey Hirsch, and others, and managed by future NHL coaches including Ken Hitchcock and Tom Renney, the Blazers went on to win three Memorial Cup titles in a four-year span, the only team to achieve such a feat.[8] [9] The Blazers hosted the third Memorial Cup tournament in that run in 1995.[10]

When the team arrived in Kamloops, they played at the Kamloops Memorial Arena before moving to the new Riverside Coliseum in 1992.[11]

After their run of success, the Blazers would go twelve seasons without winning a playoff round; the team missed the playoffs for the first time in 2006, and missed four more times between 2011 and 2018. The team hosted the Memorial Cup for a second time in 2023.[12] At the tournament, they were eliminated in overtime of a tie-breaker game against the Peterborough Petes.[13]

Season-by-season record

Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, OTL = Overtime losses, SOL = Shootout losses, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against

Season GP W L T OTL GF GA Points Finish Playoffs
72 18 53 1 320 464 37 4th West Lost West Division semifinal
72 46 26 0 461 356 92 3rd West Lost West Division semifinal
72 50 22 0 467 332 100 1st West Won Championship
72 52 17 2 423 293 106 1st West Lost final
72 49 19 4 449 299 102 1st West Won Championship
72 55 14 3 496 292 113 1st West Lost West Division final
72 45 26 1 399 307 91 1st West Lost final
72 34 33 5 326 309 73 3rd West Lost West Division final
72 56 16 0 484 278 112 1st West Won Championship
72 50 20 2 385 247 102 1st West Lost West Division final
72 51 17 4 351 226 106 1st West Won Championship and Memorial Cup
72 42 28 2 302 253 86 3rd West Lost West Division final
72 50 16 6 381 225 106 1st West Won Championship and Memorial Cup
72 52 14 6 375 202 110 1st West Won Championship and Memorial Cup
72 48 22 2 343 257 98 2nd West Lost West Division final
72 28 37 7 256 285 63 5th West Lost West Division quarterfinal
72 37 32 3 234 253 77 4th West Lost West Division quarterfinal
72 48 11 13 298 195 109 1st West Lost final
72 36 30 5 1 244 228 78 4th West Lost West Division quarterfinal
72 35 28 7 2 289 274 79 3rd West Lost West Division quarterfinal
72 38 25 5 4 263 230 85 1st B.C. Lost Western Conference quarterfinal
72 39 27 5 1 261 222 84 2nd B.C. Lost Western Conference quarterfinal
72 34 28 8 2 192 182 78 3rd B.C. Lost Western Conference quarterfinal
72 26 37 7 2 161 211 61 4th B.C. Lost Western Conference quarterfinal
Season GP W L OTL SOL GF GA Points Finish Playoffs
72 34 33 2 3 179 196 73 5th B.C. Did not qualify
72 40 26 4 2 245 222 86 2nd B.C. Lost Western Conference quarterfinal
72 27 41 2 2 197 253 58 4th B.C. Lost Western Conference quarterfinal
72 33 33 2 4 242 277 72 3rd B.C. Lost Western Conference quarterfinal
72 32 33 2 5 237 284 71 3rd B.C. Lost Western Conference quarterfinal
72 29373321928564 5th B.C. Did not qualify
72 47 20 2 3 290 211 99 1st B.C. Lost Western Conference semifinal
72 47 20 2 3 261 180 99 2nd B.C. Lost Western Conference final
72 14 53 2 3 175 305 33 5th B.C. Did not qualify
72 28 37 4 3 214 258 63 4th B.C. Did not qualify
72 38 25 5 4 237 218 85 3rd B.C. Lost Western Conference quarterfinal
72 42 24 2 4 243 198 90 3rd B.C. Lost Western Conference quarterfinal
72 30 37 1 4 212 237 65 4th B.C. Did not qualify
68 28 32 6 2 196 212 64 3rd B.C. Lost Western Conference quarterfinal
63 41 18 3 1 271 166 86 1st B.C. Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic
22 18 4 0 0 87 51 36 1st B.C. No playoffs held due to COVID-19 pandemic
68 48 17 3 0 287 176 99 1st B.C. Lost Western Conference final
68 48 13 4 3 313 198 103 1st B.C. Lost Western Conference final
68 20 42 3 3 180 295 46 5th B.C. Did not qualify

Championship history

WHL Championships series

Win, 4–3 vs. Regina Pats

Loss, 0–4 vs. Prince Albert Raiders

Win, 4–1 vs. Medicine Hat Tigers

Loss, 2–4 vs. Medicine Hat

Win, 4–1 vs. Lethbridge Hurricanes

Win, 4–3 vs. Saskatoon Blades

Win, 4–3 vs. Saskatoon Blades

Win, 4–2 vs. Brandon Wheat Kings

Loss, 1–4 vs. Calgary Hitmen

Memorial Cup finals

Win, 5–4 vs. Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds

Win, 5–3 vs. Laval Titan

Win, 8–2 vs. Detroit Junior Red Wings

Coaches

Notable head coaches in the history of the Kamloops Blazers include Ken Hitchcock, Tom Renney, Don Hay, Marc Habscheid, and Dean Evason.

NHL alumni

Totals include those who played for the franchise as the Kamloops Junior Oilers

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ownership. Blazerhockey.com.
  2. Web site: Clouston Promoted to GM / Head Coach, O'Donovan Named Assistant GM . OurSports Central . 20 July 2019.
  3. Web site: Kamloops Blazers Name Shaun Clouston Head Coach, Darryl Sydor Associate Coach . OurSports Central . 18 June 2019.
  4. Web site: WHL History . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20230731211503/https://whl.ca/history . 2023-07-31 . 2023-07-31 . Western Hockey League.
  5. News: 2016-02-12 . McLean tells tales of New West's brawling Bruins . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20230731211503/https://www.newwestrecord.ca/local-sports/mclean-tells-tales-of-new-wests-brawling-bruins-3026241 . 2023-07-31 . 2023-07-31 . New Westminster Record.
  6. Book: Lapp, Richard M. . Local Heroes: A History of the Western Hockey League . White . Silas . Harbour Publishing . 1993 . 1-55017-080-5 . . 74–77 . en-CA . registration.
  7. News: Kovac . Rob . Seitz . Earl . 2020-02-22 . The Blazers 10 year dynasty . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20240517214003/https://cfjctoday.com/2020/02/22/the-blazers-10-year-dynasty/ . 2024-05-17 . 2024-05-17 . CFJC.
  8. Book: Lapp, Richard . The Memorial Cup: Canada's National Junior Hockey Championship . Macaulay . Alec . Harbour Publishing . 1997 . 1-55017-170-4 . Madeira Park, B.C. . 279–280 . en-CA . registration.
  9. News: Sadler . Emily . 2016-02-05 . Top Kamloops Blazers grads who made the NHL . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20240517215637/https://www.sportsnet.ca/hockey/nhl/top-kamloops-blazers-grads-who-made-it-to-the-nhl/ . 2024-05-17 . 2024-05-17 . Sportsnet.
  10. Book: Lapp & Macaulay . The Memorial Cup . 264.
  11. Web site: Jordan . Kevin . 2021-11-05 . Kamloops Blazers . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20230607064827/https://www.whlarenaguide.com/blazers.htm . 2023-06-07 . 2024-05-17 . WHL Arena Guide.
  12. News: Ewen . Steve . 2022-05-30 . Kamloops to host 2023 Memorial Cup as Blazers zero in on this year’s WHL final . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20220530235143/https://theprovince.com/sports/hockey/junior-hockey/kamloops-to-host-2023-memorial-cup-as-blazers-zero-in-on-2022-whl-final . 2022-05-30 . 2024-05-17 . The Province.
  13. News: Schram . Carol . 2023-06-02 . Memorial Cup: Petes pull off crazy comeback to eliminate Blazers in OT . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20230602155739/https://thehockeynews.com/news/memorial-cup-petes-pull-off-crazy-comeback-to-eliminate-blazers-in-ot . 2023-06-02 . 2024-05-17 . . Sports Illustrated.