Nikkō Ice Bucks Explained

Team:Nikkō Ice Bucks
Bg Color:background:#FFFFFF; border-top:#EE7500 5px solid; border-bottom:#000000 5px solid;
Text Color:
  1. 000000
Logosize:230px
City:Nikkō, Tochigi
League:Asia League Ice Hockey
Arena:Nikkō Kirifuri Ice Arena (capacity 2,000)
Owner:Kobayashi Sumio
Coach:Ari-Pekka Siekkinen
Captain:Setaka Tetsuo
Affiliates:Tampereen Ilves[1]

The is an Asia League Ice Hockey team based in Nikkō, Tochigi, Japan.

Logo design: The word IceBucks in italicized English in black with white trim, with the words "NIKKO KOBE" in bold italics in orange trimmed with white

Mascot: An orange and white furred male deer wearing a hockey helmet.

History

The Nikkō area has a long history of ice hockey, with the Furukawa Electric semi-professional team (one of the oldest in Japan) having been established in 1925, and becoming a founding member of the Japanese Ice Hockey League in 1966. In 1999, however, the team was forced to disband due to financial difficulties.

A outflow of support from the city and local financing allowed the team to be recreated as a club team, supported locally. It was renamed the HC Nikkō IceBucks and joined the league in time for the next season's start. The team, despite fervent local support, was never one of the successes of the JIHL even when they were supported as Furukawa Electric, and had a rocky start as the HC Nikkō IceBucks, having to relaunch their business model in 2001. The team has consistently placed near or at the bottom of the league.

When the league expanded into the Asia League Ice Hockey, Nikkō was one of the teams that was part of the new league. In the summer of 2005, the team arranged to play a number of its home games in Kobe, Hyogo, and changed its name to the Nikkō Kobe IceBucks to reflect its new two-city home. In 2007–2008 season Kobe is no longer home and the name was reverted to the older HC Nikkō Ice Bucks.

On January 29, 2020, It was announce that five players would represent Japan in the 3rd round of qualifiers for the 2022 Beijing Olympics.[2]

Honours

2015, 2019, 2023

Year-by-year record

JIHL 1999–2004

Season GP W W(OT) W(PS)T L(PS) L(OT) L GF GA PTS Finish Playoffs
1999-0030 3 5 22 45 106 11 6th/6 Out of playoffs
2000–0140 10 1 29 91 164 21 6th/6 Out of playoffs
2001–0240 6 2 2 2 2 26 103 163 23.0 6th/6 Out of playoffs
2002–0332 7 0 4 1 2 18 68 114 23.0 5th/5 Out of playoffs
2002–0324 1 0 1 0 1 21 33 112 4.5 4th/4 ?
2003–0412 0 0 0 0 0 12 19 56 0.0 4th/4 ?

ALIH 2003–present

complete records for previous seasons[3]

Season GP W W(OT) W(GWS)*T L(GWS)* L(OT) L GF GA PTS Finish Playoffs
2003–0416 2 0 2 0 12 38 67 6 5th/5 No playoffs due to shortened season
2004–0542 13 1 2 2 24 110 125 45 6th/8
2005–0638 16 2 2 1 17 103 118 55 6th/9 Lost in quarter-final
2006–0734 12 0 1 0 21 90 158 37 6th/8 Lost in semi-final
2007–0830 8 2 2 0 18 60 109 30 6th/7 Lost in quarter-final
2008–0936 4 2 1 1 1 27 74 161 20 7th/7
2009–1036 12 2 1 2 2 17 103 118 46 6th/7
2010–1136 10 3 1 0 2 20 95 112 40 6th/7
2011–1236 18 0 4 0 1 13 158 103 63 3rd/7
2012–1342 15 3 3 2 0 19 123 141 59 5th/7
Totals346 110 15 10 9 5 9 188 954 1212

Current roster

Roster for the 2023–24 season.[4]

Forwards

Past import players

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ilves ja Nikko Icebucks yhteistyöhön.
  2. Web site: 2022 北京冬季オリンピック3次予選 チームから5選手が選出.
  3. Web site: Archive Record . Alhockey.com . 12 January 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20081006164343/http://www.alhockey.com/schedule_record/archive_record/index.html . October 6, 2008 .
  4. Web site: TEAM. icebucks.jp/. HC Tochigi Nikko Ice Bucks. 6 October 2023. ja.