Portland Winterhawks Explained

Team:Portland Winterhawks
Color:background:#FFFFFF; border-top:#C60C30 5px solid; border-bottom:#7A99AC 5px solid;
Color Text:
  1. 000000
Logosize:210px
City:Portland, Oregon
League:Western Hockey League
Conference:Western
Division:U.S.
Founded:1950
Arena:Veterans Memorial Coliseum
Colors:Biscuit black, buzzer red, squall gray, celly gold, ice white
Championships:Ed Chynoweth Cup
3 (1982, 1998, 2013)
Memorial Cup
2 (1983, 1998)
Conference Championships
5 (2010–11, 2011–12, 2012–13, 2013–14, 2023–24)
Reg Season Titles:4 (1979–80, 1997–98, 2012–13, 2019–20)
Gm:Mike Johnston
Coach:Kyle Gustafson [1]
Name1:Edmonton Oil Kings
Dates1:1950–1976
Name2:Portland Winter Hawks
Dates2:19762009
Name3:Portland Winterhawks
Dates3:2009–present

The Portland Winterhawks are a junior ice hockey team based in Portland, Oregon. Founded in 1950 as the Edmonton Oil Kings, the team relocated to Portland in 1976 and was known as the Winter Hawks until 2009. The team plays in the U.S. Division of the Western Hockey League (WHL), one of three constituent leagues of the Canadian Hockey League (CHL). The Winterhawks have made a record thirteen appearances in the WHL championship series—including a record-tying four straight from 2011 to 2014—winning the Ed Chynoweth Cup three times and capturing two Memorial Cup titles. They were the first American-based team to participate in and win either championship. The team plays its home games at Veterans Memorial Coliseum.

History

The franchise was founded in 1950 as the Edmonton Oil Kings. Under Bill Hunter's leadership, the Oil Kings were a founding franchise of the Western Canada Junior Hockey League in 1966.[2] Despite winning two league titles in the early 1970s, the arrival of Hunter's Edmonton Oilers in the World Hockey Association precipitated the relocation of the franchise.[3] In the spring of 1976, it was announced that the franchise, owned by Brian Shaw, would move to Portland, making it the league's first American team and leading the league to simplify its name to the Western Hockey League.[4] The success of the team would lead to the establishment of several more teams in the Northwest United States over the ensuing decades.

In their first season in Portland, the club would lose 7–2 to a travelling Russian club in an exhibition match watched by more than 5,000 fans.[5] Overall, the team carried over its success from its early days in Edmonton—in their first eleven seasons in Portland, the Winterhawks failed to make the playoffs only once, and advanced to the league final five times, winning their first Ed Chynoweth Cup in 1982 and the Memorial Cup in 1983.[6] In 1982, the Winterhawks became the first American team to win the WHL championship and also the first to compete for the Memorial Cup.[7] In 1983, despite losing the WHL championship series, the Winterhawks participated in the Memorial Cup by virtue of hosting the tournament—the first American team to do so.[8] Brian Shaw had advocated for the participation of a fourth team as tournament host, and after the Winterhawks—led by star rookie Cam Neely and goaltender Mike Vernon—won the tournament, the CHL opted to continue with the new format going forward.

The Winterhawks hosted the tournament again in 1986, awarded the tournament when it became clear that the original host of New Westminster would be unable to host due to also hosting the 1986 World Expo. In 1998, the Winterhawks, led by Brenden Morrow and Marián Hossa, earned their way back to the Memorial Cup—hosted by the rival Spokane Chiefs—with an Ed Chynoweth Cup championship; they won their second Memorial Cup title with a 4–3 overtime win in the final over the Guelph Storm.

The Winterhawks advanced to four consecutive WHL championship series from 2011 to 2014, just the second team to do so after the New Westminster Bruins won four consecutive titles from 1975 to 1978. From 2012 to 2014, the Winterhawks met the revived Edmonton Oil Kings in each league final.[9] The Winterhawks won one of the finals, in 2013, to advance to the team's fifth Memorial Cup tournament, where it lost the final to the Halifax Mooseheads.[10]

On November 28, 2012, the WHL announced sanctions against the Winterhawks for a series of player benefits violations over the four previous seasons. As punishment for the violations, WHL Commissioner Ron Robison suspended the team from participation in the first five rounds of the 2013 WHL Bantam Draft, and the team forfeited their first round picks from the 2014 to 2017 drafts and was fined $200,000. The WHL also suspended General Manager and Head Coach Mike Johnston for the remainder of the 2012–13 season, including the 2013 WHL playoffs.[11]

In the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic in May 2020, the franchise filed for Chapter 15 bankruptcy. Although the Winterhawks were financially stable, owner Bill Gallacher used the team as security against an unpaid loan; Gallacher ultimately had to sell the franchise in order to repay debts.[12] The WHL Board of Governors approved Winterhawks Sports Group (WSG) as the new owners of the franchise, effective January 1, 2021. Along with the Winterhawks franchise, WSG also acquired the operations of the Winterhawks Skating Center in Beaverton, Oregon, and the Winterhawks Junior Hockey programs.[13] Prior to the start of the 2021–22 WHL season, the team announced that it would be returning to the Veterans Memorial Coliseum full-time after previously dividing games between the Coliseum and the Moda Center since 1995.[14]

The 2023–24 season saw the Winterhawks advance to their first championship final in ten seasons, where they were defeated by the Moose Jaw Warriors in four consecutive games.[15]

Uniforms, logos, and mascot

The team was known as the Winter Hawks until May 2009, when it issued a press release stating that, "the space...has announced its retirement", and that the team was renaming itself the Winterhawks.[16] [17]

Upon moving to Portland in 1976, the Winter Hawks accepted a donation of old jerseys from the National Hockey League's Chicago Black Hawks, and they kept the design for nearly half of a century.[18] Amid pressure for sports teams to abandon Native American caricatures, new ownership opted to rebrand the Winterhawks in 2021. The team unveiled its new look on July 14, 2021, featuring new colors and a new hawk logo.[19]

The Winterhawks' also retired their Tom-A-Hawk bird mascot in 2019.[20]

Championships

Memorial Cup finals history

The Winterhawks have advanced to three Memorial Cup finals.

Win, 8–3 vs Oshawa Generals

Win, 4–3 (OT) vs Guelph Storm

Loss, 4–6 vs Halifax Mooseheads

WHL Championship history

Loss, 2–4 vs Brandon Wheat Kings

Win, 4–1 vs Regina Pats

Loss, 1–4 vs Lethbridge Broncos

Loss, 3–4 vs Medicine Hat Tigers

Loss, 0–4 vs Swift Current Broncos

Loss, 3–4 vs Swift Current Broncos

Win, 4–0 vs Brandon Wheat Kings

Loss, 1–4 vs Red Deer Rebels

Loss, 1–4 vs Kootenay Ice

Loss, 3–4 vs Edmonton Oil Kings

Win, 4–2 vs Edmonton Oil Kings

Loss, 3–4 vs Edmonton Oil Kings

Loss, 0–4 vs Moose Jaw Warriors

Season-by-season record

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

Season GP W L T OTL GF GA Points Finish Playoffs
72 36 29 7 - 359 294 79 3rd West Lost semifinal
72 41 20 11 - 361 296 93 1st West Eliminated in West Division round robin
72 49 10 13 - 432 265 111 1st West Lost final
72 53 18 1 - 398 293 107 1st West Eliminated in West Division round robin
72 56 15 1 - 443 266 113 2nd West Lost West Division final
72 46 24 2 - 380 323 94 1st West Won Championship
72 50 22 0 - 495 387 100 1st West Lost final; Won Memorial Cup
72 33 39 0 - 430 449 66 3rd West Lost West Division final
72 27 44 1 - 365 442 55 4th West Lost West Division semifinal
72 47 24 1 - 438 348 95 2nd West Lost West Division final
72 47 23 2 - 439 355 96 2nd West Lost final
72 24 45 3 - 328 449 51 6th West Did not qualify
72 40 28 4 - 408 395 84 1st West Lost final
72 24 45 3 - 322 426 51 5th West Did not qualify
72 17 53 2 - 298 450 36 5th West Did not qualify
72 31 37 4 - 314 342 66 5th West Lost West Division quarterfinal
72 45 24 3 - 343 275 93 1st West Lost final
72 49 22 1 - 392 260 99 2nd West Lost West Division final
72 23 43 6 - 240 308 52 6th West Lost West Division semifinal
72 30 39 3 - 283 301 63 6th West Lost West Division quarterfinal
72 46 21 5 - 300 196 97 1st West Lost West Division quarterfinal
72 53 14 5 - 342 203 111 1st West Won Championship and Memorial Cup
72 23 36 13 - 215 278 59 5th West Lost West Division quarterfinal
72 16 49 7 0 173 296 39 7th West Did not qualify
72 37 27 5 3 254 237 82 2nd West Lost final
72 36 25 5 6 269 243 83 1st U.S. Lost Western Conference quarterfinal
72 19 40 8 5 192 243 51 3rd U.S. Lost Western Conference quarterfinal
72 34 29 6 3 199 206 77 2nd U.S. Lost Western Conference quarterfinal
72 35 27 5 5 204 198 80 2nd U.S. Lost Western Conference quarterfinal
72 32 32 3 5 204 258 72 3rd U.S. Lost Western Conference semifinal
72 17 52 1 2 146 316 37 5th U.S. Did not qualify
72 11 58 2 1 132 318 25 5th U.S. Did not qualify
72 19 48 3 2 176 288 43 5th U.S. Did not qualify
Season GP W L T OTL GF GA Points Finish Playoffs
72 44 25 2 1 266 241 91 4th U.S. Lost Western Conference semifinal
72 50 19 0 3 303 227 103 1st U.S. Lost final
72 49 19 3 1 328 229 102 2nd U.S. Lost final
72 57 12 1 2 334 169 117 1st U.S. Won Championship; Lost Memorial Cup final
72 54 13 2 3 338 207 113 1st U.S. Lost final
72 43 23 2 4 287 237 92 2nd U.S. Lost Western Conference final
72 34 31 6 1 228 227 75 3rd U.S.Lost Western Conference quarterfinal
72 40 28 1 3 278 256 84 4th U.S.Lost Western Conference semifinal
72 44 22 1 5 274 214 94 2nd U.S.Lost Western Conference semifinal
68 40 22 3 3 258 210 86 3rd U.S. Lost Western Conference quarterfinal
63 45 11 3 4 270 164 97 1st U.S. Playoffs cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic
24 13 8 3 0 96 72 29 2nd U.S. No playoffs held due to COVID-19 pandemic
68 47 16 3 2 298 192 99 2nd U.S. Lost Western Conference semifinal
68 40 20 5 3 244 218 88 2nd U.S. Lost Western Conference semifinal
68 48 15 4 1 330 204 101 1st U.S. Lost final

Players

Hall of Famers

Four former Portland Winter Hawks alumni are inductees to the Hockey Hall of Fame: Mark Messier, Cam Neely, Marian Hossa, and Mike Vernon.

This is a list of former players inducted into the Portland Winter Hawks franchise Hall of Fame.

Retired numbers

Portland Winter Hawks retired numbers
width=40px No.width=130px Playerwidth=40px Positionwidth=150px Careerwidth=150px No. retirement
21 1982–1984 data-sort-value="2023-03-18"March 18, 2023[22]

NHL alumni

List of Portland Winterhawks alumni who have graduated to play in the National Hockey League.

First round draft picks

Winterhawks players chosen in the first round of the NHL entry draft:

Team records

During the 2012–13 season, Winterhawks captain Troy Rutkowski established the new team record for most regular games played for the Winterhawks. His career total of 351 games surpassed the previous mark of 328 games set by Kevin Haupt in the 1998–99 season.[25]

Career records[26]
StatisticPlayerTotalCareer
Most goalsDennis Holland1791985–1989
Most assistsTodd Robinson3251994–1999
Most pointsTodd Robinson4701994–1999
Most points, defencemanBrandon Smith2321989–1994
Most games playedTroy Rutkowski3512008–2013
Most wins (goalie)Mac Carruth1172009–2013
Most shutouts (goalie)Mac Carruth112009–2013

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://chl.ca/whl-winterhawks/article/winterhawks-announce-pair-of-hockey-operations-changes/
  2. Web site: WHL History . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20230731211503/https://whl.ca/history . 2023-07-31 . 2023-07-31 . Western Hockey League.
  3. Book: Lapp, Richard M. . Local Heroes: A History of the Western Hockey League . White . Silas . Harbour Publishing . 1993 . 1-55017-080-5 . . 137–138 . en-CA . registration.
  4. Web site: Oil Kings to become Portland Winter Hawks. June 11, 1976. Edmonton Journal. Jones, Terry. Jim Mathieson. 1.
  5. Web site: Russians win easily. UPI. The World (Coos Bay). December 14, 1976.
  6. Web site: Vrooman . Todd . 2016-05-26 . Breaking New Ground: A History of the Winterhawks in the Memorial Cup . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20240507153700/https://chl.ca/whl-winterhawks/breaking-new-ground-a-history-of-the-winterhawks-in-the-memorial-cup/ . 2024-05-07 . 2024-05-07 . Portland Winterhawks.
  7. 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. . 204 . en-CA . registration.
  8. Book: Lapp & Macaulay . The Memorial Cup . 208.
  9. News: 2014-05-01 . Winterhawks meet Oil Kings for 3rd-straight year . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20140504131811/https://www.sportsnet.ca/hockey/juniors/winterhawks-meet-oil-kings-for-3rd-straight-year/ . 2014-05-04 . 2024-05-07 . . Canadian Press.
  10. News: 2013-05-26 . Halifax Mooseheads make history, win Memorial Cup . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20230731211507/https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-scotia/halifax-mooseheads-make-history-win-memorial-cup-1.1303578 . 2023-07-31 . 2023-07-31 . CBC News.
  11. Web site: 2012-11-28 . WHL Sanctions Portland Winterhawks . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130213035138/http://www.whl.ca/article/whl-sanctions-portland-winterhawks . 2013-02-13 . 2013-03-28 . Western Hockey League.
  12. Web site: Jaynes . Dwight . 2020-05-11 . New Ownership in the offing for Winterhawks—could it be 'Pickled?' . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20200525170317/https://www.nbcsports.com/northwest/portland-winterhawks/new-ownership-offing-winterhawks-could-it-be-pickled . 2020-05-25 . .
  13. Web site: New Year, New Ownership, New Excitement for Defending Regular Season Champion Portland Winterhawks . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20201221233132/https://winterhawks.com/article/new-year-new-ownership-new-excitement-for-defending-regular-season-champion-portland-winterhawks/ . 2020-12-21 . Portland Winterhawks.
  14. Web site: 2024-05-07 . Winterhawks Share 2021–22 Regular Season Schedule . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20210624201129/https://winterhawks.com/article/winterhawks-share-2021-22-regular-season-schedule . 2021-06-24 . 2024-05-07 . Portland Winterhawks .
  15. News: 2024-05-16 . Warriors sweep Winterhawks for first-ever WHL title, trip to Memorial Cup . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20240516161525/https://www.sportsnet.ca/juniors/article/warriors-sweep-winterhawks-for-first-ever-whl-title-trip-to-memorial-cup/ . 2024-05-16 . 2024-05-16 . Sportsnet . The Canadian Press.
  16. Web site: Winterhawks' space announces retirement. 2009-05-09. Portland Winterhawks. 2011-10-04.
  17. News: Wilson . Mike . 2009-05-08 . Hockey team changes nickname ... cleverly . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20210127124906/https://www.oregonlive.com/hawks/2009/05/hockey_team_changes_nickname_c.html . 2021-01-27 . 2009-05-09 . The Oregonian.
  18. News: Canzano . John . 2021-07-12 . Winterhawks dropping Native American logo for a fresh look -- and it can’t come fast enough . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20210712170043/https://www.oregonlive.com/sports/john_canzano/2021/07/canzano-winterhawks-dropping-native-american-logo-for-a-fresh-look-and-it-cant-come-fast-enough.html . 2021-07-12 . 2024-05-07 . Oregon Live.
  19. Web site: Cowley . Jared . 2021-07-14 . 'It's time to take a step forward': Portland Winterhawks replace Native American logo and mascot . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20210714224847/https://www.kgw.com/article/sports/hockey/winterhawks/portland-winterhawks-replace-native-american-logo-mascot-unveil-new-logo/283-a2266c1c-671e-4a6e-89bc-05892b0f6af6 . 2021-07-14 . KGW.
  20. Web site: 2019-01-17 . TOM Announces His Retirement . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20190120090627/https://winterhawks.com/article/tom-announces-his-retirement . 2019-01-20 . Portland Winterhawks.
  21. Web site: Winterhawks Hall of Fame . https://web.archive.org/web/20230906012252/https://chl.ca/whl-winterhawks/hall-of-fame/ . 2023-09-06 . Portland Winterhawks.
  22. Web site: 2023-03-19 . Cam Neely honored with Winterhawks jersey retirement . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20230320072856/https://winterhawks.com/article/cam-neely-honored-with-winterhawks-jersey-retirement . 2023-03-20 . Portland Winterhawks.
  23. Web site: Craig Cunningham Stats.
  24. Web site: Caleb Jones Stats, News, Bio.
  25. Web site: Danzer . Paul . 2013-01-24 . Junior Hockey Report: Rutkowski to set W-hawks record . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20140120222053/http://www.columbian.com/news/2013/jan/24/junior-hockey-report-rutkowski-to-set-winterhawks/ . 2014-01-20 . The Columbian.
  26. Web site: All-Time Franchise Leaders . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20230906085849/https://chl.ca/whl-winterhawks/all-time-franchise-leaders/ . 2023-09-06 . 2024-05-07 . Portland Winterhawks.