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Junior Ice Hockey League in Northest United States and Ontario From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The National College Prospects Hockey League was a junior ice hockey league based in Northeast United States and Ontario. During its first season, the NCPHL was sanctioned as a Tier III league by the United Hockey Union, the junior hockey branch of the Amateur Athletic Union.
Director of Operations | Bob Black |
---|---|
Deputy Commissioner | Peter Preteroti |
Founded | 2016 |
Folded | 2017 |
Recent Champions | Rochester Rebels (2017) |
Headquarters | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania |
Website | NCPHL |
The NCPHL was announced in the spring of 2016. Originally announced as an eight-team league, as many as twelve different teams were announced for the 2016–17 season with several team changes before making it to opening night. Some teams also announced an affiliation with teams from the Western States Hockey League.[1][2] By the start of the inaugural season, the league had six active teams.
One of the original eight teams, the Lake Erie Warriors, garnered media attention when the logo was largely criticized for its depiction of a Native American warrior and was called racially insensitive. The team quickly rebranded as the Lake Erie Gulls[3] for one day and then again to the Lake Erie Eagles on July 30, 2016.[4]
The Toronto Stealth defeated the Lake Erie Eagles 7–5 in the first league game on October 6, 2016. On February 18, 2017, the NCPHL hosted its first All-star competition and game. In the end, Team White won by a score of 7–4 with the MVP, Curtis Anderson of the Toronto Stealth, recording 3 goals and 2 assists. Despite dominating the regular season with a record of 28–2–0, the Stealth chose not to participate in the NCPHL's playoffs, called the "Frosty Four," in Erie, Pennsylvania. Four teams participated in the playoffs with the Mississauga Bruins also sitting out after not playing a league game since January. With the Rochester Rebels the only remaining team with a winning record (20–15–5), they earned an automatic berth to the championship game. The bottom two teams then played a two-game aggregate qualifier series with the winner facing the Lake Erie Eagles in a semifinal game.[5]
After its first season, the NCPHL was removed as a junior program by the United Hockey Union and then listed itself as a junior-aged academic league. In the 2017 offseason, the league announced several new teams including an NCP Canada division led by the Almonte Jr. Sharpshooters organization. However, after many of the teams folded after failing to sign enough players, the league website and all social media was shut down in September 2017.[6] Four of the NCPHL teams joined the Canadian Premier Junior Hockey League: the Almonte Jr. Sharpshooters, EOHA Wolves, Lake Erie Eagles, and the Maniwaki Mustangs.[7]
Division | Team | City | Arena | Joined |
---|---|---|---|---|
Canada | ||||
Almonte Jr. Sharpshooters | Almonte, Ontario | Almonte & District Community Centre | 2017 | |
Chelsea Hurricanes | Chelsea, Quebec | Meredith Centre | 2017 | |
Eastern Ontario Hockey Academy (EOHA) Wolves[8] | Ottawa, Ontario | 2017 | ||
Maniwaki Mustangs | Maniwaki, Quebec | Gino Odjick Center | 2017 | |
Toronto Stealth | Burlington, Ontario | Wave Twin Rinks | 2016 | |
USA | ||||
Lake Erie Eagles | Erie, Pennsylvania | Erie Insurance Arena | 2016 |
Season | Season Champions | Playoff Champions |
---|---|---|
2016–17 | Toronto Stealth | Rochester Rebels[lower-alpha 1] |
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