Johnstown Chiefs

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Johnstown Chiefs
City: Johnstown, Pennsylvania
League: ECHL
Conference: American Conference
Division: North Division
Founded: 1988
Home Arena: Cambria County War Memorial Arena
Colors: black and gold
Owner(s): Neil Smith and Ned Nakles
Head Coach: Ian Herbers
Media: The Tribune-Democrat

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Affiliates: Colorado Avalanche (NHL)
Boston Bruins(NHL)
Lake Erie Monsters (AHL)
Providence Bruins (AHL)

The Johnstown Chiefs are a minor league ice hockey team located in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, playing in the ECHL. The team was founded in 1988 in the All-American Hockey League, and moved to the East Coast Hockey League (now just 'ECHL') when that league was formed. The Chiefs are the only original ECHL team still playing under its original name, and the only one still in its original city.

The owners originally wanted to name the team the Jets in honor of a team that had played in Johnstown from 1950 to 1977, mostly in the Eastern Hockey League. However, the old Jets' former owners still held the trademark for the name and refused to allow the new team to use it. Fortunately, they had a second choice. The hockey cult movie Slap Shot had been filmed in Johnstown, and featured a minor league team called the Charlestown Chiefs. The owners readily jumped on the tie-in, and the Johnstown Chiefs were born.

The Chiefs play their home games in the historic 3,745 seat Cambria County War Memorial Arena in Johnstown, where most of the hockey scenes in Slap Shot were filmed. The team colors are black, gold and white (following an early affiliation with the Boston Bruins), and its current road uniforms are based on 1970s era Bruins jerseys.

Among the franchise's notable players has been defenceman Brent Bilodeau; Dmitri Tarabrin (the career leader in games played with 427); Bruce Coles, who holds the career mark for points scored with 227, having played in only 132 games for the team; Scott Gordon, the team's goalie in 1988–89 who played for Team USA at the 1992 Winter Olympics, and became the first ECHL player to advance to the NHL when he suited up for the Quebec Nordiques in 1989–90; all-star defenceman Perry Florio, the franchise's career assist leader with 171; right wing Lukas Smital, the career goal scoring leader with 107; enforcer Jeff Sullivan, the career penalty minute leader with 1205; and goaltender Frederic Deschesnes, who leads the franchise in goaltending games with 152, wins with 69 and shutouts with 5. Goalie Arturs Irbe played for the Chiefs briefly in 2003–2004, going 10–3–1 with a GAA of 2.13 and a .927 save percentage.

Ian Herbers was named as the team's new head coach in June 2007, and will make his pro coaching debut this season.

On August 17, 2007 The Chiefs announced that they entered into an affiliation agreement with the NHL’s Colorado Avalanche. During the upcoming 2007–08 season, the Chiefs will serve as the Avalanche’s secondary minor league affiliate. The expansion Lake Erie Monsters of the AHL will be Colorado’s primary affiliate. On September 18, 2007, the Chiefs announced they had entered an affiliation agreement with the Boston Bruins for the 07–08 season.[1]

The Chiefs along with the Wheeling Thunderbirds (now known as the Wheeling Nailers)played the role of the Pittsburgh Penguins in the 1995 film Sudden Death starring Jean Claude Van Damme. The premise was the Penguins playing the Chicago Blackhawks for the Stanley Cup when terrorists attempt to hold the Vice President hostage in the arena.

[edit] Current roster as of March 29, 2008

Goaltenders
# Player Catches Place of Birth
31 Flag of Canada Andrew Penner L Scarborough, Ontario
35 Flag of Canada Ryan Nie R Nanticoke, Ontario
Defencemen
# Player Shoots Place of Birth
3 Flag of Canada Vincent Zaore R Sainte-Foy, Quebec
4 Flag of the United States Brian Deeth L Gig Harbor, Washington
5 Flag of Canada Nathan Saunders R Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island
6 Flag of the United States Greg Gallagher L Framingham, Massachusetts
7 Flag of the United States Raymond Macias R Long Beach, California
20 Flag of Canada Wes O'Neil L Essex, Ontario
21 Flag of Canada Mike Knight R Toronto, Ontario
55 Flag of the United States Andrew Martens L Friendswood, Texas
Forwards
# Player Position Shoots Place of Birth
17 Flag of the United States Joey Olson F L Peoria, Illinois
18 Flag of Canada Randy Rowe - C LW L Burford, Ontario
22 Flag of Canada Jean Desrochers- A C R Dalhousie, Quebec
27 Flag of the United States Joel Gasper C L Crookston, Minnesota
32 Flag of Canada Jason Spence - A LW L Windsor, Nova Scotia
33 Flag of Canada Alexandre Imbeault C L Montreal, Quebec
44 Flag of Canada Mike Sgroi F L Toronto, Ontario
46 Flag of the United States Domenic Maiani F R Shelby Township, Michigan
74 Flag of Canada Mark Tobin LW L St.John's, Newfoundland and Labrador
Staff
Title Staff Member
Head Coach Ian Herbers
Trainer Mic Medderhoff
Vice President Kevin McGeehan
Broadcaster Ray Schmitt
Mascot Tom E. Hawk

[edit] References

  1. ^ Johnstown Chiefs join Bruins [1]

[edit] External links

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