The 1951–52 Manitoba Junior Hockey League season
The Winnipeg Canadiens were bought and renamed the St. Boniface Canadiens.
League Standings | GP | W | L | T | Pts | GF | GA |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Winnipeg Monarchs | 36 | 26 | 10 | 0 | 52 | 155 | 111 |
Brandon Wheat Kings | 36 | 21 | 14 | 1 | 43 | 160 | 144 |
St. Boniface Canadiens | 36 | 18 | 17 | 1 | 37 | 131 | 112 |
Winnipeg Black Hawks | 36 | 6 | 30 | 0 | 12 | 123 | 202 |
Semi-Final
Turnbull Cup Championship
Western Memorial Cup Semi-Final
Trophy | Winner | Team |
---|---|---|
Scoring Champion | Del Topoll | Brandon Wheat Kings |
Most Goals | Ken Smith | Winnipeg Black Hawks |
First All-Star Team | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Goaltender | Don Dawson | Winnipeg Black Hawks | |||
Defencemen | Phil Hilton | Brandon Wheat Kings | |||
Don Johnston | Winnipeg Monarchs | ||||
Centreman | Del Topoll | Brandon Wheat Kings | |||
Wingers | Murray Wilkie | Brandon Wheat Kings | |||
Ken Smith | Winnipeg Black Hawks | ||||
Coach | Riley Mullen | Brandon Wheat Kings | |||
Manager | Pat Lyons | Winnipeg Monarchs | |||
Second All-Star Team | |||||
Goaltender | Don Collins | Winnipeg Monarchs | |||
Defencemen | Frank Arnett | Brandon Wheat Kings | |||
Syd White | St. Boniface Canadiens | ||||
Centreman | Jim Zarie | Winnipeg Monarchs | |||
Wingers | Joe Reichart | Winnipeg Black Hawks | |||
Bill Maslanko | Brandon Wheat Kings |
The St. James Canadians were a Canadian junior hockey team in the Manitoba Junior Hockey League until 2003, folding officially in 2004. The Canadians played out of the St. James Civic Centre, in Winnipeg, Manitoba. As the Winnipeg Braves, they won the 1959 Memorial Cup as National Junior Hockey champions.
On March 14, 1968, at home in St. James, the St. James Canadians corralled the Manitoba Junior Hockey League championship, and on March 26, in Selkirk, the Canadians captured the Turnbull Cup defeating the Central Manitoba Junior Hockey League champions Selkirk Steelers.
In the 1970–71 season of Canadian ice hockey, the Manitoba Junior Hockey League (MJHL) champions were Winnipeg Saints, who won the Turnbull Memorial Trophy in the final on March 30, 1971, at home in St. Boniface. The Saints went on to win the Anavet Cup by defeating the Weyburn Red Wings of the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League on April 13, 1971, at the St. James ground in Winnipeg.
In Winnipeg on April 5, 1974, the Selkirk Steelers won the MJHL title claiming the Turnbull Memorial Trophy. There was no stopping the Selkirk Steelers on April 19, 1974, in Prince Albert, as the Steelers defeated the Prince Albert Raiders of the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League winning the Anavet Cup. On May 1, 1974, with a 5-2 win over Kelowna Buckaroos of the British Columbia Hockey League in the seventh and deciding game, held in Kelowna, the Steelers captured the Abbott Cup and advanced into the national final for the Centennial Cup. In the seventh and deciding game, on May 14, 1974, in Ottawa, the Selkirk Steelers scored a dramatic 1-0 overtime victory over the Smiths Falls Bears of the Central Junior A Hockey League to capture the Centennial Cup, emblematic of junior A hockey supremacy in Canada.
The following are the results of the Canadian 1976–77 MJHL season for the Manitoba Junior Hockey League ice hockey team.
Jimmy Dunn was hired as commissioner of the Manitoba Junior Hockey League (MJHL) in May 1964. The league had been reduced to four teams based in the Greater Winnipeg area after the withdrawal of the Brandon Wheat Kings and the Fort Frances Royals. The MJHL transitioned from a draft of players in the Greater Winnipeg Minor Hockey Association, into a system where each team chose players from a set geographic district. The new "zoning" arrangement was planned to be in effect for three seasons to stimulate more localized interest in junior hockey and aimed to keep teammates together from the minor hockey level to the junior hockey level. Dunn supported the change and noted that the concept had produced forward lines on previous Memorial Cup championship teams from Winnipeg. The Charlie Gardiner Memorial Trophy series was revived as a preseason tournament for the league's teams. Dunn reached an agreement to televise MJHL games on CJAY-TV, and the league experimented with playing games on Sunday evenings instead of afternoons to increase its attendance and avoid competing with televised football games. Dunn requested to the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association (CAHA) that the MJHL waive its bye into the Abbott Cup finals and its playoffs champion meet the Thunder Bay Junior A Hockey League champion in the first round. He felt that the loss of gate receipts from a bye was a financial hardship for the MJHL, and shorten the league's playoffs to accommodate the change approved by the CAHA.
Manitoba Junior Hockey League (MJHL) commissioner Jimmy Dunn implemented an automatic one-game minimum suspension for any player who received a match penalty as of the 1965–66 season. He felt that professional hockey influenced fisticuffs in junior hockey and said that, "Any time there's a big fight in the National Hockey League, the kids drop their sticks and put up their dukes in the next game. It happens almost every time".
On March 21, 1962, in Brandon, the Wheat Kings captured the Turnbull Memorial Trophy as MJHL champions.
On March 23, 1963, the Brandon Wheat Kings clinched their second straight MJHL title before more than 4,000 hometown fans in Brandon. The Wheat Kings retained the Turnbull Memorial Trophy.
The Transcona Rangers change their name to the Winnipeg Rangers.
1958–59 Manitoba Junior Hockey League season
The 1950–51 Manitoba Junior Hockey League season saw the Winnipeg Monarchs win the league championship.