Current season, competition or edition: 2024–25 MHL season | |
Sport | Ice hockey |
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Founded | 1967 |
President | Connor Cameron |
No. of teams | 12 |
Countries | Canada |
Headquarters | Bedford, Nova Scotia |
Most recent champion(s) | Miramichi Timberwolves (1st) (2024) |
Most titles |
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TV partner(s) | Eastlink Community TV |
Official website | www |
The Maritime Junior Hockey League (MHL) is a Junior A ice hockey league under Hockey Canada, a part of the Canadian Junior Hockey League (CJHL). It consists of six teams from New Brunswick, which make up the EastLink North Division (formerly Roger Meek), five teams from Nova Scotia, and one team from Prince Edward Island, which make up the Eastlink South Division. The winner of the MHL playoffs competes for the Centennial Cup against the winners of the 8 other tier 2 junior A leagues across Canada (host team also participates). Prior to the pandemic the MHL champions participated in the Fred Page Cup. This tournament involved the Bogart Cup champions from the Central Canada Hockey League (Ontario), the Kent Cup champions from the MHL (Maritimes) and the winner of La Coupe Napa of the Quebec Junior Hockey League (Quebec) as well as a predetermined host. The winner moved on to compete for the Canadian National Junior A Championship. However with the departure of the British Columbia Hockey League from affiliation with the CJHL in March 2021 as well as Hockey Canada in June 2023, no Centennial Cup qualifying tournaments such as the Kent Cup have been played since 2022, and instead all the league champions directly advance to the Centennial Cup.
Originally known as the Metro Valley Junior Hockey League (MVJHL) , the league was founded in 1967 by Fred McGillivray and Louie Lewis of Halifax, Nova Scotia and Don Stewart of Berwick, Nova Scotia as a Junior "B" level hockey league. Originally an exclusively Nova Scotia hockey league, it included six teams: East Hants Junior Penguins, Halifax Colonels, Dartmouth Hoyts, Windsor Royals, Kentville Riteways, and Berwick Shell Juniors. 1968 saw the Truro Bearcats and Amherst Ramblers replace the teams from Kentville and Berwick. In 1971–72 the New Glasgow Bombers and the Pictou Maripacs entered the league. Stellarton and a new Kentville franchise entered the league in 1973 and 1974 respectively.
In 1977, the MVJHL entered into the Tier II Junior "A" level. The jump to Junior "A" was, in theory, to be a catalyst for the development of the league. However The budgets necessary to play at the Jr. 'A' level resulted in the immediate withdrawal of the Chester Ravens and the East Hants Penguins. The Cole Harbour Colts (Scotia Colts), who entered the league in 1976, became the first team in league history to host the national Junior A championship, then known as the Centennial Cup, in 1980.
The 1983 season saw the addition of the expansion Moncton Midland Hawks of Moncton, New Brunswick, the league's first non-Nova Scotia team. The Hawks came from the New Brunswick Junior Hockey League and are now known as the Edmundston Blizzard. In 1986, the league expanded to Antigonish and the Scotia Colts, again, hosted the Centennial Cup. Future Maritime Junior Hockey League team Summerside Western Capitals, then competing in the Island Junior Hockey League (IJHL), hosted the 1989 Centennial Cup.
In 1991, the Summerside Western Capitals and the Charlottetown Abbies left Prince Edward Island's IJHL and joined the MVJHL, which was immediately renamed the Maritime Junior A Hockey League (MJAHL).
According to league officials, it is believed that goaltender Lisa Herritt of the Dartmouth Oland Exports became the first female MHL player in the 1995–96 season. [1]
For the 1996–97 season, the league added the Cape Breton Islanders and Restigouche River Rats. In 1996–97 the league consisted of the Amherst Ramblers, Antigonish Bulldogs, Charlottetown Abbies, East Hants Penguins, Dartmouth Oland Exports, Moncton Gagnon Beavers, Saint John Alpines, and Summerside Western Capitals. The Saint John Alpines folded in January. With financial losses totalling $40,000 and an additional $50,000 shortfall projected should the team finish the season, they simply ran out of money. The Summerside Western Capitals won the league's first ever national title. The Capitals hosted the Royal Bank Cup at Cahill Stadium and won the championship game 4–3 over the South Surrey Eagles.
Truro and Bathurst received approval for new teams to start in 1997–98 but due to the relocation of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League's Laval Titan to Bathurst, the Truro Bearcats would be the sole new team. The Cape Breton Islanders moved to Glace Bay and became the Glace Bay Miners, but with the arrival of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League's Cape Breton Screaming Eagles, they folded in December of that season, leaving the league with nine teams again.
During the 1998–99 season two teams changed their names. The first was the Dartmouth Oland Exports when they moved to the Halifax Forum to become the Halifax Oland Exports. The second was the 1998–99 MJAHL champions, the Restigouche River Rats, as they changed their name to the Campbellton Tigers.
A tenth team was added for the 2000–01 season, the Miramichi Timberwolves. At the same time, the East Hants Penguins moved to Dartmouth and became the Scotia Dairy Queen Blizzard. At the end of the 2001–02 season, the league approved the transfer of the Blizzard to Yarmouth. The Yarmouth Motormart Mariners began play in September 2002. In early 2003 the league governors approved expansion into Woodstock, N.B., with the Slammers beginning play in the 2003–04 season.
The league hired its first professional full-time league president in 2003, Vernon Doyle.
The league won their second national Junior A championship when the Halifax Oland Exports won the 2002 Royal Bank Cup on home ice. One year later, after financial trouble with Oland Brewery, the franchise's name was changed to Halifax Team Pepsi. In the spring of 2004, the Weeks Hockey Organization bought the club, moved it to New Glasgow and renamed it the Pictou County Weeks Crushers. On that same day Halifax was granted an expansion franchise, the Halifax Wolverines.
The MJAHL made a number of changes in the spring of 2008.
On April 15, the Antigonish Bulldogs announced that they were applying for a leave of absence for one year. [2] On April 26, the Bulldogs had to choose between two groups trying to buy the team and relocate it. The first group would move the franchise to New Richmond, Quebec. The other group would relocate the team to the Halifax area. At the board of governors meeting that day, the proposal to relocate the franchise to Quebec was deemed to not be in the best interests of the league and its members. The Governors did leave the door open to the sale to a Halifax group and a move to Metro Halifax. The sale and relocation of the franchise to Halifax was later approved.
At the same Governors meeting, in response to the decision to leave the door open on the sale of the Bulldogs, the owners of the Halifax Wolverines announced their plans to move to Bridgewater. The Governors approved the move. [3] Following a name the team contest, the franchise was dubbed the Bridgewater Lumberjacks.
Later that week on April 29, the Moncton Beavers announced that they had failed to come to terms on a new lease for the Tim Hortons 4-Ice centre and had subsequently moved themselves to the neighboring city of Dieppe. The team was renamed the Dieppe Commandos. [4]
On May 1, with the fifth and final change for the MJAHL within a span of 16 days, the Charlottetown Abbies' applied for a leave of absence for one year, which was accepted. [5]
The Halifax franchise (former Antigonish Bulldogs) announced on August 22 that the club would be known as the Halifax Lions. This was the name of the successful Halifax team in the 1980s. [6]
In 2010, the MJAHL changed its name to the Maritime Junior Hockey League and unveiled a new logo.
In 2011, the Halifax Lions moved to Dartmouth and were renamed the Metro Marauders. Two years later the Marauders were renamed the Metro Shipbuilders for the 2012–13 season. That season was a disaster for the Shipbuilders, as they only recorded four wins in their 52-game schedule and averaged just 232 fans per game. [7] The relocation rumours had them moving back to Halifax after three years in Dartmouth but they finally moved to Kentville and were renamed the Valley Wildcats. After one season in Kentville they moved to Berwick.
In 2014 the league approved an expansion team in St. Stephen named the County Aces. As a result of the expansion, the league was back up to 12 teams for the first time since the folding of the Charlottetown Abbies in April 2008.
In November 2014, the league took over the ownership of the Bridgewater Lumberjacks after owner Ken Petrie left the team because of financial trouble. The team was sold two weeks later to a local businessman and the team was renamed the South Shore Lumberjacks. [8]
In November 2016, the Dieppe Commandos announced they would be moving to Edmundston, New Brunswick after the 2016–17 season, and be renamed the Edmundston Blizzard. [9]
In May 2018, the Woodstock Slammers applied for a leave of absence for the 2018–19 season; the team is later sold and relocated to Grand Falls, New Brunswick and renamed the Grand Falls Rapids.
In April 2019, the St. Stephen Aces were sold to a group from Fredericton, New Brunswick and became the third team in three years to relocate. The Aces relocated to Fredericton, New Brunswick for the 2019–20 season and were renamed the Fredericton Red Wings. [10]
The current MHL has twelve teams, six in each division. The league has hosted the Royal Bank Cup and Centennial Cup seven times, winning twice. MHL teams have also won seven Fred Page Cups as the Junior "A" Eastern Canadian champions to earn the right to compete for the Royal Bank Cup.
In September 2024, female goaltender Rhyah Stewart signed with the West Kent Steamers. [1]
*relocated franchise
From the 1970s until 1991, the Callaghan Cup was the Atlantic Junior A Championship of Canada. The winners of New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, Nova Scotia, and Newfoundland would playdown for this trophy during the Dudley Hewitt Cup and Manitoba Centennial Cup playdowns.
In 1991, the Callaghan Cup became exclusive to the MJAHL. The Callaghan Cup was their championship trophy until after the 2006 playoffs, when it was replaced by the Kent Cup,
In the Kent Cup era the bold team indicates the Kent Cup winner.
Year | Champion | Runner Up | Series |
---|---|---|---|
Metro Valley Jr. B Champions | |||
1968 | Windsor Royals | ||
1969 | East Hants Penguins | Truro Bearcats | |
1970 | Truro Bearcats | East Hants Penguins | 4–3 |
1971 | Truro Bearcats | East Hants Penguins | 4–0 |
1972 | Truro Bearcats | ||
1973 | New Glasgow Bombers | Halifax Blazers | 4–0 |
1974 | Truro Bearcats | ||
1975 | Dartmouth Arrows | Truro Bearcats | 4–2 |
1976 | Truro Bearcats | Dartmouth Arrows | 4–3 |
Metro Valley Jr. A Champions | |||
1977 | Dartmouth Arrows | ||
1978 | Cole Harbour Colts | ||
1979 | Halifax Lions | ||
1980 | Cole Harbour Colts | ||
1981 | Cole Harbour Colts | Halifax Lions | |
1982 | Halifax Lions | ||
1983 | Halifax Lions | ||
1984 | Halifax Lions | ||
1985 | Cole Harbour Colts | Halifax Lions | |
1986 | Moncton Hawks | Cole Harbour Colts | |
1987 | Dartmouth Fuel Kids | ||
1988 | Halifax Lions | ||
1989 | Moncton Hawks | ||
1990 | Amherst Ramblers | Halifax Dairy Queen Blizzard | 4–0 |
1991 | Halifax Jr. Canadians | Amherst Ramblers | |
Callaghan Cup Champions | |||
1992 | Halifax Mooseheads | Charlottetown Abbies | 4–3 |
1993 | Antigonish Bulldogs | Halifax Mooseheads | 4–3 |
1994 | Antigonish Bulldogs | Halifax Oland Exports | 4–3 |
1995 | Moncton Beavers | Amherst Ramblers | 4–0 |
1996 | Dartmouth Oland Exports | Moncton Beavers | 4–2 |
1997 | Summerside Western Capitals | Dartmouth Oland Exports | |
1998 | Restigouche River Rats | Dartmouth Oland Exports | |
1999 | Charlottetown Abbies | Antigonish Bulldogs | 4–3 |
2000 | Halifax Oland Exports | Summerside Western Capitals | |
2001 | Antigonish Bulldogs | Charlottetown Abbies | |
2002 | Halifax Oland Exports | Campbellton Tigers | 4–1 |
2003 | Charlottetown Abbies | Amherst Ramblers | 4–1 |
2004 | Campbellton Tigers | Yarmouth Mariners | 4–1 |
2005 | Truro Bearcats | Campbellton Tigers | 4–1 |
2006 | Woodstock Slammers | Amherst Ramblers | 4–1 |
Year | Meek Champion | Eastlink Champion | Series |
Kent Cup Champions | |||
2007 | Summerside Western Capitals | Truro Bearcats | 2–4 |
2008 | Woodstock Slammers | Yarmouth Mariners | 2–4 |
2009 | Summerside Western Capitals | Truro Bearcats | 4–1 |
2010 | Woodstock Slammers | Pictou County Crushers | 4–1 |
2011 | Summerside Western Capitals | Pictou County Crushers | 4–0 |
2012 | Woodstock Slammers | Yarmouth Mariners | 4–3 |
2013 | Summerside Western Capitals | Truro Bearcats | 4–1 |
2014 | Dieppe Commandos | Truro Bearcats | 2–4 |
2015 | Dieppe Commandos | Truro Bearcats | 4–0 |
Year | Eastlink North Division Champion | Eastlink South Division Champion | Series |
Kent Cup Champions | |||
2016 | Dieppe Commandos | Weeks Jr 'A' Crushers | 2–4 |
2017 | Miramichi Timberwolves | Truro Bearcats | 3–4 |
2018 | Edmundston Blizzard | Yarmouth Mariners | 4–2 |
Canadian Tire Cup Champions | |||
2019 | Campbellton Tigers | Yarmouth Mariners | 0–4 |
2020 | Cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic | ||
2021 | Cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic | ||
2022 | Summerside Western Capitals | Truro Bearcats | 4-1 |
Metalfab MHL Cup | |||
2023 | Edmundston Blizzard | Yarmouth Mariners | 4-0 |
2024 | Miramichi Timberwolves | Summerside Western Capitals | 4-2 |
Note: Those listed in yellow are currently home to an MHL franchise.
City/town | Province | Cups won | Championship teams | Years in league |
---|---|---|---|---|
Halifax | Nova Scotia | 9 | Lions (1979, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1988), Jr. Canadians (1991), Mooseheads (1992), Oland Exports (2000, 2002) | 1967-1995, 1998-2010 |
Truro | Nova Scotia | 9 | Bearcats (original) (1970, 1971, 1972, 1974, 1976), Bearcats (current) (2005, 2007, 2014, 2017) | 1968-1983, 1997-present |
Summerside | Prince Edward Island | 5 | Western Capitals (1997, 2009, 2011, 2013, 2022) | 1991-present |
Cole Harbour | Nova Scotia | 4 | Colts (1978, 1980, 1981, 1985) | 1976-1995 |
Dartmouth | Nova Scotia | 4 | Arrows (1975, 1977), Fuel Kids (1987), Oland Exports (1996) | 1967-1992, 1995-1998, 2000-2002, 2010-2013 |
Antigonish | Nova Scotia | 3 | Bulldogs (1993, 1994, 2001) | 1986-2008 |
Moncton | New Brunswick | 3 | Hawks (1986, 1989), Beavers (1995) | 1983-2008 |
Woodstock | New Brunswick | 3 | Slammers (2006, 2010, 2012) | 2003-2018 |
Yarmouth | Nova Scotia | 3 | Mariners (2008, 2019, 2023) | 2002-present |
Campbellton | New Brunswick | 2 | River Rats (1998), Tigers (2004) | 1996-present |
Charlottetown | Prince Edward Island | 2 | Abbies (1999, 2003) | 1991-1994, 1995-2008 |
New Glasgow | Nova Scotia | 2 | Bombers (1973), Crushers (2016) | 1972-76, 2004-present |
Amherst | Nova Scotia | 1 | Ramblers (1990) | 1968-present |
Dieppe | New Brunswick | 1 | Commandos (2015) | 2008-2017 |
East Hants | Nova Scotia | 1 | Penguins (1969) | 1967-1977, 1995-2000 |
Edmundston | New Brunswick | 1 | Blizzard (2018) | 2017-present |
Miramichi | New Brunswick | 1 | Timberwolves (2024) | 2000-present |
Windsor | Nova Scotia | 1 | Royals (1968) | 1967-1978 |
All champions in this table are from the Maritime Junior Hockey League
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All champions in this table are from the Metro Valley Junior Hockey League against interleague opponents.
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Note: Current teams are shaded in dark blue. Gold stars denote league championships. [11]
Bolded teams indicate the original names of active franchises.
The Canadian Junior Hockey League (CJHL) is an association of Canadian junior A ice hockey leagues and teams and was formed in November 1993, emerging from the Canada West Association of Junior 'A' Hockey. The champion of the Canadian Junior Hockey League wins the Centennial Cup.
The Centennial Cup is an annual ice hockey tournament organized by Hockey Canada and the Canadian Junior Hockey League (CJHL), which determines the national champion of junior A ice hockey. It consists of a ten-team round robin featuring the winners of all nine CJHL member leagues as well as a pre-selected host city.
The Fred Page Cup was a championship ice hockey trophy, won by a tournament conducted by the Canadian Junior Hockey League. The award was given to the winner of a round-robin and playoff between the Bogart Cup champions of the Central Canada Hockey League, the Kent Cup champions of the Maritime Junior Hockey League, La Coupe NAPA Champions of the Quebec Junior Hockey League, and a predetermined host team. The winner of the Fred Page Cup moves on to the Centennial Cup, the national Junior A championship. The trophy was donated by the then-called Quebec Provincial Junior Hockey League in 1994–95.
The Truro Bearcats are a Junior "A" ice hockey team based out of Truro, Nova Scotia. The Bearcats are one of six Nova Scotia teams in the Maritime Junior Hockey League.
Les Braves de Valleyfield are a Junior ice hockey team from Salaberry-de-Valleyfield, Quebec, Canada. They were a part of the Quebec Junior AAA Hockey League for 25 seasons. Another franchise relocated and took over their market and former moniker in 2014.
The West Kent Steamers are a Junior A Ice Hockey team from Bouctouche, New Brunswick. They play their home games at the 1,100 seat J.K. Irving Regional Centre in Bouctouche, New Brunswick. The team is a member of the Maritime Hockey League and play in the Eastlink North Division.
The Pictou County Crushers are a Canadian junior ice hockey team based in New Glasgow, Nova Scotia. They are in the Maritime Junior Hockey League's Eastlink South Division along with five other clubs. The Crushers play their home games at the Pictou County Wellness Centre.
The Yarmouth Mariners are a Junior "A" team based in Yarmouth, Nova Scotia. They play in the Maritime Junior Hockey League. All home games are played out of the 1,501 seat Mariners Centre. The season usually runs from mid-September to early March every year.
The Charlottetown Abbies were a Tier II Junior "A" team based in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. They played in the IJHL and the Maritime Junior A Hockey League. Their home rink from 2003 to 2008 was the MacLauchlan Arena on the campus of UPEI. Before then, it was the Charlottetown Civic Centre.
The Miramichi Timberwolves are a Junior "A" hockey team based in Miramichi, New Brunswick. They play in the Maritime Junior Hockey League. The team was founded in 2000 and plays their home games at the Miramichi Civic Centre.
The Edmundston Blizzard are a junior ice hockey team from Edmundston, New Brunswick, Canada. They play in the Maritime Junior Hockey League.
The Summerside Western Capitals are a Junior "A" hockey team based in Summerside, Prince Edward Island. They are members of the Maritime Junior Hockey League, and they play their home games at the Consolidated Credit Union Place. Until 2007 the team played at the former Cahill Stadium.
The Woodstock Slammers were a junior "A" hockey team based in Woodstock, New Brunswick. They played as part of the Maritime Junior Hockey League (MHL). The team played their home games at the Carleton Civic Centre, formally known to fans as "Slammerland" or "Slammertown, Canada". The Slammers were a relatively successful team in their 18 year history, winning a NB Junior B League title and Don Johnson Cup (2000), three Kent Cups, one Fred Page Cup (2012) and a silver medal at the RBC Cup (2012). In 2018, the franchise relocated to Grand Falls, New Brunswick, changing their name to the Grand Falls Rapids.
The Nova Scotia Senior Baseball League is an amateur baseball league located in Nova Scotia. The league is the highest level of amateur baseball in the province, it is for players 18 and over. The league champion traditionally represents Nova Scotia at the following year's Canadian Senior Baseball Championships. An exception was in 2005 when the league sent an all-star team to the Nationals.
The Valley Wildcats are a Canadian junior ice hockey franchise from the Annapolis Valley region of Nova Scotia. The team is a member of the Maritime Junior Hockey League and plays in the EastLink Division. They play their home games in the Kings Mutual Century Centre in Berwick, Nova Scotia.
The original Maritime Junior A Hockey League was a Canadian Junior ice hockey league from 1968 until 1971 in the provinces of New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Prince Edward Island. The league competed for the Memorial Cup until 1970 when it was relegated to Tier II Junior A and then competed one year for the Centennial Cup before becoming defunct.
The Island Junior Hockey League (IJHL), also sometimes called the PEI Junior A Hockey League, was a Junior ice hockey league in Prince Edward Island, Canada. Originally Junior B, the league was promoted to Junior A in 1973 after the folding of the Charlottetown Islanders in 1972.
The Eastern Junior A Hockey League was a Junior "A" ice hockey league from Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia, Canada. The Eastern Junior A Hockey League was in competition for the Manitoba Centennial Cup, the National Junior A Championship from 1975 until 1978.
The 2013–14 Maritime Junior Hockey League season was the 47th season in league history. The season consisted of 52 games played by each MHL team.
The 2014–15 Maritime Junior Hockey League season was the 48th season in league history. The season consisted of 48 games played by each MHL team.