2014 AIHL season

Last updated

2014 AIHL season
League Australian Ice Hockey League
Sport Ice hockey
Duration12 April 2014 – 31 August 2014
Regular season
H Newman Reid Trophy Melbourne Mustangs
(1st title)
Season MVPSimon Barg
(Ice Dogs)
Top scorerSimon Barg (69 points)
(Ice Dogs)
Goodall Cup
Champions Melbourne Mustangs
  Runners-up Melbourne Ice
Finals MVPViktor Gibbs Sjödin (Mustangs)
AIHL seasons
  2013
2015  

The 2014 AIHL season was the 15th season of the Australian Ice Hockey League (AIHL). It ran from 12 April 2014 until 24 August 2014, with the Goodall Cup finals following on 30 and 31 August. The Melbourne Mustangs won both the H Newman Reid Trophy for finishing first in the regular season, and the Goodall Cup after defeating the Melbourne Ice in the final.

Contents

Teams

In 2014 the AIHL had 8 teams competing in the league. [1]

2014 AIHL teams
TeamCityArenaHead CoachCaptain
Adelaide Adrenaline Flag of South Australia.svg Adelaide IceArenA Flag of Australia (converted).svg Ryan O'Handley Flag of Australia (converted).svg Greg Oddy
CBR Brave Flag of the Australian Capital Territory.svg Canberra Phillip Ice Skating Centre Flag of Finland.svg Matti Louma Flag of Australia (converted).svg Mark Rummukainen
Melbourne Ice Flag of Victoria (Australia).svg Melbourne Medibank Icehouse Flag of Australia (converted).svg Brent Laver Flag of Australia (converted).svg Lliam Webster
Melbourne Mustangs Flag of Victoria (Australia).svg Melbourne Medibank Icehouse Flag of Australia (converted).svg Brad Vigon Flag of Australia (converted).svg Sean Jones
Newcastle North Stars Flag of New South Wales.svg Newcastle Hunter Ice Skating Stadium Flag of Australia (converted).svg Garry Doré Flag of Australia (converted).svg Robert Starke
Perth Thunder Flag of Western Australia.svg Perth Perth Ice Arena Flag of Australia (converted).svg Dylan Forsythe Flag of Australia (converted).svg Samuel Wilson
Sydney Bears Flag of New South Wales.svg Sydney Sydney Ice Arena Flag of Australia (converted).svg Vladimir Rubes Flag of Australia (converted).svg Michael Schlamp
Sydney Ice Dogs Flag of New South Wales.svg Sydney Liverpool Catholic Club Ice Rink Flag of Australia (converted).svg Andrew Petrie Flag of Australia (converted).svg Robert Malloy

League business

In October 2013 it was confirmed that the Gold Coast Blue Tongues would remain suspended for the 2014 season. The team have until the 2015 season before their licence is reviewed. [2] On 26 February 2014 Canberra Knights owner John Raut announced that the team had folded operations effective immediately and would not be competing in the upcoming 2014 season. Raut cited financial costs, lack of local players and poor performance as the reasons behind the move. [3] [4] The following day it was announced that the player group headed by captain Mark Rummukainen had approached the league with plans on taking on the club's licence. [5] The following month the league announced that they had granted a provisional licence to a Canberra consortium, which involved the player group, to take on the licence and replace the Knights in the 2014 season. The new team was announced as the CBR Brave. [6] The Melbourne Mustangs announced in March 2014 that they had signed a deal with MOAT: Mental Health Services who will become the teams naming sponsors for the 2014 and 2015 seasons. The team's name will change to MOAT: Melbourne Mustangs Ice Hockey Club. [7] Air Canada expanded their sponsorship of the AIHL to the entire 2014 season after last year sponsoring the 2013 finals series. [8] They also announced they will continue to show a highlights package of the 2013 finals series as part of their in-flight entertainment until the end of June. [8] They will then replace it with the 2014 Canada Day Classic between the Sydney Bears and Melbourne Mustangs and the 2014 AIHL finals series. [8]

Exhibition games

The first exhibition game was held in November 2013 with the Sydney Bears playing a match against former AIHL team, the Central Coast Rhinos. The Rhinos who previously played in the AIHL from 2005 to 2008 went on to win the game 8–4. [9] A second game involving the Bears and Rhinos was held in March 2014 with the Bears winning 8–2. [9] In February 2014 it was announced that the pre season tournament, the Wilson Cup, would be revived. [10] The tournament was last played in 2009 and was won by the Rhinos. [10] The 2014 edition features the Newcastle North Stars, Sydney Bears and the Sydney Ice Dogs. [10] The tournament features a round robin of the three teams and finishes with a final between the top two placed teams. In started on 16 March and finished on 5 April. [10] In the opening game of the Wilson Cup the North Stars defeated the Bears 4–3 in a shootout. [11] The North Stars however lost game two to the Ice Dogs 5–4 in a shootout. [12] In the last game of the round robin the Ice Dogs defeated the Sydney Bears 8–1 and they finished first in the standings. [13] The Ice Dogs were drawn against the North Stars in the final who finished the round robin in second place. The Ice Dogs defeated the North Stars 4–2, winning their first Wilson Cup title. [14] On 27 March the Melbourne Ice and Melbourne Mustangs held an exhibition game at the Medibank Icehouse with the Ice defeating the Mustangs 8–3. [15] On 3 and 5 April the Australian national team held two exhibition games against the Mustangs and Ice. [16] The two games were played at the Medibank Icehouse and were held as part of the team's preparation for the 2014 IIHF World Championship Division II Group A tournament being held in Serbia from 9 to 15 April. [16] Australia won both of the games, defeating the Mustangs 9–3 and the Ice 4–1. [16] [17]

Personnel changes

In November 2013 Melbourne Ice announced that assistant coach Brent Laver has been promoted to the head coach position, replacing Sandy Gardner who had been in the job for only the 2013 season. [18] The team also announced that former player, Glen Mayer had signed on as an assistant coach, along with former Swedish First Division player, Johan Steenberg, who was appointed back in June 2013. [18] [19] Just prior to the start of the season Perth Thunder Coach Stan Scott announced that he had stepped down as head coach in order to focus on the General Manager operations of the club. Scott was replaced by Dylan Forsythe as head coach and but remained on the coaching panel as an assistant. [20] After eight games into the season it was announced that Forsythe had stepped down as head coach effective immediately for unknown reasons. He was replaced by Stan Scott who agreed to take over as interim head coach for the remainder of the season. [21] On 24 April 2014 the Sydney Ice Dogs head coach Ron Kuprowsky and his assistants Colin Downie and Brad Andrlon had resigned from their positions. [22] The club appointed Dion Dunwoodie as interim head coach with Mark Page and Anthony Wilson as his assistants. On 9 May 2014 the Ice Dogs signed Andrew Petrie as their new head coach. [23]

Player transfers

Regular season

The regular season started on 12 April 2014 and ran through to 1 September 2014 before the top four teams compete in the Goodall Cup playoff series. [52] Game 35 between the Newcastle North Stars and the Sydney Ice Dogs had to be postponed due to the North Stars bus breaking down en route to Liverpool. [53] The game was later rescheduled for 22 June 2014 and will be played at the Hunter Ice Skating Stadium in Newcastle. [54] Game 77 between the Adelaide Adrenaline and CBR Brave had to be postponed after the Adrenalines team bus crashed en route to the Phillip Ice Skating Centre. Head Coach Ryan O'Handley and some players were taken to hospital however none of the injuries were serious. Game 79 which was set to be held the following day between the Adrenaline and the Sydney Bears was also postponed. [55] On 31 July it was announced that both games had been cancelled as the teams involved had been unable to reschedule the games. As a result, the AIHL Commission awarded each team one point for the cancelled games, with the Adrenaline getting one point from each game and the Brave and Bears awarded one point each from their respective games. [56]

The Melbourne Mustangs won the H Newman Reid Trophy after finishing first in the regular season with 54 points. [57] In the final week of the regular season the AIHL released the list of finalists for the 2014 awards. [58] Mathieu Ouelette of the CBR Brave, Jack Wolgemuth of the Melbourne Mustangs and the Sydney Ice Dogs' Simon Barg were nominated as the Most Valuable Player, with Barg going on to win the award. [58] [59] Petri Pitkänen of the CBR Brave, Mathieu Dugas of the Perth Thunder and the Sydney Bears' Daniel Palmkvist were nominated for the Goaltender of the Year award with Petri Pitkänen being named the winner. [58] [59] Niko Suoraniemi of the Adelaide Adrenaline, John Kennedy of the Newcastle North Stars and the Melbourne Mustangs' Jack Wolgemuth were nominated for the Defenceman of the Year award with Wolgemuth being announced the winner. [58] [59] Jeremy Brown of the Melbourne Ice, Jamie Woodman of the Perth Thunder and the Newcastle North Stars Hayden Sheard were all nominated as the Rookie of the Year award with Jeremy Brown taking the award. [58] [59] David Dunwoodie of the Sydney Ice Dogs won the award for Local Player of the Year. [59]

April

GameDateTimeAwayScoreHomeLocationAttendanceRecap
112 April17:00 Sydney Ice Dogs 9–2 Melbourne Ice Melbourne 1000
212 April17:30 Newcastle North Stars 2–0 CBR Brave Canberra 800
313 April16:00 Sydney Ice Dogs 3–6 Melbourne Mustangs Melbourne 800
413 April17:00 Sydney Bears 4–0 Newcastle North Stars Newcastle 800
519 April17:00 Melbourne Mustangs 2 – 3 (SO) Melbourne Ice Melbourne 1500
626 April16:30 Melbourne Ice 3–0 Perth Thunder Perth
726 April17:00 Adelaide Adrenaline 4–0 Newcastle North Stars Newcastle
826 April17:30 Sydney Ice Dogs 2–6 CBR Brave Canberra 800
927 April15:30 Adelaide Adrenaline 6 – 5 (SO) Sydney Bears Baulkham Hills 350
1027 April16:30 Melbourne Ice 3–0 Perth Thunder Perth

May

GameDateTimeAwayScoreHomeLocationAttendanceRecap
113 May16:30 Perth Thunder 4 – 3 (SO) Adelaide Adrenaline Adelaide
123 May17:00 Sydney Ice Dogs 2–4 Melbourne Mustangs Melbourne 550
133 May18:00 Newcastle North Stars 1–3 Sydney Bears Baulkham Hills 300
144 May15:30 Perth Thunder 0–1 Adelaide Adrenaline Adelaide
154 May16:00 Sydney Ice Dogs 2–5 Melbourne Ice Melbourne 900
1610 May16:30 Sydney Bears 4 – 3 (SO) Perth Thunder Perth
1710 May17:00 Melbourne Ice 5–3 Melbourne Mustangs Melbourne 1300
1810 May17:00 Newcastle North Stars 5–3 Sydney Ice Dogs Liverpool 300
1910 May17:30 Adelaide Adrenaline 5–2 CBR Brave Canberra
2011 May16:30 Sydney Bears 3–2 Perth Thunder Perth
2111 May17:00 CBR Brave 4–2 Newcastle North Stars Newcastle
2211 May17:00 Adelaide Adrenaline 4–10 Sydney Ice Dogs Liverpool 200
2317 May16:30 Newcastle North Stars 6–3 Adelaide Adrenaline Adelaide
2417 May17:00 Melbourne Ice 6–3 Sydney Ice Dogs Liverpool
2517 May17:30 Perth Thunder 1–5 CBR Brave Canberra
2617 May18:00 Melbourne Mustangs 2–1 Sydney Bears Baulkham Hills 250
2718 May15:30 Newcastle North Stars 2 – 3 (SO) Adelaide Adrenaline Adelaide
2818 May15:30 Melbourne Ice 4–2 Sydney Bears Baulkham Hills 250
2918 May17:00 Melbourne Mustangs 2–7 Sydney Ice Dogs Liverpool 250
3018 May17:00 Perth Thunder 4 – 5 (SO) CBR Brave Canberra
3124 May17:00 Adelaide Adrenaline 2–6 Melbourne Mustangs Melbourne 450
3224 May17:00 CBR Brave 5–2 Newcastle North Stars Newcastle 700
3324 May18:00 Sydney Ice Dogs 6–2 Sydney Bears Baulkham Hills 850
3425 May16:00 Adelaide Adrenaline 3–2 Melbourne Mustangs Melbourne 300
3631 May16:30 Sydney Ice Dogs 5–7 Adelaide Adrenaline Adelaide
3731 May17:00 Perth Thunder 2–5 Melbourne Mustangs Melbourne 500
3831 May17:30 Melbourne Ice 2 – 1 (SO) CBR Brave Canberra 800

June

GameDateTimeAwayScoreHomeLocationAttendanceRecap
391 June15:30 Sydney Ice Dogs 2–0 Adelaide Adrenaline Adelaide
401 June15:30 Newcastle North Stars 4–1 Sydney Bears Baulkham Hills 300
411 June16:00 Perth Thunder 4–1 Melbourne Mustangs Melbourne 350
421 June17:00 Melbourne Ice 2–4 CBR Brave Canberra
435 June16:00 Melbourne Mustangs 8–3 Melbourne Ice Melbourne 1200
447 June16:30 Adelaide Adrenaline 1–7 Perth Thunder Perth
457 June17:00 Melbourne Mustangs 2–5 Newcastle North Stars Newcastle 900
467 June17:30 Sydney Bears 1–4 CBR Brave Canberra 800
478 June15:30 Melbourne Mustangs 5–3 Sydney Bears Baulkham Hills
488 June16:30 Adelaide Adrenaline 2–6 Perth Thunder Perth
4914 June17:00 Melbourne Ice 4–7 Newcastle North Stars Newcastle
5014 June17:30 Sydney Bears 6–8 CBR Brave Canberra
5115 June15:30 Melbourne Ice 6–4 Sydney Bears Baulkham Hills 450
5215 June17:00 CBR Brave 3–6 Sydney Ice Dogs Liverpool 220
5321 June16:30 Melbourne Mustangs 5–3 Adelaide Adrenaline Adelaide
5421 June17:00 Perth Thunder 5–0 Newcastle North Stars Newcastle
5521 June16:30 Sydney Bears 1–2 Sydney Ice Dogs Liverpool 300
5621 June17:00 CBR Brave 2 – 3 (SO) Melbourne Ice Melbourne 1000
3522 June17:00 Newcastle North Stars 4–1 Sydney Ice Dogs Newcastle
5722 June15:30 Perth Thunder 5–6 Sydney Bears Baulkham Hills 300
5822 June15:30 Melbourne Mustangs 6–3 Adelaide Adrenaline Adelaide
5922 June16:00 CBR Brave 6 – 5 (SO) Melbourne Ice Melbourne 1000
6028 June17:00 Sydney Bears 3–1 Melbourne Ice Melbourne 950
6128 June17:00 Adelaide Adrenaline 6–2 Newcastle North Stars Newcastle
6228 June17:30 Sydney Ice Dogs 4–1 CBR Brave Canberra 900
6329 June16:00 Sydney Bears 2–1 Melbourne Mustangs Melbourne 850
6429 June17:00 Adelaide Adrenaline 3 – 2 (SO) Sydney Ice Dogs Liverpool 350

July

GameDateTimeAwayScoreHomeLocationAttendanceRecap
655 July16:30 Newcastle North Stars 5–7 Perth Thunder Perth
665 July16:30 Melbourne Ice 0–4 Adelaide Adrenaline Adelaide
675 July17:00 CBR Brave 7–4 Melbourne Mustangs Melbourne 700
685 July17:00 Sydney Bears 2–4 Sydney Ice Dogs Liverpool 400
696 July15:30 Melbourne Ice 2 – 3 (SO) Adelaide Adrenaline Adelaide
706 July16:00 CBR Brave 3–4 Melbourne Mustangs Melbourne 380
716 July16:30 Newcastle North Stars 1–4 Perth Thunder Perth
7212 July17:00 Sydney Bears 0–4 Melbourne Mustangs Melbourne 450
7312 July17:00 CBR Brave 4–5 Sydney Ice Dogs Liverpool 450
7413 July16:00 Sydney Bears 1–10 Melbourne Ice Melbourne
7513 July17:00 Sydney Ice Dogs 5 – 4 (SO) Newcastle North Stars Newcastle 700
7619 July17:00 Newcastle North Stars 3–6 Melbourne Mustangs Melbourne 700
7719 July17:30 Adelaide Adrenaline Cancelled CBR Brave Canberra [note 1]
7819 July18:00 Perth Thunder 4–1 Sydney Bears Baulkham Hills 300
7920 July15:30 Adelaide Adrenaline Cancelled Sydney Bears Baulkham Hills [note 1]
8020 July16:00 Newcastle North Stars 4–5 Melbourne Ice Melbourne
8120 July17:00 Perth Thunder 3–5 Sydney Ice Dogs Liverpool 250
8226 July16:30 CBR Brave 3–1 Perth Thunder Perth
8326 July16:30 Sydney Bears 4–6 Adelaide Adrenaline Adelaide
8426 July17:00 Melbourne Ice 2–4 Newcastle North Stars Newcastle
8527 July15:30 Sydney Bears 1–8 Adelaide Adrenaline Adelaide
8627 July16:30 CBR Brave 5–3 Perth Thunder Perth
8727 July17:00 Melbourne Ice 3–2 Sydney Ice Dogs Liverpool 300

August

GameDateTimeAwayScoreHomeLocationAttendanceRecap
882 August16:30 Melbourne Mustangs 3–1 Perth Thunder Perth
892 August17:30 Newcastle North Stars 2–3 CBR Brave Canberra
903 August15:30 CBR Brave 12–4 Sydney Bears Baulkham Hills 250
913 August16:30 Melbourne Mustangs 7–4 Perth Thunder Perth 500
923 August17:00 Sydney Ice Dogs 3–5 Newcastle North Stars Newcastle
939 August17:00 Adelaide Adrenaline 2–4 Melbourne Ice Melbourne
949 August17:00 Perth Thunder 4–5 Newcastle North Stars Newcastle
959 August17:30 Melbourne Mustangs 4–2 CBR Brave Canberra
969 August18:00 Sydney Ice Dogs 8–0 Sydney Bears Baulkham Hills 400
9710 August16:00 Adelaide Adrenaline 1–3 Melbourne Ice Melbourne
9810 August17:00 Melbourne Mustangs 2–4 CBR Brave Canberra
9910 August17:00 Perth Thunder 8–2 Sydney Ice Dogs Liverpool 250
10010 August17:00 Sydney Bears 2–6 Newcastle North Stars Newcastle
10114 August17:00 Melbourne Ice 5–1 Melbourne Mustangs Melbourne 1500
10216 August16:30 Sydney Ice Dogs 3–1 Perth Thunder Perth
10316 August16:30 CBR Brave 2–5 Adelaide Adrenaline Adelaide
10416 August17:00 Newcastle North Stars 3–6 Melbourne Mustangs Melbourne 900
10517 August15:30 CBR Brave 2–6 Adelaide Adrenaline Adelaide
10617 August16:00 Newcastle North Stars 2–7 Melbourne Ice Melbourne
10717 August16:30 Sydney Ice Dogs 6–3 Perth Thunder Perth
10823 August17:00 Perth Thunder 5 – 4 (SO) Melbourne Ice Melbourne
10923 August17:00 Melbourne Mustangs 4–1 Newcastle North Stars Newcastle
11023 August18:00 CBR Brave 3–2 Sydney Bears Baulkham Hills
11124 August16:00 Perth Thunder 3–2 Melbourne Ice Melbourne 550
11224 August17:00 Melbourne Mustangs 3 – 4 (SO) Sydney Ice Dogs Liverpool 550

Standings

TeamGPWOTWTOTLLGFGAGDFPTS
Melbourne Mustangs 2817003810888+2054
Melbourne Ice 2814303810488+1651
CBR Brave 2814212910689+1749
Sydney Ice Dogs 28142011111697+1947
Adelaide Adrenaline 2810521109490+443
Newcastle North Stars 28110021587106−1935
Perth Thunder 289202159494033
Sydney Bears 2861111968125−5722
Qualified for the Goodall Cup playoffsH Newman Reid Trophy winners

Source

Statistics

Scoring leaders

List shows the ten top skaters sorted by points, then goals. [60]

PlayerTeamGPGAPtsPIMPOS
Simon Barg Sydney Ice Dogs 2623466920 F
Stephen Blunden CBR Brave 2436326859 F
Anton Kokkonen CBR Brave 2517425918 F
Mathieu Ouellette CBR Brave 2217405716 F
David Dunwoodie Sydney Ice Dogs 28203353151 F
Chris Wilson Newcastle North Stars 2317324996 F
Cody Danberg Newcastle North Stars 2817314877 F
John Clewlow Sydney Ice Dogs 2322234564 F
Patrick O'Kane Melbourne Mustangs 2821234414 F
Stuart Stefan Perth Thunder 2814304440 F

Leading goaltenders

Only the top five goaltenders, based on save percentage with a minimum 40% of the teams ice time. [61]

PlayerTeamMIPSOGGAGAASVS% SO
Mathieu Dugas Perth Thunder 13961099923.300.9161
Jaden Pine-Murphy Melbourne Ice 876446392.230.9132
Petri Pitkänen CBR Brave 1227764722.930.9060
Daniel Palmkvist Sydney Bears 1040806803.850.9011
Harrison May Newcastle North Stars 1295881893.440.8991

Season awards

Below lists the 2014 AIHL regular season award winners.

AwardNameTeam
MVP Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Simon Barg Sydney Ice Dogs
Goaltender Flag of Finland.svg Petri Pitkänen CBR Brave
Defenceman Flag of the United States.svg Jack Wolgemuth Melbourne Mustangs
Rookie Flag of Australia (converted).svg Jeremy Brown Melbourne Ice
Local player Flag of Australia (converted).svg David Dunwoodie Sydney Ice Dogs

Source

Goodall Cup playoffs

The 2014 playoffs started on 30 August 2014, with the Goodall Cup final being held on 31 August. Following the end of the regular season the top four teams advanced to the playoff series with the Melbourne Mustangs and CBR Brave making their debut playoff appearance, along with the other two finalists the Melbourne Ice and Sydney Ice Dogs. [62] [63] All three games were held at the Medibank Icehouse in Docklands, Victoria, the home of the Melbourne Ice and Melbourne Mustangs. The series was a single game elimination with the two winning semi-finalists advancing to the Goodall Cup final. The finals were sponsored by Air Canada who also sponsored the 2013 playoffs. [64] The Melbourne Mustangs won the Goodall Cup for the first time after defeating the Melbourne Ice in the final. Viktor Gibbs Sjödin of the Melbourne Mustangs was named the finals MVP. [65] [66]

Semifinals Final
      
1 Melbourne Mustangs 6
4 Sydney Ice Dogs 4
Melbourne Mustangs 6
Melbourne Ice 1
3 CBR Brave 1
2 Melbourne Ice 6

Semi-finals

All times are UTC+10:00

30 August 2014
15:00
Sydney Ice Dogs 4–6
(2–1, 0–2, 2–3)
Melbourne Mustangs Medibank Icehouse
Attendance: 1500
Game reference
Tim NotingGoaliesFraser CarsonReferee:
Jeff Scott
Linesmen:
Joe Mayer
Daryl Hamilton
0 – 13:17 – Grant (J. Hughes, Jones)
Bye (Tesarik, Malloy) – 7:221 – 1
Dunwoodie (PP) (Clewlow, Ward) – 11:542 – 1
2 – 216:02 – Bourke (Gibbs Sjödin, Wolgemuth)
2 – 317:57 – J. Hughes (PP) (Grant)
Clewlow (Tesarik, Bye) – 37:063 – 3
3 – 441:50 – Gibbs Sjödin (Bourke, O'Kane)
3 – 543:02 – Gibbs Sjödin (Bourke, O'Kane)
Dunwoodie (PP) (Malloy, Barg) – 47:494 – 5
4 – 649:35 – Bourke (EN) (Gibbs Sjödin)
8 minPenalties6 min
22Shots35
30 August 2014
18:30
CBR Brave 1–6
(0–2, 1–2, 0–2)
Melbourne Ice Medibank Icehouse
Attendance: 1500
Game reference
Petri PitkanenGoaliesJaden Pine-MurphyReferee:
Rick West
Linesmen:
Matthew Taylor
Casper Russell-Huber
0 – 16:45 – Powell (Hamilton)
0 – 28:58 – Graham (PP) (Powell, Humphries)
0 – 318:27 – Armstrong (Johansson)
Blunden (Kokkonen) – 19:101 – 3
1 – 421:54 – J. Smith (PP) (Powell, Brown)
1 – 546:43 – Johansson (Brown, Webster)
1 – 648:24 – Powell (PP) (Brown)
24 minPenalties14 min
23Shots40

Final

31 August 2014
15:00
Melbourne Ice 1–6
(0–1, 0–3, 1–2)
Melbourne Mustangs Medibank Icehouse
Attendance: 2000
Game reference
Jaden Pine-MurphyGoaliesFraser CarsonReferee:
Rick West
Jeff Scott
Linesmen:
Daryl Hamilton
Joe Mayer
0 – 16:53 – Gibbs Sjödin (Bourke)
0 – 218:23 – Bourke (Gibbs Sjödin)
0 – 319:54 – Gibbs Sjödin (Bourke)
0 – 427:43 – O'Kane (Wolgemuth, Bourke)
0 – 530:42 – Gibbs Sjödin (J.Hughes, O'Kane)
Webster (Baclig, Powell) – 32:471 – 5
1 – 647:15 – A. Belic (V.Hughes, Stringer)
16 minPenalties16 min
30Shots30

Notes

^ 1: Game 77 between the Adelaide Adrenaline and CBR Brave was cancelled after the Adrenalines team bus crashed en route to the Phillip Ice Skating Centre. Game 79 which was set to be held the following day between the Adrenaline and the Sydney Bears was also cancelled. The games which were initially postponed were announced by the AIHL as cancelled after the teams involved had been unable to reschedule the games. As a result, the AIHL Commission awarded each team one point for the cancelled games, with the Adrenaline getting one point from each game and the Brave and Bears awarded one point each from their respective games. [55] [56]

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The 2022 AIHL season is the delayed 21st season of the Australian Ice Hockey League (AIHL), following the cancellation of the 2020 and 2021 seasons. The season will consist of 60 regular season games and is scheduled to run from 30 April to 28 August 2022, with the Goodall Cup finals, consisting of 2 semi-finals, a preliminary final and a grand final, following the regular season on 2–4 September 2022. The CBR Brave won the double and claimed the H Newman Reid Trophy for a third time and Goodall Cup for a second time in 2022 by finishing top of the regular season standings and winning the AIHL grand final. The Newcastle Northstars were runner's up to both titles and the Sydney Ice Dogs claimed the wooden spoon.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Brisbane Lightning</span> Ice hockey team in Brisbane, Queensland

The Brisbane Lightning is a semi-professional ice hockey team based in Brisbane, Queensland. The team is a member of the Australian Ice Hockey League (AIHL). The team was founded in 2022 as an expansion AIHL team and are the first team based in Queensland since the Blue Tongues last competed in 2012. The Lightning's home venue is Iceworld Boondall and the team formally entered the AIHL regular season in 2023.

The 2023 AIHL season was the 22nd season of the Australian Ice Hockey League (AIHL). The season consisted of 130 regular season games from 15 April to 13 August 2023, with the Goodall Cup finals consisting of two play-in matches, two semi-finals, and a grand final, following the regular season on 26–27 August 2023.

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Further reading

  • Brodie, Will (2015), Reality Check: Travels in the Australian Ice Hockey League, Melbourne: Combiner Publishing, ISBN   978-0-646-93204-0