Belleville Bulls

Belleville Bulls
City Belleville, Ontario
League Ontario Hockey League
Conference Eastern
Division East
Operated 19812015
Home arena Yardmen Arena
Colours Black, red, gold, white
                   
Franchise history
1981–2015 Belleville Bulls
2015–present Hamilton Bulldogs
Belleville Bulls in action at home versus Oshawa Generals.

The Belleville Bulls were a junior ice hockey team, founded in 1981 and based in Belleville, Ontario, Canada. The team played in the Eastern Division of the Eastern Conference of the Ontario Hockey League. The team moved to Hamilton, Ontario at the end of the 2014–15 OHL season.

History

The Belleville Bulls started in 1979 as a Junior Tier II team in the OHA. In their second season in 1980–81, the Bulls won the Tier II title, defeating the Guelph Platers in the league finals. The Bulls then competed in the national championship for the Manitoba Centennial Trophy hosted in Halifax, Nova Scotia losing in the finals to the Prince Albert Raiders.

On February 2, 1981, the OHL granted an expansion franchise to the city of Belleville and the ownership group of Dr. Robert L. Vaughan & Bob Dolan. Dr. Robert L. Vaughan remained an owner/co-owner of the team for over 20 years until he sold the team in 2004 to Gord Simmonds. Dr. Vaughan was awarded the Bill Long award in 1993 for distinguished service to the OHL.

In 1983, Belleville hosted the OHL All-Star Game, known then as the OHL Chrysler Cup.

The Bulls reached the OHL finals in 1986 versus familiar foe from their Tier II days, the Guelph Platers. The Platers won the series in 6 games. In 1995 and 1996, the Bulls lost in the semi-finals to the Guelph Storm.

The 1999 season would be one for the memories when the Belleville Bulls would win it all. The Bulls defeated the London Knights 9–2 in game seven of the OHL championship series at the Yardmen Arena to win their first J. Ross Robertson Cup.

The Bulls competed in the 1999 Memorial Cup, hosted in Ottawa versus the Calgary Hitmen, Acadie-Bathurst Titan & Ottawa 67's. Belleville finished 3rd, losing to Ottawa 4–2 in the semifinal.

In the 2005–06 season, the Belleville Bulls celebrated their 25th anniversary in the OHL. The team also hosted the annual OHL All-Star game for the second time, on February 1, 2006. The Bulls set a season-best record of 102 points earned during the 2007–08 regular season.

In 2007–08, the Bulls made a trip to the Memorial Cup by virtue of Kitchener winning the Western Conference, and being the host, Belleville would get in as the OHL representative. The Bulls would lose the semi-final game 9-0 against the hosting team, the Kitchener Rangers, who would eventually lose to the Spokane Chiefs in the championship game.

Move to Hamilton

On March 12, 2015, Michael Andlauer announced that he had acquired the Belleville Bulls, and that they would move to Hamilton's FirstOntario Centre for the 2015-16 season and become the Hamilton Bulldogs. The Hamilton Bulldogs, an American Hockey League franchise, was concurrently sold to the Montreal Canadiens and moved to St. John's, Newfoundland for the 2015-16 season as the St. John's IceCaps (the True North Sports and Entertainment-owned IceCaps, which was affiliated with the Winnipeg Jets, moved back to Winnipeg as the Manitoba Moose).[1]

Championships

Leyden Trophy East Division Regular Season Champions

Bobby Orr Trophy Eastern Conference Champions

J. Ross Robertson Cup Championships: 1999

Memorial Cup Appearances: 2

Coaches

Larry Mavety coached the Belleville Bulls for 14 seasons. He is second only to Brian Kilrea for amount of time coached with an OHL team.

Lou Crawford was groomed by Mavety to replace him behind the Bulls' bench. Lou Crawford is the brother of NHL Coach Marc Crawford, who was also the coach of the St. John's Maple Leafs (now the Toronto Marlies) in the AHL, which played in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador. Their father, Floyd Crawford, was team captain of the 1959 World Champion Belleville McFarlands.

Former coaches Lou Crawford and Shawn MacKenzie both had brief NHL careers. George Burnett briefly coached with the Edmonton Oilers. James Boyd is the only former Bulls player to later coach the Belleville team.

List of Coaches

(Multiple years in parentheses)

Players

Award winners

CHL Humanitarian of the Year Award

Eddie Powers Memorial Trophy
OHL Top Point Scorer.

Jim Mahon Memorial Trophy
OHL Top Scoring Right Winger.

OHL Goaltender of the Year
Voted best goaltender in the OHL.

F.W. "Dinty" Moore Trophy
Best rookie goals against average.

  • 1982–1983 Dan Burrows
  • 1985–1986 Paul Henriques

Wayne Gretzky 99 Award
Playoffs MVP

Dan Snyder Memorial Trophy
Humanitarian of the year.

  • 1995–1996 Craig Mills
  • 2001–2002 David Silverstone
  • 2002–2003 Michael Mole
  • 2006–2007 Andrew Gibbons

William Hanley Trophy
Most sportsmanlike player.

Leo Lalonde Memorial Trophy
Overage player of the year.

Bobby Smith Trophy
Scholastic player of the year.

Jack Ferguson Award
First overall draft pick.

Captains

*2014–2015 Brett Welychka

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Retired numbers

NHL alumni

Team records

Team records for a single season
StatisticTotalSeason
Most points1022007–08
Most wins482007–08
Most goals for3901984–85
Least goals for1722003–04
Least goals against1752007–08
Most goals against3471986–87
Individual player records for a single season
StatisticPlayerTotalSeason
Most goalsDave MacLean / Randy Rowe641984–85 / 2000–01
Most assistsDave MacLean901984–85
Most pointsDave MacLean1541984–85
Most points, rookie Dunc MacIntyre 811981–82
Dan Cleary 811994–95
Most points, defencemanScott Boston841991–92
Best GAA, goalieMike Murphy2.082008–09
Goalies = minimum 1500 minutes played

Season-by-season results

Regular season

Legend: OL = Overtime loss, SL = Shootout Loss

Season Games Won Lost Tied OTL SL Points Pct % Goals
For
Goals
Against
Standing
1979–804424182500.5682351915th OPJHL
1980–814435 72720.8182731381st OPJHL
1981–82682442 2 500.3682803267th Leyden
1982–83703436 0 680.4863423326th Leyden
1983–84703337 0 660.4713193045th Leyden
1984–85664224 0 840.6363902782nd Leyden
1985–86663727 2 760.5763052682nd Leyden
1986–87662639 1 530.4022923475th Leyden
1987–88663230 4 680.5152972754th Leyden
1988–89662735 4 580.4392923226th Leyden
1989–90663626 4 760.5763012475th Leyden
1990–91663821 7 830.6293242803rd Leyden
1991–9266272712 660.5003142936th Leyden
1992–9366213411 530.4022803156th Leyden
1993–94663228 6 700.5303032644th Leyden
1994–95663231 3 670.5082952874th Eastern
1995–96663526 5 750.5683002503rd Eastern
1996–97662237 7 510.3862352785th Eastern
1997–98664122 3 850.6443152392nd Eastern
1998–99683922 7 850.6253342462nd East
1999–2000684422 2 0 900.6623192272nd East
2000–01683723 5 3 820.5812752241st East
2001–02683923 4 2 840.6032792181st East
2002–03683327 6 2 740.5291952003rd East
2003–04681544 8 1 390.2791722795th East
2004–05682929 6 4 680.4711762083rd East
2005–06683228 5 3 720.5292022253rd East
2006–07683924 0 5 830.6102602271st East
2007–08684814 4 21020.7502801751st East
2008–09684717 2 2 980.7212581761st East
2009–10682040 2 6 480.3531892635th East
2010–11682143 0 4 460.3381752714th East
2011–12683532 1 0 710.5222002212nd East
2012–13684416 5 3 960.7062281671st East
2013–14682338 4 3 530.3902062854th East
2014–15682733 3 5 620.3902032464th East

Playoffs

Uniforms and logos

1999 to present:
1982 to 1998:

Bulls Uniforms

Arena

The team has played all homes games at the Belleville Yardmen Arena (capacity 3,257) for the existence of the franchise. The Yardmen Arena is part of the Quinte Sports Centre which is composed of the Yardmen Arena and the Wally Dever arena which is home to the Belleville McFarlands, an OHA Senior team, and is also used by minor hockey teams.

Capacity = 3,257
Ice Size = 199.5' x 99.5'

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/16/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.