New_Westminster_Bruins

New Westminster Bruins

New Westminster Bruins

Ice hockey team


The New Westminster Bruins were a major junior ice hockey team in the Western Hockey League. There were two franchises that carried this name:

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Both incarnations of the franchise played at Queen's Park Arena in the Vancouver suburb of New Westminster, British Columbia.

History

First Bruins

The franchise began in 1946 as the Humboldt Indians of the original version of the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League (1948–1966), moving to Estevan to become the Bruins in 1957. They were a founding member of the Western Canada-based Canadian Major Junior Hockey League (later renamed the Western Canada Hockey League) in 1966. The Estevan Bruins had been a successful franchise, including a loss in the 1968 Memorial Cup national championship, when team owner and coach Punch McLean moved the team to New Westminster for the 1971–72 WCHL season.

New Westminster Bruins logo used by the second incarnation of the franchise.

Once the team arrived in New Westminster, the success continued throughout much of the decade. The Bruins won the President's Cup four times in a row between 1975 and 1978. They made it to the Memorial Cup finals four years in a row as well, losing in 1975 and 1976 before winning it in 1977 and 1978. The WCHL was renamed the Western Hockey League for the 1978–79 WHL season. That season, after a brawl at the end of a game against Portland in March 1979 at Queens Park Arena, some local hockey fans started to look with disfavour upon the Bruins' rough tactics, and the team's popularity began to wane. The Bruins moved to Kamloops, British Columbia, for the 1980–81 WHL season, where they would become first the Kamloops Junior Oilers and, from the 1984–85 WHL season, the Kamloops Blazers.

Second Bruins

The second incarnation of the Bruins arrived in New Westminster in 1983 from Nanaimo, British Columbia, where they had previously been known as the Nanaimo Islanders. The team originated in Calgary in 1966–67 with a stop as the Billings Bighorns. The team only played one season in Nanaimo before moving. The new Bruins did not enjoy the same level of success, and lasted only five seasons in New Westminster before moving to Kennewick, Washington, to become the Tri-City Americans. This franchise has never won the WHL championship in any of its incarnations.

Season-by-season records

First Bruins (1971–81)

Note: GP = games played, W = wins, L = losses, T = ties Pts = points, GF = goals for, GA = goals against

SeasonGP W L T GF GA PointsFinishPlayoffs
1971–726840271285240813rd WestLost quarter-final
1972–7368312215283264774th WestLost quarter-final
1973–7468362111284250832nd WestLost semi-final
1974–7570372211319260853rd WestWon championship, 2nd in Memorial Cup
1975–7672541444632471121st WestWon championship, 2nd in Memorial Cup
1976–77724714113632161051st WestWon championship and Memorial Cup
1977–7872332811345310773rd WestWon championship and Memorial Cup
1978–797234326310301743rd WestEliminated in round robin
1979–807210611244443214th WestOut of playoffs
1980–817217541306512355th WestOut of playoffs

Second Bruins (1983–88)

SeasonGP W L T GF GA PointsFinishPlayoffs
1983–847234362304348702nd WestLost West Division semi-final
1984–857241292379302842nd WestLost West Division final
1985–867225452276373525th WestOut of playoffs
1986–877218504300432406th WestOut of playoffs
1987–887233345339358714th WestLost West Division semi-final

NHL alumni

Totals include both incarnations of the Bruins

See also

References


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