Saint John Storm

The Saint John Storm are a women's football team in the Maritime Women's Football League. Originally known as the Saint John Seagalls, they were also once known as the Saint John Buccaneers and are one of the three charter franchises in MWFL history. The current head coach is Larry Harlow and the coaching staff includes Jim Mather, Tyler Guimond, Danny Oliver and Gillian Gilmore. Games are contested at Kennebecasis High Field.

Saint John Storm
Founded2004
Based inSaint John, New Brunswick, Canada
Head coachLarry Harlow
LeagueMaritime Women's Football League
DivisionMaritime
ColoursOxford blue, Orange, White
              
MWFL championships2010, 2011

Year by year

= Indicates Playoff Appearance
= Indicates Regular Season Title
= Indicates League Championship
SeasonRecordFinishPostseason
20105-1-0SupHer Bowl VII, 26-6 vs. Vipers
20115-1-0SupHer Bowl VIII, 31-8 vs. Gladiators
2012Friendship Bowl champions
20136-0-0Regular season championsSupHer Bowl X, 14-26 vs. Gladiators

IFAF competitors

The following recognizes women from the Saint John Storm that competed in the IFAF Women's World Football Championships

2010

  • Lori Boyles
  • Jaclyn Brewer
  • Ashley Clements
  • Melissa Daley
  • Erin Devlin
  • Kara Fillmore
  • Lisa Harlow
  • Kendra Jones
  • Lisa Rogers
  • Amy Salter
  • Terri Shannon
  • Trina Graves
  • Alanna Waberski
  • Michelle Young-Mather[1]

2013

  • Lori Boyles
  • Trina Graves[2]

Awards and honors

  • 2011 SupHer Bowl VIII Most Outstanding Player Offense, Lisa Harlow
  • 2011 SupHer Bowl VIII Most Outstanding Player Defense, Ashlee Clements
  • 2010 SupHer Bowl VII Most Outstanding Player Offense, Kendra Jones
  • 2010 SupHer Bowl VII Most Outstanding Player Defense, Jaclyn Brewer
  • 2009 SupHer Bowl VI Most Outstanding Player Offense, Lori Boyles
  • 2009 SupHer Bowl VI Most Outstanding Player Defense, Michele Young-Mather
  • 2008 SupHer Bowl V Most Outstanding Player Defense, Alanna Waberski
gollark: Although maybe not because of diminishing returns.
gollark: But I guess 2x the quality at 2x the bitrate seems completely plausible.
gollark: I've heard it can do up to maybe 50% *bitrate* savings.
gollark: Compared to what?
gollark: VP9's pretty competitive with H.265 anyway.

References

  1. http://www.footballcanada.com/LinkClick.aspx?fileticket=6oFU%2bJjRYNI%3d&tabid=139&language=en-CA%5B%5D
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2013-11-17. Retrieved 2013-11-15.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.