Tropical Hockey League

The Tropical Hockey League was an ice hockey league in Miami, Florida. The league had four teams, all based in Miami, and lasted for only one season, 1938–39, before folding. It was notable as the first attempt to establish professional hockey in Florida or the South in general, though it ultimately had no impact on popularizing the sport in the region.

History

The Tropical Hockey League was established as an attempt to introduce ice hockey to the Southern United States. The league consisted of four teams: the Coral Gables Seminoles, the Miami Clippers, Miami Beach Pirates, and the Havana Tropicals, all of which played at the Metropolitan Ice Palace in Miami.[1] With three exceptions the players were all Canadians recruited from camps in Port Colborne, Ontario and Winnipeg, Manitoba. One notable figure was Mike Goodman, a former member of the Winnipeg Falcons who won the gold medal in hockey for Canada in the 1920 Summer Olympics; he served the Seminoles as player-coach.[2]

The league's inaugural game, billed as "the first hockey game ever staged in the south", was played between the Clippers and Pirates on December 10, 1938. It was preceded by demonstrations of the sport by the players and featured a mambo concert after the second period. The game ended with a fight following a 4-3 victory by the Clippers.[2] Newspapers of the time (including the Miami Herald and the AP report) list the final score of the first game as 3-2. It seems as if the Miami News printed the wrong score on December 11, 1938. In subsequent reports the Miami News switches to 3-2 being the final. The Tropical Hockey League made it through a 15-game season in 1938-39.[1] However, it failed to attract much interest from the community due to its late start times, weak competition, and a tendency for games to devolve into fighting, and folded at the end of the season.[2]

The Tropical Hockey League experiment did nothing to popularize hockey in the South.[1] There would be no further attempt to establish professional hockey in the region until 1956, when the Eastern Hockey League placed the Charlotte Clippers, later the Charlotte Checkers, in Charlotte, North Carolina.[1] Florida did not get another hockey team until the Jacksonville Rockets joined the EHL in 1964.[3] From 1992–1995 there was another minor hockey league based in Florida, the Sunshine Hockey League.[4]

Final standings

GP W L OTL GF GA Pts
Coral Gables Seminoles141220855324
Miami Clippers13760535814
Miami Beach Pirates14590576910
Havana Tropicals15411069848

Notes

  1. Mancuso and Kelly, p. 7.
  2. McKinley, p. 124.
  3. Mancuso and Kelly, p. 9.
  4. Mancuso and Kelly, p. 15.
gollark: @ubq323 how is progress with the apioformic rewrite?
gollark: Great, resynced.
gollark: ++tel dial MatsWidenBacon
gollark: ++tel disconnect
gollark: ++tel disconnect

References

  • Mancuso, Jim; Pat Kelly (2006). Hockey in Charlotte. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 0-7385-4230-X. Retrieved December 21, 2010.
  • McKinley, Michael (2009). Hockey: A People's History. Random House Digital. ISBN 0771057717. Retrieved June 25, 2013.


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