World United Hockey League

The World United Hockey League (WUHL) was a junior ice hockey league. The WUHL were members of the United Hockey Union (UHU), an affiliate of the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU).

World United Hockey League
SportIce hockey
Founded2014
Ceased2015
No. of teams4
Country Canada
Last
champion(s)
St. Charles North Stars (2014–15)
Official websiteWUHL Website

History

Formed in November 2014, the WUHL was formed by four teams who were previously members of the Canadian International Hockey League (CIHL). On November 10, 2014 the CIHL decided to leave the UHU and became an independent league.[1][2] The four teams decided to separate and stay under the UHU umbrella, forming the new league.

On November 15, 2014, the Milton Battle Arts Cobras won the first-ever WUHL game, 7-4[3] against Toronto Junior Hockey Academy. Defensemen Brody Heleno of Missassauga, Ontario scored the historic opening goal just 42-seconds into the game. Heleno recently committed to play college hockey at Salem State University in the Fall of 2015.[4]

After playing nine league games, Collingwood Ice owner Tim Dickieson folded the team. The Ice won five of eight games, but Dickieson alleged a lack of local support ended the team.[5][6]

All four teams competed in the 2015 WUHL Playoffs. Regular season winner St. Charles easily swept their best-of-three semifinals series over Colborne (9-3, 12-2) while Milton had a much tougher series win over Toronto Hockey Academy (6-5, 1-0). The league finals were a best-of-five series with the North Stars defeating Milton in three straight games (5-2, 8-5, 5-1).[7]

Two expansion teams were announced in July 2015: Acton Rhinos and Mississauga Red Dogs. However, by early September, the Red Dogs had removed their website and appears to have folded sometime after attempting to hold a training camp on August 26, 2015. On September 14, 2015, the WUHL announced another expansion team called the Lake of Bays Snappers based out of Lake of Bays, Ontario.[8] However, since the announcement stating the Snappers would take the ice in October 2015, there had been no updates on any teams or league news by the end of October and the league has appeared to have ceased operations.

Teams

TeamArenaCity/area
Acton RhinosActon ArenaActon, Ontario
Lake of Bays SnappersBaysville ArenaLake of Bays, Ontario
St. Charles North StarsSt. Charles ArenaSt. Charles, Ontario
Toronto Junior Hockey AcademyMasterCard CentreToronto, Ontario

Former teams

  • Colborne Cramahe Hawks (2014–15)
  • Collingwood Ice (2014–15)
  • Milton Battle Arts Cobras (2014–15)
  • Mississauga Red Dogs (Announced for 2015–16 but appears to have ceased operations in September 2015)

League champions

SeasonRegular Season ChampionPlayoff ChampionRunner-up
2014–15St. Charles North StarsSt. Charles North StarsMilton Cobras

2015 Playoffs

Semifinals WUHL Finals
      
1 St. Charles North Stars 2
4 Colborne Cramahe Hawks 0
1 St. Charles North Stars 3
2 Milton Cobras 0
2 Milton Cobras 2
3 Toronto Hockey Academy 0
gollark: WHY IS THIS SOURCE FILE 15000 LINES
gollark: The compiler should just optimize™ it via magic.
gollark: Hmm. It is clearly apparent that I have no idea how git works. What joy.
gollark: They have good JITs.
gollark: That's actually slower than modern JS engines.

References

  1. "New Look For The CIHL". CIHL Hockey. 10 November 2014.
  2. "The Death Pool – CIHL Is The Latest To Leave AAU – UHU Has Two Members For Now". The Junior Hockey News. 10 November 2014.
  3. "Toronto Jr. Hockey Academy vs Milton Battle Arts Cobras". Pointstreak. 15 November 2014.
  4. "Heleno Commits To Salem State". Milton Battle Arts Cobras. 13 December 2014.
  5. "Collingwood junior hockey team folds". Simcoe.com. 5 January 2015.
  6. "Collingwood Ice disbanded after owner alleges campaign against them". Collingwood Enterprise Bulletin. 8 January 2015.
  7. "North Stars sweep to league title". Sudbury Star. 29 March 2015.
  8. "The WUHL Lands in Cottage Country!!!!". Pointstreak. September 14, 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.