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词条 2014–15 ECHL season
释义

  1. League business

      Team changes   New affiliations and changes  Annual Board of Governors meeting   All-star game   2015 Kelly Cup Playoffs format 

  2. Standings

  3. Postseason

  4. Awards

     All-ECHL Teams 

  5. References

  6. See also

{{Infobox sports season
| title = 2014–15 ECHL season
| league = ECHL
| sport = Ice hockey
| duration = October 17, 2014 – April 11, 2015
| attendance =
| season = Regular season
| season_champ_name= Brabham Cup
| season_champs = Toledo Walleye
| MVP = Jeff Jakaitis (South Carolina)
| MVP_link = CCM Most Valuable Player
| top_scorer = Chad Costello (Allen)
| top_scorer_link = ECHL Leading Scorer Award
| playoffs = Playoffs
| playoffs_link = 2015 Kelly Cup playoffs
| conf1 = Eastern
| conf1_link =
| conf1_champ = South Carolina Stingrays
| conf1_runner-up = Toledo Walleye
| conf2 = Western
| conf2_link =
| conf2_champ = Allen Americans
| conf2_runner-up = Ontario Reign
| finals = Kelly Cup
| finals_link = 2015 Kelly Cup playoffs#Kelly Cup Finals
| finals_champ = Allen Americans
| finals_runner-up = South Carolina Stingrays
| playoffs_MVP = Greger Hanson
| playoffs_MVP_link=
| nextseason_year = 2015–16
| prevseason_year = 2013–14
| seasonslistnames = ECHL
}}

The 2014–15 ECHL season was the 27th season of the ECHL. The regular season schedule ran from October 17, 2014, to April 11, 2015,[1] with the Kelly Cup playoffs following. Twenty-eight teams in 20 states and one Canadian province each played a 72-game schedule. The league was significantly expanded just before the season in October 2014 after a merger with its longtime rival, the Central Hockey League.[2]

League business

Team changes

  • The expansion Indy Fuel began play at the Fairgrounds Coliseum in Indianapolis, Indiana.[3]
  • The Las Vegas Wranglers voluntarily suspended operations in May 2014 to allow the team time to secure a new home arena. The team's lease with the Orleans Arena in Las Vegas was not renewed after the 2013–14 season.[4] In January 2015, the team announced that they would not be returning and had withdrawn their membership from the ECHL at the Mid-season Board of Governors Meeting.[5]
  • Shortly before the season began in October 2014, the ECHL expanded with seven new teams as a result of a merger with the Central Hockey League. The Allen Americans, Brampton Beast, Missouri Mavericks, Quad City Mallards, Rapid City Rush, Tulsa Oilers and Wichita Thunder formed a new Central Division in the Western Conference.[2] This entirely replaced a previously planned Midwest Division, which in turn reassigned the Colorado Eagles to the Western Conference's Pacific Division and sent Evansville, Fort Wayne, Kalamazoo and Indy to the Eastern Conference's North Division. Within the Eastern Conference the Elmira Jackals and Reading Royals were reassigned to the former South Division, which was renamed the East Division.

New affiliations and changes

ECHL teamNew affiliatesFormer affiliates
Alaska Aces Minnesota Wild (NHL)
St. Louis Blues (NHL)
Iowa Wild (AHL)
Calgary Flames (NHL)
Abbotsford Heat (AHL)
Allen Americans San Jose Sharks (NHL)
Worcester Sharks (AHL)
Unaffiliated in CHL
Brampton BeastUnaffiliated from CHL
Colorado Eagles Calgary Flames (NHL)
Adirondack Flames (AHL)
Independent
Elmira Jackals Buffalo Sabres (NHL)
Rochester Americans (AHL)
Ottawa Senators (NHL)
Binghamton Senators (AHL)
Evansville IceMen Ottawa Senators (NHL)
Binghamton Senators (AHL)
Columbus Blue Jackets (NHL)
Springfield Falcons (AHL)
Fort Wayne Komets Colorado Avalanche (NHL)
Lake Erie Monsters (AHL)
Independent
Indy Fuel Chicago Blackhawks (NHL)
Rockford IceHogs (AHL)
Expansion team
Kalamazoo Wings Columbus Blue Jackets (NHL)
Springfield Falcons (AHL)
St. Louis Blues (NHL)
Missouri MavericksChicago Wolves (AHL) since 2011 in CHL
Orlando Solar Bears Minnesota Wild (NHL)
Iowa Wild (AHL)
Quad City Mallards Minnesota Wild (NHL)
Iowa Wild (AHL)
Wild affiliation in CHL since 2013
Rapid City RushUnaffiliated from CHL
Reading Royals Philadelphia Flyers (NHL)
Lehigh Valley Phantoms (AHL)
Washington Capitals (NHL)
Hershey Bears (AHL)
South Carolina Stingrays Washington Capitals (NHL)
Hershey Bears (AHL)
Toledo Walleye Chicago Blackhawks (NHL)
Rockford IceHogs (AHL)
Tulsa OilersUnaffiliated from CHL
Wichita ThunderUnaffiliated from CHL

Annual Board of Governors meeting

The annual ECHL Board of Governors meeting was held at the Monte Carlo Resort and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada, in June 2014. Conferences were significantly re-aligned in light of recent team changes. In the Eastern Conference, the three-team Atlantic Division was eliminated while the Mountain Division in the Western Conference was eliminated to make way for a new Midwest Division. The Evansville IceMen, Fort Wayne Komets and Kalamazoo Wings were moved to the Western Conference to compete in the Midwest Division with the Colorado Eagles and expansion Indy Fuel.[6] This was significantly revised after the CHL merger in October 2014, with the newly created Midwest Division eliminated in favor of a Central Division consisting of the former CHL teams. Along with Indy, Evansville, Fort Wayne and Kalamazoo were moved back to the Eastern Conference.[2]

The ECHL Board of Governors also re-elected Gwinnett Gladiators president Steve Chapman as chairman and approved changes to the icing rule similar to those previously implemented by the National Hockey League.[6]

All-star game

The annual ECHL All-Star Classic was held on January 21, 2015, at the Amway Center in Orlando, Florida. The format for the 2015 All-star Game featured the Orlando Solar Bears taking on the ECHL All-stars.[7] The ECHL All-stars won the game with a score of 8-4 and the game had the largest ECHL all-star game attendance since 2000.[8]

2015 Kelly Cup Playoffs format

At the end of the regular season the top four teams in each division qualified for the 2015 Kelly Cup Playoffs. The first two playoff rounds were played entirely within the divisions, with the divisional playoff champions facing each other in the conference championships. The Kelly Cup final pitted the Eastern Conference champion against the Western Conference champion. All four rounds were a best-of-seven format.[6]

Standings

Due to the merger with the Central Hockey League, the league's conference alignment changed on October 9, 2014, moving the Colorado Eagles to the Pacific Division and moving the seven former CHL squads into the Western Conference as the Central Division. The Midwest Division dissolved, with its remaining teams joining the North Division. To make room for the four Midwest teams, the Reading Royals and Elmira Jackals left the North Division for the South, which was then renamed the East Division.[2]

Final Regular Season Standings[9]
Eastern Conference
North Division{{abbr|GP|Games played{{abbr|W|Wins{{abbr|L|Losses{{abbr|OTL|Overtime losses{{abbr|SOL|Shootout loss{{abbr|GF|Goals for{{abbr|GA|Goals against{{abbr|PTS|Points
z – Toledo Walleye (DET) 72 50 15 5 2 281 182 107
x – Fort Wayne Komets (COL) 72 48 18 2 4 251 200 102
x – Kalamazoo Wings (CBJ/VAN) 72 36 30 3 3 226 233 78
x – Wheeling Nailers (MTL/PIT) 72 37 33 1 1 210 213 76
Cincinnati Cyclones (FLA/NSH) 72 31 30 2 9 195 212 73
Indy Fuel (CHI) 72 31 30 4 7 197 221 73
Evansville IceMen (OTT) 72 15 48 6 3 169 271 39
East Division{{abbr|GP|Games played{{abbr|W|Wins{{abbr|L|Losses{{abbr|OTL|Overtime losses{{abbr|SOL|Shootout loss{{abbr|GF|Goals for{{abbr|GA|Goals against{{abbr|PTS|Points
y – Florida Everblades (CAR/TB) 72 49 16 2 5 267 208 105
x – South Carolina Stingrays (BOS/WSH) 72 45 20 1 6 224 163 97
x – Reading Royals (PHI) 72 45 21 4 2 259 210 96
x – Orlando Solar Bears (TOR) 72 37 25 6 4 236 215 84
Greenville Road Warriors (NYR) 72 39 29 1 3 216 215 82
Elmira Jackals (BUF) 72 32 33 0 7 186 217 71
Gwinnett Gladiators (ARZ) 72 20 45 3 4 174 263 47
Western Conference
Central Division{{abbr|GP|Games played{{abbr|W|Wins{{abbr|L|Losses{{abbr|OTL|Overtime losses{{abbr|SOL|Shootout loss{{abbr|GF|Goals for{{abbr|GA|Goals against{{abbr|PTS|Points
y – Allen Americans (SJ) 72 48 14 6 4 292 203 106
x – Rapid City Rush ({{abbr|Ind.|Independent/unaffiliated}}) 72 37 28 2 5 218 206 81
x – Quad City Mallards (MIN) 72 37 28 4 3 205 186 81
x – Tulsa Oilers ({{abbr|Ind.|Independent/unaffiliated}}) 72 37 29 3 3 248 244 80
Wichita Thunder ({{abbr|Ind.|Independent/unaffiliated}}) 72 32 31 2 7 213 240 73
Missouri Mavericks (AHL-CHI) 72 28 35 5 4 192 231 65
Brampton Beast ({{abbr|Ind.|Independent/unaffiliated}}) 72 23 46 3 0 181 298 49
Pacific Division{{abbr|GP|Games played{{abbr|W|Wins{{abbr|L|Losses{{abbr|OTL|Overtime losses{{abbr|SOL|Shootout loss{{abbr|GF|Goals for{{abbr|GA|Goals against{{abbr|PTS|Points
y – Idaho Steelheads (DAL) 72 48 18 2 4 258 187 102
x – Ontario Reign (LA/WPG) 72 43 19 4 6 239 184 96
x – Colorado Eagles (CGY) 72 41 23 4 4 236 209 90
x – Utah Grizzlies (ANA) 72 37 27 5 3 213 219 82
Alaska Aces (MIN/STL) 72 35 30 3 4 237 233 77
Bakersfield Condors (EDM) 72 26 38 3 5 202 265 60
Stockton Thunder (NYI) 72 21 49 1 1 199 296 44
{{Color box|#bbffbb|x|border=darkgray}} - clinched playoff spot, {{Color box|#ffeeaa|y|border=darkgray}} - clinched regular season division title, {{Color box|#FFFF00|z|border=darkgray}} - Brabham Cup (regular season) champion

Postseason

{{main|2015 Kelly Cup playoffs}}{{2015 Kelly Cup Playoffs}}

Awards

{{See also|ECHL awards}}
Award Winner
Patrick Kelly Cup: Allen Americans
Henry Brabham Cup: Toledo Walleye
Gingher Memorial Trophy: South Carolina Stingrays
Bruce Taylor Trophy: Allen Americans
John Brophy Award: Derek Lalonde, Toledo Walleye
CCM Most Valuable Player: Jeff Jakaitis, South Carolina Stingrays
Kelly Cup Playoffs Most Valuable Player: Greger Hanson, Allen Americans
Warrior Hockey Goaltender of the Year: Jeff Jakaitis, South Carolina Stingrays
CCM Rookie of the Year: Tyler Barnes, Toledo Walleye
CCM Defenseman of the Year: Mike Little, Florida Everblades
Leading Scorer: Chad Costello, Allen Americans
AMI Graphics Plus Performer Award: Drew Daniels, Fort Wayne Komets
Mike Little, Florida Everblades
Sportsmanship Award: Chad Costello, Allen Americans
Community Service Award: Cal Wild, Brampton Beast
Birmingham Memorial Award: Scott Senger

All-ECHL Teams

All-First Team[10]
  • Jeff Jakaitis (G) – South Carolina Stingrays
  • Mike Little (D) – Florida Everblades
  • Matthew Register (D) – Ontario Reign
  • Chad Costello (F) – Allen Americans
  • Wade MacLeod (F) – Idaho Steelheads
  • Shawn Szydlowski (F) – Fort Wayne Komets
All-Second Team[11]
  • Jeff Lerg (G) – Toledo Walleye
  • Cameron Burt (D) – Florida Everblades
  • Aaron Gens (D) – Allen Americans
  • Adam Brace (F) – Florida Everblades
  • Brendan Connolly (F) – Alaska Aces
  • Gary Steffes (F) – Allen Americans
All-Rookie Team[12]
  • Roman Will (G) – Fort Wayne Komets
  • Justin Baker (D) – Allen Americans
  • Steven Shamanski (D) – Elmira Jackals
  • Derek Army (F) – Wheeling Nailers
  • Tyler Barnes (F) – Toledo Walleye
  • Jason Bast (F) – Idaho Steelheads

References

1. ^"ECHL releases 2014-15 schedule", ECHL, June 4, 2014. (accessed 15 June 2014)
2. ^"ECHL Accepts Seven New Members", ECHL, October 7, 2014. (accessed 13 October 2014)
3. ^Wilson, Phillip B. "Indy Fuel sign affiliation deal with Chicago Blackhawks", The Indianapolis Star, April 1, 2014. (accessed 15 June 2014)
4. ^Guillermo, Matt. "Venue flux to sideline Las Vegas Wranglers next season", KVVU-TV, May 20, 2014. (accessed 15 June 2014)
5. ^http://echl.com/echl-board-of-governors-announces-major-moves-p196041
6. ^"Annual ECHL Board of Governors Meeting concludes", ECHL, June 24, 2014. (accessed 24 June 2014)
7. ^"2015 CCM/ECHL ALL-STAR CLASSIC PRESENTED BY VISIT ORLANDO", Orlando Solar Bears. (accessed 15 June 2014)
8. ^http://echl.com/echl-all-stars-defeat-orlando-8-4-p195901
9. ^{{Cite web|title=2014-15 Regular Season - Division |url=http://echl.com/stats/statdisplay.php?type=standings&subType=0&season_id=33&tournament_id=0&leagueId=1&division_id=3&confId=0 |accessdate= |date= |publisher=ECHL |language= |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20141109213826/http://echl.com/stats/statdisplay.php?type=standings&subType=0&season_id=33&tournament_id=0&leagueId=1&division_id=3&confId=0 |archivedate=2014-11-09 }}
10. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.echl.com/all-echl-first-team-announced-p197294 |title=ALL-ECHL FIRST TEAM ANNOUNCED |publisher=ECHL |date=April 9, 2015}}
11. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.echl.com/all-echl-second-team-announced-p197295 |title=ALL-ECHL SECOND TEAM ANNOUNCED |publisher=ECHL |date=April 9, 2015}}
12. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.echl.com/echl-announces-2014-15-all-rookie-team-p197273 |title=ECHL ANNOUNCES 2014-15 ALL-ROOKIE TEAM |publisher=ECHL |date=April 8, 2015}}

See also

  • 2014 in sports
  • 2015 in sports
{{ECHL seasons}}{{ECHL}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Echl Season 2014-15}}

4 : 2014–15 ECHL season|ECHL seasons|2014–15 in American ice hockey by league|2014–15 in Canadian ice hockey by league

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