Dubuque Fighting Saints

This article is about the current Dubuque Fighting Saints of the USHL established in 2010. For the former team of the same name that played from 1980 to 2001, see: Dubuque Fighting Saints (1980–2001).
Dubuque Fighting Saints
City Dubuque, Iowa
League USHL
Conference East
Founded 2010
Home arena Mystique Community Ice Center
Colors

Red & White

         
Owner(s) Northern Lights Hockey, LLC (Brad Kwong, managing partner)
General manager Jason Lammers (2015-16)
Head coach Jason Lammers (2015-16)
Media Telegraph Herald, KIYX, KCRG-TV, KWWL, KGAN
Franchise history
2010–present Dubuque Fighting Saints
Championships
Regular season titles Anderson Cup
1 (2012–13)
Conference Championships 3 (2010–11, 2012–13,
2015–16)
Playoff championships Clark Cup
2 (2010–11, 2012–13)

The Dubuque Fighting Saints are a Tier I junior ice hockey team playing in the United States Hockey League (USHL) and are based in the city of Dubuque, Iowa on the banks of the Mississippi River at the border intersects of Iowa, Illinois and Wisconsin. Home games are played at the Mystique Community Ice Center (capacity: 3,079). Home and away games are broadcast live on KIYX, with Zack Fisch handling play-by-play with select games televised locally each season on KCRG-TV channel 9.2.

History

The original Dubuque Fighting Saints played at the multi-purpose Dubuque Five Flags Center arena situated in downtown Dubuque from 1980 to 2001. In the early years of the franchise the Saints enjoyed much success with a number of championship seasons. In later years, the team struggled on the ice and crowds in the stands decreased putting the team into some financial trouble. During the 2000–01 season, team owner/GM/coach Brain Gallagher announced plans to relocate the team following the season to Tulsa, Oklahoma to play as the Tulsa Crude. In their first and only season in Tulsa, Gallagher's team would finish last in the league (12-43-6) and failed to generate the necessary fan support, and the franchise ceased operations.

To replace the hockey void in Dubuque, the Fighting Saints were replaced in the 2001–02 season by the Dubuque Thunderbirds in the Tier III Minnesota Junior Hockey League and later the Central States Hockey League. The Thunderbirds would prove to be a success and would win league championships in 2004, 2007, 2008, and 2009 while setting league attendance records along the way.

In the fall of 2009, construction began on the new Mystique Community Ice Center. Around that same time several former hockey teammates from Harvard formed Northern Lights Hockey, LLC. which included former team captain, Brad Kwong; Philip Falcone (part owner of NHL's Minnesota Wild); Peter Chiarelli (past GM of the NHL's Boston Bruins/current GM of the NHL's Edmonton Oilers); and former University of Denver player Mark Falcone (board member of the NHL's Minnesota Wild). The purpose of their group was to assemble and develop plans to obtain ownership of an USHL expansion team, announcing in late 2009 their intentions to bring USHL hockey back to Dubuque. The new team replaced the successful Dubuque Thunderbirds in 2010. After completion of voting from local hockey fans, it was revealed that the "Fighting Saints" moniker would once again represent Dubuque in the USHL.[1]

2010–11

In their first year back in the USHL, the Saints would inaugurate the brand new Mystique Community Ice Center with Dubuque native Brooks Bertsch scoring the first goal. The expansion Fighting Saints had a successful season compiling a 37–14–9 record and taking first place in the Western Conference.[2] The Saints would go on to a 9-2 playoff record, defeating the Fargo Force 3-games-to-0 in the quarterfinals, Sioux Falls Stampede 3-games-to-1 in the semifinals, and win the 2011 USHL Clark Cup. They defeating the defending Clark Cup Champion Green Bay Gamblers 3-games-to-1 in the best-of-five finals.[3] Saints LW Rookie Johnny Gaudreau was recognized as the USHL Rookie of the Year and Jim Montgomery was recognized as the USHL General Manager of the Year.

2011–12

After an off-season conference realignment by the USHL, the Saints were moved to the Eastern Conference. The defending champions would finish in third place with a 36–20–4 record and claim the inaugural "Cowbell Cup".[4] They would go on to win the opening best-of-three qualifying round of the playoffs 2-games-to-0 over Team USA. The Saints were then swept in the best-of-five quarterfinals by the Indiana Ice.[5]

2012–13

The Fighting Saints would roll through the season with a 45–11–8 record, finishing first in the Eastern Conference and the overall league leaders, securing their first Anderson Cup regular season championship since the former Saints in the 1982–83 season, and repeat as Cowbell Cup champions.[6] After securing a bye for the qualifying round, the Saints skated to a 3-games-to-0 quarterfinals win over the Muskegon Lumberjacks. The Youngstown Phantoms took Dubuque to a decisive game 5 in the Clark Cup Semifinals, with the Saints advancing with the win. In the Clark Cup Finals, the Saints would seal the championship with a win on the road, taking down the Fargo Force 3-games-to-0.[7] Dan Lehv was recognized as the USHL Executive of the Year and Jim Montgomery was once again recognized as the USHL General Manager of the Year. Montgomery had served as the team's head coach and general manager from 2010 through the end of the 2013 season. In May 2013, Matt Shaw was hired as head coach and GM to replace Montgomery who was hired as head coach of the University of Denver Pioneers.

2013–14

Prior to the start of the season, first-year coach Shaw and the Saints were invited to play in the Junior Club World Cup in Omsk, Russia finishing with the bronze medal. Returning home, the defending champions skated to a 33-23-4 regular season record, finishing third in the Eastern Conference[8] and qualifying for the postseason for the fourth time in four years.[9] Prior to the start of the season, the USHL reduced the number of playoff teams from each conference from 6 to 4, eliminating the opening qualifying round. In the playoffs, the Saints would face-off in the quarterfinals against the Cedar Rapids RoughRiders for the first time and would win the series 3-games-to-1. The Saints were then swept out of the semifinals by the eventual Clark Cup Champion Indiana Ice, 3-games-to-0.[10]

2014–15

The Saints finished the regular season in third place in the Eastern Conference with a 36–19–5 record.[11] For the fifth straight year since returning to the USHL, they qualified for the Clark Cup playoffs, extending the longest active playoff streak in the league. The Saints also claimed their third "Cowbell Cup" in the Prairie Farms Cowbell Cup Series over Cedar Rapids and Waterloo. The playoff quarterfinals pitted the Saints in a 2014 quarterfinals rematch against rival Cedar Rapids, a team that Dubuque had aa 6-2 regular season record against. Dubuque would sweep Cedar Rapids 3-games-to-0 in the best-of-five series to move on. The best-of-five semifinals pitted Dubuque against the Muskegon Lumberjacks. In a back and forth five-game series with neither team notching back-to-back wins, Muskegon would prevail in game 5 by holding off a late game rally for the 3-4 win and take the series.[12] Following the season, head coach Matt Shaw announced that he would be leaving the Saints after accepting a position as an assistant coach at the University of North Dakota

2015–16

The Saints under direction of first year coach Jason Lammers, would wrap up the 2015–16 regular season in third place in the Eastern Conference (39-19-1-1). For the sixth straight year, the Saints qualified for a spot in the Clark Cup playoffs, further extending the longest active playoff streak in the league. Each of the four Eastern Conference playoff teams finished the season with better records than all teams in the Western Conference, gaining the eventual Eastern Conference champions a guaranteed home-ice advantage in the finals. In the quarterfinals, the Saints would close out a 3-games-to-1 series win against the second seeded Green Bay Gamblers. In the Eastern Conference finals, Dubuque took the first of a back and forth series against the Bloomington Thunder and took the series to game five at home in Dubuque, prevailing in a 3-0 shutout to earn a spot and home-ice advantage in the Clark Cup finals. Even with the home-ice advantage, the Fighting Saints would be swept in three games in the finals by the Tri-City Storm.

Team colors and logo

The Fighting Saints team colors are red and white and a secondary color silver. Their main logo is a Gothic style D with a sword piercing the D and a halo on the top.

Season records

Season GP W L OTL SOL PTS GF GA PIM Regular Season Results Playoff Results Playoff Record Trophies
2010–11 60 37 14 9 -- 83 195 152 961 1st, Western Conference Quarterfinals (W) 3-0 vs Fargo
Semifinals (W) 3-1 vs Sioux Falls
Clark Cup Finals (W) 3-1 vs Green Bay
9 - 2 Clark Cup
2011–12 60 36 20 4 -- 76 189 169 940 3rd, Eastern Conference Qualifying round (W) 2-0 vs Team USA
Quarterfinals (L) 0-3 vs Indiana
2 - 3 Cowbell Cup
2012–13 64 45 11 8 -- 98 247 154 1055 1st, Eastern Conference;
League Champions
Quarterfinals (W) 3-0 vs Muskegon
Semifinals (W) 3-2 vs Youngstown
Clark Cup Finals (W) 3-0 vs Fargo
9 - 2 Clark Cup, Anderson Cup,
Cowbell Cup
2013–14 60 33 23 4 -- 70 201 186 957 3rd, Eastern Conference Quarterfinals (W) 3-1 vs Cedar Rapids
Semifinals (L) 0-3 vs Indiana
3 - 4
2014–15 60 36 19 5 -- 77 207 167 1327 3rd, Eastern Conference Quarterfinals (W) 3-0 vs Cedar Rapids
Semifinals (L) 2-3 vs Muskegon
5 - 3 Cowbell Cup
2015–16 60 39 19 1 1 80 209 159 1082 3rd, Eastern Conference Quarterfinals (W) 3-1 vs Green Bay
Semifinals (W) 3-2 vs Bloomington
Clark Cup Finals (L) 0-3 vs Tri-City
6 - 6 Eastern Conference Champions

Cowbell Cup Champions

Started in 2011–12 season and sponsored by Prairie Farms, the Cowbell Cup is awarded to the highest finisher in the "Cowbell Cup Regular Season Series" between the eastern Iowa USHL rivals; Cedar Rapids RoughRiders, Dubuque Fighting Saints, and Waterloo Blackhawks. At the start of the 2015–16 season, Dupaco Community Credit Union became the primary sponsor of the renamed "Dupaco Cowbell Cup". The Fighting Saints have won the Cowbell Cup in the following seasons:

Professional staff

Hockey Operations Staff

Front Office Staff

Head coaches

Jim Montgomery (2010–13) - Assembling the new Fighting Saints was placed on shoulders of the new coach and general manager, Jim Montgomery. Montgomery was a standout at the University of Maine (301 points, 103 goals, 198 assists over 170 games) captaining 1992–93 NCAA Champions and was a finalist for the Hobey Baker Award before playing over a decade in the NHL. During Montgomery's three-year tenure at the helm, his team was 118-45-21 in the regular season and 20-7 in 3 trips to the postseason winning 2 Clark Cup Playoff Championships and 1 Anderson Cup Regular Season Championship. Montgomery was twice awarded the USHL's General Manager of the Year Award. After 3 incredibly successful seasons in which the Dubuque Fighting Saints stormed back into the USHL, Coach Montgomery was hired to fill the head coaching position at the University of Denver Pioneers.

Matt Shaw (2013–15) - Came to Dubuque with 20 years of coaching experience including several coaching positions from 2007–12 in the NHL. In his two seasons with the Saints, Coach Shaw would guide the team to back-to-back Clark Cup Semifinals appearances, with a 69-42-9 regular season record and notching an 8-7 playoff record. Coach Shaw accepting a position as an assistant coach at the University of North Dakota following the 2014–15 season.

Jason Lammers (2015–Present) - Comes to Dubuque with 15 years of coaching experience. Previously working in assistant and associate coaching positions at UMass Lowell, making 4 NCAA tournament appearances advancing once to the Frozen Four. Prior to UMass he was an assistant coach at Colorado College and Ohio State.

Alumni in the NHL

"Saints For Life"

DubuqueFightingSaints.com Alumni

Johnny Gaudreau (2010–11) - Selected as the Calgary Flames' fourth-round, 104th overall, in the 2011 NHL Entry Draft. "Johnny Hockey" was a member of the Boston College Eagles 2012 NCAA National Championship team, a finalist for the 2013 Hobey Baker Award, and the winner of the 2014 Hobey Baker Award as the top National Collegiate Athletic Association men's hockey player. He made his NHL debut with the Flames in the final game of the 2013–14 NHL season, scoring a goal in his first game. Selected as a rookie to play in the 2015 NHL All Star Game where he registered an assist. Johnny was a 2015 Calder Memorial Trophy finalist, finishing 3rd for the NHL rookie of the year award. In 2016 Johnny was selected to play for Team Pacific as a 2016 NHL All Star.

Zemgus Girgensons (2010–11, 2011–12) - Selected as the Buffalo Sabres' first-round selection, 14th overall, in the 2012 NHL Entry Draft. He made his NHL debut with the Sabres during the 2013–14 NHL season, scoring a goal in his first game and becoming the first former Saint to play in the NHL since its return as a franchise. Zemgus was a member of Latvia's 2014 Olympic Men's Hockey Team held in Sochi, Russia. Zemgus was the first place vote-getter for the 2015 NHL All Star Game.[13]

Michael Matheson (2011–12) - Selected as the Florida Panthers' first-round selection, 23rd overall, in the 2012 NHL Entry Draft. After three seasons at Boston College, Matheson, a defenseman and team captain, signed with the Panthers and played with their AHL affiliate before making his NHL debut on February 20th of the 2015–16 NHL season.[14]

Roster

2016–17 30-man roster.[15][16]

# S/P/C Player Pos Ht Wt DoB Hometown Previous team College commitment
2 Finland Tiuraniemi, Veli-MattiVeli-Matti Tiuraniemi D 6' 0" 181 lb 1997-06-17 Pietarsaari, Finland Oulun Kärpät (Nuorten SM-liiga) None
4 Illinois Keane, JoeyJoey Keane D 6' 0" 179 lb 1999-07-02 Homer Glen, Illinois Chicago Mission (Midget AAA) Miami
5 Ontario List, CaleCale List D 6' 2" 193 lb 1998-08-08 Petawawa, Ontario Pembroke (CCHL) UMass Lowell
6 Texas Baum, JeffJeff Baum D 5' 11" 185 lb 1996-06-17 Dallas, Texas Wichita Falls (NAHL) None
9 Minnesota Staum, CaseyCasey Staum D 5' 11" 174 lb 1998-01-08 Falcon Heights, Minnesota Hill-Murray School (USHS–MN) Nebraska–Omaha
10 Arizona Boyle, MichaelMichael Boyle D 6' 2" 208 lb 1997-09-16 Phoenix, Arizona Sioux City (USHL) Denver
11 Pennsylvania Maust, PaulPaul Maust F 5' 10" 175 lb 1998-06-24 Butler, Pennsylvania Wilkes-Barre/Scranton (NAHL) None
12 Minnesota Brumm, DavidDavid Brumm F 6' 1" 180 lb 1997-08-17 Maple Grove, Minnesota Vancouver (WHL) None
13 Michigan Theisen, ColinColin Theisen F 5' 11" 181 lb 1997-04-24 Monroe, Michigan Coulee Region (NAHL) Dartmouth
14 Michigan Theisen, IsaacIsaac Theisen F 5' 11" 160 lb 1996-04-13 Monroe, Michigan Coulee Region (NAHL) Air Force
15 Massachusetts Murphy, R. J.R. J. Murphy F 6' 2" 187 lb 1998-10-02 Needham, Massachusetts Saint Sebastian's School (USHS–MA) Harvard
16 Michigan Preston, QuinnQuinn Preston F 5' 0" 175 lb 1997-10-21 Trenton, Michigan Topeka (NAHL) None
17 Ontario Jeffers, JackJack Jeffers F 6' 1" 185 lb 1997-09-21 Oakville, Ontario Orangeville (OJHL) None
18 Minnesota Bushy, BrendanBrendan Bushy D 6' 1" 212 lb 1998-08-23 Thief River Falls, Minnesota Thief River Falls High School (USHS–MN) None
19 California Guttman, ColeCole Guttman F 5' 10" 165 lb 1999-04-05 Northridge, California Los Angeles Jr. Kings (Midget AAA) St. Cloud State
20 Minnesota Gerads, DallasDallas Gerads F 5' 10" 192 lb 1996-06-01 Blaine, Minnesota Rio Grande Valley (NAHL) Minnesota State
21 Sweden Ullman, ErikErik Ullman D 6' 0" 170 lb 1997-06-17 Stockholm, Sweden Modo Hockey (J20 SuperElit) None
22 Finland Virtanen, SanteriSanteri Virtanen F 6' 0" 179 lb 1999-05-11 Kirkkonummi, Finland HC TPS (SM-sarja) None
24 Florida Bofshever, JustinJustin Bofshever F 5' 10" 181 lb 1998-01-02 Coconut Creek, Florida Kenai River (NAHL) None
25 Virginia Cavanagh, RegenRegen Cavanagh F 5' 11" 170 lb 1997-01-31 Chesapeake, Virginia Corpus Christi (NAHL) None
26 Missouri Rueschhoff, AustinAustin Rueschhoff F 6' 5" 201 lb 1997-09-07 Wentzville, Missouri Austin (NAHL) None
27 Ontario Kudla, PatrickPatrick Kudla D 6' 3" 175 lb 1996-04-02 Guelph, Ontario Oakville (OJHL) Arizona State
28 Florida Solow, ZachZach Solow F 5' 9" 180 lb 1998-11-06 Naples, Florida Janesville (NAHL) Northeastern
29 California Hamacher, JacobJacob Hamacher F 5' 7" 156 lb 1997-04-19 Corona, California Wilkes-Barre/Scranton (NAHL) None
36 New Hampshire Robinson, MikeMike Robinson G 6' 4" 200 lb 1997-03-27 Bedford, New Hampshire Boston (USPHL) New Hampshire
37 New York (state) Wojciechowski, JohnJohn Wojciechowski F 6' 4" 210 lb 1998-02-18 Larchmont, New York Omaha (USHL) None
40 Arizona Castor, JaxonJaxon Castor G 6' 3" 194 lb 1997-03-14 Phoenix, Arizona Phoenix Jr. Coyotes (Midget AAA) Arizona State
Washington (state) VanWyhe, GarrettGarrett VanWyhe F 6' 1" 180 lb 1997-04-30 Seattle, Washington Wichita Falls (NAHL) None
Illinois Keane, ThomasThomas Keane D 6' 3" 185 lb 1997-03-30 Homer Glen, Illinois EC Red Bull Salzburg (Austria U20) None
Arizona Vance, CarsonCarson Vance D 5' 10" 178 lb 1996-01-10 Tempe, Arizona Muskegon (USHL) Wisconsin

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/6/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.