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Camrose Kodiaks
Camrose Kodiaks Logo
City Camrose, Alberta
League AJHL
Division South
Founded 1997 (1997)
Home arena EnCana Arena
Colors Black, Red and Tan
              
General manager Eric Kroetch
Head coach Shawn Germain (Interim)

Website
camrosekodiaks.ca

The Camrose Kodiaks are a Canadian Junior "A" ice hockey team in the Alberta Junior Hockey League (AJHL). They play in Camrose, Alberta, Canada, with home games in the EnCana Arena, which has a seating capacity for approximately 2,300 people.[1]

History[]

The Kodiaks were added to the Alberta Junior Hockey League (AJHL) in 1997. They missed the playoffs in their first season, but has since qualified for the playoffs in every season. The Kodiaks have won six South Division titles, five league championships, five Doyle Cups for the regional championship, three silver medals at the National Junior A Championship, and won one Canadian National Junior A Championship. Multiple players have advanced to higher levels of hockey in major junior, college, and professional leagues.

Season-by-season record[]

Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T/OTL = Ties/Overtime losses, SOL = Shootout losses, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against

Junior A National Championship[]

The National Junior A Championship, known as the Centennial Cup and formerly as the Royal Bank Cup or RBC Cup, is the postseason tournament for the Canadian national championship for Junior A hockey teams that are members of the Canadian Junior Hockey League. The tournament consists of the regional Junior A champions and a previously selected host team. Since 1990, the national championship has used a five-team tournament format when the regional qualifiers were designated as the ANAVET Cup (Western), Doyle Cup (Pacific), Dudley Hewitt Cup (Central), and Fred Page Cup (Eastern). From 2013 to 2017, the qualifiers were the Dudley Hewitt Cup (Central), Fred Page Cup (Eastern), and the Western Canada Cup champions and runners-up (Western #1 and #2).

The tournament begins with round-robin play between the five teams followed by the top four teams playing a semifinal game, with the top seed facing the fourth seed and the second facing the third. The winners of the semifinals then face each other in final game for the national championship. In some years, the losers of the semifinal games face each other for a third place game.

Year Round-robin Record Standing Semifinal Championship game
2001 W, 4–1 vs. Thornhill Rattlers (Central)
W, 4–3 vs. Weyburn Red Wings (Western)
W, 5–1 vs. Flin Flon Bombers (Host)
W, 4–3 vs. St. Jerome Panthers (Eastern)
4–0
(W–L)
1st of 5 W, 7–1 vs. St. Jerome Panthers W, 5–0 vs. Flin Flon Bombers
National Junior A Champions
2003 L, 2–3 vs. Charlottetown Abbies (Host)
W, 7–1 vs. Wellington Dukes (Central)
W, 4–1 vs. Lennoxville Cougars (Eastern)
W, 5–3 vs. Humboldt Broncos (Western)
3–1
(W–L)
1st of 5 W, 2–1 vs. Lennoxville Cougars L, 1–3 vs. Humboldt Broncos
2005 W, 3–2 vs. Hawkesbury Hawks (Eastern)
W, 6–2 vs. Portage Terriers (Western)
L, 1–3 vs. Weyburn Red Wings (Host)
W, 2–1 vs. Georgetown Raiders (Central)
3–1
(W–L)
2nd of 5 W, 8–2 vs. Georgetown Raiders L, 2–3 vs. Weyburn Red Wings
2007 W, 4–2 vs. Prince George Spruce Kings (Host)
W, 3–1 vs. Selkirk Steelers (Western)
W, 3–0 vs. Pembroke Lumber Kings (Eastern)
L, 4–7 vs. Aurora Tigers (Central)
3–1
(W–L)
2nd of 5 OTL, 2–3 vs. Prince George Spruce Kings
2008 W, 5–1 vs. Weeks Crushers (Eastern)
W, 2–1 vs. Humboldt Broncos (Western)
W, 2–1 vs. Cornwall Colts (Host)
W, 6–1 vs. Oakville Blades (Central)
4–0
(W–L)
1st of 5 W, 3–0 vs. Weeks Crushers L, 0–1 vs. Humboldt Broncos
2011
Host
L, 2–4 vs. Vernon Vipers (Pacific)
W, 3–2 vs. Wellington Dukes (Central)
W, 4–2 vs. Portage Terriers (Western)
W, 2–1 vs. Pembroke Lumber Kings (Eastern)
3–1
(W–L)
2nd of 5 L, 2–4 vs. Pembroke Lumber Kings

NHL draft picks[]

The following players have been drafted to the National Hockey League (NHL):


NHL alumni[]

See also[]

References[]

External links[]

Preceded by
Fort McMurray Oil Barons
Royal Bank Cup Champions
2001
Succeeded by
Halifax Exports
This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Camrose Kodiaks. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Ice Hockey Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike License 3.0 (Unported) (CC-BY-SA).