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Hartford Wolf Pack
Hartford Wolf Pack
City: Hartford, Connecticut
League: American Hockey League
Conference: Eastern
Division: Atlantic
Founded: 1926, in the CAHL
Home Arena: XL Center
Colors: Blue, red, white
              
Owner(s): Madison Square Garden, Inc.
General Manager: Ryan Martin
Head Coach: Steve Smith (Interim)
Captain: Jonny Brodzinski
Media: MSG Network
AHL.TV (Internet)
Mixlr (Internet)
Affiliates: New York Rangers (NHL)
Bloomington Bison (ECHL)
Franchise history
1926–1976: Providence Reds
1976–1977: Rhode Island Reds
1977–1980: Binghamton Dusters
1980–1990: Binghamton Whalers
1990–1997: Binghamton Rangers
1997–2010: Hartford Wolf Pack
2010–2013: Connecticut Whale
2013–present: Hartford Wolf Pack
Championships
Regular Season Titles: 1: (1999–00)
Division Championships: 4: (1999–00, 2003–04, 2008–09, 2014–15)
Conference Championships: 1: (1999–00)
Calder Cups: 1: (1999–00)

The Hartford Wolf Pack are a professional ice hockey team based in Hartford, Connecticut. A member of the American Hockey League (AHL), they play their home games at the XL Center. The team was established in 1926 as the Providence Reds. After a series of relocations, the team moved to Hartford in 1997 as the Hartford Wolf Pack. It is one of the oldest professional hockey franchises in existence, and the oldest continuously operating minor league hockey franchise in North America.

The franchise was renamed the Connecticut Whale in October 2010, in honor of the former Hartford Whalers of the National Hockey League (NHL), but reverted to their current name after the 2012–13 AHL season. The Wolf Pack is the top affiliate of the NHL's New York Rangers and is one of the three professional hockey teams in Connecticut.

History[]

The franchise that became the Wolf Pack was founded in 1926 in Providence, Rhode Island as the Providence Reds, one of the five charter members of the Canadian-American Hockey League. In 1936, the Northeast-based CAHL merged with the Midwest-based International Hockey League to form the International-American Hockey League, which dropped the "International" from its name in 1940.

The Reds — known as the Rhode Island Reds in their later years — folded after the 1976–77 season. Shortly afterward, the owners of the Broome Dusters of the North American Hockey League bought the Reds franchise and moved it to Binghamton, New York as the Binghamton Dusters. After securing an affiliation with the Hartford Whalers in 1980, the team changed its name to the Binghamton Whalers. An affiliation change to the Rangers in 1990 — one that continues to this day — brought another new name, the Binghamton Rangers.

After the 1996–97 NHL season, the Whalers moved to Raleigh, North Carolina as the Carolina Hurricanes. Soon after the Whalers' departure, the Binghamton Rangers relocated to Hartford and began to play at the vacated Hartford Civic Center (today known as the XL Center).

Following a "name-the-team" contest, the franchise became the Hartford Wolf Pack, a reference to a submarine class as well as the tactic known as "wolfpacking". With Connecticut being home to both the main builder of submarines (General Dynamics Electric Boat) and the US Navy's primary submarine base, honoring the state's naval tradition was the paramount goal. The name Seawolf, a reference to the Seawolf-class submarines was considered to have been the ideal name for the team. However, it had already been taken by the Mississippi Sea Wolves of the East Coast Hockey League. Following the submarine theme, the mascot was named "Sonar".

The Connecticut Whale logo, used from 2010 to 2013

The Connecticut Whale logo, used from 2010 to 2013

The Wolf Pack's first coach was E.J. McGuire, and their first home game was played in front of a crowd of 12,934 fans on October 4, 1997. P.J. Stock scored the first home goal in Wolf Pack history. The first franchise goal was scored the night prior in Providence, R.I., by Pierre Sevigny. The team reached the playoffs during the first 12 years of their existence and won the Calder Cup in 2000, defeating the Rochester Americans in the Cup finals. Derek Armstrong won the Jack A. Butterfield Trophy as AHL playoff MVP.

In the summer of 2010, the Rangers entered into a business relationship which gave former Whalers owner Howard Baldwin and his company, Hartford Hockey LLC (doing business as Whalers Sports & Entertainment), control of the team's business operations.[1] On September 20, 2010, Baldwin announced the Wolf Pack would change their name to the Connecticut Whale in honor of the Whalers.[2] The name change took place on November 27, 2010; the final game with the "Wolf Pack" name came on November 26, 2010. The opponent was Connecticut's other AHL team, the Bridgeport Sound Tigers. The Sound Tigers won 4–3, in a shootout. On November 27, 2010, the team played their first game under the new "Whale" name. The opponent was, again, the Sound Tigers. The Whale won 3–2, in a shootout. The attendance for the debut game was 13,089, which is the third-largest crowd in franchise history.[3] On January 1, 2011, the Whale debuted new home jerseys featuring light blue instead of green, however, the color was shelved for the 2011–12 season.

The Whale were hosts and participants in the 2011 AHL Outdoor Classic, the Whale Bowl, held at Rentschler Field in East Hartford, Connecticut. Connecticut fell to the Providence Bruins, 5–4, in a shootout.

In June 2012, after just 21 months, the New York Rangers terminated their business relationship with Baldwin[1] after he and his company ran up a debt of almost $3 million and had about 15 court cases against him.[4]

In April 2013, just two and a half seasons after rebranding as the Whale, the team decided it would revert to the nickname "Wolf Pack" for the following season.[5] Global Spectrum, the group now marketing the team and managers of the XL Center arena, announced in May 2013 that the franchise had officially returned to the Hartford Wolf Pack identity.[6]

Although the Wolf Pack does not officially acknowledge its past in Providence and Binghamton (or claim the Reds' four Calder Cups), it is the only AHL franchise to have never missed a season since the league's founding in 1936. In one form or another, the franchise has iced a team every year since 1926. The Wolf Pack and Abbotsford Canucks — the descendants of another charter AHL member, the Springfield Indians — are the oldest minor-league hockey franchises in North America. However, the Indians were inactive for three seasons in the 1930s, making the Wolf Pack the oldest continuously operating minor-league hockey franchise in North America. The only professional hockey franchises older than the Wolf Pack and the Canucks are the NHL's Montreal Canadiens, Toronto Maple Leafs and Boston Bruins.

Team information[]

Mascots[]

The Wolf Pack started in 1997 with one mascot, a wolf named Sonar. The name was chosen to keep with the submarine theme that the team had used in their naming and logo. Following the folding of their sister team, the Arena Football League's New England Sea Wolves, the Wolf Pack added the Sea Wolves' mascot, named Torpedo; this mascot has since been retired. In 2010, with the renaming of the team to the Connecticut Whale, Sonar was joined as a mascot by former Whalers mascot Pucky the Whale. Sonar took the 2012–13 season off while Pucky was the sole mascot. When the naming arrangement ended, Sonar came back while Pucky was retired.

Season-by-season results[]

Regular season Playoffs
Season Games Won Lost Tied OTL SOL Points PCT Goals
for
Goals
against
Standing Year Prelims 1st
round
2nd
round
3rd
round
Final
1997–98 80 43 24 12 1 99 .619 272 227 2nd, New England 1998 W, 3–0, BNH W, 4–3, WOR L, 1–4, SJF
1998–99 80 38 31 5 6 87 .544 256 256 2nd, New England 1999 W, 3–0, SPR L, 0–4, PRO
1999–00 80 49 22 7 2 107 .669 249 198 1st, New England 2000 W, 3–2, SPR W, 4–1, WOR W, 4–3, PRO W, 4–2, RCH
2000–01 80 40 26 8 6 94 .588 263 247 2nd, New England 2001 L, 2–3, PRO
2001–02 80 41 26 10 3 95 .594 249 243 2nd, East 2002 BYE W, 3–2, MAN L, 1–4, HAM
2002–03 80 33 27 12 8 86 .538 255 236 3rd, East 2003 L, 0–2, SPR
2003–04 80 44 22 12 2 102 .638 198 153 1st, Atlantic 2004 BYE W, 4–1, POR W, 4–0, WOR L, 3–4, WBS
2004–05 80 50 24 3 3 106 .663 206 160 2nd, Atlantic 2005 L, 2–4, LOW
2005–06 80 48 24 6 2 104 .650 292 231 2nd, Atlantic 2006 W, 4–3, MAN L, 2–4, POR
2006–07 80 47 29 3 1 98 .613 231 201 2nd, Atlantic 2007 L, 3–4, PRO
2007–08 80 50 20 2 8 110 .688 266 198 2nd, Atlantic 2008 L, 1–4, POR
2008–09 80 46 27 3 4 99 .619 243 216 1st, Atlantic 2009 L, 2–4, WOR
2009–10 80 36 33 6 5 83 .519 231 251 6th, Atlantic 2010 Did not qualify
2010–11 80 40 32 2 6 88 .550 221 223 3rd, Atlantic 2011 L, 2–4, POR
2011–12 76 36 26 7 7 86 .566 210 208 2nd, Northeast 2012 W, 3–0, BRI L, 2–4, NOR
2012–13 76 35 32 6 3 79 .520 213 222 2nd, Northeast 2013 Did not qualify
2013–14 76 37 32 1 6 81 .533 202 220 3rd, Northeast 2014 Did not qualify
2014–15 76 43 24 5 4 95 .625 221 214 1st, Northeast 2015 W, 3–2, PRO W, 4–2, HER L, 0–4, MAN
2015–16 76 41 32 3 0 85 .559 202 199 6th, Atlantic 2016 Did not qualify
2016–17 76 24 46 4 2 54 .355 194 280 7th, Atlantic 2017 Did not qualify
2017–18 76 34 33 6 3 77 .507 208 252 6th, Atlantic 2018 Did not qualify
2018–19 76 29 36 7 4 69 .454 209 266 8th, Atlantic 2019 Did not qualify
2019–20 62 31 20 6 5 73 .589 171 173 4th, Atlantic 2020 Season cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic
2020–21 24 14 9 1 0 29 .604 82 74 2nd, Atlantic 2021 No playoffs were held
2021–22 72 32 32 6 2 72 .500 205 225 7th, Atlantic 2022 Did not qualify
2022–23 72 35 26 4 7 81 .563 227 215 5th, Atlantic 2023 W, 2–0, SPR W, 3–1, PRO L, 0–3, HER
2023–24 72 34 28 7 3 78 .542 204 219 5th, Atlantic 2024 W, 2–1, CHA W, 3–1, PRO L, 0–3, HER

Players[]

Current roster[]

Updated April 26, 2024.[7][8]

# Nat Player Pos S/G Age Acquired Birthplace Contract
48 Flag of Russia Barbashev, MaximMaxim Barbashev

LW L 20 2023 Moscow, Russia Rangers
55 Flag of Canada Belzile, AlexAlex Belzile

 (A)

RW R 33 2023 Rivière-du-Loup, Quebec Rangers
9 Flag of the United States Berard, BrettBrett Berard

LW L 22 2023 East Greenwich, Rhode Island Rangers
21 Flag of Sweden Blidh, AntonAnton Blidh

LW L 29 2023 Mölnlycke, Sweden Rangers
40 Flag of Canada Boyko, TalynTalyn Boyko

G L 21 2023 Drumheller, Alberta Rangers
27 Flag of Canada Brouillard, NikolasNikolas Brouillard

D L 29 2023 Saint-Hyacinthe, Quebec Rangers
42 Flag of Czech Republic Chmelar, JaroslavJaroslav Chmelar

F R 21 2024 Nove Mesto nad Metuji, Czechia Rangers
5 Flag of Canada Harpur, BenBen Harpur

D L 29 2022 Hamilton, Ontario Rangers
24 Flag of Sweden Henriksson, KarlKarl Henriksson

C L 23 2022 Malmo, Sweden Rangers
25 Flag of the United States Hillman, BlakeBlake Hillman

D L 28 2022 Elk River, Minnesota Wolf Pack
81 Flag of Canada Hollowell, MacMac Hollowell

D R 26 2023 Niagara Falls, Ontario Rangers
17 Flag of the United States Jenkins, BladeBlade Jenkins

LW L 24 2024 Jackson, Michigan Wolf Pack
38 Flag of Canada Korczak, RyderRyder Korczak

C R 22 2022 Yorkton, Saskatchewan Rangers
16 Flag of Canada Leschyshyn, JakeJake Leschyshyn

C L 25 2023 Raleigh, North Carolina Rangers
50 Flag of Sweden Lindbom, OlofOlof Lindbom

G L 24 2022 Stockholm, Sweden Rangers
14 Flag of the United States Mackey, ConnorConnor Mackey

D L 28 2023 Tower Lakes, Illinois Rangers
23 Flag of the United States Mancini, VictorVictor Mancini

D R 22 2024 Hancock, Michigan Rangers
8 Flag of the United States McCarthy, CaseCase McCarthy

D R 23 2024 Troy, New York Wolf Pack
13 Flag of Canada McConnell-Barker, BryceBryce McConnell-Barker

C L 20 2023 London, Ontario Wolf Pack
20 Flag of Canada Nash, RileyRiley Nash

C R 35 2023 Consort, Alberta Rangers
1 Flag of Sweden Ollas, HugoHugo Ollas

G L 22 2024 Linköping, Sweden Rangers
78 Flag of Canada Othmann, BrennanBrennan Othmann

LW L 21 2023 Scarborough, Ontario Rangers
28 Flag of Canada Panwar, SahilSahil Panwar

C L 22 2023 Mississauga, Ontario Wolf Pack
10 Flag of the Czech Republic Pekar, MatejMatej Pekar

C L 24 2023 Turnov, Czech Republic Wolf Pack
7 Flag of Canada Petan, NicNic Petan

C L 29 2024 Delta, British Columbia Rangers
71 Flag of the United States Pitlick, TylerTyler Pitlick

RW R 32 2024 Minneapolis, Minnesota Rangers
39 Flag of Canada Rees, HarrisonHarrison Rees

D R 24 2024 Mississauga, Ontario
44 Flag of Canada Robertson, MatthewMatthew Robertson

D L 23 2021 Edmonton, Alberta Rangers
10 Flag of Canada Roobroeck, DylanDylan Roobroeck

F L 20 2024 London, Ontario Wolf Pack
58 Flag of Canada Scanlin, BrandonBrandon Scanlin

D L 25 2022 Hamilton, Ontario Rangers
29 Flag of Slovakia Sykora, AdamAdam Sykora

LW L 20 2023 Piestany, Slovakia Rangers
41 Flag of the United States Trivigno, BobbyBobby Trivigno

F L 25 2022 Setauket, New York Rangers
3 Flag of Finland Väisänen, KalleKalle Väisänen

LW R 21 2024 Kotka, Finland Rangers
4 Flag of the United States Yoon, BryanBryan Yoon

D R 26 2024 Parker, Colorado Wolf Pack

Team captains[]

Retired numbers[]

Hartford Wolf Pack retired numbers
No. Player Position Career No. retirement
12 Ken Gernander RW 1997–2005 October 8, 2005[13]

The Wolf Pack have honored a number of former Hartford Whalers players by hanging their jerseys in the rafters, without formally retiring their numbers. In 2006, Ulf Samuelsson (#5), Ron Francis (#10) and Kevin Dineen (#11) were honored by the team in this way, joining Rick Ley (#2), Gordie Howe (#9) and John Mckenzie (#19) whose numbers had been previously retired by the Whalers.[14]

American Hockey League Hall of Famers[]

AHL Hall of Fame Honored Members
Name Seasons Induction Year
Ken Gernander 1997-2005 (player)
2005-07 (asst. coach)
2007-17 (head coach)
2013
Jean-Francois Labbe 1998-2001 (player) 2016
John Paddock 1999-2002 (head coach) 2010
Brad Smyth 1997-2002, 2005-06 (player) 2019

Notable alumni[]

The following players have played both 100 games in Hartford and 100 games in the National Hockey League:


Team records[]

Single season
Goals: 50, Brad Smyth (2000–01)
Assists: 69, Derek Armstrong (2000–01)
Points: 101, Derek Armstrong (2000–01)
Penalty Minutes: 415, Dale Purinton (1999–2000)
GAA: 1.59, Jason LaBarbera (2003–04)
SV%: .936, Jason LaBarbera (2003–04)
Shutouts: 13, Jason LaBarbera (2003–04)
Goaltending Wins: 34, Jason LaBarbera (2003–04)
Career
Goals: 184, Brad Smyth
Assists: 204, Derek Armstrong
Points: 365, Brad Smyth
Penalty Minutes: 1240, Dale Purinton
Shutouts: 21, Jason LaBarbera
Goaltending Wins: 91, Jason LaBarbera
Games: 599, Ken Gernander

References[]

External links[]

New York Rangers
Team FranchisePlayersCoachesGMsSeasonsRecordsDraft PicksHistory
Madison Square Garden
Stanley Cups 1928, 1933, 1940, 1994
Affiliates Hartford Wolf Pack (AHL), Maine Mariners (ECHL)
This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Hartford Wolf Pack. 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).


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