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Muskegon Fury
MuskegonFury
City: Muskegon, Michigan
League: International Hockey League
Founded: 1992
Home Arena: L. C. Walker Arena
Colors: Teal, Purple, Black
Media: WWKR-FM (94.1)
Affiliates: none
Championships
Regular Season Titles: two (1999, 2005)
Division Championships: four (1996, 1999, 2005, 2007)
Colonial Cups: four (1999, 2002, 2004, 2005)

The Muskegon Fury was a International Hockey League ice hockey team located in Muskegon, Michigan. On September 12, 2008, the team changed its name to the Muskegon Lumberjacks with new ownership of brothers Stacey and Jeff Patulskey and Tim Taylor.

The Fury was established in 1992 after the original Muskegon Lumberjacks of the International Hockey League's previous incarnation relocated to Cleveland, Ohio. Hockey had been in Muskegon for 32 consecutive seasons to that point and Tony Lisman, Owner/President of the Fury, would not let that tradition end. Lisman kept his vow to keep hockey in Muskegon by establishing the Fury in the Colonial Hockey League, and has been very successful in doing so throughout the league's name changes.

The Fury lost to the Danbury Trashers in the 2005-2006 playoffs in their bid for a third consecutive Colonial Cup championship.

On August 30, 2006, Bruce Ramsay was named the Fury head coach for the 2006-2007 season, replacing Todd Nelson, who had accepted the assistant coaching position for the Chicago Wolves a few days earlier.Nelson is now serving as an assistant coach for the NHL Atlanta Thrashers, and Ramsay has been resigned for the Fury's upcoming 2008-2009 season.

Muskegon’s L.C. Walker Arena, home of the Fury, is the premiere facility in the area for sporting events, concerts, shows and many more activities.

Erin Whitten, one of the few female hockey players to play professionally, played for the fury during the 1995-1996 season, before being traded to the Flint Generals.

Championships[]

Year League Trophy
2004–2005 UHL Colonial Cup
2003–2004 UHL Colonial Cup
2001–2002 UHL Colonial Cup
1998–1999 UHL Colonial Cup

NOTE: The league's name has changed over the years from the Colonial Hockey League (until 1997), United Hockey League (1997–2007), and the "new" International Hockey League (2007–present).

External links[]

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