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Surrey Eagles
Surrey Eagles logo
City Surrey, British Columbia
League British Columbia Hockey League
Founded 1976
Home Arena South Surrey Arena
Colours White, Green, and Blue
Coach Cam Keith (2019-present)
GM Blaine Neufeld (2017-present)

The Surrey Eagles are a Tier II Junior "A" ice hockey team from Surrey, British Columbia, Canada. They are a part of the British Columbia Hockey League and play in the (Mainland Division / Coastal Conference).

Bellingham Blazers 1976 - 1978
Bellingham Ice Hawks 1978 - 1980
Vancouver Blue Hawks 1980 - 1982
Burnaby Blue Hawks 1982 - 1985
Delta Flyers 1985 - 1988
New Westminster Royals 1988 - 1991
Surrey Eagles 1991 - 1996
South Surrey Eagles 1996 - 2003
Surrey Eagles 2003 to Present

History[]

The current Surrey Eagles are the product of numerous town and name changes since 1976. The team started out in Bellingham, Washington, replacing the original Blazers team that moved off to Maple Ridge, British Columbia and eventually folded as the Revelstoke Rangers in 1985.

The first four seasons in the South Surrey were very disappointing for the Eagles as they did not make it past the Quarter-Finals. It was seasons 5 and 6 that the team had its greatest success.

In 1997, their fifth season, the Eagles finished with a record of 47-7-6 for 100 points, and won the BCHL championship by defeating the Vernon Vipers in the Subway Cup. The Eagles then beat the Rocky Mountain Junior Hockey League champions Cranbrook Colts and the Fort McMurray Oil Barons of the Alberta Junior Hockey League to earn a birth in the Royal Bank Cup. In the tournament, held in Summerside, Prince Edward Island, the Eagles went 3-1 in the round robin and beat the Kanata Valley Lasers 4-2 in the semi-final before losing to the host Summerside Western Capitals 4-3 in the championship game.

Season 6, 1998, would bring the ultimate goal, a Royal Bank Cup, to the South Surrey Eagles. This time, in Nanaimo, British Columbia, they cruised through the tournament, ultimately beating the Weyburn Red Wings 4-1 in the final.

The remaining seasons were also very strong regular seasons for Surrey. In 1999 they lost the league title to eventual Royal Bank Cup winners Vernon Vipers. They lost twice in the Semi-finalls in that span and won the league title, Fred Page Cup, in 2005 overcoming Vernon Vipers ,4 games to 1. In the Doyle Cup series, Camrose Kodiaks defeated them, 4 games to 1.

Season-by-season record[]

Season GP W L T OL GF GA Pts PIM Finish Playoffs
1962-67 PCJHL Statistics Not Available
1967-68 40 15 23 2 - 186 234 32 5th, BCJHL Did not qualify
1968-69 40 10 23 7 - 158 200 27 5th, BCJHL Did not qualify
1969-70 48 2 44 2 - 151 320 6 7th, BCJHL Did not qualify
1970-71 60 25 29 6 - 261 270 56 3rd, Central Lost in Quarterfinals, 2-4 (Centennials)
1971-81 Franchise Suspended
1981-82 48 39 9 0 - 362 196 78 1st, Coastal Lost in Finals, 1-4 (Knights)
1982-83 56 41 14 1 - 363 246 83 2nd, Coastal Lost in Semifinals, 2-4 (Flyers)
1983-88 Franchise Suspended
1988-89 60 45 14 1 - 458 283 91 1st, Coastal Lost in Finals, 1-4 (Lakers)
1989-90 59 52 3 4 - 444 181 108 1st, Coastal Fred Page Cup Champions, 4-2 (Lakers)
Mowat Cup, Doyle Cup, Abbott Cup Champions
1990-91 60 38 21 1 - 310 236 77 1st, Coastal Lost in Quarterfinals, 1-4 (Warriors)
1991-92 60 22 37 1 - 256 356 45 5th, Coastal Did not qualify
1992-93 60 29 26 5 - 328 288 71 2nd, Coastal Lost in Quarterfinals, 1-4 (Clippers)
1993-94 60 29 30 1 - 289 324 59 3rd, Coastal Lost in Quarterfinals, 1-4 (Capitals)
1994-95 60 37 21 2 - 316 259 76 3rd, Mainland Lost in Quarterfinals, 2-4 (Chiefs)
1995-96 60 32 27 1 - 267 276 65 3rd, Mainland Lost in Preliminary, 0-2 (Centennials)
1996-97 60 47 7 6 - 374 178 100 1st, Coastal Fred Page Cup Champions, 4-1 (Vipers)
Mowat Cup, Doyle Cup, Abbott Cup Champions
1997-98 60 43 15 2 - 322 200 88 1st, Coastal Fred Page Cup Champions, 4-1 (Panthers)
Mowat Cup, Doyle Cup, Abbott Cup, RBC Champions
1998-99 60 40 19 - 1 323 244 81 1st, Mainland Lost in Division Finals, 3-4 (Chiefs)
1999-00 60 27 27 6 - 258 283 60 4th, Mainland Did not qualify
2000-01 60 29 22 9 - 247 247 67 3rd, Mainland Lost in Quarterfinals, 0-3 (Salsa)
2001-02 60 31 24 5 - 251 263 67 2nd, Mainland Lost in Quarterfinals, 0-3 (Chiefs)
2002-03 60 29 24 1 6 211 209 65 3rd, Mainland Lost in Semifinals, 1-4 (Chiefs)
2003-04 60 38 16 1 5 276 212 82 2275 1st, Mainland Lost in Semifinals, 0-4 (Clippers)
2004-05 60 37 18 0 5 246 194 79 1859 1st, Mainland Fred Page Cup Champions, 4-1 (Vipers)
Mowat Cup Champions
2005-06 60 16 39 2 3 163 259 37 1236 4th, Mainland Did not qualify
2006-07 60 17 39 1 3 192 288 38 1008 8th, Coastal Lost in Preliminary, 1-4 (Clippers)
2007-08 60 33 23 1 3 234 213 70 994 3rd, Coastal Lost in Preliminary, 1-3 (Kings)
2008-09 60 28 25 1 6 199 205 63 1034 3rd, Mainland Lost in Division Semifinals, 1-4 (Kings)
2009-10 60 30 24 0 6 196 190 66 1076 5th, Coastal Lost in Division Quarterfinals, 2-4 (Chiefs)
2010-11 60 35 22 1 2 216 187 73 - 2nd, Coastal Lost Division Final 2-4 Kings
2011-12 60 36 15 2 7 217 187 81 - 2nd, Coastal Lost Division Final 1-4 Kings
2012-13 56 35 13 3 5 195 149 78 - 1st, Mainland Fred Page Cup Champions, 4-2 (Vees)
Western Canada Cup Champions (Brooks Bandits)*

Royal Bank Cup lost Semi-finals (Summerside)**
2013-14 58 25 30 1 2 201 232 53 - 4th, Mainland Lost in Division Semifinals, 2-4 (Rivermen)
2014-15 58 9 45 1 3 144 285 22 - 5th, Mainland DNQ
2015-16 58 7 48 1 2 139 308 17 - 6th, Mainland
17th, BCHL
DNQ
2016-17 58 18 36 0 4 187 269 40 - 5th, Mainland
16th, BCHL
DNQ
2017-18 58 26 22 2 8 189 208 62 - 3rd, Mainland
10th, BCHL
Won DSF 4-2 (Rivermen)
L, DF 3-4 (Spruce Kings)
2018-19 58 13 41 2 2 143 259 30 - 5th, Mainland
17th, BCHL
DNQ
2019-20 58 26 21 5 5 192 172 63 - 2nd, Mainland
10th, BCHL
Won DSF 4-3 (Chiefs)
Balance of playoffs cancelled
2020-21 20 17 2 1 0 102 44 35 - 1st, Coquitlam Pod Playoffs cancelled
2021-22 54 28 26 0 0 165 170 56 - 6th Coastal Lost Conference Quarterfinals

Logos[]


External links[]


Preceded by
Summerside Western Capitals
Royal Bank Cup Champions
1998
Succeeded by
Vernon Vipers


This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Surrey Eagles. 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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