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Fayetteville Force

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The Fayetteville Force was a professional ice hockey team. based in Fayetteville, North Carolina . The franchise was a member of the Central Hockey League (1997–2001). They played their home games at the Crown Coliseum .

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8-608: In 1996, the Central Hockey League (CHL) decided to expand eastward, adding privately owned teams for the first time. Bill Coffey , one of the founders of the East Coast Hockey League , applied for a franchise in Fayetteville, North Carolina . The Cape Fear region had a population of close to a quarter of a million people and was the home of Fort Bragg , one of the largest military posts in

16-671: A development league for the NHL . The ECHL iced 20 teams during the 2009–10 season. Coffey is also the founder of the Atlantic Coast Hockey League (ACHL) - where he served as the league's president; and he is the director of hockey operations for the Southern Professional Hockey League (SPHL). Coffey has been the owner of several minor league ice hockey teams. This United States biographical article relating to ice hockey

24-677: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This article about a sports team in North Carolina is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Bill Coffey Bill Coffey is a businessman and minor league sports entrepreneur. He is one of the founders of the ECHL (formerly known as the East Coast Hockey League). Founded in 1988, the ECHL is a minor professional ice hockey league that serves as

32-728: The CHL All-Star Game . Despite the fact that eight inches of snow had fallen during the day, 6,128 people showed to watch the game. In the spring of 2001, it was announced that the CHL would consolidate with the Western Professional Hockey League . With the departures of teams in Columbus, Huntsville and Macon, the Force became isolated and it was determined to be financially impossible to continue in

40-738: The CHL, so they folded. There would be no more professional hockey in Fayetteville until the 2002–03 season, when the ACHL and the Cape Fear FireAntz would come to town. Scott, Jon C. (2006). Hockey Night in Dixie: Minor Pro Hockey in the American South . Heritage House Publishing Company Ltd. pp. 103–133. ISBN   1-894974-21-2 . This American ice hockey team-related article

48-505: The club. The new ownership group lacked knowledge of the business of minor league sports, and the travel to places as distant as San Antonio , Texas , became increasingly more expensive. Additionally, the honeymoon between the local residents and the new sport and its arena was over. The brightest moment of the Force’s last two seasons occurred on January 25, 2000, when the Coliseum hosted

56-409: The northern-raised servicemen and other such transplants who were hockey fans. The novelty of the new Crown Coliseum was a draw in the first year, as were hockey fights and “zany” promotions such as a between-periods contest of shooting the puck at empty beer cartons placed along the goal line - hitting a carton meant that the shooter would take home a full case of beer . After two years, Coffey sold

64-465: The world. On June 17, 1997, it was announced that Fayetteville would become a member of the CHL. The team was named the Force in honor of the military base and would play its home games at the new Crown Coliseum . In its first season the team was a financial success, drawing an average of almost 4,000 spectators a game during the 1997–98 season . The triumph of the first year relied upon more than just

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