Misplaced Pages

New England Stars

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

The North Eastern Hockey League was a semi-professional ice hockey league from 2003 until 2008. It was created by entrepreneur Jim Cashman , who served as league president. The NEHL was built to focus on giving players that were not quite ready for the ECHL , United Hockey League , and the Central Hockey League a place to play and develop after their Junior and college careers had finished. In the 2003-04 season, nine total players moved up to the "AA" level and remained there and six of those players came from the York IceCats alone.

#453546

8-668: The New England Stars were a North Eastern Hockey League ( NEHL ) team based in Danbury, Connecticut , who started play at the end of 2006. The team filled the void when the Danbury Trashers left the Danbury Ice Arena , after the Trashers folded due to involvement in illegal business. The New England Stars swept the two game championship series 2–0 to finish the season an astounding 22-0 .The Stars were by far

16-648: A record of 20-0, and cruised in the Championship series beating the Mohawk Valley Icecats 2 games to 0 (8-5 and 9-2) to capture the 2006-2007 NEHL Crown. The league announced on January 23, 2008 that it was suspending operations for the remainder of the 2007-08 season. (teams only played six games until the league suspended operations for a season) A previous league was also known as the Northeastern Hockey League during

24-616: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . North Eastern Hockey League The League started with four franchises, the York IceCats out of York , Pennsylvania , Jamestown Titans out of Jamestown , New York , Mohawk Valley Comets out of Whitestown , New York and the Poughkeepsie Panthers out of Poughkeepsie, New York . After very low attendance in the first few games in Poughkeepsie ,

32-724: The Herb Brooks Memorial Trophy. The league went dark for the 2004-05 season, then attempted to return in 2005-06 as the Continental Professional Hockey League with teams in Canada and the United States . The regular 44-game season was supposed to start in early November 2005, was postponed, saw six games played, and was cancelled in mid-December 2005. In the 2006-2007 season, The New England Stars finished first with

40-461: The league that they would not be playing, the league changed the playoff structure. York and Jamestown would play a two-game series that weekend. If there were a tie after the two games they would play a mini-game lasting twenty minutes. York won the opening game, 8-5. Jamestown defeated York 9-1 in the second game and then won a 20-minute tiebreaker game 6-1. As league champions, the Titans received

48-548: The most successful team in the 2006–07 season, going undefeated as of March 18, 2007. Their superiority against the rest of the league was tested on March 18 when they played against an all-star team made up of the best players on the other three NEHL teams. However, they lost the game 4–3. They finished the regular season 20–0. This article about a sports team in Connecticut is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This American ice hockey team-related article

56-526: The playoff weekend that they were not going to participate as not enough players were available and they had financial concerns. With the Comets as the league regular season leaders, they were to get a bye straight to the finals, which was to be played on Sunday. York and Jamestown (the second and third place teams) were to play on the Saturday to see who went on to face the Comets. Once the Comets had informed

64-564: The team was to be relocated to Connecticut and renamed the Connecticut Cougars but negotiations with an arena broke down and the Cougars finished as a road team for the remainder of the season. When concerns of Comets players not being available for the final month of the season due to their summer jobs starting, Coach Brett Boake requested a schedule change and the season was shortened a month. The Comets decided two days before

#453546