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Sarnia Legionnaires

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32-579: Sarnia Legionnaires may refer to: Sarnia Legionnaires (1954–1970) , defunct Canadian junior ice hockey team Sarnia Legionnaires (GOJHL) , Canadian junior ice hockey team in the Greater Ontario Junior Hockey League Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Sarnia Legionnaires . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change

64-494: A Canadian junior ice hockey team that won five Western Jr. 'B' Hockey League championships and four Sutherland Cups as Ontario Hockey Association Junior B champions in the 16 seasons they operated out of Sarnia , Ontario from 1954 until 1970. The club folded after two unsuccessful years as a Tier II Jr. 'A' team. The original Legionnaires were one of the most successful junior teams in Canadian hockey history, playing out of

96-516: A Jr. 'B' team. Ten times in 18 years if you count the team's record when it was known as the Sailors. Phil Esposito scored 47 goals and 61 assists for the Legionnaires during the 32-game 1960-61 regular schedule. In a playoff game that spring, he got 12 points as the Legionnaires beat Goderich 15–2. Eric Vail , future Calder Memorial Trophy winner as NHL rookie of the year, played with

128-468: A Jr.'B' team and there were only six NHL teams. They also sent two players to the WHA. With their multiple championships and their domination at the provincial level, no other Sarnia junior team has ever matched their success. Phil Esposito and Pat Stapleton were both Legionnaires alumni and both represented Canada at the 1972 Summit Series . Esposito's appearance as a Legionnaire is quite remarkable as he

160-604: A home exhibition game against the Chicago Black Hawks, losing to the NHL club by a 14–6 score. Members of the 1957-58 Legionnaire team that won the club's second title included: Coach Ollie Haddon, General manager Tommy Norris G. Paiment, P. Kilbreath, Art Turcotte, Don McPhail, Neil Armstrong, Dick Robinson, G. Harris, Paul Crawley, N. Harris, Pat Stapelton, Mike Muir, D. Chivers, M. Guthrie, Ross Dark, J. McKellar, Eddie Leslie, Pete Bentley and Jack Kerwin. Members of

192-518: A name for himself as coach of the Jr. 'C' Mooretown Flags. The legend of the Sarnia Legionnaires began on Oct. 20, 1954 with the opening of the inaugural training camp. General manager Phil Hamilton invited 40 players to the first tryout . Coach Jim Butler cut 20 athletes that first day. The club went right into the regular schedule without playing an exhibition game, losing its first match to

224-521: A sixth place club, this Legionnaire team won two playoff rounds, making it to the league final, where they were eliminated by the St. Thomas Barons in five games. Members of the 1962-63 team that ended up in fifth place included: Coach C. Glaab, Manager Tommy Norris Players: B. Williams, G. Lawrence, G. Bonny, B. Finn, Ron Carroll, B. L'Heureux, Fred Pageau, R. Roy, T. Woodcock, H. Brand, R. Kuschel, T. Gray, Ray Germain, M. Filipchuck, Les Hosins Members of

256-588: Is no National Championship for Junior B hockey in Canada, similar championships are held in Western Canada ( Keystone Cup ), Quebec ( Coupe Dodge ), Eastern Ontario ( Barkley Cup ), and Atlantic Canada ( Don Johnson Memorial Cup )—leaving five teams at the end of each year with a shared claim to being the best Junior B team in Canada. (*) advanced to championship round as wild card. Lost in conference final, but advanced based on superior record over

288-680: The Senior team . In 1956, the Big 10 was divided and the Legionnaires moved on with the Western League. In 1968, the league went renegade and declared itself Junior "A". As of February 1, 1970, the Legionnaires officially folded and disbanded. They were in direct financial competition with the Junior "B" Sarnia Bees , but lost popularity within the city forcing them to go out of business. Fan attendance had dropped from 1200 to 200 people per game, with

320-677: The Western Ontario Junior A and B Hockey Leagues . Counting the Sutherland Cup they won when they were known as the Sarnia Sailors, the franchise won five titles in 20 years, beginning with the 1950-51 campaign. They were founded as members of the Big 10 Junior B Hockey League . The Legionnaires' moniker was resurrected for the 2008-09 Greater Ontario Junior Hockey League season. The Sarnia team that helped displace

352-422: The 1956-57 team that won the first championship in Legionnaires history included: Coach Stu Cousins, General Manager Tommy Norris Players: Pat Stapelton, Gary Vena, Paul 'Butch' Crawley, Bill Armstrong, Larry Cunningham, Glen Forbes, Bob Foster, Peter Bentley, D. Foster, Dick Robinson, George Spencer, Don McPhail, Eric Haddon, Ross Dark, Ted Wright, Mike Muir, Hartley Vernon, Jack Kerwin and Eddie Leslie. This

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384-412: The 1958-59 Legionnaires team that won the team's third crown included: Coach Ollie Haddon, General manager Tommy Norris Players: C. Knetchel, Larry Cunningham, J. Mara, D. Foster, C. Adams, Art Turcotte, Dick Robinson, N. Harris, G. Paiement, J. Bloomfield, G. Lakusciak, Norm Armstrong, P. Kilbreath, W. Verbeem, P. Hamilton, Paul Crawley, Ross Dark, D Chivers.Charlie Ryan. After three straight titles

416-430: The 1960-61 team. Members included: Coach Ollie Haddon, General manager Tommy Norris Players: C. Depoli, B. L'Heureux, M. L'Heureux, N. Mallette, G. Lawrence, Jimmy Sanko, Phil Esposito, R. Lachowick, G. Lakusciak, D. Chivers, Goalie Joe DeRush, J. Clarke, J. Bloomfield, R. Heino, Dave Besse and W. Verbeem.Charlie Ryan Jerry Mara. Highlights: Esposito finished second in league scoring behind future NHLer Terry Crisp of

448-399: The 1963-64 team that finished fourth included: Coach Marty Zorica, Manager M. Wallis Players: D. Shanks, G. Geary, G. Lawrence, D. Burgess, D. Rhodes, Pete Mara, J. McVicar, Tom Ostrander, R. Kuschel, Les Hoskins, T. Gray, Ron Carroll, T. Woodcock, S. Wormith, K. Eadie, D. Caley In 1964-65 the Legionnaires once again became a force to be reckoned with, finishing in second place. Members of

480-563: The Legionnaires as a 16-year-old during the team's last season (1969–70). Another member of that team was Kirk Bowman , who went on to play in the NHL with the Chicago Blackhawks . Still another was Frank Blum, a goaltender who would go on to play in the WHA with Bobby Hull and the Winnipeg Jets. Before they disbanded, the Legionnaires sent nine players to the NHL, despite the fact that, for most of their history, they were

512-457: The Sarnia Legionnaires were dethroned in 1959–60, although they still finished second in regular season play. Team members included: Coach Ollie Haddon, manager Tommy Norris Players: Gene Lakusciak, Larry Cunningham, C. Adams, Mike Muir, Joe Clark, Mike L'Heureux, Danny Chivers, C. Knetchel, Dick Robinson, Dave Besse, William Verbeem, Goalie Joe DeRush, Norm Harris, Danny Foster, Gerry Mara, Art Turcotte, Charlie Ryan. Phil Esposito played on

544-731: The Seaforth Baldwins on Nov. 9, 1954 by an 8–6 score. Billy Muir scored the first goal in Legionnaire history. The club won its first game four nights later, beating the London Lou Balls 7–5 in London. The first home win came on Nov. 16 when Sarnia edged the Blenheim Bobcats 4-3 before 410 fans. Glen Forbes had two goals for the victors. Defenceman Don Ward went on to play in the NHL but the most flashy player

576-489: The St. Marys Lincolns. For three years after Esposito left, the Legionnaires finished below .500. Members of the 1961-62 team that finishing sixth included: Coach Ollie Haddon, general manager Tommy Norris Players: B. L'Heureux, M. Filipchuk, Ron Carroll, H. Brand, R. Roy, R. Allen, T. Gray, T. Woodcock, R. Kuschel, Les Hoskins, D. Sheffield, G. Lakusiak, Ray Germain, M. L'Heureux, Goalie Joe DeRush, B. Finn, B. Doohan, G. Lawrence, B. Mackey Highlight == Although they were

608-484: The brink of oblivion, winning the last three encounters. Round two went more smoothly, with Sarnia sweeping the St. Marys Lincolns in four straight. In the league final, the Legionnaires again got into trouble, falling behind the Burlington Industrialists 3–2 in games before winning the final two contests. Mike Muir got two goals in the seventh and deciding game as Sarnia won 4–2. Another playoff hero

640-466: The first shutout in team history as Sarnia defeated Blenheim 4–0 on December 28, 1954. During a Nov. 30 game at the Sarnia Arena, a riot broke out between fans and players. Sarnia Observer sports editor Freddie Wheeler restored order by playing the national anthem, a move that shamed the combatants into coming to attention. Once the song ended, cooler heads had prevailed and order was restored. In

672-431: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sarnia_Legionnaires&oldid=1118017958 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Sarnia Legionnaires (1954%E2%80%931970) The Sarnia Legionnaires were

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704-591: The original Legionnaires in 1970 are now officially known as the Sarnia Legionnaires . And just like the old Legionnaires, the new Sarnia Legionnaire squad has been a powerhouse, winning the Weir Cup as Western Ontario Jr. 'B' champions in the 2009 playoffs. The Legionnaires started out as a Big 10 Junior B Hockey League team in 1954. Prior to this they existed as the Sarnia Jr. Sailors, named after

736-494: The playoffs, the Legionnaires defeated London three games to two in a best-of-five semi-final before losing the best-of-seven final to Seaforth four straight games. Players on that first Legionnaire team included: Ken Green, Don Ward, Bob Armstrong, G. Fitzpatrick, Hartley Vernon, Dick Hamilton, D. Link, E. Hoskins, 'Pistol' Pete Cote, B. Dillon, Eric Haddon, Bruce McGrath, E. Leslie, Don McPhail, Alf Phillips, Tussy Dunham, Bob Duncan and goalies Bob Ryan and Bob Foster. Members of

768-501: The splitting of the Big 10. The Legionnaires also won four Sutherland Cups as All-Ontario Junior "B" Champions. The franchise had a total of five Sutherland Cup wins, counting the 1951 win when it was known as the Sailors. Even when they didn't win a title the Sarnia Legionnaires were almost always a top contender. They lost four Western Jr. 'B' finals. In all, they were in the Western Final nine times during their 14 seasons as

800-451: The team included: Coach Marty Zorica, manager M. Wallis Players: Tom Ostrander, D. Burgess, D. Rhodes, Goalie Mitch Martin, P. Clark, C. Cryderman, Les Hoskins, M. Chartrand, Wayne McConnell, Ron Carroll, S. Wormith, Fred Pageau, Pete Mara. Members of the 1965-66 championship Sarnia Legionnaires team included: Sutherland Cup The Sutherland Cup is the ice hockey Ontario Junior "B" Provincial Championship trophy. The trophy

832-616: The team over $ 10,000 CAD in debt. The team was owned by Branch 62 of the Royal Canadian Legion . The folding happened after the cancelling of a home game in late January against the Guelph Beef Kings . The announcement of the disbandment of the team was followed by an emergency meeting by the league to discuss the folding and how to handle the unbalanced schedule left through unplayed Legionnaires games. The Legionnaires won at least 5 Western league titles after

864-422: Was Butch Crawley, a defensive forward who suddenly exploded for eight goals in one three-game stretch. Highlights: During the regular schedule the team was led in scoring by defenceman Pat Stapelton, the future NHL all-star, who scored 12 goals and 23 assists for 35 points. Teammate Ted Wright also racked up 35 points, with 17 goals and 18 assists. Also of note that year was the fact that the Legionnaires played

896-497: Was a small, speedy forward who was able to move into high gear at the last moment, fooling many opposing blueliners. When the season ended, Forbes had missed the league scoring title (which was won by Blenheim's Elio Marcon) by a single point. Other stalwarts from that first Legionnaire team included Bob Duncan, who scored 19 goals and 13 assists (including a four-goal game of his own); Tussy Dunham, who notched nine goals and 22 assists, and goalie Bob Foster, who made 18 saves to record

928-488: Was an unlikely championship. The Legionnaires fell behind the Woodstock Warriors, who were led by Walter Gretzky, the father of future hockey superstar Wayne Gretkzky, by two games to none in the best-of-seven opening round. Woodstock won both contests convincingly, taking the second by an 8-0 count. Four games into the series, things were little better, with Sarnia down 3–1. But the Legionnaires tottered back from

960-564: Was first awarded in 1934, and named in honour of former OHA and CAHA president, James T. Sutherland . The Sutherland Cup is now the championship trophy of the Greater Ontario Junior Hockey League . Until 2007, the Cup served as an interleague provincial championship. From 1976 until 1978, as many as eight leagues competed for the Sutherland Cup in a massive playdown structure that took months to complete. There

992-621: Was seemingly destine to play Junior A that season with St. Catharines but was cut before the season started. After one great season at Junior B, Esposito finally made the Ontario Hockey Association Junior A League. Noted Legionnaire coach Ted Garvin went on to coach briefly with the Detroit Red Wings . Well known Jr. 'B' coaches Fred Pageau, Dick Robinson and Ron Carroll played for the Sarnia Legionnaires. Former team goalie Joe DeRush went on to make

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1024-477: Was undoubtedly Glen Forbes, who finished second in league scoring with 23 goals, 25 assists and 58 points in just 23 games. He created headlines by scoring four goals two games in a row . In the first contest, played Dec. 7, 1954, Forbes blinked the red light four consecutive times in the third period as the Legionnaires edged London 6–4. Four nights later he got another four as Sarnia crushed the Lou Balls 11–7. He

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