Английская Википедия:Ice hockey in Oklahoma
Oklahoma has a mixed relationship with ice hockey in the United States. Several professional teams have called the Sooner state home with some having extended stays, however, ice hockey has yet to catch on at the grassroots level.
History
An unlikely destination for ice hockey due to both its warm climate and modest population (28th in the nation in 2022), Oklahoma didn't have its fist major ice hockey team until 1964. Seeking to increase its footprint in hockey's the suddenly expanding sphere of influence, the Toronto Maple Leafs established the Tulsa Oilers as a farm team in the CPHL which had started a year earlier. The following year the Minneapolis Bruins, a subsidiary of the Boston Bruins, relocated to the state and became the Oklahoma City Blazers. In their first year of play the Blazers defeated Tulsa in the for the league championship and kicked off a rivalry between the two. The championship would remain in Oklahoma for four years, being won by one or the other during that time, but by 1970 the teams began to lose their strength. Once the Bruins withdrew from the Blazers in 1972, the team folded. Oklahoma City went without a pro team for a year before Toronto moved the Oilers to OKC and renamed them as the 'Oklahoma City Blazers'. Immediately following the Oilers departure, a second franchise of the same name was created. Though it began as an independent, it would eventually fall under the oversight of the Atlanta Flames.[1]
The new Tulsa team won the league title in 1976 and managed to establish itself with the community. The same could not be said for the new Blazers. After a good first season, the team declined and by 1976 the Maple Leafs cut the franchise loose as a financial drain. The Colorado Rockies stepped in as sponsors but the Blazers sank to the bottom of the league in 1977 and then folded. A year later the CHL returned to Oklahoma City with the Oklahoma City Stars. The team was run by the Minnesota North Stars for the first three seasons and saw some improvement in that time. After switching to the Calgary Flames in 1981, the team flatlined and finished 29 games under .500. That turned out to be the final year for the Stars, who were never able to establish the same kind of rivalry the Blazers had had with the Oilers. Tulsa, meanwhile soldiered on and traded one parent club for another until 1984 when the CPHL (then called the 'CHL') suspended operations along with all of its league members.[2]
In 1992, the CHL name was revived and both the Tulsa Oilers and Oklahoma City Blazers were resurrected. While neither had any official connection to the earlier iterations other than their names, the two were able to continue the tradition of minor league hockey in Oklahoma. In the new league's first final, the Oilers defeated the Blazers and instantly rekindled the rivalry between the two fan bases. Three years later Oklahoma City won the championship and then added a second in 2001. The Blazers routinely finished ahead of the Oilers in the standings for existence but the team found itself a victim of its own success.[3] When rumors of a potential AHL team in Oklahoma City surfaced in 2009, the Blazers withdrew their lease extension and folded after the season. Just over a year later, the Oklahoma City Barons made their debut but the new team didn't enjoy the same level of interest as the Blazers. Despite producing winning records every year and making two trips to the league semifinals, the Barons continually suffered from poor attendance and by 2015 the team relocated due to financial losses.[4]
In the meantime, the Oilers continued in the CHL until that league folded in 2014. This time, however, Tulsa was able to survive by joining the ECHL. The change to a new league also brought about a chance in the team's fortunes as the Oilers routinely produced winning records in the first decade with the ECHL.
Towards the end of the Barons' tenure in OKC, the city got its first junior team when the Oklahoma City Jr. Blazers began in 2014. The team played in the WSHL for six seasons but saw both the franchise and the league cease operations in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[5] In the wake of their disappearance, a different junior team from Wisconsin assumed the mantle of the Jr. Blazers. A year later, they restyled themselves as the Oklahoma City Ice Hawks. Once season later, the NAHL announced that they would be moving into the region in 2022. In order to forestall a fight that they would likely lose, the Ice Hawks moved to New Mexico and OKC got a new junior team in the Oklahoma Warriors.
Teams
Professional
Active
Team | City | League | Arena | Founded |
---|---|---|---|---|
style="color:white; background:#091837; Шаблон:Box-shadow border"|Tulsa Oilers (third) | Tulsa | ECHL | BOK Center | 1992 |
Inactive
Team | City | League | Years Active | Fate |
---|---|---|---|---|
Tulsa Oilers | Tulsa | CPHL | 1964–1973 | Oklahoma City Blazers (second) |
style="color:white; background:#141e1c; Шаблон:Box-shadow border"|Oklahoma City Blazers | Oklahoma City | CPHL | 1965–1972 | Defunct |
style="color:white; background:#040204; Шаблон:Box-shadow border"|Oklahoma City Blazers (second) | Oklahoma City | CPHL | 1973–1977 | Defunct |
Tulsa Oilers (second) | Tulsa | CPHL | 1973–1984 | Defunct |
style="color:white; background:#048d04; Шаблон:Box-shadow border"|Oklahoma City Stars | Oklahoma City | CPHL | 1978–1982 | Defunct |
style="color:white; background:#94022c; Шаблон:Box-shadow border"|Oklahoma City Blazers (third) | Oklahoma City | CHL | 1992–2009 | Defunct |
style="color:white; background:#00205B; Шаблон:Box-shadow border"|Oklahoma City Barons | Oklahoma City | AHL | 2010–2015 | Bakersfield Condors |
Junior
Active
Team | City | League | Arena | Founded |
---|---|---|---|---|
style="color:white; background:#000000; Шаблон:Box-shadow border"|Oklahoma Warriors | Oklahoma City | NAHL | Blazers Ice Centre | 2022* |
Inactive
Team | City | League | Years Active | Fate |
---|---|---|---|---|
style="color:white; background:#1c221a; Шаблон:Box-shadow border"|Tulsa Crude | Tulsa | USHL | 2001–2002 | Defunct |
style="color:white; background:#c02028; Шаблон:Box-shadow border"|Oklahoma City Jr. Blazers | Oklahoma City | WSHL | 2014–2020 | Defunct |
style="color:white; background:#da2128; Шаблон:Box-shadow border"|Oklahoma City Ice Hawks | Oklahoma City | NA3HL | 2020–2022 | New Mexico Ice Wolves |
* relocated
Timeline
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bar:1 color:act from:07/01/1964 till:06/01/1973 text:Tulsa Oilers / Oklahoma City Blazers (1964–1977) bar:1 color:act from:07/01/1973 till:06/01/1977 text: bar:2 color:act from:07/01/1965 till:06/01/1972 text:Oklahoma City Blazers (1965–1972) bar:3 color:act from:07/01/1973 till:06/01/1984 text:Tulsa Oilers (1973–1984) bar:4 color:act from:07/01/1978 till:06/01/1982 text:Oklahoma City Stars (1978–1982) bar:5 color:act from:07/01/1992 till:06/01/2009 text:Oklahoma City Blazers (1992–2009) bar:6 color:act from:07/01/1992 till:end text:Tulsa Oilers (1992–Present) bar:7 color:out from:07/01/1962 till:06/01/2001 text: bar:7 color:act from:07/01/2001 till:06/01/2002 text:Tulsa Crude (2001–2002) bar:8 color:out from:07/01/1984 till:06/01/2005 text: bar:8 color:act from:07/01/2010 till:06/01/2015 text:Oklahoma City Barons (2010–2015) bar:8 color:out from:07/01/2015 till:end text: bar:9 color:act from:07/01/2014 till:06/01/2020 text:Oklahoma City Jr. Blazers (2014–2020) bar:10 color:out from:07/01/1998 till:06/01/2020 text: bar:10 color:act from:07/01/2020 till:06/01/2022 text:Oklahoma City Ice Hawks (2020–2022) bar:10 color:out from:07/01/2022 till:end text: bar:11 color:out from:07/01/2020 till:06/01/2022 text: bar:11 color:act from:07/01/2022 till:end text:Oklahoma City Warriors (2022–Present)
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Шаблон:Font color Шаблон:Font color
Players
Oklahoma's history with minor league hockey had helped the state produce a few notable players despite a very low level of engagement (Only about 1,000 residents were registered with USA Hockey in 2022).[6] Unsurprisingly, most notable players were born in and around Oklahoma City and Tulsa, the two towns that have sported established teams.
Notable players by city
Edmond
Oklahoma City
Raised Elsewhere
References