- Owen Sound Platers
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Owen Sound Platers City Owen Sound, Ontario League Ontario Hockey League Operated 1989 –2000Home arena J.D. McArthur Arena, Bayshore Community Centre Colours Black, white, gold and red Franchise history 1956–1975 Guelph CMC's 1975–1989 Guelph Platers 1989–2000 Owen Sound Platers 2000–present Owen Sound Attack Owen Sound Platers was a name used for a junior ice hockey team in the Ontario Hockey League from 1989 to 2000, in Owen Sound, Ontario, Canada. In 2000, after the team was sold, new ownership renamed the team the Owen Sound Attack.
Contents
History
In 1989 the Holodys moved the Guelph Platers to Owen Sound, Ontario, retaining the name "Platers". The city of Owen Sound would be a strong base for junior hockey with disproportionately high support from the smallest city in the OHL. The city had a two time Memorial Cup champion in the Owen Sound Greys in 1924 & 1927, and the Owen Sound Mercurys were a long-standing OHA Senior Hockey team and 1954 Allan Cup Champions.
The best year for the Platers was the 1998–99 season. Owen Sound had a mostly veteran team that achieved their best regular finish in the club's history, and also played into the third round of the playoffs.
Despite many mediocre seasons, support for the team has remained strong. When the Holodys decided to sell the team in 2000, several local Owen Sound businesspeople banded together to purchase the team. Owen Sound fans realized that losing the team would be a crisis for the city. After a bidding war and a summer-long legal battle with another suitor, the team remained in Owen Sound. The ownership group elected for a name change and came up with the "Owen Sound Attack".
Coaches
List of coaches with multiple seasons in parentheses.
- 1989–91 Len McNamara (2)
- 1991–92 Rick Tarasuk
- 1992–93 Jerry Harrigan (3)
- 1995–96 Ric Seiling, J.Lovell
- 1996–97 John Lovell (3)
- 1997–98 J.Lovell, D.Siciliano
- 1998–99 Dave Siciliano (3)
- 1999–2000 D.Siciliano, Brian O'Leary
Players
Andrew Brunette won the 1992–93 Eddie Powers Memorial Trophy as the top scorer in the OHL with 62 Goals, 100 Assists and 162 Points. He also tied for the Canadian Hockey League's scoring lead. Brunette was selected by the Washington Capitals 174th overall in the 7th round of 1993 NHL Entry Draft.
Jamie Storr was the 1993–94 OHL Goaltender of the Year. Storr was the starting goalie for back-to-back World Junior Hockey Championship Gold medals in 1993 and 1994. In 1994 he became the highest drafted goaltender overall in NHL history in by the Los Angeles Kings, 7th overall.
Dan Snyder, a former captain of the Owen Sound Platers had his number 14 retired by the Owen Sound Attack in 2003. He is remembered in Owen Sound for his leadership on the ice, and off the ice. Snyder was twice voted his team's humanitarian of the year. The Ontario Hockey League renamed its Humanitarian of the Year award posthumously in honour of Dan Snyder, who died from injuries suffered in a vehicular accident with teammate Dany Heatley in 2003.
NHL alumni
Nineteen alumni of the Owen Sound Platers graduated from the Ontario Hockey League to play in the National Hockey League.
- Scott Walker
- Kevin Weekes
- Sean Whyte
- Joel Ward
Team records
Records listed for those achieved from 1989 to 2000.
Team records for a single season Statistic Total Season Most points 83 1998–99 Most wins 39 1998–99 Most goals for 330 1992–93 Least goals for 237 1999–2000 Least goals against 284 1993–94 Most goals against 373 1990–91 Individual player records for a single season Statistic Player Total Season Most goals Andrew Brunette 62 1992–93 Most assists Andrew Brunette 100 1992–93 Most points Andrew Brunette 162 1992–93 Most penalty minutes David Benn 219 1992–93 Best GAA (goalie) Jamie Storr 3.59 1993–94 Most wins (goalie) Curtis Sanford 30 1998-99 Goalies = minimum 1500 minutes played Season-by-season results
Regular season
Season Games Won Lost Tied OTL Points Pct % Goals
forGoals
againstStanding 1989–90 66 28 31 7 - 63 0.477 265 305 4th Emms 1990–91 66 13 48 5 - 31 0.235 269 373 7th Emms 1991–92 66 23 41 2 - 48 0.364 260 315 6th Emms 1992–93 66 29 29 8 - 66 0.500 330 324 4th Emms 1993–94 66 34 30 2 - 70 0.530 303 284 4th Emms 1994–95 66 22 38 6 - 50 0.379 239 299 3rd Central 1995–96 66 29 32 5 - 63 0.477 274 313 4th Central 1996–97 66 27 37 2 - 56 0.424 258 318 4th Central 1997–98 66 27 34 5 - 59 0.447 270 312 4th Central 1998–99 68 39 24 5 - 83 0.610 312 293 2nd Midwest 1999–2000 68 21 35 6 6 54 0.353 237 292 5th Midwest Playoffs
- 1989–90 Defeated Sudbury Wolves 4 games to 3 in first round.
Lost to Niagara Falls Thunder 4 games to 1 in quarter-finals. - 1990–91 Out of playoffs.
- 1991–92 Lost to London Knights 4 games to 1 in first round.
- 1992–93 Defeated Niagara Falls Thunder 4 games to 0 in first round.
Lost to S.S. Marie Greyhounds 4 games to 0 in quarter-finals. - 1993–94 Defeated Kitchener Rangers 4 games to 1 in division quarter-finals.
Lost to Detroit Jr. Red Wings 4 games to 0 in division semi-finals. - 1994–95 Defeated Niagara Falls Thunder 4 games to 2 in division quarter-finals.
Lost to Guelph Storm 4 games to 0 in quarter-finals. - 1995–96 Lost to Niagara Falls Thunder 4 games to 2 in division quarter-finals.
- 1996–97 Lost to Barrie Colts 4 games to 0 in division quarter-finals.
- 1997–98 Defeated Kitchener Rangers 4 games to 2 in division quarter-finals.
Lost to Ottawa 67's 4 games to 1 in quarter-finals. - 1998–99 Defeated S.S. Marie Greyhounds 4 games to 1 in conference quarter-finals.
Defeated Guelph Storm 4 games to 2 in conference semi-finals.
Lost to London Knights 4 games to 1 in conference finals. - 1999–2000 Out of playoffs.
Uniforms and logos
The Owen Sound platers used the same logo as the Guelph Platers from 1989 to 1995 (inset right) only changing the name of the city. Owen Sound modernized its logo for the 1995–96 season (top of page), and used it until the team was sold in 2000.
The team colours remained the same throughout; black, gold, red and white. The home uniforms for Owen Sound were white back ground with black, red and gold trim. The away uniforms were black background, with red, gold and white trim.
Arena
- Bayshore Community Centre The OHL Arena & Travel Guide
Ontario Hockey League East Division Central Division Midwest Division West Division Defunct teams Brantford Alexanders · Cornwall Royals · Detroit Compuware Ambassadors · Detroit Junior Red Wings · Detroit Whalers · Guelph Platers · Hamilton Dukes · Hamilton Steelhawks · Kingston Canadians · Kingston Raiders · Mississauga IceDogs · Newmarket Royals · Niagara Falls Thunder · North Bay Centennials · Owen Sound Platers · Toronto Marlboros · Toronto St. Michael's MajorsCHL · Memorial Cup · J. Ross Robertson Cup · OHL history · OHL seasons · OHA standings · OHL Awards · CHL Awards · QMJHL · WHL Categories:- Defunct Ontario Hockey League teams
- Sport in Owen Sound
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