The Erie Otters are a Major junior ice hockey team based in Erie, Pennsylvania. They are members of the Midwest division of the Ontario Hockey League (OHL), one of only three American teams in the circuit. The team name refers to the North American river otter common to Lake Erie.

Erie Otters
CityErie, Pennsylvania
LeagueOntario Hockey League
ConferenceWestern
DivisionMidwest
Founded1996 (1996)–97
Home arenaErie Insurance Arena
ColorsNavy, gold, white
     
Owner(s)Jim Waters
General managerDave Brown
Head coachStan Butler
Websiteottershockey.com
Franchise history
1946–1953Windsor Spitfires
1953–1960Hamilton Tiger Cubs
1960–1974Hamilton Red Wings
1974–1978Hamilton/St. Catharines Fincups
1978–1984Brantford Alexanders
1984–1988Hamilton Steelhawks
1988–1996Niagara Falls Thunder
1996–presentErie Otters

History edit

The Erie Otters were previously located in Niagara Falls, Ontario, known as the Niagara Falls Thunder. They moved to Erie Insurance Arena for the 1996–97 season. After three seasons, they won the Holody Trophy as Midwest Division champions 1999. It was their first of three consecutive Midwest Division championships, culminating in a J. Ross Robertson Cup in the 2001–02 season. Dave MacQueen won the Matt Leyden Trophy in 2000–01 as the OHL Coach of the Year. General manager Sherwood Bassin was awarded OHL Executive of the Year, and the CHL Executive of the Year for his role in building a championship team.[1][2]

The Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine partnered with the Otters in 2012, as their medical provider.[3]

Connor McDavid played for the Otters from the 2012–13 OHL season to the 2014–15 OHL season.[4] Hockey Canada granted McDavid "exceptional player" status, which permitted him to play in the OHL a year earlier than would otherwise be permissible for a player his age.[5] The Otters chose the 15-year-old McDavid as their first overall pick in the 2012 draft. He led the team to the J. Ross Robertson Cup championship finals, where the Otters fell to the Oshawa Generals.[6]

On March 18, 2017, the Otters became the first team in Canadian Hockey League history to record four consecutive 50-win seasons (2013–2017). The Otters had previously shared the record of three consecutive 50-win seasons with the Kelowna Rockets (2012–2015), Edmonton Oil Kings (2011–2014), Saint John Sea Dogs (2009–2012) and the Kamloops Blazers (1989–1992).[7]

On May 22, 2017, the Otters set a Memorial Cup record for most goals by one team in a single game by defeating the Saint John Sea Dogs with a final score of 12–5, surpassing the previous record of 11 goals set by the Quebec Remparts (1974, 11–3) and Regina Pats (1980, 11–2). Dylan Strome set an individual record of 7 points in a single game (4 goals, 3 assists). Taylor Raddysh also tied the previous record of 6 points (2 goals, 4 assists) in the same game.[8]

On January 17, 2022, the Erie Otters hosted their inaugural Martin Luther King Jr. Day game. The team made history when University of Pittsburgh student Alex Randall broadcast the television feed of the game as the first African American play-by-play announcer in the Ontario Hockey League or the Canadian Hockey League.[9] This continued on January 16, 2023 when Arizona State University student Trey Matthews broadcast the television feed of the game as the second African-American play-by-play announcer.[10] The Erie Otters used a Black History Month inspired logo and warm-up jersey on Martin Luther King Jr. Day 2023.[11]

On January 26, 2023, Stan Butler was announced as the 10th head coach in the team's history.[12] The Otters lost by a 5–1 score to the London Knights in Butler's first game as coach.[13]

Uniforms and logos edit

From their first season until the end of the 2016–17 season, the Erie Otters' colors were navy blue, gold, red, and white. Their primary logo featured a circular outline with a fierce, anthropomorphic otter furnishing a hockey stick and gear. The "Otters" wordmark is superimposed over the design in red with a gold and navy blue outline. The team's home uniform included a navy blue sweater with red and gold accents. The away uniforms featured a white jersey with navy blue and red trim.[citation needed]

For the 2013–14 season, the Erie Otters introduced a gold alternate jersey. This jersey features a navy blue shoulder yoke, navy blue and white stripes, and the cursive "Otters" wordmark centered across the chest. The design resembles the sweaters of the defunct Erie Blades, who played from 1975 to 1982.[14] In 2016, the Erie Otters began wearing the gold alternate jerseys for every Saturday home game throughout the regular season and also introduced gold helmets to the uniform set, rather than the blue helmets worn with the gold jersey in previous seasons.[citation needed]

For the 2017–18 season, the Erie Otters announced that the secondary cursive "Otters" watermark has become their new primary logo and the team is making a full-time switch to a gold, navy, and white color set. With this change, the alternate gold jerseys have become the new primary home set, and a newly introduced white jersey (in the same style as the gold) has become the new away set.[15]

On May 20, 2019, the Otters updated an older Otters logo with the new color pattern of navy blue and gold as part of the center emblem, a shoulder patch with a more modern look, and the Erie name inside of the Pennsylvania keystone symbol.[16]

Arena edit

The Erie Otters play their home games at Erie Insurance Arena, which opened in 1983, and seats more than 6,700 spectators for ice hockey.[17]

Championships edit

List of championships:[citation needed]

J. Ross Robertson CupWayne Gretzky TrophyHamilton Spectator TrophyHolody Trophy
OHL ChampionsWestern Conference Champions1st Place - Regular SeasonMidwest Division Champions

2001–02

2016–17

2001–02

2014–15

2016–17

2000–01

2015–16

2016–17

1999–00

2000–01

2001–02

2014–15

2015–16

2016–17

Coaches edit

List of coaches:[citation needed]

Regular SeasonPlayoffsMemorial Cup
CoachFirst SeasonLast SeasonGPWLTOTLSOLPTSPCT%GPWLPCT%GPWLPCT%
Chris Johnstone1996-971996-97*39112530025.321--------
Dale Dunbar1996-97*1997-98934536930102.5481248.333----
Paul Theriault1998-991998-9968313340066.485514.200----
Dave MacQueen1999-20002005-0647622918336253522.548643826.594422.500
Peter Sidorkiewicz2006-072007-08*84196201241.244--------
Robbie Ftorek2007-08*2012-13*35313917401613307.43616412.250----
Kris Knoblauch2012-13*2016-1731321683095446.712694623.667532.600
Chris Hartsburg2017-182021-22*199759901411175.438---.000---.000
B.J Adams2021-22*2022-23*90364803378.400
Stan Butler2022-23*2023-24277160418.333

* indicates replacement mid-season.

Award winners edit

List of award winners:[citation needed]

SeasonCoachAward WonAward For
2000-01Dave MacQueenMatt Leyden TrophyCoach of the Year
2015-16Kris KnoblauchMatt Leyden TrophyCoach of the Year

General managers edit

List of general managers with multiple seasons in parentheses.

Players edit

Award winners edit

List of award winners:[citation needed]

SeasonPlayer(s)Award WonAward For
1999-00Brad BoyesCHL Scholastic Player of the Year Award
Bobby Smith TrophyOHL Scholastic Player of the Year
2000-01Brad BoyesRed Tilson TrophyMost Outstanding Player
William Hanley TrophyMost Sportsmanlike Player
Joey SullivanDan Snyder Memorial TrophyHumanitarian of the Year
2001-02Brad BoyesCHL Sportsman of the Year Award
Red Tilson TrophyMost Outstanding Player
William Hanley TrophyMost Sportsmanlike Player
Wayne Gretzky 99 AwardOHL Playoffs MVP
Cory PeckerLeo Lalonde Memorial TrophyOverage Player of the Year
2003-04Chris CampoliCHL Humanitarian of the Year
Dan Snyder Memorial TrophyHumanitarian of the Year
2006-07Derrick BagshawRoger Neilson Memorial AwardTop Academic University Player
Ryan O'ReillyJack Ferguson AwardFirst Overall Draft Pick
2011-12Connor McDavidJack Ferguson AwardFirst Overall Draft Pick
Adam PelechBobby Smith TrophyScholastic Player of the Year
Ivan Tennant Memorial AwardTop Academic High School Player
2012-13Connor McDavidEmms Family AwardTop First Year Player
2013-14Connor BrownEddie Powers Memorial TrophyOHL Leading Scorer
Jim Mahon Memorial TrophyTop Scoring Right Winger
Red Tilson TrophyMost Outstanding Player
CHL Top Scorer AwardHighest Scoring Player in CHL
Dane FoxLeo Lalonde Memorial TrophyOverage Player of the Year
Connor McDavidWilliam Hanley TrophyMost Sportsmanlike Player
Bobby Smith TrophyScholastic Player of the Year
Oscar Dansk & Devin WilliamsDave Pinkney TrophyLowest Team Goals Against
2014-15Connor McDavidRed Tilson TrophyMost Outstanding Player
Bobby Smith TrophyScholastic Player of the Year
Wayne Gretzky 99 AwardOHL Playoffs MVP
CHL Player of the Year
CHL Top Draft Prospect AwardTop Eligible Draft Prospect in CHL
Dylan StromeEddie Powers Memorial TrophyOHL Leading Scorer
William Hanley TrophyMost Sportsmanlike Player
CHL Top Scorer AwardHighest Scoring Player in CHL
Alex DeBrincatEmms Family AwardTop First Year Player
CHL Rookie of the Year
2016-17Alex DeBrincatRed Tilson TrophyMost Outstanding Player
Eddie Powers Memorial TrophyOHL Leading Scorer
Jim Mahon Memorial TrophyTop Scoring Right Winger
CHL Player of the Year
Darren RaddyshLeo Lalonde Memorial TrophyOverage Player of the Year
Max Kaminsky TrophyDefenceman of the Year
Warren FoegeleWayne Gretzky 99 AwardOHL Playoffs MVP
Dylan StromeStafford Smythe Memorial TrophyMemorial Cup MVP
Dylan Strome & Taylor RaddyshEd Chynoweth TrophyMemorial Cup Leading Scorer(s)
Anthony CirelliGeorge Parsons TrophyMemorial Cup Most Sportsmanlike Player

NHL alumni edit

List of National Hockey League (NHL) alumni:[citation needed]

NHL first round draft picks edit

Connor McDavid is the first player with Erie ties to be selected first overall in a major professional sports league’s draft. In his case, it was by the Edmonton Oilers in the 2015 NHL Entry Draft on June 26, 2015.[18]

List of first round NHL draft picks:[citation needed]

YearPlayerTeamRoundPick #
1997Jason WardMontreal Canadiens111
1998Michael RuppNew York Islanders19
1999Tim ConnollyNew York Islanders15
2000Nikita AlexeevTampa Bay Lightning18
2000Brad BoyesToronto Maple Leafs124
2001Carlo ColaiacovoToronto Maple Leafs117
2001Adam MunroChicago Blackhawks129
2005Ryan O'MarraNew York Islanders115
2013Andre BurakovskyWashington Capitals123
2015Connor McDavidEdmonton Oilers11
2015Dylan StromeArizona Coyotes13
2020Jamie DrysdaleAnaheim Ducks16

Retired numbers edit

Season-by-season results edit

List of season-by-season results:[citation needed]

Regular season edit

Legend: OTL - Overtime Loss, SL - Shootout Loss, PTS - Points, GF - Goals For, GA - Goals Against, GD - Goal Differential

SeasonGamesWonLostTieOTLSLPTSPCT%GFGAGDStandingPlayoffs
1996–976623367--530.402240260-205th CentralLost in Quarterfinals
1997–986633285--710.538261252+94th WestLost in Quarterfinals
1998–996831334--660.485271297-263rd MidwestLost in Quarterfinals
1999–0068332843-730.515224229-51st MidwestLost in Semifinals
2000–01684511102-1020.735264171+931st MidwestLost in Conference Finals
2001–0268412241-870.632246218+281st MidwestWon OHL Championship, Lost Memorial Cup
2002–0368243563-570.397181248-675th MidwestMissed Playoffs
2003–0468292667-710.471221212+95th MidwestLost in Semifinals
2004–0568312665-730.500186207-214th MidwestLost in Quarterfinals
2005–06682635-43590.434219266-475th MidwestMissed Playoffs
2006–07681550-12330.243209378-1695th MidwestMissed Playoffs
2007–08681846-22400.294206343-1375th MidwestMissed Playoffs
2008–09683429-32730.537208254-463rd MidwestLost in Quarterfinals
2009–10683328-52730.537257259-24th MidwestLost in Quarterfinals
2010–11684026-11820.603281229+523rd MidwestLost in Quarterfinals
2011–12681052-33260.191169338-1695th MidwestMissed Playoffs
2012–13681940-45470.346206312-1065th MidwestMissed Playoffs
2013–14685214-201060.779312170+1422nd MidwestLost in Conference Finals
2014–15685014-221040.765331212+1191st MidwestLost OHL Championship
2015–16685215-101050.772269183+861st MidwestLost in Conference Finals
2016–17685015-211030.757319182+1371st MidwestWon OHL Championship, Lost Memorial Cup
2017–18682335-73560.412220270-505th MidwestMissed Playoffs
2018–19682638-31560.412230300-705th MidwestMissed Playoffs
2019–20632626-47630.500229236-75th MidwestPlayoffs Cancelled
2020–21000-0000.000000Season CancelledPlayoffs Cancelled
2021–22682737-22580.426223267-445th MidwestMissed Playoffs
2022–23682140-25490.360207287-805th MidwestMissed Playoffs
2023–24683328-52730.537254270-163rd Midwest

 

Playoffs edit

List of playoffs results:[citation needed]

Conference QuarterfinalsConference SemifinalsConference FinalsOHL Championship
SeasonResultOpponentFinalResultOpponentFinalResultOpponentFinalResultOpponentFinal
1996-97>LostGuelph Storm4-1
1997-98>LostLondon Knights4-3
1998-99>LostGuelph Storm4-1
1999-00>WonBrampton Battalion4-2>LostSault Ste. Marie Greyhounds4-3
2000-01>WonLondon Knights4-1>WonBrampton Battalion4-1>LostPlymouth Whalers4-1
2001-02>WonSarnia Sting4-1>WonLondon Knights4-2>WonWindsor Spitfires4-1>WonBarrie Colts4-1
2002-03Out of playoffs. Did not qualify.
2003-04>WonSarnia Sting4-1>LostLondon Knights4-0
2004-05>LostKitchener Rangers4-2
2005-06Out of playoffs. Did not qualify.
2006-07Out of playoffs. Did not qualify.
2007-08Out of playoffs. Did not qualify.
2008-09>LostLondon Knights4-1
2009-10>LostWindsor Spitfires4-0
2010-11>LostWindsor Spitfires4-3
2011-12Out of playoffs. Did not qualify.
2012-13Out of playoffs. Did not qualify.
2013-14>WonSaginaw Spirit4-1>WonSault Ste. Marie Greyhounds4-0>LostGuelph Storm4-1
2014-15>WonSarnia Sting4-1>WonLondon Knights4-0>WonSault Ste. Marie Greyhounds4-2>LostOshawa Generals4-1
2015-16>WonSaginaw Spirit4-0>WonSault Ste. Marie Greyhounds4-1>LostLondon Knights4-0
2016-17>WonSarnia Sting4-0>WonLondon Knights4-3>WonOwen Sound Attack4-2>WonMississauga Steelheads4-1
2017-18Out of playoffs. Did not qualify.
2018-19Out of playoffs. Did not qualify.
2019-20Cancelled.
2020-21Cancelled.
2021-22Out of playoffs. Did not qualify.
2022-23Out of playoffs. Did not qualify.

 

Memorial Cup edit

List of Memorial Cup results:[citation needed]

Round Robin Game 1Round Robin Game 2Round Robin Game 3Semi-FinalFinal
YearResultOpponentScoreResultOpponentScoreResultOpponentScoreResultOpponentScoreResultOpponentScore
2002LostKootenay Ice3-0WonVictoriaville Tigres5-1WonGuelph Storm4-0LostVictoriaville Tigres5-4 OT
2017WonSeattle Thunderbirds4-2WonSaint John Sea Dogs12-5LostWindsor Spitfires4-2WonSaint John Sea Dogs6-3LostWindsor Spitfires4-3

References edit

  1. ^ "OHL Awards". Ontario Hockey League. Canadian Hockey League. Retrieved December 24, 2017.
  2. ^ "CHL Awards". chl.ca. Canadian Hockey League. Retrieved December 24, 2017.
  3. ^ "LECOM becomes official medical provider..." Otters Hockey.com. Retrieved October 6, 2012.
  4. ^ Oilers' Connor McDavid becomes fourth fastest to 400 career assists, has 4-point game
  5. ^ "Connor McDavid granted exceptional status, now eligible for OHL draft". National Post. March 21, 2012. Archived from the original on March 22, 2012.
  6. ^ "Junior dreams crushed for McDavid in OHL championship". mastercardmemorialcup.ca. Retrieved May 16, 2015.
  7. ^ "Otters make CHL history, claim second straight Hamilton Spectator Trophy – Ontario Hockey League". ontariohockeyleague.com. Retrieved March 20, 2017.
  8. ^ "Otters rewrite the record books in 12-5 win – Mastercard Memorial Cup". mastercardmemorialcup.ca. Retrieved May 24, 2017.
  9. ^ "Pennsylvania's Alex Randall to Become First Black Play-by-Play Voice in CHL History". Ontario Hockey League. December 14, 2021. Retrieved January 27, 2022.
  10. ^ "Pennsylvanian Trey Matthews to call Otters' second MLK Day Game – Ontario Hockey League".
  11. ^ "ERIE OTTERS UNVEIL 2023 BLACK HISTORY LOGO, JERSEY – Erie Otters".
  12. ^ "Stan Butler to be named 10th coach in Otters franchise history". Ontario Hockey League. January 26, 2023. Retrieved February 5, 2023.
  13. ^ "Late penalty trouble dooms Otters in front of sold out Erie Insurance Arena". Erie Otters. February 4, 2023. Retrieved February 5, 2023.
  14. ^ Creamer, Chris. "New Otters Jersey Evokes Memories of the Blades". SportsLogos.net Blog. Retrieved March 18, 2013.
  15. ^ "Otters Unveil New Color Scheme and Jersey". OttersHockey.com. Retrieved August 20, 2017.
  16. ^ "Otters Unveil New Jerseys for 2019-2020 Season - Erie News Now | WICU & WSEE in Erie, PA". www.erienewsnow.com. Retrieved April 16, 2021.
  17. ^ "Erie Insurance Arena". Erie Sports Commission. Retrieved May 7, 2024.
  18. ^ Fernandes, Victor. "Otters' McDavid chosen No. 1 in NHL draft". GoErie.com. Retrieved April 16, 2021.

External links edit