The
Spokane Chiefs are a major junior ice hockey team that plays in the
Western Hockey League based
out of Spokane,
Washington
. The team plays its home games at the
Spokane Arena. Their uniforms are
similar to those of the
NHL's
Montreal Canadiens. Spokane
consistently ranks in the top 10 in the
Canadian Hockey League in attendance.
[143457] The Chiefs won the
Memorial Cup in 1991 and 2008.
History

The Chiefs line up for a game with the
Tri-City Americans.
The
current franchise was granted in 1982 to Kelowna, British
Columbia
as the Kelowna
Wings. In 1985, the team relocated to Spokane,
Washington and became the Chiefs. Before the Spokane Chiefs, there
was another WHL franchise in Spokane, the
Spokane Flyers, which played between
1980–1982.
The Chiefs won the WHL and CHL
Memorial
Cup championships in 1991 and 2008. In addition, they have won
two division titles and four Western Conference championships. The
Chiefs and
Portland Winter
Hawks are the only United States based teams to win the
Memorial Cup. The Chiefs are also the only team in the history of
the Western Hockey League to come back from an 0–3 deficit to win a
best-of-seven series, which they did against the Portland Winter
Hawks in 1996.
The
1991 Memorial Cup team
included future
NHL players:
Ray Whitney,
Pat Falloon,
Trevor
Kidd,
Jon Klemm, and
Scott Bailey. This team of future
NHL'ers blew through the Memorial Cup Tournament, scoring a goal in
the first couple of minutes of virtually every game.
The Chiefs' move to the new
Spokane
Arena in 1995 proved to be good luck. Along with being called
the gem of the Western Hockey League, the Arena hosted many
memorable events in the first year and saw the Chiefs win 50 games
and advance to the WHL finals, only to lose in five games to the
Brandon Wheat Kings.

The Chiefs won the Western Conference
Championship cup in 1991, 1996, 2000 and 2008.
Just two years later, the Chiefs hosted the
1998 Memorial Cup, setting an attendance
record. In the
1999–00
season head coach
Mike Babcock led
the team from a last place finish the previous year to a first
place, 47 win season. The Chiefs advanced to play the
Kootenay Ice in the WHL finals, but lost in six
games.
Between 2001 and 2005, the Chiefs struggled to find an identity.
The organization went through three head coaches in five years:
Perry Ganchar (resigned),
Al Conroy (fired) and
Bill Peters. Still Spokane fans,
known for their robust support, continued to turn out. The Chiefs
consistently average 6,000–7,000 fans per game, one of the top
figures in the Western and Canadian Hockey Leagues. The Chiefs are
also known for a goal celebration often called the 'best in junior
hockey.'
[143458] In 1999, the fans were named the best
in the WHL. On Saturday nights, often referred to as 'Hockey Night
in Spokane', the Spokane Arena is generally sold out, and sellouts
are expected when the
Tri-City
Americans come to town.
The
2007–08 season
produced the most wins by a Spokane Chiefs team since the 1999–00
season, a season which saw the Chiefs go to the WHL Finals. The
team, backed by a solid goaltending tandem and an offensive attack
led by
Carolina Hurricanes draft
pick
Drayson Bowman, ranked in the
top ten of the CHL for most of the season, and reached the #1 spot
in late February. In one of the greatest series in WHL history the
Chiefs beat their arch-rival, the
Tri-City Americans, 4 games to 3 in the
Western Conference finals to earn a spot in the 2008 WHL Finals.
Five of the 7 games went into overtime, including 3 games decided
in double overtime.
In the
Finals, the Chiefs outscored the Lethbridge Hurricanes 15–5 and swept
the series 4–0, just as they did in the 1991 WHL playoffs, to earn
a trip to the Memorial Cup in Kitchener,
Ontario
. The Chiefs skated to a perfect 3–0 round
robin record en route to their
2nd
Memorial Cup, defeating the host
Kitchener Rangers 4–1 in the championship
game. The Chiefs remain the only U.S. team ever to win the
Memorial Cup on Canadian soil.
In the 2008 offseason, head coach Bill Peters announced he was
leaving the Chiefs for the
Rockford
IceHogs of the AHL. Assistant Coach
Hardy Sauter was named the Chiefs 10th head
coach a week later. He is the only former Chiefs player to become
head coach.
In the 2009 offseason, former Chiefs defensemen and captain
Jon Klemm was named assistant coach. Klemm
lead the Chiefs to their first
Memorial
Cup championship in 1991, and won two
Stanley Cups with the
Colorado Avalanche.
Players
Current roster
| Number |
Player |
Position |
Birthyear |
Hometown |
|
NHL Team |
| 2 |
Jared Cowen |
D |
1991 |
Allan, Saskatchewan |
|
Ottawa
Senators |
| 3 |
Garrett Leedahl |
D |
1991 |
Saskatoon, SK |
|
Undrafted |
| 5 |
Tanner Mort |
D |
1993 |
Post Falls, Idaho |
|
Undrafted |
| 7 |
Ryan Letts |
RW |
1989 |
Newport Beach, California |
|
Undrafted |
| 8 |
Brendon Kitchton |
D |
1992 |
Spruce Grove, Alberta |
|
Draft eligible 2010 |
| 9 |
Tyler Johnson |
C |
1990 |
Liberty Lake, Washington |
|
Undrafted |
| 10 |
Blake Gal |
RW |
1992 |
Lethbridge, Alberta |
|
Draft eligible 2010 |
| 11 |
T. C. Cratsenberg |
C |
1992 |
Federal Way, Washington |
|
Draft eligible 2010 |
| 12 |
David Conrad |
LW |
1991 |
Winnipeg, Manitoba |
|
Undrafted |
| 14 |
Mitch Wahl |
C |
1990 |
Seal Beach, California |
|
Calgary
Flames |
| 15 |
Brady Bassart |
C |
1993 |
North Vancouver,
BC |
|
Undrafted |
| 17 |
Mitch Holmberg |
RW |
1993 |
Sherwood Park, AB |
|
Undrafted |
| 18 |
Jared Spurgeon |
D |
1989 |
Edmonton, Alberta |
|
New York
Islanders |
| 19 |
Mike Betz |
LW |
1992 |
Summerland, British Columbia |
|
Draft eligible 2010 |
| 20 |
Steven Kuhn |
C |
1991 |
Oyen, Alberta |
|
Undrafted |
| 21 |
Kyle Beach |
LW |
1990 |
North Vancouver,
BC |
|
Chicago
Blackhawks |
| 22 |
Stefan Ulmer |
D |
1990 |
Dornbirn , Austria |
|
Undrafted |
| 23 |
Corbin Baldwin |
D |
1991 |
Winnipeg, Manitoba |
|
Undrafted |
| 24 |
Brett Bartman |
D |
1989 |
Medicine Hat, Alberta |
|
Undrafted |
| 25 |
Levko Koper |
C |
1990 |
Edmonton, Alberta |
|
Atlanta
Thrashers |
| 26 |
Dominik Uher |
LW |
1992 |
Frydek-Mistek, Czech
Republic |
|
Undrafted |
| 28 |
Kenton Miller |
C |
1991 |
Redvers, SK |
|
Undrafted |
| 29 |
Anthony Bardaro |
C |
1992 |
Delta, BC |
|
Undrafted |
| 30 |
Michael Tadjdeh |
G |
1991 |
Calgary, Alberta |
|
Undrafted |
| 32 |
Matt Marantz |
RW |
1991 |
Calgary, Alberta |
|
Undrafted |
| 35 |
James Reid |
G |
1990 |
Calgary, Alberta |
|
Undrafted |
NHL alumni
Club records

On Sept.
27, 2008, the Chiefs unveiled their WHL and Memorial Cup
Championship banners.
The Chiefs have won two Western Hockey League titles and two
Memorial Cup titles.
Banners for the championships hang in the Spokane Arena
rafters.
Division and conference championship banners are hung
throughout the Arena concourse.
Most goals: 68 -
Valeri
Bure (
1992–93)
Most assists: 118 -
Ray Whitney (
1990–91)
Most points: 185 -
Ray Whitney (1990–91)
Most points, rookie: 78 -
Pat Falloon (
1988–89)
Most points, defenceman: 84 -
Bryan McCabe (
1993–94)
Most penalty minutes: 505 -
Kerry Toporowski (1990–91)
Best goals against average, goaltender: 2.05 -
Dustin Tokarski (
2007–08)
Most shutouts, goaltender: 15 -
Dustin Tokarski (2007–08,
2008–09)
Most saves, goaltender: 2,007 -
Troy Gamble (
1987–88)
Most regular season wins, goaltender: 76 -
Dustin Tokarski (
2006–07, 2007–08, 2008–09)
Most single-season games played, goaltender: 67 -
Troy Gamble (1987–88)
Most points in standings, team: 107
(2007–08)
Most wins, team: 50 (1995–96), (2007–08)
Longest game: 1:26:05 - 4 OT's (vs. Vancouver -
April 10, 2009) (2nd longest game in WHL history)
Season-by-season record
Regular season
Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses,
T = Ties OTL = Overtime losses Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA =
Goals against
| Season |
GP |
W |
L |
T |
OTL |
GF |
GA |
Points |
Finish |
Playoffs |
| 1985–86 |
72 |
30 |
41 |
1 |
- |
373 |
413 |
61 |
3rd West |
Lost West Division semi-final |
| 1986–87 |
72 |
37 |
33 |
2 |
- |
374 |
350 |
76 |
3rd West |
Lost West Division semi-final |
| 1987–88 |
72 |
37 |
32 |
3 |
- |
330 |
296 |
77 |
2nd West |
Lost West Division final |
| 1988–89 |
72 |
25 |
45 |
2 |
- |
326 |
419 |
56 |
6th West |
Out of playoffs |
| 1989–90 |
72 |
30 |
37 |
5 |
- |
334 |
344 |
65 |
4th West |
Lost West Division semi-final |
| 1990–91 |
72 |
48 |
23 |
1 |
- |
435 |
275 |
97 |
2nd West |
Won WHL
championship and Memorial
Cup |
| 1991–92 |
72 |
37 |
29 |
6 |
- |
267 |
270 |
80 |
2nd West |
Lost West Division semi-final |
| 1992–93 |
72 |
28 |
40 |
4 |
- |
311 |
319 |
60 |
5th West |
Lost West Division semi-final |
| 1993–94 |
72 |
31 |
37 |
4 |
- |
324 |
320 |
66 |
5th West |
Lost West Division quarter-final |
| 1994–95 |
72 |
32 |
36 |
4 |
- |
244 |
261 |
68 |
5th West |
Lost West Division semi-final |
| 1995–96 |
72 |
50 |
18 |
4 |
- |
322 |
221 |
104 |
1st West |
Lost WHL finals |
| 1996–97 |
72 |
35 |
33 |
4 |
- |
260 |
235 |
74 |
3rd West |
Lost West Division semi-final |
| 1997–98 |
72 |
45 |
23 |
4 |
- |
288 |
235 |
94 |
2nd West |
Lost West Division final & Lost Memorial Cup |
| 1998–99 |
72 |
19 |
44 |
9 |
- |
193 |
268 |
47 |
7th West |
Out of playoffs |
| 1999–00 |
72 |
47 |
19 |
4 |
2 |
272 |
191 |
100 |
1st West |
Lost WHL finals |
| 2000–01 |
72 |
35 |
28 |
7 |
2 |
242 |
219 |
79 |
4th West |
Lost West Division final |
| 2001–02 |
72 |
33 |
25 |
11 |
3 |
223 |
206 |
80 |
2nd U.S. |
Lost Western Conference semi-final |
| 2002–03 |
72 |
26 |
36 |
6 |
4 |
216 |
261 |
62 |
2nd U.S. |
Lost Western Conference semi-final |
| 2003–04 |
72 |
32 |
29 |
4 |
7 |
200 |
215 |
74 |
4th U.S. |
Lost Western Conference quarter-final |
| 2004–05 |
72 |
24 |
38 |
8 |
2 |
192 |
230 |
58 |
5th U.S. |
Out of playoffs |
| Season |
GP |
W |
L |
OTL |
SOL |
GF |
GA |
Points |
Finish |
Playoffs |
| 2005–06 |
72 |
25 |
39 |
5 |
3 |
193 |
254 |
58 |
5th U.S. |
Out of playoffs |
| 2006–07 |
72 |
36 |
28 |
4 |
4 |
232 |
217 |
80 |
4th U.S. |
Lost Western Conference quarter-final |
| 2007–08 |
72 |
50 |
15 |
1 |
6 |
251 |
160 |
107 |
2nd U.S. |
Won WHL championship
and Memorial Cup |
| 2008–09 |
72 |
46 |
23 |
0 |
3 |
246 |
145 |
95 |
2nd U.S. |
Lost Western Conference semi-final |
| 2009–10 |
25 |
15 |
8 |
2 |
0 |
80 |
60 |
32 |
- |
Season In Progress |
- ALL-TIME RECORD: 1753GP, 854W 750L 93T 39OTL
16SL
Playoff history
- 1985–86: Lost to Portland Winter Hawks 5 games
to 4 in Conference semi-finals.
- 1986–87: Lost to Portland Winter Hawks 5 games
to 0 in Conference semi-finals.
- 1987–88: Defeated Victoria Cougars 5 games to
3 in Conference semi-finals.
Lost to Kamloops Blazers 5 games to 2 in Conference
finals.
- 1988–89: Out of playoffs.
- 1989–90: Lost to Kamloops Blazers 5 games to 1
in Conference semi-finals
- 1990–91: Defeated Seattle Thunderbirds 5 games
to 1 in Conference semi-finals.
Defeated Kamloops Blazers 5 games to 0 in Conference finals.
Defeated Lethbridge Hurricanes 4 games to 0 in WHL finals.
WHL CHAMPIONS
Finished Memorial Cup round-robin in first place
(3–0).
Defeated Drummondville Voltigeurs 5–1 to win Memorial Cup.
MEMORIAL CUP CHAMPIONS
- 1991–92: Defeated Portland Winter Hawks 4
games to 2 in Conference quarter-finals.
Lost to Seattle Thunderbirds 3 games to 1 in Conference
semi-finals.
- 1992–93: Defeated Tacoma Rockets 4 games to 3
in Conference quarter-finals.
Lost to Kamloops Blazers 3 games to 0 in Conference
semi-finals.
- 1993–94: Lost to Seattle Thunderbirds 3 games
to 0 in Conference quarter-finals.
- 1994–95: Advanced past round-robin tournament
with 3–1 record.
Lost to Tri-City Americans 4 games to 3 in Conference
semi-finals.
- 1995–96: Defeated Portland Winter Hawks 4
games to 3 in Conference quarter-finals.
Earned second-round bye.
Defeated Kamloops Blazers 4 games to 2 in Conference finals.
Lost to Brandon Wheat Kings 4 games to 1 in WHL Finals.
- 1996–97: Defeated Kelowna Rockets 4 games to 2
in Conference quarter-finals.
Lost to Prince George Cougars 3 games to 0 in Conference
semi-finals.
- 1997–98: Defeated Kelowna Rockets 4 games to 3
in Conference quarter-finals.
Defeated Prince George Cougars 3 games to 1 in Conference
semi-finals.
Lost to Portland Winter Hawks 4 games to 3 in Conference
finals.
Hosted Memorial Cup, finished round-robin in third
place (1–2).
Lost 2–1 (OT) in Semi-Final to Guelph Storm.
- 1998–99: Out of playoffs.
- 1999–00: Defeated Tri-City Americans 4 games
to 0 in Conference quarter-finals.
Earned second-round bye.
Defeated Prince George Cougars 4 games to 1 in Conference
finals.
Lost to Kootenay Ice 4 games to 2 in WHL finals.
- 2000–01: Defeated Kamloops Blazers 4 games to
0 in Conference quarter-finals.
Defeated Seattle Thunderbirds 3 games to 0 in Conference
semi-finals.
Lost to Portland Winter Hawks 4 games to 1 in Conference
finals.
- 2001–02: Defeated Tri-City Americans 4 games
to 1 in Conference quarter-finals.
Lost to Kelowna Rockets 4 games to 2 in Conference
semi-finals.
- 2002–03: Defeated Portland Winter Hawks 4
games to 3 in Conference quarter-finals.
Lost to Kelowna Rockets 4 games to 0 in Conference
semi-finals.
- 2003–04: Lost to Everett Silvertips 4 games to
0 in Conference quarter-finals.
- 2004–05: Out of playoffs.
- 2005–06: Out of playoffs.
- 2006–07: Lost to Everett Silvertips 4 games to
2 in Conference quarter-finals.
- 2007–08: Defeated Everett Silvertips 4 games
to 0 in Conference quarter-finals.
Defeated Vancouver Giants 4 games to 2 in Conference
semi-finals.
Defeated Tri-City Americans 4 games to 3 in Conference
finals.
Defeated Lethbridge Hurricanes 4 games to 0 in WHL finals.
WHL CHAMPIONS
Finished Memorial Cup round-robin in first place
(3–0).
Defeated Kitchener Rangers 4–1 to win Memorial Cup.
MEMORIAL CUP CHAMPIONS
- 2008–09: Defeated Seattle Thunderbirds 4 games
to 1 in Conference quarter finals.
Lost to Vancouver Giants 4-3 in Conference semi finals.
- All-Time Playoff Record (Not Including Memorial Cup
Games): 113–102
- All-Time Memorial Cup Tournament Record:
9–3
Executives
Head coaches and all-time regular season records
- 1985–86 Ernie Gare Jr. (1–5–0)
- 1985–86 Marc Pezzin (30–41–1)
- 1986–87 Peter Esdale (37–33–2)
- 1987–89 Butch Goring (39–41–3)
- 1989 (Interim)- Bob Strumm
(2–4–0)
- 1988–89 Gary Braun (21–32–2)
- 1989–94 Bryan Maxwell (165–155–22)* Resigned
Mid-Season 1993–94
- 1994 (Interim)- Tim Speltz (1–0)
- 1994 (Interim)- Perry Shockey
(0–1)
- 1994 (Interim)- Mike Fedorko
(9–11–2)
- 1994–00 Mike Babcock (234–169–29–2)
- 1997 (Interim)- Brian Cox
(5–2–0)
- 2000–02 Perry Ganchar (68–53–18–5)
- 2003–05 Al Conroy (82–103–18–13)
- 2005–2008 Bill Peters (111–81–10–12)
- 2008 (Interim) Leigh Mendelson
(1-0)
- 2008–present Hardy Sauter (60-31-2-3)
General managers
- 1985–86 Marc Pezzin
- 1986–89 Bob Strumm
- 1989–90 Brian Maxwell
- 1990–present Tim Speltz
Arenas
Spokane Arena hockey attendance records

The Spokane Arena is the home of the
Spokane Chiefs.
- Largest crowds: 10,759 vs. Tri-City (7 times since 1995),
10,751 Spokane vs. Val d'Or (1998 Memorial Cup opener), 10,700 vs.
Tri-City (8 times since 1995), 10,650 vs. Tri-City (2 times since
1995), 10,538 vs. Tri-City (5 times since 1995), 10,431 vs.
Tri-City (4 times since 1995)
- Smallest crowd: 3,025 Spokane vs. Kelowna (February 8,
2006)
- 1995–96 Sellouts: 11 (Includes NHL Exhibition Game)
- 1996–97 Sellouts: 10
- 1997–98 Sellouts: 14 (Includes 8 Memorial Cup Games)
- 1998–99 Sellouts: 9
- 1999–00 Sellouts: 10
- 2000–01 Sellouts: 6
- 2001–02 Sellouts: 7
- 2002–03 Sellouts: 5
- 2003–04 Sellouts: 4
- 2004–05 Sellouts: 2
- 2005–06 Sellouts: 1
- 2006–07 Sellouts: 2
- 2007–08 Sellouts: 3
- 2008–09 Sellouts: 4
- 2009–10 Sellouts: 0 (Season In Progress)
Chiefs attendance averages and WHL attendance rank
| Season |
Total attendance |
Average |
Games |
WHL rank |
| 1996–97 |
281,743 |
7,826 |
36 |
2nd |
| 1997–98 |
289,735 |
8,048 |
36 |
2nd |
| 1998–99 |
259,150 |
7,404 |
36 |
2nd |
| 1999–00 |
255,974 |
7,110 |
36 |
1st |
| 2000–01 |
231,960 |
6,443 |
36 |
2nd |
| 2001–02 |
229,308 |
6,369 |
36 |
3rd |
| 2002–03 |
219,586 |
6,099 |
36 |
3rd |
| 2003–04 |
226,550 |
6,293 |
36 |
3rd |
| 2004–05 |
225,002 |
6,250 |
36 |
4th |
| 2005–06 |
219,802 |
6,105 |
36 |
5th |
| 2006–07 |
220,019 |
6,112 |
36 |
4th |
| 2007–08 |
236,056 |
6,557 |
36 |
3rd |
| 2008–09 |
239,620 |
6,656 |
36 |
3rd |
| 2009-10 |
77,921 |
5,993 |
13 |
4th |
See also
External links