Grenoble dominates Angers to clinch 9th Ligue Magnus title
Brûleurs de Loups seal the title at home with dominant Game 5 victory as veterans Hardy and Fleury bid farewell to the ice Read more»
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All time leagues: OHA | OHL | QMJHL | Memorial Cup
# | Pos | Player name | State | Born | Height | Weight | Shoots | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
G | Roland Melanson | ![]() | 28.06.1960 | 178 cm | 84 kg | left | Show profile» | |
D | Claude Julien | ![]() | 23.04.1960 | 183 cm | 86 kg | right | Show profile» | |
LW | Paul Gagne | ![]() | 06.02.1962 | 180 cm | 88 kg | left | Show profile» | |
C | Ernie Godden | ![]() | 13.03.1961 | 172 cm | 72 kg | left | Show profile» | |
LW | Dave Hannan | ![]() | 26.11.1961 | 178 cm | 77 kg | N/A | Show profile» | |
??? | Vic Morin | ![]() | 20.12.1960 | 183 cm | 88 kg | N/A | Show profile» |
* no longer in the club
Retired numbers
# 9 - Adam Graves
# 15 - Ernie Godden
# 18 - Mickey Renaud
# 23 - Scott Miller
Honoured numbers
# 4 - Marcel Pronovost
# 6 - Joel Quenneville
# 11 - Gordon Haidy
The Original Spitfires in the Ontario Hockey Association played Junior A hockey from 1945 to 1953. During this period the Spitfires reached the league finals twice, and featured four future Hockey Hall of Fame players. Prior to 1945 local junior hockey was divided up into the 6-team Windsor Junior Hockey League. The folding of the Spitfires occurred in 1953 as hockey interests in Windsor chose to focus their attention on the OHA Senior A Hockey League. This resulted in the founding of the Windsor Bulldogs. Eventually five former Spitfires laced up with the Bulldogs and one, Bobby Brown, won an Allan Cup with the team (1963). The Bulldogs folded in 1964 after one season in the International Hockey League.
The modern Windsor Spitfires started as a Junior A team which played in the Southern Ontario Junior A Hockey League from 1971-1975. The Spitfires won the 1973 Jack Oakes Trophy as league playoff champions and were regular season champions in 1974 and 1975, and were granted entry into the OMJHL (later known as the OHL) as an expansion franchise for the 1975-76 OMJHL season, after a 22 year hiatus.
The "Spits" as they are commonly known, won their first Emms division title in 1980 and reached the OHL finals, but lost to the Peterborough Petes. In 1984 Peter Karmanos, the founder and CEO of Compuware, bought the team and renamed them the Windsor Compuware Spitfires.
Karmanos sold the team to local construction magnate Steve Riolo after the 1988-89 season, and the team reverted back the Windsor Spitfires name and adopted their modern logo.
Brûleurs de Loups seal the title at home with dominant Game 5 victory as veterans Hardy and Fleury bid farewell to the ice Read more»
The transnational influence of European NHL players has become a transformative force in reshaping hockey development programs across their home nations. By importing NHL-caliber training methodologies while funding grassroots initiatives, these athletes are driving measurable growth in participation and competitive outcomes. ... Read more»