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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# | Pos | Player name | State | Born | Height | Weight | Shoots | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
G | Brandon Kasel | ![]() | 26.03.1996 | 188 cm | 79 kg | left | Show profile» | |
30 | G | Mareks Egīls Mitens | ![]() | 29.01.1998 | 185 cm | 84 kg | left | Show profile» |
1 | G | Alex Sakellaropoulos | ![]() | 02.05.1994 | 191 cm | 93 kg | left | Show profile» |
D | Ryan Cook | ![]() | 06.02.1995 | 191 cm | 100 kg | right | Show profile» | |
D | Jarrod Gourley | ![]() | 29.06.1999 | 188 cm | 96 kg | left | Show profile» | |
6 | D | Jake Hamilton | ![]() | 29.10.1995 | 185 cm | 91 kg | left | Show profile» |
25 | D | Chris Lijdsman | ![]() | 18.09.1991 | 188 cm | 102 kg | left | Show profile» |
20 | D | Joe Masonius | ![]() | 17.02.1997 | 183 cm | 86 kg | left | Show profile» |
77 | D | James Mazza | ![]() | 07.07.1994 | 188 cm | 88 kg | right | Show profile» |
D | Trey Phillips | ![]() | 02.04.1993 | 176 cm | 83 kg | left | Show profile» | |
D | Rourke Russell | ![]() | 25.02.1998 | 183 cm | 88 kg | left | Show profile» | |
19 | D | Jake Ryczek | ![]() | 19.03.1998 | 180 cm | 84 kg | right | Show profile» |
D | Kyle Thacker | ![]() | 20.03.1993 | 191 cm | 93 kg | left | Show profile» | |
D | Timmy Theocharidis | ![]() | 28.06.1998 | 183 cm | 83 kg | left | Show profile» | |
8 | D | Blake Thompson | ![]() | 20.11.1992 | 185 cm | 93 kg | left | Show profile» |
33 | D | Michael Vukojevic | ![]() | 08.06.2001 | 191 cm | 96 kg | left | Show profile» |
F | Matt Baker | ![]() | 21.02.1997 | 180 cm | 77 kg | right | Show profile» | |
17 | RW | Alexandre Carrier | ![]() | 18.02.1991 | 188 cm | 92 kg | right | Show profile» |
3 | F | Ivan Chukarov | ![]() | 03.04.1995 | 188 cm | 90 kg | left | Show profile» |
37 | F | Nicholas DeVito | ![]() | 05.07.1995 | 175 cm | 78 kg | N/A | Show profile» |
C | Brennan Feasey | ![]() | 28.03.1994 | 181 cm | 88 kg | right | Show profile» | |
RW | Nick Ford | ![]() | 02.11.1995 | 185 cm | 93 kg | right | Show profile» | |
21 | C | Patrick Grasso | ![]() | 29.05.1996 | 171 cm | 79 kg | right | Show profile» |
RW | Shane Harper | ![]() | 01.02.1989 | 180 cm | 87 kg | right | Show profile» | |
27 | RW | Tyler Irvine | ![]() | 15.05.1996 | 180 cm | 77 kg | right | Show profile» |
RW | Billy Jerry | ![]() | 21.11.1997 | 193 cm | 86 kg | right | Show profile» | |
13 | RW | Jordan Kaplan | ![]() | 19.05.1997 | 178 cm | 77 kg | right | Show profile» |
18 | LW | Samuel Laberge | ![]() | 10.04.1997 | 188 cm | 96 kg | left | Show profile» |
9 | C | Colin Long | ![]() | 19.06.1989 | 180 cm | 86 kg | right | Show profile» |
16 | C | Peter MacArthur (C) | ![]() | 20.06.1985 | 178 cm | 84 kg | left | Show profile» |
F | Rex Moe | ![]() | 10.11.1998 | 193 cm | 98 kg | left | Show profile» | |
29 | C | Robbie Payne | ![]() | 11.05.1993 | 180 cm | 88 kg | right | Show profile» |
F | Canon Pieper | ![]() | 15.12.1993 | 179 cm | 81 kg | N/A | Show profile» | |
23 | C | Nicholas Rivera | ![]() | 03.05.1996 | 178 cm | 86 kg | right | Show profile» |
28 | RW | Ryan Smith | ![]() | 04.04.1997 | 185 cm | 89 kg | right | Show profile» |
22 | LW | Sebastian Vidmar | ![]() | 13.03.1994 | 191 cm | 92 kg | left | Show profile» |
F | Filip Virgili | ![]() | 31.03.1998 | 183 cm | 84 kg | left | Show profile» |
Coach name | State | Born | Coach position | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Alex Loh | ![]() | 00.00.1985 | Head Coach | Show profile» |
* no longer in the club
The Stockton Thunder franchise began as the first incarnation of the Cincinnati Cyclones, who were an expansion franchise that joined the East Coast Hockey League in 1990. Following the 1991-92 season, Cincinnati's owner Doug Kirchhofer was granted an expansion franchise in the International Hockey League and took all Cyclones colors, logos and monikers to be adopted by his future Cincinnati IHL franchise.
The ECHL moved the franchise rights that had been held by Kirchhofer to Birmingham, Alabama. The new franchise was named the Birmingham Bulls, named after the former former World Hockey Association franchise that played in Birmingham from 1976-79. The Bulls played their home games at the Birmingham-Jefferson Convention Complex from 1992 until 2001.
Following the 2000-01 season, the Birmingham Bulls would move to Atlantic City, New Jersey and become the Atlantic City Boardwalk Bullies. The Bullies would find success quickly in the ECHL, reaching the Conference Finals during the 2002 Kelly Cup playoffs and winning the Northeast Division title the following season. The Bullies would continue their streak through the 2003 Kelly Cup playoffs, winning the Kelly Cup after defeating the Columbia Inferno, 4 games to 1. Despite winning a division crown and making playoff appearances in all of their four seasons in New Jersey, including the 2003 Kelly Cup championship, the Bullies were unable to maintain a large average attendance. Following the 2004-05 season, the Bullies were sold to an ownership group out of Stockton, California that moved the team into Stockton Arena which was to open during the 2005-06 season. The Atlantic City Boardwalk Bullies were relocated to Stockton following the 2004-05 season and the franchise was named the Stockton Thunder in May 2005. On January 29, 2015, the Calgary Flames announced that they would be moving their AHL affiliate, the Adirondack Flames, to Stockton as one of five charter member's of the AHL's new Pacific Division. The next day, the Flames announced that the ECHL's Stockton Thunder (who they had purchased the day before) would move to Glens Falls in what was essentially a "market swap".
NY Islanders sign affiliation with Stockton Thunder
The New York Islanders and the Stockton Thunder of the ECHL and have reached a one year affiliation agreement for the 2013-14 season.
The Thunder previously had an NHL affiliation with the Edmonton Oilers (2006-13), San Jose Sharks (2010-12) and Phoenix Coyotes (2005-06).
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»