Contents
Johnstown Jets
The Johnstown Jets were a professional ice hockey team from Johnstown, Pennsylvania. The Jets were founded in the Eastern Amateur Hockey League for the 1950–51 season, playing at the newly constructed Cambria County War Memorial Arena. The Jets won consecutive EHL championships in 1951–52 and 1952–53. When the EAHL suspended operations in 1953, the Jets transferred to the International Hockey League, where they played two seasons. Johnstown were Turner Cup finalists in 1953–54, losing four games to two, to the Cincinnati Mohawks. In 1955, the Jets joined the Eastern Hockey League (a league founded from the EAHL), and won three consecutive EHL championships in 1959–60, 1960–61 and 1961–62. Johnstown remained in the league until its demise in 1973. The Jets then joined the new North American Hockey League in 1973. Dick Roberge coached Johnstown to the Lockhart Cup championship 1974–75, defeating the Broome Dusters. That season's playoff run included the Carlson brothers, Jeff, Jack and Steve, who became the basis for the Hanson Brothers in the movie Slap Shot. Jeff and Steve Carlson portrayed their fictional selves in the movie, while former Jet Dave Hanson portrayed Jack. The Jets played four seasons total in the NAHL before the league folded in 1977. The team itself folded in the offseason, when the Johnstown flood of 1977 damaged the arena's ice making equipment. Johnstown was later represented by the Johnstown Wings (later Red Wings) from 1978 to 1980. The Red Wings folded after two seasons, but hockey returned to Johnstown in 1988 with the Johnstown Chiefs, which named itself after the Jets' fictional counterpart from Slap Shot.
Season-by-season results
NHL alumni
List of Johnstown Jets who played in the National Hockey League, 46 in total. • Lloyd Ailsby • Wayne Bianchin • Bruce Boudreau • Ross Brooks • Andy Brown • Fred Burchell • Jack Carlson • Steve Carlson • Dwight Carruthers • Mike Chernoff • Gary Collins • Joe Daley • Nick Damore • Bob Dawes • Norm Defelice • Guy Delparte • Marv Edwards • Rocky Farr • Harry Frost • Gary Gambucci • Bob Gryp • Dave Hanson • Galen Head • Paul Holmgren • Eddie Johnston • Larry Johnston • Eddie Kachur • Ken Kilrea • Ted Lanyon • Jean-Louis Levasseur • Dave Lucas • Ralph MacSweyn • Jim Mair • Brian Marchinko • Jack McIntyre • Don McLean • Jim Mikol • Jim Murray • Joe Schaefer • Don Simmons • Bob Sneddon • Morris Stefaniw • Gilles Villemure • Bob Warner • Bob Whitlock • Joe Zanussi
League All-Stars
The following players were named to the league's respective All-Star team, announced at the end of the season. Most All-Star appearances
This article is derived from Wikipedia and licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. View the original article.
Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the
Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.
Bliptext is not
affiliated with or endorsed by Wikipedia or the
Wikimedia Foundation.