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Maritime-Hockey North Junior C Championships Notes New Brunswick Junior B Hockey League: New Brunswick: 2009: 2: 2: Previously operated as the original New Brunswick Junior B Hockey League (1983–2003). Bottom-tier teams collectively play for the Junior C league title and represent the NBJHL at the Maritime-Hockey North Junior C Championship.
The UNB Reds men's ice hockey team is an collegiate ice hockey team representing the UNB Reds athletics program of University of New Brunswick. The team is a member of the Atlantic University Sport (AUS) conference and compete in U Sports. The team plays their home games at the Aitken University Centre in Fredericton, New Brunswick. [2]
The University of New Brunswick's men's hockey program can trace its lineage back to 1880 and was an inaugural member of the Maritime Intercollegiate Hockey League in 1906. [3] Then known as the Red Devils, the team made their first appearance in the national tournament in 1964 where they lost to the Alberta Golden Bears , but defeated the ...
The arena is home to the Acadie–Bathurst Titan, a hockey team of the QMJHL. It was named in honour of businessman K. C. Irving. Opened in September 1996 and built at a cost of $21 million, it is the largest arena in north-eastern New Brunswick. There are 3,162 seats for a total capacity of 3,524 at the hockey games.
Ice hockey teams in New Brunswick (5 C, 16 P) M. ... Pages in category "Sports clubs and teams in New Brunswick" The following 7 pages are in this category, out of 7 ...
Pages in category "Ice hockey teams in New Brunswick" The following 16 pages are in this category, out of 16 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. *
The Allan Cup trophy 2017 Allan Cup logo. The 2017 Allan Cup was the Canadian championship of senior ice hockey and the 109th year the Allan Cup was awarded. The tournament was played at the J.K. Irving Centre in Bouctouche, New Brunswick from April 10 to 15, 2017 and won by the Grand Falls-Windsor Cataracts.
The Maritime Amateur Hockey Association (MAHA) was granted a branch membership within the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association (CAHA) in 1928, with its jurisdiction including the Maritimes provinces of New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island. [1] [2] New Brunswick first attempted to become a separate branch of the CAHA in 1953.