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The California Golden Seals: a tale of white skates, red ink, and one of the NHLs most outlandish teams. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-8848-5. Kurtzberg, Brad (2006). Shorthanded: The Untold Story of the Seals: Hockey's Most Colorful Team. AuthorHouse. ISBN 978-1-4259-1028-0. Webster, Gary (2021).
Two teams from the expansion—the California Golden Seals and the Minnesota North Stars—relocated to other cities. The Golden Seals moved after nine seasons in Oakland to become the Cleveland Barons; this was the first time in four decades the NHL approved a franchise relocation. [11]
The 1970–71 California Golden Seals season was the Seals' fourth in the NHL, but their first as the Golden Seals. Oakland Athletics owner Charlie O. Finley bought the team [1] in the offseason for approximately $4,500,000. He announced a name change in which his team would be called the Bay Area Seals. On October 16, after the first two games ...
The San Francisco franchise, named the "Seals" in honor of the city's former minor league baseball team, [1] and Blades were California's first pro hockey teams since the San Francisco Shamrocks and Los Angeles Monarchs left the Pacific Coast Hockey League, as the WHL was then known, in 1950. [2]
Media in category "National Hockey League logos" ... File:California Golden Seals Logo.svg; File:Carolina Hurricanes.svg; File:Chicago Blackhawks logo (1937-1955).png;
The Cleveland Barons were a professional ice hockey team based in Richfield, Ohio. They competed in the National Hockey League (NHL) as a member of the Adams Division in the Prince of Wales Conference (1976–1978). The Barons played at Richfield Coliseum. They were a relocation of the California Golden Seals franchise that had played in ...
The 1971–72 California Golden Seals season was the team's fifth in the NHL. The Seals missed the playoffs again, but posted a solid improvement over the previous season and finished sixth in the West Division.
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