The 1979 Air Canada Cup was Canada's inaugural national midget 'AAA' hockey championship. It took place April 16 – 22, 1979 at the Winnipeg Arena in Winnipeg, Manitoba. The Canadian Amateur Hockey Association established the Air Canada Cup for the 1978–79 season as the new official midget championship, replacing the invitational Wrigley National Midget Tournament.

1979 Air Canada Cup
Tournament details
Venue(s)Winnipeg Arena in Winnipeg, MB
DatesApril 16 – 22, 1979
Teams12
Final positions
Champions Couillard de Ste-Foy
Runner-up St. Michael's College
Third place Notre Dame Hounds
Tournament statistics
Scoring leader(s)Claude Drouin
MVPPierre Rioux
1980 →

The Couillard de Ste-Foy (Quebec) captured the first national championship, defeating St. Michael's College Buzzers (Ontario) in the gold medal game. The Notre Dame Hounds (Saskatchewan) took the bronze medal.[1][2]

Future National Hockey League players competing at the inaugural Air Canada Cup were Garry Galley, Paul Gillis, Mike Moller, Randy Moller, Tony Tanti, James Patrick, and future Hall of Fame defenceman Al MacInnis.

Teams edit

Result Team Branch City
  Couillard de Ste-Foy Quebec Ste-Foy, QC
  St. Michael's College Buzzers Ontario Toronto, ON
  Notre Dame Hounds Saskatchewan Wilcox, SK
4 Ottawa West 79's Ottawa District Ottawa, ON
5 North Shore Winter Club British Columbia North Vancouver, BC
6 Antigonish Novas Nova Scotia Antigonish, NS
7 PEI Eastern Prince Edward Island Charlottetown, PE
8 St. James Canadians Manitoba Winnipeg, MB
9 Moncton Flyers New Brunswick Moncton, NB
10 Red Deer Chiefs Alberta Red Deer, AB
11 Corner Brook Newfoundland Corner Brook, NL
12 Andrews Maroons Thunder Bay District Thunder Bay, ON

Round robin edit

DC8 Flight edit

Standings edit

Pos Team Pld W L D GF GA GD Pts
1 St. Michael's College Buzzers 5 4 1 0 24 11 +13 8
2 Notre Dame Hounds 5 4 1 0 25 14 +11 8
3 North Shore Winter Club 5 4 1 0 27 18 +9 8
4 St. James Canadians 5 1 3 1 15 18 −3 3
5 Red Deer Chiefs 5 1 4 0 20 25 −5 2
6 Andrews Maroons 5 0 4 1 10 35 −25 1
Source: [citation needed]

Scores edit

  • St. Michael's College 6 - Red Deer 0
  • Notre Dame 11 - Andrews 2
  • North Shore 4 - St. James 3
  • North Shore 8 - Red Deer 8
  • St. Michael's College 5 - Notre Dame 3
  • St. James 2 - Andrews 2
  • Notre Dame 3 - North Shore 2
  • St. Michael's College 5 - Andrews 2
  • St. James 5 - Red Deer 3
  • North Shore 4 - St. Michael's College 3
  • Red Deer 8 - Andrews 2
  • Notre Dame 4 - St. James 3
  • North Shore 9 - Andrews 2
  • Notre Dame 4 - Red Deer 2
  • St. Michael's College 5 - St. James 2

DC9 Flight edit

Standings edit

Pos Team Pld W L D GF GA GD Pts
1 Couillard de Ste-Foy 5 5 0 0 41 5 +36 10
2 Ottawa West 79's 5 3 1 1 19 13 +6 7
3 Antigonish Pirates 5 2 3 0 20 23 −3 4
4 PEI Eastern 5 2 3 0 16 29 −13 4
5 Moncton Flyers 5 1 3 1 16 22 −6 3
6 Corner Brook 5 1 4 0 10 30 −20 2
Source: [citation needed]

Scores edit

  • Ottawa West 5 - Antigonish 4
  • Ste-Foy 14 - Corner Brook 1
  • Eastern 4 - Moncton 3
  • Ottawa West 5 - Corner Brook 1
  • Ste-Foy 9 - Eastern 1
  • Antigonish 5 - Moncton 4
  • Ste-Foy 8 - Moncton 1
  • Ottawa West 5 - Eastern 2
  • Corner Brook 4 - Antigonish 2
  • Ottawa West 3 - Moncton 3
  • Ste-Foy 7 - Antigonish 2
  • Eastern 5 - Corner Brook 4
  • Antigonish 7 - Eastern 3
  • Moncton 4 - Corner Brook 1
  • Ste-Foy 3 - Ottawa West 1

Playoffs edit

Bronze medal game edit

  • Notre Dame 7 - Ottawa West 2

Gold medal game edit

  • Ste-Foy 9 - St. Michael's College 7

Individual awards edit

  • Most Valuable Player: Pierre Rioux (Ste-Foy)
  • Top Scorer: Claude Drouin (Ste-Foy)
  • Most Sportsmanlike Player: Paul Houck (North Shore)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Ste Foy wins midget title", Regina Leader-Post, p. 22, 1979-04-23, retrieved 2013-04-26
  2. ^ "Quebec captures midget hockey title", The Montreal Gazette, p. 49, 1979-04-22, retrieved 2013-04-26

External links edit