1974–75 AHL season

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The 1974–75 AHL season was the 39th season of the American Hockey League. Ten teams were scheduled to play 76 games each in the schedule. The Baltimore Clippers suspended operations after 46 games, when displaced by the Baltimore Blades of the World Hockey Association. The Providence Reds finished first overall in the regular season. The Springfield Indians won their fourth Calder Cup championship.

1974–75 AHL season
LeagueAmerican Hockey League
SportIce hockey
Regular season
F. G. "Teddy" Oke TrophyProvidence Reds
Season MVPDoug Gibson
Top scorerDoug Gibson
Playoffs
ChampionsSpringfield Indians
  Runners-upNew Haven Nighthawks
AHL seasons

Team changes edit

Final standings edit

Note: GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points;

  East Division   West Division
North GP W L T Pts GF GA
Providence Reds (NYR) 76 43 21 12 98 317 263
Rochester Americans (BOS) 76 42 25 9 93 317 243
Nova Scotia Voyageurs (MTL) 75 40 26 9 89 270 227
Springfield Indians (CGS/LAK) 75 33 30 12 78 299 256
New Haven Nighthawks (MNS) 76 30 35 11 71 282 302
South GP W L T Pts GF GA
Virginia Wings (DET) 75 31 31 13 75 254 250
Richmond Robins (PHI/WSH) 75 29 39 7 65 261 293
Hershey Bears (BUF/PIT) 75 27 38 10 64 259 303
Syracuse Eagles (MTL/STL) 75 21 43 11 53 254 332
Baltimore Clippers (KCS) 46 14 22 10 38 136 180

Suspended operations.

Scoring leaders edit

Note: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty minutes

Player Team GP G A Pts PIM
Doug Gibson Rochester Americans 75 44 72 116 31
Peter Sullivan Nova Scotia Voyageurs 75 44 60 104 48
Tom Cassidy Springfield Indians 72 32 59 91 201
Pierre Laganiere Providence Reds 75 25 61 86 44
Barry Merrell Rochester Americans 74 44 41 85 32
Jerry Holland Providence Reds 67 44 35 79 44
Rene Drolet Virginia Wings 72 26 52 78 36
Dave Hynes Rochester Americans 63 37 30 67 20
Tom Colley New Haven Nighthawks 76 29 47 76 51

Calder Cup playoffs edit

Division Semifinals Division Finals Calder Cup Final
         
N1 Providence 2
N4 Springfield 4
N4 Springfield 4
North Division
N2 Rochester 2
N2 Rochester 4
N3 Nova Scotia 2
N4 Springfield 4
N5 New Haven 1
S1 Virginia 1
N5 New Haven 4
N5 New Haven 4
South Division
S3 Hershey 1
S2 Richmond 3
S3 Hershey 4

Trophy and award winners edit

Team awards
Calder Cup
Playoff champions:
Springfield Indians
F. G. "Teddy" Oke Trophy
Regular Season champions, North Division:
Providence Reds
John D. Chick Trophy
Regular Season champions, South Division:
Virginia Wings
Individual awards
Les Cunningham Award
Most valuable player:
Doug Gibson - Rochester Americans
John B. Sollenberger Trophy
Top point scorer:
Doug Gibson - Rochester Americans
Dudley "Red" Garrett Memorial Award
Rookie of the year:
Jerry Holland - Providence Reds
Eddie Shore Award
Defenceman of the year:
Joe Zanussi - Providence Reds
Harry "Hap" Holmes Memorial Award
Lowest goals against average:
Ed Walsh & Dave Elenbaas - Nova Scotia Voyageurs
Louis A. R. Pieri Memorial Award
Coach of the year:
John Muckler - Providence Reds
Other awards
James C. Hendy Memorial Award
Most outstanding executive:
Fred T. Hunt
James H. Ellery Memorial Award
Outstanding media coverage:
Ron Rohmer, New Haven

See also edit

References edit

Preceded by AHL seasons Succeeded by