Creston Valley Thunder Cats

The Creston Valley Thunder Cats are a Junior 'A' ice hockey team based in Creston, British Columbia, Canada. They are members of the Eddie Mountain Division of the Kootenay Conference of the Kootenay International Junior Hockey League (KIJHL). The Thunder Cats play their home games at Johnny Bucyk Arena. Kelly Everett is the team's president, Bill Rotheisler is the general manager and coach.[when?][citation needed]

Creston Valley Thunder Cats
CityCreston, British Columbia
LeagueKootenay International Junior Hockey League
ConferenceKootenay
DivisionEddie Mountain
Founded1992 (1992)–93 (RMJHL)
Home arenaJohnny Bucyk Arena
ColoursSky Blue, Red and White
     
PresidentCanada Shannon Veitch
General managerCanada Geordie Wudrick
Head coachCanada Geordie Wudrick
CaptainVacant
Websitecrestonvalleythundercats.com
Franchise history
1992-99Creston Thunder (RMJHL)
2000-presentCreston Valley Thunder Cats (KIJHL)

The Thunder Cats joined the KIJHL in 2000 as an expansion team, after they played Junior 'A' in the RMJHL from 1992-99.

The Creston Valley Thunder Cats were named hosts of the 2017 Cyclone Taylor Cup, being the first time that the Creston Valley hosted the Junior B Provincial Championships.

History edit

Before the Thunder Cats, Creston also had a Junior 'B' team in the Kootenay International Junior Hockey League (KIJHL), the Creston Clippers, before folding in 1985.

The Creston Thunder were founded in 1992 as a Junior 'A' team in the Rocky Mountain Junior Hockey League. By the 1998–99 season, the RMJHL had fallen to four teams and was playing a lot of interleague with the America West Hockey League. The Creston Thunder could not afford the travel and opted to leave the RMJHL, effectively forcing the league to fold, at the end of the 1999 playoffs. The team sat out for the 1999–2000 season to reorganize. Prior to the 2000–01 season, the team was renamed the Creston Valley Thunder Cats and joined the Kootenay International Junior Hockey League.

In the 2007–2008 season, Joe Martin and Mike Young were hired as co-coaches, with Joe Martin becoming the head coach and general manager at the start of the 2008–2009 season. At the end of the 2010–2011 season Joe Martin moved on to the Merritt Centennials of the BCHL as an assistant coach.

The start of the 2011–2012 season seen former Castlegar Rebels Head Coach Brent Heaven take over the head coach / general manager role. The team played a strong competitive season, but lost in the divisional semi-finals against the Kimberly Dynamiters. At the end of the season, Brent assumed the role of assistant coach of the Trail Smoke Eaters in the BCHL.

The Creston Valley Thunder Cats hired newcomer coach Josh Hepditch upon his retirement of semi-pro hockey. Although the Thunder Cats played a high tempo competitive brand of hockey during the 2012–2013 season, the team fell short of making the playoffs. With Josh Hepditch returning for a second season, the Creston Valley Thunder Cats brought an exciting line up of new and returning players that finished first in the Eddie Mountain Division with 80 points, and setting a team record of 39 wins during the campaign. In the first round, the Creston Valley Thunder Cats disposed of the Columbia Valley Rockies in 4 straight games, to meet the Kimberly Dynamiters in the second round. In game seven, the Thunder Cats made up a three-goal deficit in the third period and take the lead with less than 2 minutes in the third in front of a sell out crowd at the Johnny Bucyk Arena. However, the Thunder Cats only won the first game of the Conference finals to lose to the eventual KIJHL Champions Beaver Valley Night Hawks.

With a successful year in the 2013–2014 season, including winning the KIJHL Coach of the Year, Josh Hepditch moved onto the head coach / general manager of the Amherst Wranglers, a Junior A team in the MHL. For the third time in four years, the Thunder Cats were looking for a head coach and general manager, bringing in Jeff Dubois, former head coach / general manager of the Selkirk Saints of the BC Intercollegiate Hockey League. Jeff Dubois had built coach the Selkirk Saints to two back to back championships bringing solid coaching credentials to his new role in as a head coach of the Thunder Cats. In his first two seasons, the teams made the playoffs, losing to the eventual KIJHL Champions the Kimberly Dynamiters in the first round in 2014-2015, and then again to the Kimberly Dynamiters in the second round. Kimberly Dynamiters played in the KIJHL finals, losing to the 100 Mile House Wranglers in the 2015–2016 championship round.

The Creston Valley Thunder Cats organization put together a bid to BC Amateur Hockey in the spring of 2016 to host the Cyclone Taylor Cup, the Provincial Championship for Junior B hockey in British Columbia. The present format of the tournament has the league champions of the Pacific Junior Hockey League (PJHL), the Vancouver Island Junior Hockey League (VIJHL), the Kootenay International Junior Hockey League (KIJHL) and the host team play a round robin format to determine placement in the gold and bronze medal games. In May 2016, BC Amateur Hockey announced that the successful bid for hosting the 2017 Cyclone Taylor Cup was to the Creston Valley, making it the first time the Provincial Championship tournament is played in Creston. The tournament was played April 6 to April 9, 2017. The Thunder Cats finished as bronze medalists in the tournament.

Season-by-season record edit

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

Records as of February 17, 2024.[1][2]

Season GP W L T OTL Pts GF GA Finish Playoffs
1992-93 52 5 47 0 10 161 399 4th, Kootenay Lost in Division Semifinals, 0-4 (Smoke Eaters)
1993-94 52 25 26 1 51 260 277 3rd, Kootenay Lost in Division Semifinals, 1-4 (Colts)
1994-95 52 25 24 3 53 303 268 4th, Kootenay Lost in Division Finals, 0-4 (Colts)
1995-96 58 19 33 6 44 227 272 5th, Kootenay Did not qualify
1996-97 60 28 27 5 61 267 279 5th, RMJHL Lost in quarterfinals, 3-4 (Leafs)
1997-98 54 11 40 3 25 204 323 6th, RMJHL Did not qualify
1998-99 45 16 26 3 35 166 192 4th, RMJHL Lost in semifinals, 0-4 (Dynamiters)
1999-00 Did not participate
2000-01 58 11 41 5 1 28 184 318 6th, Neil Murdoch Did not qualify
2001-02 50 16 25 4 5 41 190 249 3rd, Eddie Mountain Lost in Division Semifinals, 3-4 (Dynamiters)
2002-03 50 23 22 1 4 51 184 192 3rd, Eddie Mountain Lost in Division Semifinals, 3-4 (Dynamiters)
2003-04 50 19 28 1 2 41 169 206 3rd, Eddie Mountain Lost in Division Semifinals, 1-4 (Dynamiters)
2004-05 50 21 25 4 0 46 170 195 3rd, Eddie Mountain Lost in Division Semifinals, 2-4 (Rockies)
2005-06 50 7 43 0 14 132 291 5th, Eddie Mountain Did not qualify
2006-07 52 25 25 2 52 190 211 2nd, Eddie Mountain Lost in Division Finals, 0-4 (Ghostriders)
2007-08 52 28 19 5 61 172 177 2nd, Neil Murdoch: East Lost in Division Semifinals, 1-3 (Dynamiters)
2008-09 52 30 12 10 70 210 165 1st, Eddie Mountain Lost in Division Semifinals, 1-4 (Dynamiters)
2009-10 50 28 18 0 4 60 196 163 2nd, Eddie Mountain Lost in Division Finals, 0–4 (Ghostriders)
2010-11 50 26 19 3 2 57 169 170 2nd, Eddie Mountain Lost in Division Finals, 3-4 (Ghostriders)
2011-12 52 30 17 0 5 65 247 188 3rd, Eddie Mountain Lost in Division Semifinals, 2-4 (Dynamiters)
2012-13 52 17 28 0 7 41 170 196 5th, Eddie Mountain Did not qualify
2013-14 52 39 11 1 1 80 282 161 1st, Eddie Mountain Lost in Conference finals, 1-4 (Nitehawks)
2014-15 52 28 18 1 5 62 172 157 3rd, Eddie Mountain Lost in Division Semifinals, 1-4 (Dynamiters)
2015-16 52 33 15 2 2 70 208 141 2nd, Eddie Mountain Lost in Division Finals, 0-4 (Dynamiters)
2016-17 47 36 9 1 1 74 224 118 1st of 5 Eddie Mountain
3rd of 20 KIJHL
Lost in Division Finals, 2-4 (Dynamiters)
Cyclone Taylor Cup as HOST
2017-18 47 32 12 0 1 78 199 112 2nd of 5 Eddie Mountain
5th of 20 KIJHL
Lost in Division Semifinals, 2-4 (Columbia Valley)
2018-19 49 10 35 0 4 24 128 219 5th of 5 Eddie Mountain
20th of 20 KIJHL
Did not qualify for playoffs
2019-20 49 22 20 1 6 51 168 193 4th of 5 Eddie Mountain
11th of 20 KIJHL
Lost Division Semifinals, 1-4 (Dynamiters)
2020–21 3 0 3 0 0 0 5 16 Remaining season cancelled due to COVID-19
2021-22 42 19 23 1 0 39 128 219 3rd of 5 Eddie Mountain
12th of 19 KIJHL
Lost Murdoch Div. Semifinals, 1-4 (Nitehawks)
2022-23 44 19 23 1 1 40 147 189 5th of 5 Eddie Mountain
14th of 19 KIJHL
Won Murdoch Div. Semifinals, 4-1 (Border Bruins)
Lost Murdoch Div Semifinals, 3-4 (Nitehawks)
2023-24 44 21 18 4 1 47 146 146 4th of 5 Eddie Mountain
11th of 20 KIJHL
Lost Div. Semifinals, 1-4 (Ghostriders)

Playoffs edit

Records as of March 1, 2024. [3][4][5]

Season 1st Round 2nd Round 3rd Round Finals
1992–93 L, 0-4, Trail
1993–94 L, 1-4, Cranbrook
1994–95 W, 4-0, Nelson L, 0-4, Cranbrook
1995–96 Did not qualify
1996–97 L, 3-4, Nelson
1997–98 Did not qualify
1998–99 L, 0-4, Kimberley
1999–00 Did not participate
2000–01 Did not qualify
2001–02 L, 3-4, Kimberley
2002–03 L, 3-4, Kimberley
2003–04 L, 1-4, Kimberley
2004–05 L, 2-4, Columbia Valley
2005–06 Did not qualify
2006–07 W, 4-3, Kimberley L, 0-4, Fernie
2007–08 L, 1-3, Kimberley
2008–09 L, 1-4, Kimberley
2009–10 W, 4-2, Kimberley L, 0-4, Fernie
2010-11 W, 4-2, Golden L, 3-4, Fernie
2011-12 L, 2-4, Kimberley
2012–13 Did not qualify
2013-14 W, 4-0, Columbia Valley W, 4-3, Kimberley L, 1-4, Beaver Valley
2014–15 L, 1-4, Kimberley
2015-16 W, 4-0, Columbia Valley L, 0-4, Kimberley
2016-17 W, 4-0, Columbia Valley L, 2-4, Kimberley
2017-18 L, 2-4, Columbia Valley
2018-19 Did not qualify
2019-20 L, 1-4, Kimberley
2020-21 Cancelled due to coronavirus pandemic
2021-22 L, 3-4, Beaver Valley
2022-23 W, 4-1, Grand Forks L, 3-4, Beaver Valley
2023-24 L, 1-4, Fernie

Cyclone Taylor Cup edit

Season Round Robin Record Standing Bronze-medal game Gold-medal game
2017
HOST
W, Aldergrove 3-0
L, Campbell River 2-6
L, Beaver Valley 2-5
1-2-0 4th of 4 W, Aldergrove 2-0
Bronze medalists
did not qualify
Notes
  1. The RMJHL playoffs had three playoff rounds.
  2. The final 1998-99 RMJHL playoffs had two playoff rounds.

Awards and trophies edit

Coach of the Year

  • Rob Boyd: 2003-04 (Divisional)
  • Shane Lukinchuk: 2006-07 (Divisional)
  • Joe Martin: 2010-11 (Divisional)
  • Josh Hepditch: 2013-14 (Divisional and League)
  • Jeff Dubois: 2016-17 (Divisional and League)
  • Brad Tobin: 2017-18 (Divisional)

Most Sportsmanlike

  • Keven Cann: 2009-10 (Divisional)
  • Jesse Collins: 2013-14 (Divisional)
  • Carson Cartwright: 2014-15 (Divisional)
  • Carson Cartwright: 2015-16 (Divisional and League)
  • Sebastian Kilcommons: 2016-17 (Divisional)

Most Valuable Player

  • Wade Waters: 2007-08 (Divisional)
  • Cole Yurkowski: 2008-09
  • Jesse Collins: 2011-12 (Divisional)
  • Trevor Hanna: 2013-14 (Divisional)
  • Sebastian Kilcommons: 2016-17 (Divisional)

Rookie of the Year

  • Chris Kostiuk: 2001-02 (Divisional)
  • Andrew Wasmuth: 2003-04 (Divisional)
  • Trevor Forward: 2011-12 (Divisional)
  • Logan Styler: 2013-14 (Divisional)

Top Defenseman

  • Colton Grolla: 2008-09
  • Sebastian Kilcommons: 2016-17 (Divisional)

Top Goaltender

  • James Patterson: 2004-05 (Divisional)
  • Wade Waters: 2007-08 (Divisional)
  • Kyle Michalovsky: 2013-14 (Divisional and League)
  • Brock Lefebvre: 2016-17 (Divisional)

Top Scorer

  • Darryl Adams: 2001-02 (Divisional)
  • Aaron Jakubec: 2003-04 (Divisional)
  • Cole Yurkowski: 2008-09
  • Jesse Collins: 2013-14 (Divisional)
  • Paxton Malone: 2016-17 (Divisional)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ KIJHL.ca, Final 2013-14 regular season standings. Archived 2014-02-26 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ "KIJHL.ca – Year end standings". Archived from the original on 2012-09-18. Retrieved 2012-04-02.
  3. ^ KIJHL.ca, Current playoff bracket. Archived May 5, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ "KIJHL.ca – 2013-14 playoff standings". Archived from the original on 2014-02-26. Retrieved 2014-03-18.
  5. ^ KIJHL.ca, League champions. Archived 2013-02-09 at the Wayback Machine

External links edit