Jump to content

1966–67 MJHL season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is the current revision of this page, as edited by Flibirigit (talk | contribs) at 19:51, 5 July 2021 (League notes: corrected link to Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League (1948–1966)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.

(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

The Manitoba Junior Hockey League (MJHL) expanded from four to six teams for the 1966–67 season when it readmitted the Brandon Wheat Kings and accepted the Selkirk Steelers.[1] MJHL commissioner Jimmy Dunn announced his resignation on October 24, 1966, and cited personal reasons. Despite being offered a pay raise, he felt that the increase in teams made the job too much for him and had "taken the fun out of it".[2] His resignation came shortly after a game between the Winnipeg Rangers and the Brandon Wheat Kings in which 242 penalty minutes were given in the first period.[3]

Champion

[edit]

On April 7 in Flin Flon, the Bombers won the MJHL championship and were presented with the Turnbull Memorial Trophy.

League notes

[edit]

Brandon Wheat Kings and Flin Flon Bombers transfer from the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League after the league folds.
The MJHL expands to Selkirk, with the Selkirk Steelers joining the league.
The Winnipeg Braves change their name to the St. James Braves.
Bobby Clarke (Flin Flon) set league records for most goals (71), assists (112), and points (183),
in a single season.

Regular season

[edit]
League Standings GP W L T Pts GF GA
Flin Flon Bombers 48 42 6 0 104 407 125
Brandon Wheat Kings 57 47 9 1 95 416 178
Winnipeg Rangers 57 34 19 4 74 263 201
Winnipeg Monarchs 57 21 34 2 46 235 316
St. James Braves 56 21 34 1 43 254 361
Selkirk Steelers 57 14 42 1 29 216 382
Winnipeg Warriors 58 10 45 3 23 162 390

Flin Flon played 12 four point games, winning 10.
Monarchs & Rangers each won 1 four point game.
Some postponed games not played.

All-Star game

[edit]

On February 24, the MJHL All-Stars played Canada's National Team at St. James.
MJHL Lineup:

Playoffs

[edit]

Quarter-Finals

Brandon defeated St. James 3-games-to-none
Rangers defeated Selkirk 3-games-to-none

Semi-Finals

Flin Flon defeated Monarchs 3-games-to-none
Brandon defeated Rangers 4-games-to-1

Turnbull Cup Championship

Flin Flon defeated Brandon 3-games-to-2

Western Memorial Cup Semi-Final

Flin Flon lost to Port Arthur Marrs (TBJHL) 4-games-to-2

Awards

[edit]
Trophy Winner Team
MVP
Top Goaltender Chris Worthy Flin Flon Bombers
Rookie of the Year Bobby Clarke Flin Flon Bombers
Hockey Ability & Sportsmanship Award Butch Goring Winnipeg Rangers
Scoring Champion Bobby Clarke Flin Flon Bombers
Most Goals Bobby Clarke Flin Flon Bombers

All-Star Teams

[edit]
First All-Star Team
Goaltender Chris Worthy Flin Flon Bombers
Defencemen Gerry Hart Flin Flon Bombers
Jim Pritchard Winnipeg Monarchs
Centreman Bobby Clarke Flin Flon Bombers
Leftwinger Cal Swenson Brandon Wheat Kings
Rightwinger Reggie Leach Flin Flon Bombers
Coach Ed Dorohoy Brandon Wheat Kings
Second All-Star Team
Goaltender George Surmay Winnipeg Rangers
Defencemen Jack Criel Flin Flon Bombers
Larry Brown Brandon Wheat Kings
Centreman Juha Widing Brandon Wheat Kings
Leftwinger Murray Klein Winnipeg Rangers
Rightwinger Bill Fairbairn Brandon Wheat Kings

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "MJHL Opens On Oct. 9". Brandon Sun. Brandon, Manitoba. August 31, 1966. p. 10.Free access icon
  2. ^ "Goodbye MJHL". Winnipeg Free Press. Winnipeg, Manitoba. October 25, 1966. p. 24.Free access icon
  3. ^ Beck, Dallis (January 9, 1979). ""Mr. Hockey" a member of Hall of Fame". Winnipeg Free Press. Winnipeg, Manitoba. p. 58.Free access icon