Fayetteville Marksmen
Fayetteville FireAntz | |
---|---|
City | Fayetteville, North Carolina |
League | Southern Professional Hockey League |
Founded | 2002 |
Home arena | Cumberland County Crown Coliseum |
Colors | Red, black, white |
General manager | Kevin MacNaught |
Head coach | Jeff Bes |
Media | Fayetteville Observer |
Franchise history | |
2002–2003 | Cape Fear FireAntz (ACHL) |
2003–2004 | Cape Fear FireAntz (SEHL) |
2004–present | Fayetteville FireAntz (SPHL) |
Championships | |
Regular season titles | 1 (2012) |
Playoff championships | 1 (2006) |
The Fayetteville FireAntz are a professional minor league ice hockey team based in Fayetteville, North Carolina, U.S. They currently play in the Southern Professional Hockey League (SPHL).[1] They play their home games in the Cumberland County Crown Coliseum.
The team, originally known as the Cape Fear Fireantz, began play in the Atlantic Coast Hockey League in the 2002–2003 season. After the league's collapse they joined the South East Hockey League for the 2003–2004 season, and joined what would become the SPHL in 2005. Since their inception they won the 2007 SPHL championship and have made a number of playoff appearances.
History
ACHL and SEHL years
The team, then known as the Cape Fear Fireantz, joined the fledgling Atlantic Coast Hockey League for the 2002–2003 season. Their first coach was Shawn Ulrich. After the season David Waronker announced he was withdrawing his four teams from the unstable league to form the World Hockey Association 2. The Fireantz and other remaining ACHL teams formed the South East Hockey League. They played the SEHL for the 2003-2004 season, with Scott Rex serving as coach.
SPHL
In 2004 teams from the SEHL and WHA2 joined together to form the league now known as the Southern Professional Hockey League. The Fireantz joined the new league, changing their name to "Fayetteville FireAntz", abandoning the reference to the nearby Cape Fear River. Derek Booth took over as head coach in 2004. After two seasons behind the bench, coach Derek Booth left in 2006 to coach the Bloomington Prairie Thunder of the United Hockey League.
In the 2006–2007 season, under the guidance of head coach John Marks, the FireAntz advanced to the finals of the league's post-season playoffs for the first time in team history. The first two games of the best-of-five final series were won by Fayetteville on the FireAntz' home ice, before the series returned to Jacksonville, Florida, where the Jacksonville Barracudas won Game 3 of the series by a 3-2 score. On April 18, 2007 the FireAntz won the fourth game of the series by a score of 5-3 to win the SPHL President's Cup. It was the first championship for the FireAntz, and Fayetteville's first professional sports championship in 51 years.[citation needed] John Marks resigned after the team's championship run to take the head coach position with the Pensacola Ice Pilots of the ECHL. Shortly after Marks' resignation the FireAntz announced that former Florida Seals coach, Tommy Stewart, had been hired to coach the team for the 2007-2008 season.
Tommy Stewart was let go after the 2010-2011 season and was soon replaced by Rio Grande Valley Killer Bees' assistant coach, Sean Gillam.[2] Gillam would only last partway through the season; on Feb 17, 2012, the FireAntz replaced him with Todd Bidner.[3]
Championships
Year | League | Trophy |
---|---|---|
2006–2007 | SPHL | President's Cup |
2012–2013 | SPHL | Coffey Trophy |
Honors
2004–2005 | SPHL | Derek Booth | Coach of the Year |
2004–2005 | SPHL | Chad Collins | Rookie of the Year |
2005–2006 | SPHL | Mike Clarke | Defenseman of the Year |
2006–2007 | SPHL | Tim Velemirovich | Rookie of the Year |
2006–2007 | SPHL | Rob Sich | SPHL MVP |
2006–2007 | SPHL | John Marks | Coach of the Year |
2006–2007 | SPHL | Chad Collins | SPHL Playoff MVP |
2012-2013 | SPHL | Josh McQuade | SPHL MVP |
2012-2013 | SPHL | Andrew Smale | Defenseman of the Year |
2012-2013 | SPHL | Mark Desantis | Coach of the Year |
2013-2014 Roster
# | PLAYER | POSITION | HEIGHT | WEIGHT | BIRTHDAY | HOMETOWN |
2 | Kavanagh, Mike | D | 6-2 | 215 | 02/09/88 | Little Neck, NY |
4 | Toy, Corey | D | 6-0 | 200 | 08/09/88 | Round Hill, VA |
5 | Kessler, Kevin | D | 6-3 | 214 | 10/28/85 | Marshfield, MA |
7 | Clewlow, John | RW | 5-9 | 175 | 11/16/88 | Brampton, ONT |
9 | Liscomb, Brett | LW | 5-9 | 187 | 01/28/86 | Long Sault, ONT |
10 | Elliott, Derek | C | 5-10 | 190 | 11/20/87 | West Des Moines, IA |
11 | Richardson, Brandon | RW | 5-11 | 185 | 06/07/88 | San Clemente, CA |
16 | Martens, Jeff | LW | 6-2 | 215 | 04/06/84 | Maple Ridge, BC |
18 | McGill, Aaron | LW | 6-2 | 215 | 06/26/89 | Salem, OR |
19 | Reed, Bobby | C | 6-1 | 210 | 11/09/80 | Huntsville, ONT |
20 | Chlanda, Evan | RW | 6-4 | 210 | 05/12/88 | Islip, NY |
22 | McNeil, Kyle | RW | 6-3 | 220 | 07/26/88 | Cambridge, ONT |
23 | Craven, Nick | RW | 6-3 | 200 | 08/18/90 | Fort Collins, CO |
24 | Carriveau, Zach | D | 6-0 | 190 | 08/06/90 | Hollis, ME |
27 | Ridley, Matt | D | 6-2 | 210 | 05/17/90 | Kelowna, BC |
28 | Smyth, Matt | RW | 5-11 | 188 | 06/12/89 | Orlando, FL |
33 | Skoggard, Peter | G | 5-11 | 190 | 04/07/88 | Lulea, SWE |
41 | Fogal, Brad | G | 5-10 | 170 | 02/05/86 | Sharon, ONT |
44 | Greenside, Brandon | D | 5-11 | 185 | 11/28/89 | London, ONT |
91 | Greene, Chris | C | 6-1 | 185 | 09/24/1985 | Massena, NY |
x | Carriere, Evan | LW | 6-2 | 201 | 07/28/88 | Ottawa, ONT |
x | Dunn, Dan | G | 6-5 | 215 | 06/20/88 | Oshawa, ONT |
x | Hopfner, Dustin | D | 6-2 | 195 | 11/20/89 | East Pointe, MI |
x | Janosz, Tom | D | 6-1 | 195 | 06/17/88 | Elma, NY |
x | Rank, Kyle | G | 5-10 | 175 | 08/13/87 | Islip, NY |
x | Rous, Kyle | D | 6-1 | 200 | 12/28/92 | Winnipeg, MAN |
x | Sawyer, Brock | D | 5-11 | 200 | 05/29/87 | Toronto, ONT |
References
- ^ http://www.hockeydb.com/stte/fayetteville-fireantz-5725.html
- ^ http://www.fayobserver.com/articles/2011/06/13/1101260?sac=Sports
- ^ Pope, Thomas (17 Feb 2012). "Fayetteville FireAntz fire Coach Sean Gillam, bring in Todd Bidner". Fayetteville Observer. Retrieved 28 May 2012.
- Scott, Jon C. (2006). Hockey Night in Dixie: Minor Pro Hockey in the American South. Heritage House Publishing Company Ltd. pp. 103–133. ISBN 1-894974-21-2.