2002 Memorial Cup

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2002 Mastercard Memorial Cup
Tournament details
Venue(s)Guelph Sports and Entertainment Centre
Guelph, Ontario
DatesMay 18–26, 2002
Teams4
Host teamGuelph Storm (OHL)
TV partnerRogers Sportsnet
Final positions
ChampionsKootenay Ice (WHL) (1st title)
Tournament statistics
Games played8
Attendance45,144 (5,643 per game)
← 2001
2003 →
Silver bowl trophy with two large handles, mounted on a wide black plinth engraved with team names on silver plates.
The Memorial Cup trophy

The 2002 Memorial Cup occurred May 18–26 at the Guelph Sports and Entertainment Centre in Guelph, Ontario.[1] It was the 84th annual Memorial Cup competition and determined the major junior ice hockey champion of the Canadian Hockey League (CHL). It featured the host team, the Guelph Storm, as well as the winners of the Ontario Hockey League, Quebec Major Junior Hockey League and the Western Hockey League: the Erie Otters, Victoriaville Tigres and the Kootenay Ice respectively.[1] The Kootenay Ice won their first Memorial Cup, beating the Victoriaville Tigres in the final.[1]

Round-robin standings

[edit]
PosTeamPldWLGFGA
1Kootenay Ice (WHL)32196
1Erie Otters (OHL)32194
3Guelph Storm (host)31289
3Victoriaville Tigres (QMJHL)[a]312512
Source: [citation needed]
Notes:
  1. ^ Victoriaville won the tiebreaker against Guelph to advance to the semi-finals

Scores

[edit]
  • May 18: Guelph 5–1 Victoriaville
  • May 19: Kootenay 3–0 Erie
  • May 20: Kootenay 4–3 Guelph
  • May 21: Erie 5–1 Victoriaville
  • May 22: Victoriaville 3–2 Kootenay
  • May 23: Erie 4–0 Guelph

Tie-breaker

  • May 24: Victoriaville 4–3 Guelph

Semi-final

  • May 25: Victoriaville 5–4 Erie (OT)

Final

  • May 26: Kootenay 6–3 Victoriaville

Winning team

[edit]

Igor Agarunov, Bryan Bridges, B. J. Boxma, Nigel Dawes, Gerard Dicaire, Brennan Evans, Cole Fischer, Curtis Fransoo, Travis Featherstone, Richard Hamula, Chris LaValley, Dale Mahovsky, Steve Makway, Duncan Milroy, Shaun Norrie, Tomas Plihal, Kyle Sheen, Colin Sinclair, Jarret Stoll, Marek Svatos, Adam Taylor, Andy Thompson, Craig Weller. Coach: Ryan McGill

Scoring leaders

[edit]
  1. Matthew Lombardi, VIC (2g 7a) 9p
  2. Cory Pecker, ER (4g 3a) 7p
  3. Danny Groulx, VIC (2g 5a) 7p
  4. Carl Malette, VIC (5g 1a) 6p
  5. Colin Sinclair, KOO (4g 2a) 6p
  6. Kevin Dallman, GUE (1g 5a) 6p
  7. Brad Boyes, ER (2g 3a) 5p
  8. Brandon Cullen, ER (2g 3a) 5p
  9. Marek Svatos, KOO, (1g 4a) 5p
  10. Jarret Stoll, KOO (0g 5a) 5p

Goaltending leaders

[edit]
  1. T. J. Aceti, ER (1.91 gaa, 0.942 sv%)
  2. B. J. Boxma, KOO (2.25 gaa, 0.900 sv%)
  3. Daniel Manzato, VIC (2.79 gaa, 0.943 sv%)
  4. Andrew Penner, GUE (3.25 gaa, 0.873 sv%)
  5. Daniel Boisclair, VIC (4.22 gaa, 0.880 sv%)

Award winners

[edit]

All-Star Team

  • Goal: T. J. Aceti (Erie)
  • Defence: Danny Groulx (Victoriaville), Kevin Dallman (Guelph)
  • Forwards: Matthew Lombardi (Victoriaville), Colin Sinclair (Kootenay), Cory Pecker (Erie)

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c "Memorial Cup Champions History". Canadian Hockey League. November 28, 2024. Retrieved November 29, 2024.
[edit]

    2002 Mastercard Memorial Cup
    Tournament details
    Venue(s)Guelph Sports and Entertainment Centre
    Guelph, Ontario
    DatesMay 18–26, 2002
    Teams4
    Host teamGuelph Storm (OHL)
    TV partnerRogers Sportsnet
    Final positions
    ChampionsKootenay Ice (WHL) (1st title)
    Tournament statistics
    Games played8
    Attendance45,144 (5,643 per game)
    Silver bowl trophy with two large handles, mounted on a wide black plinth engraved with team names on silver plates.
    The Memorial Cup trophy

    The 2002 Memorial Cup occurred May 18–26 at the Guelph Sports and Entertainment Centre in Guelph, Ontario.[1] It was the 84th annual Memorial Cup competition and determined the major junior ice hockey champion of the Canadian Hockey League (CHL). It featured the host team, the Guelph Storm, as well as the winners of the Ontario Hockey League, Quebec Major Junior Hockey League and the Western Hockey League: the Erie Otters, Victoriaville Tigres and the Kootenay Ice respectively.[1] The Kootenay Ice won their first Memorial Cup, beating the Victoriaville Tigres in the final.[1]

    Round-robin standings

    PosTeamPldWLGFGA
    1Kootenay Ice (WHL)32196
    1Erie Otters (OHL)32194
    3Guelph Storm (host)31289
    3Victoriaville Tigres (QMJHL)[a]312512
    Source: [citation needed]
    Notes:
    1. ^ Victoriaville won the tiebreaker against Guelph to advance to the semi-finals

    Scores

    • May 18: Guelph 5–1 Victoriaville
    • May 19: Kootenay 3–0 Erie
    • May 20: Kootenay 4–3 Guelph
    • May 21: Erie 5–1 Victoriaville
    • May 22: Victoriaville 3–2 Kootenay
    • May 23: Erie 4–0 Guelph

    Tie-breaker

    • May 24: Victoriaville 4–3 Guelph

    Semi-final

    • May 25: Victoriaville 5–4 Erie (OT)

    Final

    • May 26: Kootenay 6–3 Victoriaville

    Winning team

    Igor Agarunov, Bryan Bridges, B. J. Boxma, Nigel Dawes, Gerard Dicaire, Brennan Evans, Cole Fischer, Curtis Fransoo, Travis Featherstone, Richard Hamula, Chris LaValley, Dale Mahovsky, Steve Makway, Duncan Milroy, Shaun Norrie, Tomas Plihal, Kyle Sheen, Colin Sinclair, Jarret Stoll, Marek Svatos, Adam Taylor, Andy Thompson, Craig Weller. Coach: Ryan McGill

    Scoring leaders

    1. Matthew Lombardi, VIC (2g 7a) 9p
    2. Cory Pecker, ER (4g 3a) 7p
    3. Danny Groulx, VIC (2g 5a) 7p
    4. Carl Malette, VIC (5g 1a) 6p
    5. Colin Sinclair, KOO (4g 2a) 6p
    6. Kevin Dallman, GUE (1g 5a) 6p
    7. Brad Boyes, ER (2g 3a) 5p
    8. Brandon Cullen, ER (2g 3a) 5p
    9. Marek Svatos, KOO, (1g 4a) 5p
    10. Jarret Stoll, KOO (0g 5a) 5p

    Goaltending leaders

    1. T. J. Aceti, ER (1.91 gaa, 0.942 sv%)
    2. B. J. Boxma, KOO (2.25 gaa, 0.900 sv%)
    3. Daniel Manzato, VIC (2.79 gaa, 0.943 sv%)
    4. Andrew Penner, GUE (3.25 gaa, 0.873 sv%)
    5. Daniel Boisclair, VIC (4.22 gaa, 0.880 sv%)

    Award winners

    All-Star Team

    • Goal: T. J. Aceti (Erie)
    • Defence: Danny Groulx (Victoriaville), Kevin Dallman (Guelph)
    • Forwards: Matthew Lombardi (Victoriaville), Colin Sinclair (Kootenay), Cory Pecker (Erie)

    References

    1. ^ a b c "Memorial Cup Champions History". Canadian Hockey League. November 28, 2024. Retrieved November 29, 2024.
    • Memorial Cup Archived 2016-06-02 at the Wayback Machine
    • Canadian Hockey League
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2002_Memorial_Cup&oldid=1307371418"