Iserlohn Roosters
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Iserlohn Roosters | |
Founded | *1959 as EC Deilinghofen *1980 as ECD Iserlohn *1988 as ECD Sauerland *1994 as Iserlohner EC *2000 as Iserlohn Roosters |
Home ice | Eissporthalle Iserlohn or Eissporthalle am Seilersee |
Based in | Iserlohn |
Colours | blue, white |
League | Deutsche Eishockey-Liga |
Head coach | vacant |
General manager | Josef Jost |
The Iserlohn Roosters are a professional ice hockey team in the Deutsche Eishockey-Liga. They play in Iserlohn, North-Rhine-Westphalia, Germany at the Eissporthalle Seilersee.
- Founded: first in 1959, the profi team became a limited liability company in 2000
- Arena: Eissporthalle Iserlohn (capacity 4,967)
- Uniform colours: blue and white
- Logo design: A face of a rooster
- League championships won: none
Contents |
[edit] History
The history of ice hockey in Iserlohn began in the neighbouring town ofHemer. In a district of Hemer called Deilinghofen were deployed Canadian soldiers. They came to the town after the end of the Korean War in 1953 and soon built an arena - first without a roof. The teenagers in Deilinhofen were interested in this strange kind of sport and wanted to play it, too. They played on streets or frozen ponds and were allowed to play in the arena in 1957 for the first time. Recognizing the joy of the teenagers they got first changing coaches, later with Charles McCuaig a steady trainer. After a long preparation time the first game against a Canadian youth team from Soest was on 8th March 1958 in front of 120 people. Deilinghofen played well, but lost 2-6. The equipment was borrowed by the soldiers. After that game, the matches were more steady and with more bystanders, so the arena had to get a roof in 1958.
[edit] EC Deilinghofen (1959-1980)
The next goal was reached on 28th February 1959. The EC Deilinghofen was founded in a small tavern. At that time there were only 49 hockey clubs in Germany, only 8 in North-Rhine-Westphalia. In 1959 a team from Deilinghofen started in a junior league and reached the second place. A year later they took part in the German championship and reached place five. In the second season 1960-61 they became first in North Rhine-Westphalia, and the second best team in the country. They only lost against EV Füssen. When they came back to Hemer, thousands of fans celebrated the team and coach Charles McCuaig. The famous newspaper Die Welt wrote a large article about The Canadians from Sauerland. Five ECD players were nominated for the German national team.
Because the players got too old, the team played in a regular league in the 1961-62 season. With Victor Leury as new coach. Deilinghofen lost only one point that season in a scandalous game in Hanover. Later newspapers wrote about a "Schlacht vom Pferdeturm" (Battle of Pferdeturm, Pferdeturm is the name of Hanover's arena). After this match the teams and fans of Deilinghofen and RESG Hannover were arch-enemies for decades. In this season and in two after this Deilinghofen became champion of the north of Germany, but they lost games against the champions of the south and so missed the moving up. In the 1964-65 season they were called "Unaufsteigbar" (not able to moving up). The local brewery and a new mode helped the team to move up to the Oberliga.
But the first Oberliga season was not as successful as the years before, so fewer people than before came to watch. In this season the team had three different coaches and in the next season 1965-66, a German became head coach for the first time: Horst Kubik. In the following years the Aufstiegsrunde (something like playoffs) were reached, but from a financial standpoint the season was bad.
In 1971 the Canadian soldiers were disengaged and the new British soldiers were not interested in the arena, so the team had to search for a new one. Local politics wanted to have an arena in Iserlohn. After the agreement of Iserlohn's town council the Eissporthalle am Seilersee was built by a company from Krefeld near the border to Hemer. In the 1976-77 season Deilinghofen was two places behind Kaufbeuren in the new Zweite Bundesliga. But Kaufbeuren waived the promotion and the ECD got the chance to play in Germany's best hockey league for the first time, 6,776 days after its foundation. In the first season Deilinghofen got only 16 points, but stayed with luck in the Bundesliga.
[edit] ECD Iserlohn (1980-1987)
In 1980 the club was renamed ECD Iserlohn, because the arena was there for years. In the following season the team was relegated for the first time in its history. Two years later it moved up again. And the next years were the best and most successful seasons in the club's history. In 1986 the ECD reached the semi-final in the playoffs with stars like Jaroslav Pouzar and Martti Jarkko. These two players are fondly remembered by many fans today. But these players also cost a lot. So the president Heinz Weifenbach looked for help in Libya. Muammar al-Gaddafi wanted to pay money. The team only had to advertise for his "Green Book". On 4th December 1987 they did. It was one of the biggest scandals in the history of hockey. A few days later the ECD Iserlohn was strapped.
[edit] ECD Sauerland (1988-1994)
The next season the ECD Sauerland was founded. They started playing in the Oberliga, although Weifenbach wanted to begin in the Bundesliga. The club had the same, big financial problems as its predecessors. The 1991-92 season was a catastrophe, so the fans were frightened to miss the license. The ECD got the license, but went bankrupt a few days after the end of season.
[edit] ECD Sauerland Iserlohn Penguins (1994)
Only one day later, on 9th April 1994, the ECD Sauerland Iserlohn Penguins was founded, but the pewee players didn't contract in, so the club hadn't a chance to survive.
[edit] Iserlohner EC (1994-2000)
The Iserlohner EC was founded on 20th April in the same year. The new committee wanted to avoid financial adventures. After one season the team moved up to the second best league. The following two years were more difficult, but new players during the season revived the club. In 1997 a new coach came to Iserlohn: Greg Poss. After three successful years, the club could move up again, because they bought the license of Rosenheim. The arena in Deilinghofen was torn down in 1999, 40 years after the foundation of the ECD. Many people from Deilinghofen protested against this.
[edit] Iserlohn Roosters (since 2000)
Iserlohner EC since became a professional team in the Deutsche Eishockey-Liga, and adopted the name Iserlohn Roosters. In the 2002-03 season playoffs were missed. The Roosters collected two points too less, although the German champion of this year, the Krefeld Pinguine, were beaten 8-1 at the last day of play. In the next season Poss coached the Nürnberg Ice Tigers, Iserlohn's new coach was Dave Whistle, after nine games Doug Mason was his successor. In the lockout season 2004-05 Mike York and John-Michael Liles came to Iserlohn and helped to reach place eleven despite the smallest budget in the league. In March 2006, Mason left Iserlohn and is now coach of the Kölner Haie. Last year Geoff Ward coached the Team, he leave Iserlohn during the summer 2007 to be an assistant coach for the NHL-Team of the Boston Bruins. The new coach of the Roosters is now Rick Adduono.
[edit] Notable players
[edit] Current squad
Goaltenders | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Number | Player | Acquired | Place of Birth | ||
31 | Hendrik Sirringhaus | 2003 | Iserlohn, Germany | ||
74 | Norm Maracle | 2007 | Belleville, Canada | ||
20 | Sebastian Stefaniszin | 2007 | Berlin, Germany |
Defencemen | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Number | Player | Shoots | Acquired | Place of Birth | ||
4 | Sebastian Jones | L | 2005 | Iserlohn, Germany | ||
7 | Paul Traynor | L | 2006 | Thunder Bay, Canada | ||
10 | Collin Danielsmeier | L | 2003 | Dortmund, Germany | ||
23 | Brendan Buckley | R | 2007 | Needham, USA | ||
24 | Alexander Dück | L | 2007 | Russia | ||
26 | / | Chris Schmidt | L | 2007 | Beaver Lodge, Canada | |
44 | Danny Pyka | R | 2007 | Berlin, Germany | ||
72 | Sean Blanchard | L | 2007 | Sudbury, Canada |
Forwards | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Number | Player | Position | Shoots | Acquired | Place of Birth | |
9 | Bob Wren | C | L | 2007 | Preston, Canada | |
11 | Ryan Ready | LW | L | 2006 | Peterborough, Canada | |
12 | Martin Schymainski | C/W | L | 2006 | Berlin, Germany | |
13 | Michael Wolf | RW | R | 2005 | Ehenbichl, Austria | |
14 | Matthias Potthoff | LW | L | 2005 | Wickede, Germany | |
15 | Pat Kavanagh | RW | R | 2007 | Ottawa, Canada | |
18 | Tyler Beechey | LW | L | 2007 | Edmonton, Canada | |
19 | Brad Tapper | RW | R | 2007 | Scarborough, Canada | |
21 | Jimmy Roy | C | R | 2006 | Sioux Lookout, Canada | |
32 | David Sulkovsky | RW | L | 2006 | Freiburg, Germany | |
77 | Marlon Czernohous | F | R | 2007 | Germany | |
79 | Henry Martens | F | L | 2007 | Germany | |
91 | Robert Hock | C | L | 2006 | Sternberk, Czech Republic |
[edit] Team captains
- Bryan Adams (2004-2006)
- Mark Greig (2006-2007)
- Robert Hock (2007-)
[edit] Not to be forgotten
- Cestmir Fous: He played 7 years for the team and for the most fans, he is the best goeltender, who ever played in Iserlohn
- Martti Jarkko: The player with the best skills in stickhandling, who ever played for Iserlohn
- Jarouslav Pouzar: many fans say he is the best player of Iserlohn ever.
- Teal Fowler: was forward first, later assistant coach. Was in Iserlohn for nine and a half years and is assistant coach of the Adler Mannheim now.
- Mike York and John-Michael Liles: these two NHL-players came to Iserlohn in the 2004-05 lockout-season.
[edit] External links
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