2016–17 ECHL season

2016–17 ECHL season
League ECHL
Sport Ice hockey
Duration October 14, 2016 – April 8, 2017
Regular season
Playoffs
Kelly Cup

The 2016–17 ECHL season will be the 29th season of the ECHL. The regular season schedule runs from October 14, 2016 to April 8, 2017,[1] with the Kelly Cup playoffs to follow. Twenty-seven teams in 21 states and one Canadian province each plays a 72-game schedule.

League business

Teams in the ECHL as of the 2016–17 season. Dot colors correspond to divisional alignment. For the Alaska Aces of the Mountain Division, see map below.
Location of the Alaska Aces

Team changes

Conference realignment

The ECHL returned to a four division alignment for the 2016–17 season with the removal of the East and Midwest Divisions. Two teams, the Kalamazoo Wings and Toledo Walleye, were moved from the Eastern to the Western Conference and the Cincinnati Cyclones were moved to the Eastern Conference. The West Division was also renamed to the Mountain Division while adding the Allen Americans and Missouri Mavericks. The Central Division added the Fort Wayne Komets, Indy Fuel, Kalamazoo Wings, Quad City Mallards, and Toledo Walleye. The South Division added Cincinnati and the Norfolk Admirals. The North Division added the former East Division, except Norfolk.[4]

Due to the season schedule being set in May 2016 and the realignment announced after the July Board of Governors meetings, the new alignment had several divisional scheduling oddities. One of the most egregious examples being Cincinnati having more games against Western Conference teams than in their own Eastern Conference and would not even play inter-divisional members Florida, Norfolk, and Orlando during the regular season.[5]

Affiliation changes

ECHL team New affiliates Former affiliates
Alaska Aces[6] Vancouver Canucks (NHL)
Utica Comets (AHL)
Independent
Colorado Eagles[7] Colorado Avalanche (NHL)
San Antonio Rampage (AHL)
Independent
Fort Wayne Komets[8] Independent Colorado Avalanche (NHL)
San Antonio Rampage (AHL)
Kalamazoo Wings[9] Tampa Bay Lightning (NHL)
Syracuse Crunch (AHL)
Columbus Blue Jackets (NHL)
Lake Erie Monsters (AHL)
Rapid City Rush[10] Tucson Roadrunners (AHL) Springfield Falcons (AHL)
Wichita Thunder[11] Ottawa Senators (NHL)
Binghamton Senators (AHL)
Independent

Annual Board of Governors meeting

The annual ECHL Board of Governors meeting was held at the Monte Carlo Resort and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada, in July 2016. The ECHL Board of Governors unanimously re-elected Cincinnati Cyclones' president Ray Harris as chairman for a second season. The Board also approved of the rule change for no timeouts allowed following an icing penalty, a rule that had also been approved by the American Hockey League.[12]

All-star game

The 2017 CCM/ECHL All-Star Classic will be held on January 18, 2017, at the Glens Falls Civic Center in Glens Falls, New York.[13][14] The event will feature the ECHL All-Stars playing against the host Adirondack Thunder. The format for the match consists of two 25-minute halves with a skills competition during the intermission. The skills competition will have a fastest skater, a hardest shot, and a skills relay. The first half of the game will be under standard 5-on-5 player rules while the second half will be ten minutes of 5-on-5, five minutes of 4-on-4, and finishing with 3-on-3 player hockey. Both goals scored during play and points made during the skills competition will count towards the final score of All-Star Classic.[15]

2017 Kelly Cup playoffs format

At the end of the regular season the top four teams in each division qualifies for the 2017 Kelly Cup playoffs and be seeded one through four based on highest point total earned in the season. Then the first two rounds of the playoffs are held within the division with the first seed facing the fourth seed and the second seed facing the third. The division champions then play each other in a conference championship. The Kelly Cup finals pits the Eastern Conference champion against the Western Conference champion. All four rounds are a best-of-seven format.[4]

Standings

As of November 30, 2016.[16]

Eastern Conference
North Division GP W L OTL SOL GF GA PTS
Adirondack Thunder (CGY) 1811313604826
Manchester Monarchs (LA) 2011711706324
Reading Royals (PHI) 2010811686922
Wheeling Nailers (PIT) 179620555020
Brampton Beast (MTL) 167612636717
Elmira Jackals (BUF) 1741030355711
South Division GP W L OTL SOL GF GA PTS
Florida Everblades (CAR) 1712212584327
Atlanta Gladiators (BOS) 23101021858723
Orlando Solar Bears (TOR) 1710520645422
Greenville Swamp Rabbits (NYR) 158520484618
South Carolina Stingrays (WSH) 168710404317
Cincinnati Cyclones (NSH) 187920496016
Norfolk Admirals (EDM) 172114032618

Western Conference
Mountain Division GP W L OTL SOL GF GA PTS
Alaska Aces (VAN) 1712401624225
Colorado Eagles (COL) 1910513635924
Idaho Steelheads (DAL) 1911620666124
Allen Americans (SJ) 21101100616620
Missouri Mavericks (NYI) 188901546217
Rapid City Rush (ARZ) 197930596817
Utah Grizzlies (ANA) 1971011516616
Central Division GP W L OTL SOL GF GA PTS
Tulsa Oilers (WPG) 2114520665730
Toledo Walleye (DET) 1714300774628
Quad City Mallards (MIN) 1710601474421
Fort Wayne Komets (Ind.) 169520604620
Indy Fuel (CHI) 188811484918
Kalamazoo Wings (TB) 1971002436316
Wichita Thunder (OTT) 157701494615

 x  – clinched playoff spot,  y  – clinched regular season division title,  z Brabham Cup (regular season) champion

See also

References

External links

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