2006–07 ECHL season

(Redirected from 2006-07 ECHL season)

The 2006–07 ECHL season was the 19th season of the ECHL. The league had 25 teams for 2006–07. The Brabham Cup regular season champions were the Las Vegas Wranglers and the Kelly Cup playoff champions were the Idaho Steelheads.

2006–07 ECHL season
LeagueECHL
SportIce hockey
DurationOctober 2006 – May 2007
Regular season
Brabham CupLas Vegas Wranglers
Season MVPBrad Schell (Gwinnett)
Top scorerBrad Schell (Gwinnett)
Playoffs
American championsDayton Bombers
  American runners-upFlorida Everblades
National championsIdaho Steelheads
  National runners-upAlaska Aces
Playoffs MVPSteve Silverthorn (Idaho)
Finals
ChampionsIdaho Steelheads
  Runners-upDayton Bombers
ECHL seasons

League changes

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Two teams returned to the ECHL after suspensions: the Texas Wildcatters and the Cincinnati Cyclones. The Wildcatters had to suspend operations for the 2005–06 season as a byproduct of damage to their home arena caused by Hurricane Rita. The Cyclones returned after ceasing operations following the 2003–04 season in trying to secure an American Hockey League franchise.

The Board of Governors revoked the Greenville Grrrowl franchise and the San Diego Gulls had returned its franchise.

The New Jersey Devils purchased the Trenton Titans and the team became the ECHL affiliate of the Devils. The Titans still maintained their affiliation with the Philadelphia Flyers for the season. After the purchase of the Titans, the New Jersey Devils renamed the franchise's operator Trenton Titans, LLC to Trenton Devils, LLC.

Realignment

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At the 2006 pre-season meeting of the ECHL Board of Governors, the ECHL announced the alignment of the 25 teams. The Las Vegas Wranglers were moved from the West to the Pacific Division to replace the departed San Diego Gulls, the returning Texas Wildcatters replaced the Grrrowl in the South Division, and the Cincinnati Cyclones were re-added to the North Division.

Regular season

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Final standings

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Note: GP = Games played; W = Wins; L= Losses; OTL = Overtime Losses; SOL = Shootout Losses; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points; Green shade = Clinched playoff spot; Blue shade = Clinched division; (z) = Clinched home-ice advantage[1][2]

American Conference

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North Division GP W L OTL SOL Pts GF GA
Dayton Bombers (CBJ) 72 37 26 2 7 83 213 191
Toledo Storm (DET/CHI) 72 39 30 1 2 81 211 220
Cincinnati Cyclones (MTL) 72 37 29 4 2 80 213 198
Trenton Titans (PHI) 72 36 31 1 4 77 250 242
Johnstown Chiefs (TBL) 72 33 33 3 3 72 216 232
Reading Royals (LAK) 72 32 33 2 5 71 221 235
Wheeling Nailers (PIT) 72 32 34 2 4 70 215 255
Southern Division GP W L OTL SOL Pts GF GA
Florida Everblades (CAR/FLA) (z) 72 44 22 4 2 94 272 212
Texas Wildcatters (Independent) 72 41 22 5 4 91 265 222
Gwinnett Gladiators (ATL) 72 41 24 5 2 89 289 256
Charlotte Checkers (NYR) 72 42 27 1 2 87 252 220
Augusta Lynx (ANA) 72 39 29 1 3 82 258 265
South Carolina Stingrays (WAS) 72 36 27 4 5 81 250 251
Columbia Inferno (TOR) 72 29 34 4 5 67 217 256
Pensacola Ice Pilots (NYI) 72 20 46 2 4 46 233 318

National Conference

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Pacific Division GP W L OTL SOL Pts GF GA
Las Vegas Wranglers (CGY) (z) 72 46 12 6 8 106 231 187
Bakersfield Condors (Independent) 72 41 19 3 9 94 270 236
Stockton Thunder (EDM) 72 38 24 5 5 86 225 197
Fresno Falcons (SJS) 72 34 29 5 4 77 195 197
Long Beach Ice Dogs (BOS) 72 27 42 0 3 57 209 267
West Division GP W L OTL SOL Pts GF GA
Alaska Aces (STL) 72 49 16 3 4 105 270 176
Idaho Steelheads (DAL) 72 42 24 2 4 90 240 208
Victoria Salmon Kings (VAN) 72 36 32 1 3 76 239 249
Phoenix RoadRunners (PHX) 72 27 40 2 3 59 201 255
Utah Grizzlies (Independent) 72 22 42 4 4 52 184 294

Scoring leaders

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Note: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty minutes

Player Team GP G A Pts PIM
Brad Schell Gwinnett Gladiators 63 25 85 110 60
Scott Mifsud Gwinnett Gladiators 70 26 68 94 66
Yannick Tifu Phoenix RoadRunners/Dayton Bombers 78 28 61 89 104
Marty Flichel Idaho Steelheads 70 39 49 88 95
Kevin Baker Texas Wildcatters 62 36 45 81 76
Derek Nesbitt Idaho Steelheads 66 30 51 81 32
Kimbi Daniels Alaska Aces 70 18 63 81 128
Mark Lee Charlotte Checkers 59 26 54 80 64
Scott Bertoli Trenton Titans 64 31 48 79 118
Mike Bayrack Texas Wildcatters 66 33 45 78 71

Data referenced from ECHL website[3]

Leading goaltenders

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Note: GP = Games played; Min = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; OTL = Overtime losses; SOL = Shootout losses; GA = Goals against; SO = Shutouts; SV% = Save percentage; GAA = Goals against average

Player Team GP Min W L OTL SOL GA SO SV% GAA
Mike McKenna Las Vegas Wranglers 38 2258 27 4 2 5 83 5 .927 2.21
Derek Gustafson Alaska Aces 43 2536 29 11 2 1 100 5 .918 2.37
Adam Berkhoel Dayton Bombers 43 2584 23 17 0 3 105 5 .910 2.44
Ryan MacDonald Fresno Falcons 39 2134 16 14 5 1 88 1 .924 2.47
Cedrick Desjardins Cincinnati Cyclones 44 2648 24 19 1 0 112 4 .917 2.54

Data referenced from ECHL website[4]

Kelly Cup playoffs

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Format

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The two unbalanced conferences had separate playoff formats. The 10-team National Conference had the top eight teams advance to the playoffs with the division winners awarded the first and second seeds. The remaining six teams were seeded by points and the four highest seeds faced the lowest remaining seeds. The four remaining teams in the second round would be reseeded by regular season points and the winners would play for a conference championship. All playoff series were best-of-seven. The 15-team American Conference had 10 teams advance to the playoffs but kept an inter-divisional playoff structure. The fourth and fifth seeded teams in each division had a play-in best-of-three series before moving on to the divisional semifinals which were a best-of-five series. The divisional and conference finals were a best-of-seven series. The two conference champions then met in a best-of-seven Kelly Cup final series.

Playoff bracket

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National

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Conference Quarterfinals
April 9–21
Conference Semifinals
April 23-May 5
Conference Finals
May 7–19
         
1 Las Vegas 4
8 Phoenix 0
1 Las Vegas 2
4 Idaho 4
4 Idaho 4
5 Stockton 2
4 Idaho 4
2 Alaska 1
3 Bakersfield 4
6 Fresno 2
3 Bakersfield 0
2 Alaska 4
2 Alaska 4
7 Victoria 2

National quarterfinals

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Las Vegas (1) vs. Phoenix (8)
Date Away Home
April 10 Las Vegas 5 1 Phoenix
April 12 Las Vegas 3 2 Phoenix
April 13 Phoenix 4 5 Las Vegas OT
April 14 Phoenix 2 3 Las Vegas
Las Vegas wins best-of-seven series 4–0
Alaska (2) vs. Victoria (7)
Date Away Home
April 9 Victoria 3 2 Alaska
April 10 Victoria 1 7 Alaska
April 12 Alaska 5 2 Victoria
April 13 Alaska 5 2 Victoria
April 14 Alaska 4 9 Victoria
April 16 Victoria 2 5 Alaska
Alaska wins best-of-seven series 4–2
Bakersfield (3) vs. Fresno (6)
Date Away Home
April 10 Fresno 7 3 Bakersfield
April 12 Bakersfield 3 9 Fresno
April 13 Fresno 2 4 Bakersfield
April 15 Bakersfield 6 2 Fresno
April 16 Bakersfield 4 2 Fresno
April 19 Fresno 0 4 Bakersfield
Bakersfield wins best-of-seven series 4–2
Idaho (4) vs. Stockton (5)
Date Away Home
April 10 Stockton 4 2 Idaho
April 11 Stockton 0 3 Idaho
April 13 Idaho 2 1 Stockton 2OT
April 15 Idaho 2 3 Stockton
April 16 Idaho 3 2 Stockton OT
April 18 Stockton 1 6 Idaho
Idaho wins best-of-seven series 4–2

National semifinals

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Las Vegas (1) vs. Idaho (4)
Date Away Home
April 22 Las Vegas 2 1 Idaho
April 23 Las Vegas 1 4 Idaho
April 25 Idaho 4 2 Las Vegas
April 26 Idaho 4 3 Las Vegas
April 27 Idaho 0 4 Las Vegas
April 29 Las Vegas 0 1 Idaho
Idaho wins best-of-seven series 4–2
Alaska (2) vs. Bakersfield (3)
Date Away Home
April 23 Bakersfield 0 6 Alaska
April 25 Bakersfield 2 3 Alaska
April 27 Alaska 1 0 Bakersfield OT
April 28 Alaska 3 1 Bakersfield
Alaska wins best-of-seven series 4–0

National finals

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Alaska (2) vs. Idaho (4)
Date Away Home
May 7 Idaho 1 0 Alaska
May 8 Idaho 3 2 Alaska OT
May 11 Alaska 5 2 Idaho
May 13 Alaska 2 7 Idaho
May 15 Alaska 2 3 Idaho
Idaho wins best-of-seven series 4–1

American

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Divisional Quarterfinals
April 8–12
Divisional Semifinals
April 13–22
Divisional Finals
April 23-May 5
Conference Finals
May 7–19
N1 Dayton 3
N4 Trenton 2 N4 Trenton 0
N5 Johnstown 0 N1 Dayton 4
N3 Cincinnati 3
N2 Toledo 0
N3 Cincinnati 3
N1 Dayton 4
S1 Florida 3
S2 Texas 3
S4 Charlotte 2 S3 Gwinnett 1
S5 Augusta 0 S2 Texas 2
S1 Florida 4
S1 Florida 3
S4 Charlotte 0


American Divisional quarterfinals

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North Division quarterfinals
Trenton (4) vs. Johnstown (5)
Date Away Home
April 9 Johnstown 2 4 Trenton
April 10 Trenton 7 5 Johnstown
Trenton wins best-of-three series 2–0
South Division quarterfinals
Charlotte (4) vs. Augusta (5)
Date Away Home
April 9 Augusta 1 2 Charlotte OT
April 10 Charlotte 3 2 Augusta OT
Charlotte wins best-of-three series 2–0

American Divisional semifinals

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North Division semifinals
Dayton (1) vs. Trenton (4)
Date Away Home
April 15 Trenton 3 6 Dayton
April 16 Trenton 0 1 Dayton
April 19 Dayton 1 0 Trenton
Dayton wins best-of-five series 3–0
South Division semifinals
Florida (1) vs. Charlotte (4)
Date Away Home
April 13 Charlotte 2 3 Florida
April 14 Charlotte 2 7 Florida
April 17 Florida 4 0 Charlotte
Florida wins the best-of-five series 3–0
North Division semifinals
Toledo (2) vs. Cincinnati (3)
Date Away Home
April 13 Cincinnati 3 1 Toledo
April 14 Cincinnati 7 3 Toledo
April 19 Toledo 0 4 Cincinnati
Cincinnati wins best-of-five series 3–0
South Division semifinals
Texas (2) vs. Gwinnett (3)
Date Away Home
April 14 Texas 2 5 Gwinnett
April 15 Texas 5 2 Gwinnett
April 18 Gwinnett 4 5 Texas OT
April 20 Gwinnett 1 2 Texas OT
Texas wins best-of-five series 3–1

American Divisional finals

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North Division Finals
Dayton (1) vs. Cincinnati (3)
Date Away Home
April 22 Cincinnati 5 4 Dayton
April 25 Cincinnati 1 0 Dayton
April 27 Dayton 4 3 Cincinnati
April 28 Dayton 3 5 Cincinnati
April 30 Dayton 6 2 Cincinnati
May 2 Cincinnati 0 3 Dayton
May 3 Cincinnati 3 5 Dayton
Dayton wins best-of-seven series 4–3
South Division Finals
Florida (1) vs. Texas (2)
Date Away Home
April 24 Texas 0 5 Florida
April 25 Texas 5 0 Florida
April 27 Florida 5 2 Texas
April 28 Florida 1 3 Texas
April 30 Florida 4 2 Texas
May 4 Texas 3 4 Florida OT
Florida wins best-of-seven series 4–2

American Conference finals

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American Conference finals
Dayton (No.1) vs. Florida (So.1)
Date Away Home
May 8 Dayton 4 3 Florida 3OT
May 10 Dayton 3 5 Florida
May 12 Florida 4 3 Dayton
May 13 Florida 1 3 Dayton
May 15 Florida 2 4 Dayton
May 17 Dayton 3 6 Florida
May 18 Dayton 3 Florida 1
Dayton wins best-of-seven series 4–3

Kelly Cup finals

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Dayton (No. 1) vs. Idaho (Na. 4)
Date Away Home
May 23 Dayton 2 1 Idaho
May 25 Dayton 2 5 Idaho
May 27 Idaho 4 2 Dayton
May 29 Idaho 2 1 Dayton 2OT
May 31 Idaho 4 1 Dayton
Idaho wins best-of-seven series 4–1

Playoff tables referenced from ECHL website.[5]

ECHL awards

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Patrick Kelly Cup: Idaho Steelheads
Henry Brabham Cup: Las Vegas Wranglers
Gingher Memorial Trophy: Dayton Bombers
Bruce Taylor Trophy: Idaho Steelheads
John Brophy Award: Davis Payne (Alaska)
CCM Vector Most Valuable Player: Brad Schell (Gwinnett)
Kelly Cup Playoffs Most Valuable Player: Steve Silverthorn (Idaho)
Reebok Hockey Goaltender of the Year: Adam Berkhoel (Dayton)
CCM Tacks Rookie of the Year: Colton Fretter (Gwinnett)
Defenseman of the Year: Jon Awe (Gwinnett)
Leading Scorer: Brad Schell (Gwinnett)
Reebok Hockey Plus Performer Award: Matt Shasby (Alaska)
Sportsmanship Award: Derek Nesbitt (Idaho)

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "2006–07 ECHL Standings". HockeyDB. Retrieved March 8, 2017.
  2. ^ "2006–07 ECHL Stats" (PDF). ECHL. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 9, 2017. Retrieved March 8, 2017.
  3. ^ "ECHL 2006-07 Regular Season Scoring Leaders". Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 24 April 2007.
  4. ^ "ECHL 2006-07 Regular Season Top Goalies". Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 24 April 2007.
  5. ^ "ECHL 2007 Playoff Bracket". Archived from the original (pdf) on 19 April 2007. Retrieved 24 April 2007.
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Preceded by Kelly Cup Playoffs
2007
Succeeded by