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Holody Trophy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Holody Trophy
SportIce hockey
Awarded forRegular season champion, Midwest division
History
First award1999
Most winsLondon Knights (13)
Most recentLondon Knights

The Holody Trophy, awarded annually to the regular season champion of the Midwest division in the Ontario Hockey League. The trophy was first given out in the 1998-99 season with the realignment of the League into four divisions. It is named for Joe Holody, the former owner and governor of the Guelph Platers and Owen Sound Platers franchise.[1]

Winners

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List of winners of the Holody Trophy.[1]

Season Team GP W L T OTL Pts GF GA
1998–99 Guelph Storm 68 44 22 2 90 300 218
1999–2000 Erie Otters 68 33 28 4 3 73 224 229
2000–01 Erie Otters 68 45 11 10 2 102 264 171
2001–02 Erie Otters 68 41 22 4 1 87 246 218
2002–03 Kitchener Rangers 68 46 14 5 3 100 275 188
2003–04 London Knights 68 53 11 2 2 110 300 147
2004–05 London Knights 68 59 7 2 0 120 310 125
Season Team GP W L OTL SL Pts GF GA
2005–06 London Knights 68 49 15 1 3 102 304 211
2006–07 London Knights 68 50 14 1 3 104 311 231
2007–08 Kitchener Rangers 68 53 11 1 3 110 289 174
2008–09 London Knights 68 49 16 1 2 101 287 194
2009–10 London Knights 68 49 16 1 2 101 273 208
2010–11 Owen Sound Attack 68 46 17 1 4 97 283 215
2011–12 London Knights 68 49 18 0 1 99 277 178
2012–13 London Knights 68 50 13 2 3 105 279 180
2013–14 Guelph Storm 68 52 12 2 2 108 340 191
2014–15 Erie Otters 68 50 14 2 2 104 331 212
2015–16 Erie Otters 68 52 15 1 0 105 269 183
2016–17 Erie Otters 68 50 15 2 1 103 319 182
2017–18 Kitchener Rangers 68 43 21 3 1 90 246 218
2018–19 London Knights 68 46 15 6 1 99 299 211
2019–20 London Knights 62 45 15 1 1 92 265 187
2020–21 Not awarded, season cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic[2]
2021–22 London Knights 68 39 22 5 2 85 264 232
2022–23 London Knights 68 45 21 2 0 92 269 214
2023–24 London Knights 68 50 14 1 3 104 322 197

References

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  1. ^ a b Bell, Aaron (2017). 2017–18 OHL Media Information Guide (PDF). Scarborough, Ontario: Ontario Hockey League. pp. 144–159. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-02-17. Retrieved 2018-01-03.
  2. ^ Jeffrey, Jake (2021-04-20). "OHL officially cancels the 2020-21 season". Global News. Archived from the original on 2021-11-08. Retrieved 2023-06-05.
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