Jump to content

2004 Telus Cup

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2004 National Midget Championship
Tournament details
Venue(s)Kenora Recreation Centre in Kenora, ON
DatesApril 18–25, 2004
Teams6
Final positions
Champions Brandon Wheat Kings
Runner-up Riverains du Collège Charles-Lemoyne
Third place Red Deer Chiefs
Tournament statistics
Scoring leader(s)Francis Paré (11G 3A 14P)
MVPFrancis Paré
← 2003
2005 →

The 2004 National Midget Championship was Canada's 26th annual national midget 'AAA' hockey championship, played April 18–25, 2004 at Kenora, Ontario.[1] The Brandon Wheat Kings defeated the Riverains du Collège Charles-Lemoyne 2-1 in overtime to win their first and only national title. It also marked the first time that a Manitoba team was the national midget champion.

This was the only season that Hockey Canada did not have a sponsor for the national midget championship. From 1979 to 2003, it was known as the Air Canada Cup. Later in 2004, a new sponsor would be found and the midget championship would be renamed the Telus Cup.[2]

Teams

[edit]
Result Team Region City
1st place, gold medalist(s) Brandon Wheat Kings West Brandon, MB
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Riverains du Collège Charles-Lemoyne Quebec Sainte-Catherine, QC
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Red Deer Optimist Chiefs Pacific Red Deer, AB
4 Kenora Stars Host Kenora, ON
5 Cornwall Thunder Atlantic Cornwall, PE
6 Toronto Marlboros Central Toronto, ON

Round robin

[edit]

Standings

[edit]
Pos Team Pld W L D GF GA GD Pts
1 Riverains du Collège Charles-Lemoyne 5 5 0 0 29 12 +17 10
2 Red Deer Optimist Chiefs 5 4 1 0 19 14 +5 8
3 Brandon Wheat Kings 5 2 2 1 18 17 +1 5
4 Kenora Stars 5 1 3 1 8 19 −11 3
5 Cornwall Thunder 5 1 4 0 16 23 −7 2
6 Toronto Marlboros 5 1 4 0 16 21 −5 2
Source: [citation needed]

Scores

[edit]
  • Red Deer 6 - Brandon 5 (OT)
  • Collège Charles-Lemoyne 5 - Cornwall 2
  • Toronto 5 - Kenora 1
  • Collège Charles-Lemoyne 5 - Brandon 4 (OT)
  • Red Deer 3 - Toronto 1
  • Kenora 5 - Cornwall 2
  • Collège Charles-Lemoyne 6 - Toronto 2
  • Brandon 5 - Cornwall 3
  • Red Deer 4 - Kenora 1
  • Cornwall 7 - Toronto 5
  • Collège Charles-Lemoyne 5 - Red Deer 3
  • Brandon 0 - Kenora 0
  • Red Deer 3 - Cornwall 2 (OT)
  • Brandon 4 - Toronto 3
  • Collège Charles-Lemoyne 8 - Kenora 1

Playoffs

[edit]

Semi-finals

[edit]
  • Collège Charles-Lemoyne 2 - Kenora 1
  • Brandon 6 - Red Deer 2

Bronze-medal game

[edit]
  • Red Deer 5 - Kenora 2

Gold-medal game

[edit]
  • Brandon 2 - Collège Charles-Lemoyne 1 (OT)

Individual awards

[edit]
  • Most Valuable Player: Francis Paré (Collège Charles-Lemoyne)
  • Top Scorer: Francis Paré (Collège Charles-Lemoyne)
  • Top Forward: Tyler Dittmer (Brandon)
  • Top Defenceman: Jeff Termineski (Toronto)
  • Top Goaltender: Tyler Gordon (Kenora)
  • Most Sportsmanlike Player: Kyle Dorowicz (Red Deer)

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "News Release #NR.041". Hockey Canada. April 16, 2004. Retrieved January 16, 2012.
  2. ^ "Canada's National Midget Championship Officially Named the Telus Cup". Hockey Canada. October 14, 2004. Retrieved January 14, 2012.
[edit]