Chippewa Steel

Ice hockey team in Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Chippewa Steel is a Tier II junior ice hockey team based in Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin, that plays in the North American Hockey League (NAHL).

DivisionMidwest
Founded2005
Quick facts City, League ...
Chippewa Steel
CityChippewa Falls, Wisconsin
LeagueNorth American Hockey League
DivisionMidwest
Founded2005
Home arenaChippewa Area Ice Arena
ColorsGreen, black, gray
     
OwnersKelly Kasik
Geoffrey Stahl
General managerVinny Bohn
Head coachSteve Dougherty
Franchise history
2005–2010North Iowa Outlaws
2010–2018Coulee Region Chill
2018–presentChippewa Steel
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History

The franchise began in 2005 as the North Iowa Outlaws based in Mason City, Iowa, where the team played for five seasons until moving to Onalaska, Wisconsin, in 2010 under owner Mark Motz as the Coulee Region Chill.[1] The team was then sold to Michelle Bryant in 2012 and the franchise was eventually moved in 2014 to nearby La Crosse, Wisconsin, with games at the Green Island Ice Arena.

After the 2017–18 season, Chill owner Michelle Bryant sold the franchise to Steve Black of JB Black Enterprise, LLC, the owner of the NA3HL's New Ulm Steel. Black relocated the Chill franchise to Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin, as the Chippewa Steel to play out of Chippewa Area Ice Arena. Bryant would then rename her NA3HL team from La Crosse Freeze to Coulee Region Chill while continuing to play out of La Crosse.[2] Al Rooney was named the Steel's first head coach and general manager,[3] but was relieved of duties 23 games into his first season with a 5–16–1–1 record.[4] Assistant coach Carter Foguth was named the interim head coach for the remainder of the season before be given the role permanently at the end of the season.[5]

In March 2021, it was reported that Steve Black sold the Steel and the Tier III New Ulm Steel to an ownership group led by Kelly Kasik.[6] The sale was confirmed on April 16 along with the announcement of new general manager and head coach Mike Janda.[7] However, Janda was then given a two-year suspension in August 2021 by USA Hockey for manipulating records to use non-eligible players when he held a previous coaching job on a youth team and was subsequently released by the Steel.[8] The Steel then hired Casey Mignone, the assistant coach of the St. Cloud Norsemen.[9]

After Casey Mignone left for a coaching job at Alaska-Farianks, on July 8, 2023, owner Kelly Kasik and the Steel hired Chris Ratzloff,[10] who had previously coached for the Rochester Grizzlies(NA3HL) for the past 4 years. Chris Ratzloff went 29-25-6 in his first season as coach. The Steel also adopted a new slogan in 2023, which is currently "Rally the Valley!"

Current division opponents for the Steel are the Anchorage Wolverines, Fairbanks Ice Dogs, Janesville Jets, Kenai River Brown Bears, Minnesota Wilderness, Springfield Jr. Blues, and Wisconsin Windigo(previously Minnesota Magicians)

Season-by-season records

More information Season, GP ...
SeasonGPWLOTLPTSGFGAPIMFinishPlayoffs
North Iowa Outlaws
2005–0658183733914921914395th of 5, Central
19th of 20, NAHL
Did not qualify
2006–0762272966017419814464th of 6, Central
12th of 17, NAHL
Lost Div. Semifinal series, 2–3 (Fargo-Moorhead Jets)
2007–0858381648019513712091st of 8, Central
4th of 18, NAHL
Lost Div. Semifinal series, 0–3 (Springfield Jr. Blues)
2008–0958351857522917111072nd of 5, Central
t-7th of 19, NAHL
Lost Div. Semifinal series, 1–3 (Owatonna Express)
2009–105815376361472349155th of 5, Central
18th of 19, NAHL
Did not qualify
Coulee Region Chill
2010–11583320571204180982t-2nd of 6, Central
t-10th of 26, NAHL
Won Div. Semifinal series, 3–1 (Owatonna Express)
Lost Div. Final series, 2–3 (Bismarck Bobcats)
2011–126018357431622299964th of 5, MidWest
t-23rd of 28, NAHL
Lost Div. Semifinal series, 0–3 (St. Louis Bandits)
2012–136016395371572248496th of 6, Central
23rd of 24, NAHL
Did not qualify
2013–1460312816318118110115th of 6, Midwest
15th of 24, NAHL
Did not qualify
2014–156028239651761829873rd of 5, Midwest
12th of 24, NAHL
Lost Div. Semifinal series, 2–3 (Minnesota Wilderness)
2015–166033261671771658834th of 6, Midwest
t-11th of 22, NAHL
Lost Div. Semifinal series, 1–3 (Fairbanks Ice Dogs)
2016–176031272642202209204th of 6, Midwest
16th of 24, NAHL
Lost Div. Semifinal series, 0–3 (Janesville Jets)
2017–186017349431622146615th of 6, Midwest
21st of 23, NAHL
Did not qualify
Chippewa Steel
2018–1960193834114922010196th of 6, Midwest
22nd of 24, NAHL
Did not qualify
2019–205129184621711467982nd of 6, Midwest
11th of 23, NAHL
Postseason cancelled
2020–214814295331161699045th of 5, Midwest
22nd of 23, NAHL
Did not qualify
2021–226025314541682067727th of 8, Midwest
24 of 29, NAHL
Did not qualify
2022–236031254661861728064th of 8, Midwest
13 of 29, NAHL
Lost Div. Semifinal series, 0–3 (Wisconsin Windigo)
2023–246029256641701886465th of 8, Midwest
20 of 32, NAHL
Did not qualify
2024–2559302366618218610244th of 8, Midwest
14 of 35, NAHL
Lost Div. Semifinal series, 1–3 (Wisconsin Windigo)
2025-264993732110422610988th of 8 Midwest, 34th of 34 NAHLEliminated from playoff contention
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Rivalry

The Chippewa Steel and Janesville Jets have one of the most fierce rivalries in the Midwest Division. The history of this rivalry dates back to 2018, when the Steel were "New" to the league, where the Jets and Steel fought for a milk can, which is called the Dairyland Milk Can Trophy,[11] which was sponsored by Blain's Farm & Fleet. The battle for this milk jug ran from 2018-2022, but it was stopped in the 2023-24 season. The Steel had a 21-17-2 record in that time frame, and overall lead the series 26-21-3 at the moment. But just because the trophy was taken away doesn't mean the animosity was, as these teams are usually at each other's throats every minute or so. In fact, in a game on March 1, 2024, between the Jets and Steel in Chippewa Falls, 14 out of the 18 penalties served in that game between the two teams were either Roughing, Head Contact, Unsportsmanlike, Slashing, Boarding, or Checking from Behind(These are generally considered more "rougher" penalties), 8 of those being Roughing alone. The Jets ended up winning that game 5-0, off of a 4 goal first period.

References

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