Iowa Wild

American Hockey League team in Des Moines, Iowa From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Iowa Wild are a professional ice hockey team based in Des Moines, Iowa. They are the American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate of the Minnesota Wild of the National Hockey League (NHL). The Wild play their home games at Casey's Center.

ConferenceWestern
DivisionCentral
Quick facts City, League ...
Iowa Wild
CityDes Moines, Iowa
LeagueAmerican Hockey League
ConferenceWestern
DivisionCentral
Founded1994 (IHL)
Operated2013–present
Home arenaCasey's Center
ColorsForest green, Iron Range red, harvest gold, Minnesota wheat, white
         
OwnerMinnesota Sports and Entertainment
General managerMatt Hendricks[1]
Head coachGreg Cronin
CaptainBen Jones
MediaFanduel Sports Network North
KXNO
AHL.TV (Internet)
AffiliatesMinnesota Wild (NHL)
Iowa Heartlanders (ECHL)
Franchise history
1994–2013Houston Aeros
2013–presentIowa Wild
Current season
Close

The team was formerly the Houston Aeros, in Houston, Texas, before being relocated to Des Moines, beginning with the 2013–14 AHL season as the Iowa Wild.[2][3] The Wild is the second AHL team based in Des Moines following the Iowa Stars, which had been the Dallas Stars' AHL affiliate from 2005 until 2008 (in the team's final season (2008–09), they were known as the Iowa Chops and were affiliated with the Anaheim Ducks).

The affiliation between the two Wild franchises is the first of two between Twin Cities area franchises and Iowa minor league franchises, as the Minnesota Timberwolves of the National Basketball Association and the Iowa Wolves of the NBA G League also share an affiliation.

History

The Iowa Wild franchise began as the Houston Aeros, a 1994 expansion team in the International Hockey League (IHL) that played out of the Compaq Center. The Aeros were one of six IHL teams to join the American Hockey League (AHL) in 2001 when the IHL folded. Upon joining the AHL, the Aeros affiliated with the National Hockey League's one-year-old expansion team, the Minnesota Wild. The AHL version of the Aeros won the 2003 Calder Cup and also reached the 2011 Calder Cup finals, but lost to the Binghamton Senators. In 2003, the majority ownership of the franchise was sold to Minnesota Sports and Entertainment, the ownership group of the Wild, while former owner Chuck Watson retained a 10% minority share along with Houston native Nick Sheppard holding a 4% share. The team then moved home games to the new Toyota Center.[4]

On April 18, 2013, the Minnesota Wild announced that Minnesota Sports and Entertainment were unable to reach a lease agreement with the Toyota Center, and the Aeros would be relocated to Des Moines, Iowa, beginning with the 2013–14 season with home games at Wells Fargo Arena.[5] The Iowa Wild inaugural season was opened on October 12 with a 1–0 win over the Oklahoma City Barons. The opening night attendance was 10,200.[6] The team failed to make the playoffs for its first five seasons.

The Wild playing against the Milwaukee Admirals in 2024

On February 22, 2018, the Minnesota Wild extended their contract through 2023.[7] In 2019, the team reached the playoffs for the first time since relocating from Houston, reaching the division finals and losing to the Chicago Wolves in six games. The following 2019–20 season was then curtailed by the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic with the Wild holding second place in the division and no playoffs were held. The 2020–21 season was then delayed due to the pandemic, with a shortened season held and no Calder Cup playoffs.

Season-by-season results

More information Regular season, Playoffs ...
Regular season Playoffs Average
attendance[8]
Season Games Won Lost OTL SOL Points PCT Goals
for
Goals
against
Standing Year Prelims 1st
round
2nd
round
3rd
round
Finals
2013–147627367667.4411692355th, Midwest2014Did not qualify5,883
2014–157623492250.3291722455th, Midwest2015Did not qualify5,659
2015–167624415659.3881692258th, Central2016Did not qualify5,846
2016–177636317281.5331821966th, Central2017Did not qualify6,019
2017–1876332710682.5392322465th, Central2018Did not qualify6,153
2018–197637268587.5722422303rd, Central2019W, 3–2, MILL, 2–4, CHI6,409
2019–206337184482.6511941712nd, Central2020Season cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic6,351
2020–213417134038.5591071134th, Central2021No playoffs were held3,273[9]
2021–227232314573.5072022096th, Central2022Did not qualify5,435
2022–237234276579.5492112114th, Central2023L, 0–2 RFD6,296
2023–247227374462.4311842456th, Central2024Did not qualify6,401
2024–257227376262.4312012516th, Central2025Did not qualify6,237
Close

Players

Current roster

Updated March 6, 2026.[10]

More information No., Nat ...
No. Nat Player Pos S/G Age Acquired Birthplace Contract
96 Canada Nicolas Aube-Kubel RW R 29 2025 Slave Lake, Alberta Minnesota
19 Canada Caedan Bankier C L 23 2023 White Rock, British Columbia Minnesota
86 Canada Jean-Luc Foudy RW R 23 2025 Scarborough, Ontario Iowa
24 United States Dylan Gambrell C R 29 2025 Bonney Lake, Washington Iowa
6 United States Ben Gleason D L 27 2025 Ortonville, Michigan Minnesota
43 Canada Hunter Haight C R 21 2024 Strathroy, Ontario Minnesota
27 Canada Riley Heidt C L 20 2025 Saskatoon, Saskatchewan Minnesota
31 Slovakia Samuel Hlavaj G L 24 2024 Martin, Slovakia Minnesota
18 Canada Ben Jones (C) C L 27 2024 Waterloo, Ontario Minnesota
23 United States Matt Kiersted (A) D L 27 2025 Elk River, Minnesota Minnesota
95 Finland Rasmus Kumpulainen C L 20 2025 Lahti, Finland Minnesota
7 Canada Carson Lambos D L 23 2023 Winnipeg, Manitoba Minnesota
26 Canada Mark Liwiski C L 24 2025 Dauphin, Manitoba Iowa
10 United States Brad Marek C L 25 2024 Big Rapids, Michigan Minnesota
20 United States Gerry Mayhew RW R 33 2025 Wyandotte, Michigan Iowa
16 United States Jaxon Nelson C R 25 2025 Magnolia, Minnesota Iowa
24 Sweden Oskar Olausson RW L 23 2025 Stockholm, Sweden Minnesota
3 United States Jack Peart D L 22 2024 Grand Rapids, Minnesota Minnesota
40 United States Cal Petersen G R 31 2025 Waterloo, Iowa Minnesota
17 United States Tyler Pitlick (A) C R 34 2025 Minneapolis, Minnesota Minnesota
34 Canada William Rousseau G L 23 2025 Trois-Rivières, Quebec Iowa
13 United States Ryan Sandelin RW R 27 2024 Hermantown, Minnesota Iowa
76 United States Roman Schmidt D R 22 2026 Midland, Michigan Minnesota
21 Czech Republic David Spacek D R 23 2023 Columbus, Ohio Minnesota
4 United States Will Zmolek D R 26 2024 Rochester, Minnesota Iowa
Close

Team captains

Franchise records and leaders

Scoring leaders

These are the top-ten point-scorers for the Iowa Wild in the AHL. Figures are updated after each completed season.[11]

Note: Pos = Position; GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; P/G = Points per game;   = current Iowa player

More information Player, Pos ...
Points
PlayerPosGPGAPtsP/G
Kyle RauC24488111199.81
Sam AnasC25972125197.76
Gerald MayhewRW2289781178.78
Zack MitchellRW2506666132.53
Cal O'ReillyC14231100131.92
Mason ShawC1974378121.61
Brennan MenellD19915101116.58
Adam BeckmanLW1815751108.60
Marco RossiC1163470104.90
Colton BeckLW3194163104.33
Close

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI