Notre Dame Hounds

Former ice hockey team in Wilcox, Saskatchewan From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Notre Dame Hounds were a Canadian Junior A ice hockey team based in Wilcox, Saskatchewan. The team was affiliated with Athol Murray College of Notre Dame, a private boarding school established in 1920 and later renamed after Athol Murray, who directed the school and founded its hockey program. The Hounds were members of the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League and played their home games in Duncan McNeill Arena. The team became national champions in 1988, representing Western Canada and winning the Centennial Cup. The Hounds have also operated successful Minor AAA teams over the course of their history. The Hounds hockey program was notable for producing a number of players who have gone on to National Hockey League careers. The Hounds were relocated to Warman, Saskatchewan in 2025, becoming the Warman Wolverines.

LeagueSJHL
DivisionSherwood
Founded1933 (1933)
Quick facts City, League ...
Notre Dame Hounds
CityWilcox, Saskatchewan
LeagueSJHL
DivisionSherwood
Founded1933 (1933)
Folded2025 (2025)
Home arenaDuncan McNeill Arena
ColoursRed and white
   
Websitenotredame.ca/hockey
Franchise history
1970–1976SJHL (Junior A)
1976–1987Midget AAA (U-18)
1987–2025SJHL
Championships
Regular season titles3 (1987–88, 1988–89, 2001–02)
Playoff championshipsSJHL Champions: 1 (1987–88)
Anavet Cup: 1 (1988)
Centennial Cup: 1 (1988)
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History

Black and white photo of man wearing a black robe and white priest's collar
Athol Murray c.1930.

Establishment

The Notre Dame Hounds were founded by Athol Murray out of the College of Notre Dame, which was renamed after Murray in 1981.[1] Murray moved to Regina from Toronto in 1922, where he had earlier established the Argos sports club, and he brought many students with him to Saskatchewan and founded the Regina Argos program.[1][2] Murray was assigned to Wilcox in 1933 and began teaching at St. Augustine School, which had been established in 1920 by the Sisters of Charity of St. Louis, where he would found the College of Notre Dame in 1933.[2] He brought his love of hockey with him—Murray was known to say, "I love God, Canada, and hockey—not always in that order."[3] Murray coached the team until 1947.[4]

Minor hockey

The Hounds hockey team joined the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League (SJHL) in 1970, although the team struggled to compete and the arrangement last only until 1976. After that, the team operated only as a AAA minor hockey team for more than a decade. In 1980, the team won the national championship, the Air Canada Cup, defeating the Ste. Foy Governors in the final by a score of 5–1.[5] The team returned to the final in 1984, and won the tournament for a second time in 1986, defeating the Toronto Red Wings by a score of 8–5.[6][7] In 1987, the Hounds returned to the final for a fourth time.[8] Despite losing the final, the organization decided to move up a level, returning to Junior A hockey, and the Hounds were promoted back to the SJHL in 1987.[9] After the promotion, the Hounds continued to operate their AAA team, which has gone on to further success, including back-to-back national titles in 2009 and 2010, and a record fifth national championship in 2018.[10][11]

Since the 1990s, the Hounds have also operated a successful AAA girls' team.[12] The team played in the national championships in 2010 and 2011, finishing second in 2010 and winning the 2011 Esso Cup as national champions.[13][14] In 2022, both the boys' and girls' Hounds squads advanced to their respective national championships in the same season for the first time since 2010.[15]

Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League

The Hounds' first season back in the SJHL, 1987–88, would prove to be the most successful in club history, despite most of the players still being under-18s.[16] Coached by Barry MacKenzie and boasting future National Hockey League (NHL) stars Rod Brind'Amour and Curtis Joseph, the team won 53 out of 60 games and defeated the Yorkton Terriers for the SJHL title.[9] The team then swept the Winnipeg South Blues for the right to contest the Western Canadian Abbott Cup title, in which they faced the Calgary Canucks. Despite falling behind three games to one, the Hounds defeated the Canucks in seven games—which included Joseph saving a penalty shot with two seconds remaining in game seven—to win the Abbott Cup and proceed to the Centennial Cup national championship.[8] The Hounds, newly promoted to the Junior A ranks, were the youngest team in the history of the tournament.[17] The Hounds advanced to the tournament final, where they defeated the Halifax Lions by a score of 3–2, with Dwayne Norris scoring the game-winning goal in the third period to secure the national championship.[8] Brind'Amour led the tournament in scoring and was named its most valuable player.[18] In 2013, the 1987–88 Hounds squad was inducted into the Saskatchewan Sports Hall of Fame.[9]

Although the Hounds topped the SJHL standings the following season, they fell short of defending their title. The team's most successful season since 1988 came in 2014–15, when they returned to the league final, losing to the Melfort Mustangs.[19]

The Hounds have been noted for producing a large number of NHL alumni over many decades, such as Brind'Amour, Joseph, Wendel Clark, Vincent Lecavalier, and Morgan Rielly.[20][21] More than one hundred former Hounds have been drafted to the NHL.[1][2] During the 1985–86 NHL season, the Toronto Maple Leafs iced three former Hounds on one line, with the forward grouping of Clark, Gary Leeman, and Russ Courtnall being christened the "Hound Line".[22] As it happened, the three had never played on a line with the Hounds, as Clark played defence until joining the Maple Leafs.[23] The 2015 Stanley Cup Finals between the Chicago Blackhawks and Tampa Bay Lightning featured four Hounds alumni in Lightning coach Jon Cooper and defenceman Braydon Coburn and Blackhawks players Scott Darling and Brad Richards.[24] In addition to NHL draft picks, many Hounds have gone on to play in the American National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA); nineteen members of the 1987–88 team—nearly the entire roster—were given NCAA scholarships.[8]

On February 18, 2025, the SJHL conditionally approved the relocation of the Junior A Hounds to Warman for the 2025-26 hockey season.[25]

Abuse allegations

Since 2021, the Hounds organization has been the subject of allegations of physical and sexual abuse by players who attended Notre Dame College and played hockey there in the 1980s. Todd Tisdale, whose brother Tim had starred for the Hounds in 1986, made the first public allegations in late 2021.[26] Tisdale has described a culture of hazing at the College, and accused officials there of ignoring and enabling physical and sexual violence.[26] Tisdale pursued an apology from the school in the 1990s and in 2018 filed a statement of claim against the school; he re-filed in 2022, adding a second student to the claim.[27] Other students who participated in the program in the 1980s followed suit with public allegations, including Kenny Wray and Jason Duckworth.[28][29]

Season-by-season record (SJHL)

GP = Games Played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, OTL = Overtime Losses, GF = Goals For, GA = Goals Against, P = Points

SeasonGPWLTOTLGFGAPResultsPlayoffs
1970–71353320-10225167th SJHLDid not qualify
1971–723816220-162223288th SJHLLost quarterfinal, 0–4 (Olympics)
1972–734818300-255327165th SJHL SouthDNQ
1973–745019292-207244405th SJHL SouthDNQ
1974–755720361-256332415th SJHL SouthDNQ
1975–76587501-131390156th SJHL SouthDNQ
1987–88605352-3211601081st SJHLWon League
Won ANAVET Cup

Won Abbott Cup
Won Centennial Cup
1988–896444164-338223921st SJHLWon quarterfinal, 4–2 (Americans)
Lost semifinal, 2–4 (Hawks)
1989–906824431-253331496th SJHL SouthDNQ
1990–916831343-265266654th SJHL NorthLost quarterfinal, 0–4 (Terriers)
1991–926432248-259251725th SJHL SouthDNQ
1992–936425318-266259585th SJHL SouthDNQ
1993–946825367-277280575th SJHL SouthLost quarterfinal, 1–4 (Red Wings)
1994–956424364-270275527th SJHL SouthDNQ
1995–966418379-215264455th SJHL SouthLost quarterfinal, 0–4 (Terriers)
1996–976429350-223264583rd SJHL SouthLost quarterfinal, 2–4 (Eagles)
1997–986427316-205203604th SJHL SouthLost quarterfinal, 2–4 (Eagles)
1998–996640206-228179863rd SJHL SouthWon quarterfinal, 4–3 (Terriers)
Lost semifinal, 1–4 (Bruins)
1999–006023289-150181554th SJHL SouthLost quarterfinal, 2–4 (Red Wings)
2000–0162233441173228514th SJHL SherwoodLost quarterfinal, 0–4 (Red Wings)
2001–0264381673245166861st SJHLWon quarterfinal, 4–2 (Red Wings)
Lost semifinal, 1–4 (Broncos)
2002–0360311964203186721st SJHL SherwoodLost quarterfinal, 2–4 (Millionaires)
2003–0460252663202193592nd SJHL SherwoodLost quarterfinal, 1–4 (Red Wings)
2004–0555311770185138693rd SJHL SherwoodLost quarterfinal, 0–4 (Terriers)
2005–0655311752192162692nd SJHL SherwoodWon quarterfinal, 4–0 (Millionaires)
Lost semifinal, 0–4 (Terriers)
2006–07582423011202234594th SJHL SherwoodLost preliminary, 1–4 (Red Wings)
2007–08582035-31762584311th SJHLDNQ
2008–09562333-01922394610th SJHLDNQ
2009–10583220-6178180704th SJHLLost quarterfinal, 0–4 (Klippers)
2010–11582130-71581964911th SJHLDNQ
2011–12582233-3172233475th Sherwood Div
10th SJHL
Lost preliminary round, 0–3 (Bruins)
2012–13542127-6164173483rd Sherwood Div
6th SJHL
Lost quarterfinals, 3–4 (Millionaires)
2013–14562227-7136175514th Kramer Div
9th SJHL
Lost quarterfinals, 1–4 (Terriers)
2014–1556371414165133792nd of 4 Kramer Div
3rd of 12 SJHL
Won quarterfinals, 4–3 (Bombers)
Won semifinals, 4–2 (Klippers)
Lost final, 0–4 (Mustangs)
2015–1658222943163218513rd of 4 Finning Div
9th of 12 SJHL
Lost wildcard, 1–3 (Klippers)
2016–1758262372174167513rd of 4 Finning Div
7th of 12 SJHL
Won wildcard, 3–1 (Mustangs)
Lost quarterfinal, 1–4 (Bombers)
2017–1858292414192174634th of 4 Global Ag Div
8th of 12 SJHL
Lost wildcard, 1–2 (Bombers)
2018–1958252355182186604th of 4 Nutrien Div
9th of 12 SJHL
Lost wildcard, 1–2 (Terriers)
2019–2058183253135192444th of 4 Nutrien Div
10th of 12 SJHL
DNQ
2020–215130113223SJHL season cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic
2021–2258262732193229443rd of 4 Nutrien Div
8th of 12 SJHL
Lost quarterfinal, 1–4 (Bruins)
2022–2358222842176219503rd of 4 Nutrien Div
9th of 12 SJHL
DNQ
2023–2456153920152262324th of 4 Nutrien Div
12th of 12 SJHL
DNQ
2024–2556124022137256284th of 4 Nutrien Div
12th of 12 SJHL
DNQ

1987–88 championship playoffs

Hounds defeated Weyburn Red Wings, 4-games-to-0
Hounds defeated Nipawin Hawks, 4-games-to-0
Hounds defeated Yorkton Terriers, 4-games-to-2 (SJHL Champions)
Hounds defeated Winnipeg South Blues (MJHL), 4-games-to-0 (ANAVET CUP Champions)
Hounds defeated Calgary Canucks (AJHL), 4-games-to-3 (Abbott Cup Champions)
Second in 1988 Centennial Cup round robin (2–1)
Hounds defeated Pembroke Lumber Kings (CJHL), 7–3 in semifinal
Hounds defeated Halifax Lions (MVJHL), 3–2 in final (Centennial Cup Champions)

Notable alumni

Over 215 Hounds alumni have been signed or drafted by an NHL team.[30][31]

See also

References

Further reading

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