Powassan Voodoos

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Powassan Voodoos
CityPowassan, Ontario
LeagueNorthern Ontario Junior Hockey League
Founded2014
Home arenaPowassan Sportsplex
ColoursDark green, yellow, black, and red
     
OwnersJim & Graeme Bruce, Ray Seguin
General managerChris Dawson
Head coachPeter Goulet
Championships
Playoff championships1: 2017

The Powassan Voodoos are a Canadian junior "A" ice hockey team based out of Powassan, Ontario. They are members of the Northern Ontario Junior Hockey League and play their home games at the Powassan Sportsplex.

The Voodoos were founded in 2014. The arrival of the team marked the return of junior hockey to Powassan for the first time since 1994, when the Powassan Hawks departed for Sturgeon Falls. The team signed an agreement with the North Bay Battalion of the Ontario Hockey League to serve as an official feeder to this squad.[1] The team adopted a logo featuring a CF-101 Voodoo jet fighter and a roundel similar to the Royal Canadian Air Force's. Scott Wray, a fifteen-year veteran who skated mainly in the ECHL was chosen as head coach. During the 2014–15 season, the Voodoos' first in the league, the club finished with a 15–29–0–8 record.

In only their second year of operation the Voodoos claimed their first regular season Division Championship. In their third year the team repeated as regular season division champions and added the overall regular season league champions and they swept the Blind River Beavers in four games in the finals to advance to the Dudley Hewitt Cup. They finished the round-robin with a record of 1–2–0 and advanced to the semifinals, which they lost to the Georgetown Raiders with a score of 2–1.

Prior to the 2017–18 season, Scott Wray was promoted to an assistant coach position with the North Bay Battalion[2] and Beau Moyer was hired as the team's second head coach.[3] However, he would be fired from the team during the season on 29 January following a league imposed suspension after he had violated a league rule involving drinking with a few players.[4] Both Moyer and his father, who was present in the hotel bar, cited that they had not invited the players to the bar, who were of legal drinking age, but that the players came to the bar on their own and then joined the coaches. After Moyer was fired, assistant coach Bruce Cazabon became the interim coach.[5] Max Gavin was hired as the head coach for the 2018–19 season. Gavin left the team in August 2020 and was not immediately replaced during the COVID-19 pandemic that had curtailed the previous season.[6] Former Hearst Lumberjacks' head coach Mark Lafleur was hired as coach for the 2021–22 season.[7]

Season-by-season records

Statistics
SeasonGPWLTOTLGFGAPtsRegular seasonPlayoffs
2014–1552152908217262384th in division
7th overall
Won first round against Mattawa (2:)
Won quarterfinal against Kirkland Lake (4:2)
Lost semifinal against Cochrane (4:0)
2015–1654401013278137842nd in division
3rd overall
Lost quarterfinal against Kirkland (4:2)
2016–175646712271121951st in division
1st overall
Won quarterfinal against Kirkland Lake (4:0)
Won semifinal against Timmins (4:0)
Won final against Blind River (4:0)
2017–185645731299171941st in division
1st overall
Lost quarterfinal against Timmins (4:2)
2018–1956331904206172703rd in division
4th overall
Won quarterfinal against Kirkland Lake (4:2)
Lost semifinal against Hearst (4:0)
2019–205645902264141921st in division
1st overall
Postseason cancelled
2020–21Leave of absence[8]
2021–2248301161184145673rd in division
5th overall
Lost quarterfinal against Hearst (4:2)
2022–2358372010225171753rd in division
6th overall
Won quarterfinal against Hearst (4:2)
Lost semifinal against Timmins (4:0)
2023–2458361912253183753rd in division
6th overall
Won quarterfinal against Hearst (4:1)
Won semifinal against Timmins (4:3)
Lost final against Greater Sudbury (4:1)
2024–2552222505161177497th overallLost quarterfinal against Hearst (4:0)
2025–2652361312251149752nd overallLost quarterfinal against Soo Eagles (4:0)

Source: "Powassan Voodoos statistics and history". hockeydb.com. Retrieved 8 April 2026.

Dudley Hewitt Cup

Central Canada Championships
NOJHLOJHLSIJHL – Host
Round robin play with second vs. third in semifinal to advance against first in the finals.

YearRound RobinRecordStandingSemifinalChampionship
2017L, (Trenton Golden Hawks) 1–5
W, (Dryden Ice Dogs) 4–3
L, (Georgetown Raiders) 2–5
1–2–03rd of 4L, (Georgetown Raiders) 1–2

References

Further reading

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