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Ice hockey conferences

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Conference Nickname Founded Members (Men/Women) Headquarters Map
Atlantic Hockey Atlantic Hockey 1997 11 (11/none) Haverhill, Massachusetts
Big Ten Big 10 2012 6 (6 /none) Indianapolis, Indiana File:Map - College Hockey - Big Ten states.svg
College Hockey America CHA 1999 [IH 1] 6 (none/6) Haverhill, Massachusetts
ECAC Hockey ECAC 1962 12 (12/12) Albany, New York
Hockey East Hockey East 1984 12 (12/8) [IH 2] Wakefield, Massachusetts
Independents 1 (none/1)
National Collegiate Hockey Conference NCHC 2011 [IH 3] 8 (8/none) Colorado Springs, Colorado
Western Collegiate Hockey Association WCHA 1951 16 (10/8) Denver, Colorado
Notes
  1. ^ College Hockey America was formed in 1999 as a men's-only conference; women's play began in 2002. The men's side of CHA folded after the 2009–10 season.
  2. ^ 12 total members, 9 women's members in 2015 with addition of Merrimack women (Merrimack men are already members)
  3. ^ Although founded in 2011, the NCHC did not begin play until 2013.

Year-by-year record

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Central Hockey League

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Year GP W L RT PTS Finish Playoffs
1996–97 66 32 28 6 70 4th, East Lost in Quarter Finals
1997–98 70 51 13 6 108 1st, East Won Levins Cup
1998–99 70 42 21 7 91 2nd, East Lost in Division Finals
1999–00 70 39 20 11 89 2nd, East Lost Miron Cup Finals
2000–01 70 41 21 8 90 2nd, East Lost Miron Cup Finals

East Coast Hockey League

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Year GP W L RT PTS Finish Playoffs
2001–02 72 24 37 11 59 8th, Southeast Out of playoffs
2002–03 72 25 39 8 58 7th, Southeast Out of playoffs
2003–04 72 41 21 8 82 5th, Central Out of playoffs

Southern Professional Hockey League

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Year GP W L OTL PTS Finish Playoffs
2004–05 56 30 26 - 60 5th Won President's Cup
2005–06 56 34 16 6 74 2nd Lost Quarter Finals
2006–07 56 36 18 2 74 1st Lost Quarter Finals
2007–08 52 22 24 6 50 6th Lost Quarter Finals
2008–09 60 31 22 7 69 2nd Lost Semi-Finals
2009–10 56 22 27 2 48 6th Lost First Round
2010–11 56 29 27 - 58 4th Lost Semi-Finals
2011–12 56 35 16 5 75 2nd Won President's Cup
2012-13 56 28 24 4 60 5th Lost Quarter Round


Sports

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Club Sport League Venue City Titles
Atlanta Braves Baseball National League, Major League Baseball SunTrust Park Cumberland 1995
Gwinnett Stripers Baseball Triple-A International League Coolray Field Lawrenceville
Atlanta Falcons American football National Football League Mercedes-Benz Stadium Atlanta
Atlanta Gladiators Ice hockey ECHL Infinite Energy Center Duluth
Atlanta Hawks Basketball National Basketball Association State Farm Arena Atlanta
Atlanta Dream Basketball Women's National Basketball Association State Farm Arena Atlanta
Atlanta United FC Soccer Major League Soccer Mercedes-Benz Stadium Atlanta 2018

Starting in 2019, College Park will be home of the Hawks' NBA G-League franchise; the team is currently based in Erie, Pennsylvania while an arena is under construction at the Georgia International Convention Center.

Former teams include the Atlanta Flames (now Calgary Flames) and Atlanta Thrashers (now Winnipeg Jets), both of the National Hockey League.

Atlanta also plays host to one Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race each year at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

The Atlanta metropolitan area is also home to three NCAA Division I programs, with the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets and Georgia State Panthers in Atlanta proper and the Kennesaw State Owls in Kennesaw. Both Georgia Tech and Georgia State are members of the Football Bowl Subdivision in the Atlantic Coast Conference and Sun Belt Conference, respectively, while Kennesaw State is a football member of the Big South Conference in the Football Championship Subdivision while its remaining sports are in the non-football Atlantic Sun Conference.

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Mississippi Sea Wolves (FPHL)

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Mississippi Sea Wolves
CityBiloxi, Mississippi
LeagueFPHL (2022–)
DivisionContinental
Founded2022
Home arenaMississippi Coast Coliseum
ColorsRed, Blue, White
     
Owner(s)Barry Soskin
CEOJoe Pace Jr
Head coachJoe Pace Jr.
Websitemississippiseawolves.com

History

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The Mississippi Sea Wolves are a professional hockey team based in Biloxi, Mississippi, and play in the Mississippi Coast Coliseum. The Sea Wolves are members of the FPHL. They are a revival of a team by the same name that played in the ECHL.

In 2021, the Federal Prospects Hockey League hosted three neutral site games in Biloxi. Biloxi Pro Hockey sold 20,163 tickets in the month of December and an announcement was made on December 30 that the Sea Wolves would return in 2022.[1] On April 27, 2022, the team announced Phil Esposito, a former ECHL player and winningest FPHL Head Coach, will serve as the teams first head coach in its FPHL history.[2]

After a 2-9-2 start to their inaugural FPHL season, Esposito was relieved of his duties on November 28, to be replaced by team CEO, Defenseman, and director of Hockey Operations Joe Pace Jr. as interim Head Coach/Player.[3]

Season-by-season results

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League champions Division champions Playoff berth
Season Division Regular season Statistics Postseason results Coach
W L T OTL SOL Pts Pct. GF GA PIM
2022-23 Continental 17 35 4 51 .305 199 304 1324 did not qualify Phil Esposito*

Joe Pace Jr

References

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  1. ^ "Professional hockey team returning full-time to Biloxi". supertalk.fm. January 3, 2022.
  2. ^ "Sea Wolves announce Phil Esposito as new head coach". wlox.com. April 27, 2022.
  3. ^ "News: Mississippi Sea Wolves Release Head Coach Phil Esposito - Mississippi Sea Wolves". www.mississippiseawolves.com. Retrieved 2022-11-28.
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