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1964–65 MJHL season
Manitoba ice hockey season
Manitoba ice hockey season
Jimmy Dunn was hired as commissioner of the Manitoba Junior Hockey League (MJHL) in May 1964. The league had been reduced to four teams based in the Greater Winnipeg area after the withdrawal of the Brandon Wheat Kings and the Fort Frances Royals. The MJHL transitioned from a draft of players in the Greater Winnipeg Minor Hockey Association, into a system where each team chose players from a set geographic district. The new "zoning" arrangement was planned to be in effect for three seasons to stimulate more localized interest in junior hockey and aimed to keep teammates together from the minor hockey level to the junior hockey level. Dunn supported the change and noted that the concept had produced forward lines on previous Memorial Cup championship teams from Winnipeg. The Charlie Gardiner Memorial Trophy series was revived as a preseason tournament for the league's teams. Dunn reached an agreement to televise MJHL games on CJAY-TV, and the league experimented with playing games on Sunday evenings instead of afternoons to increase its attendance and avoid competing with televised football games. Dunn requested to the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association (CAHA) that the MJHL waive its bye into the Abbott Cup finals and its playoffs champion meet the Thunder Bay Junior A Hockey League champion in the first round. He felt that the loss of gate receipts from a bye was a financial hardship for the MJHL, and shorten the league's playoffs to accommodate the change approved by the CAHA.
Champion
On March 31, 1965, at the Winnipeg Arena, the Winnipeg Braves captured the MJHL championship and Turnbull Memorial Trophy.
League notes
Brandon Wheat Kings transfer to the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League, and Fort Frances Royals transfer to the Thunder Bay Junior Hockey League.
The St. Boniface Canadiens change their name to the Winnipeg Warriors.
The League announced that the Manitoba - Saskatchewan all-star game has been cancelled.
League shortens 48 game schedule, no reason given.
Regular season
| League Standings | GP | W | L | T | Pts | GF | GA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Winnipeg Braves | 44 | 26 | 13 | 5 | 57 | 184 | 140 |
| Winnipeg Rangers | 45 | 21 | 18 | 6 | 48 | 202 | 170 |
| Winnipeg Monarchs | 45 | 19 | 21 | 5 | 43 | 159 | 165 |
| Winnipeg Warriors | 44 | 13 | 27 | 4 | 30 | 152 | 222 |
Playoffs
Semi-Finals :Rangers lost to Monarchs 3-games-to-2 Turnbull Cup Championship :Braves defeated Monarchs 4-games-to-none Western Memorial Cup Semi-Final :Braves defeated Port Arthur North Stars (TBJHL) 4-games-to-1 Western Memorial Cup Final (Abbott Cup) :Braves lost to Edmonton Oil Kings (CAHL) 4-games-to-2
Awards
| Trophy | Winner | Team | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MVP | ||||
| Top Goaltender | ||||
| Rookie of the Year | ||||
| Sportsmanship Award | ||||
| Scoring Champion | ||||
| Most Goals |
All-Star teams
| First All-Star Team | Second All-Star Team |
|---|---|
| Goaltender | Wayne Stephenson |
| Defencemen | Al Dylcer |
| Jim Lane | Winnipeg Rangers |
| Centreman | Ken Sucharski |
| Leftwinger | Doug Overton |
| Rightwinger | Bill Cooper |
| Goaltender | Gary Thornton |
| Defencemen | Mike Kolody |
| Brian Dyck | Winnipeg Braves |
| Centreman | Bill Heindl Jr. |
| Leftwinger | Dunc Rousseau |
| Rightwinger | George Anderson |
References
- Manitoba Junior Hockey League
- Manitoba Hockey Hall of Fame
- Hockey Hall of Fame
- Winnipeg Free Press Archives
- Brandon Sun Archives
References
- (May 16, 1964). "MJHL zones city; hires Jimmy Dunn". Winnipeg Tribune.
- (September 17, 1964). "Juniors revive trophy series". Winnipeg Tribune.
- (October 23, 1964). "Open Sunday". Winnipeg Free Press.
- (January 25, 1965). "MJHL waives bye into western final". Winnipeg Tribune.
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