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2024–25 AJHL season
2024–25 AJHL season
Alberta Junior Hockey League
Ice hockey
Pre-seasonAugust - SeptemberRegular seasonSeptember - MarchPost-seasonMarch - April
324
12
231,940
Calgary Canucks
Grande Prairie Storm
Calgary Canucks
Melfort Mustangs
The 2024–25 AJHL season was the 61st season of the Alberta Junior Hockey League (AJHL). Competition began on 24 August 2024 with a 35-game exhibition season, followed by a 54-game regular season which ran from 13 September 2024 to 15 March 2025. The Calgary Canucks finished the regular season in first place overall, and went on to win the AJHL championship Inter Pipeline Cup and the national championship 2025 Centennial Cup. The Canucks hosted the national championship as well as the 2024 AJHL showcase.
Whitecourt Wolverines goaltender, Zac Onyskiw, was named most valuable player by the AJHL and the CJHL. The CJHL is made up of nine Junior A leagues (including the AJHL) from across Canada. Onyskiw finished the regular season with a 1.87 goals against average (GAA) and a save percentage of .939. Onyskiw and his teammate, Elliott Pratt, received the AJHL's top team goaltenders award, which is presented every year to the goalies whose team has the lowest GAA in the regular season. Pratt had a GAA of 2.56 and a .911 save percentage. The Wolverines finished the regular season with an overall GAA of 2.29.
Drumheller Dragons forward, Easton Daneault, was named rookie of the year by both the AJHL and the CJHL.
The league extended its pilot program of video goal review in select arenas that began in the 2023–24 season.
The governing body, Hockey Canada, and its four western regional affiliates – BC Hockey, Hockey Alberta, Hockey Saskatchewan and Hockey Manitoba – will pilot the Western Canadian Development Model (WCDM). Under the WCDM, junior leagues will adopt most of the Western Hockey League rulebook, excluding some sections, and restrictions on 15-year-old affiliate players in the Western Hockey League will be loosened. Players that will be 18-years of age or older in the calendar year will be allowed to choose whether to use full-face protection or half-face protection, whilst younger players will be required to use full-face protection.
The Devon Xtreme joined the league as an expansion team, bringing the total number of teams to 12. The team plays its home games in the Dale Fisher Arena, which opened in September 2024. The team hired Kelly Buchberger to be its general manager and head coach.
Similar to in years past, teams were organized into a North Division and a South Division. The surprise mid-season departure of five teams during the 2023–24 season — namely the Sherwood Park Crusaders and Spruce Grove Saints from the North Division and the Blackfalds Bulldogs, Brooks Bandits and Okotoks Oilers from the South Division — led to the consolidation of what was left of the divisions into a single unit for the remainder of the season. The updated divisional structure for this season is as follows:
Division
Team
Home
Arena
Bonnyville Pontiacs
Bonnyville
R. J. Lalonde Arena
Devon Xtreme
Devon
Dale Fisher Arena
Fort McMurray Oil Barons
Fort McMurray
Centerfire Place
Grande Prairie Storm
Grande Prairie
Bonnetts Energy Centre
Lloydminster Bobcats
Lloydminster
Centennial Civic Centre
Whitecourt Wolverines
Whitecourt
Scott Safety Centre
Calgary Canucks
Calgary
Ken Bracko Arena
Camrose Kodiaks
Camrose
EnCana Arena
Canmore Eagles
Canmore
Canmore Recreation Centre
Drayton Valley Thunder
Drayton Valley
Drayton Valley Omni-Plex
Drumheller Dragons
Drumheller
Drumheller Memorial Arena
Olds Grizzlys
Olds
Olds & District Sports Complex
A 35-game exhibition season ran from 24 August to 7 September 2024.
Teams played six matches against each of the teams in their division and four matches against each of the teams in the other division. The regular season schedule included 12 games played as part of the 2024 AJHL Showcase, an event that brings all of the teams to the host city to play in front of an audience of coaches and scouts from the NHL, CHL and collegiate institutions. It was the 18th annual showcase and it took place from 25 to 27 September 2024 in Calgary.
Rank
Team
GP
W
L
OTL
SOL
Pts
1
Whitecourt Wolverines
54
36
12
3
3
78
2
Grande Prairie Storm
54
30
17
1
6
67
3
Lloydminster Bobcats
54
31
19
1
3
66
4
Fort McMurray Oil Barons
54
24
26
3
1
52
5
Bonnyville Pontiacs
54
20
30
1
3
44
6
Devon Xtreme
54
11
39
2
2
26
Rank
Team
GP
W
L
OTL
SOL
Pts
1
Calgary Canucks
54
37
13
2
2
78
2
Canmore Eagles
54
35
12
5
2
77
3
Drumheller Dragons
54
30
16
3
5
68
4
Camrose Kodiaks
54
32
18
4
0
68
5
Drayton Valley Thunder
54
23
24
4
3
53
6
Olds Grizzlys
54
15
38
1
0
31
Inter Pipeline Cup
21 March – 23 April
8
Calgary Canucks
Calgary Canucks
Grande Prairie Storm
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33
235 (7.12 per game)
37,643 (1,141 per game)
2025 AJHL playoffs
At the end of the regular season, the top 4 teams from each division competed in the post-season for the league championship Inter Pipeline Cup. The format consisted of three play-off rounds. In the first and second rounds, teams competed within their respective divisions. The winners in each round were determined by a best-of-7 series, with the winners advancing to the next round, and the losers being eliminated from competition.
02:28 - 2power play 09:49 - 3power play 13:07 - 4shorthanded 14:07 - 516:13 - 617:12 - 7
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power play 10:45 - 1
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1 - 14:45 power play
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Third period
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power play 19:39 - 2
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13:41 - 3empty net 18:44 - 4
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Column 1
Column 2
Drumheller Dragons win 4-3
The first-place Calgary Canucks defeated the fourth-place Camrose Kodiaks in five games to one to advance to the semifinal.
19:14 - 1
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No scoring
12:17 - 2
Second period
1 - 03:10
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Third period
2 - 10:073 - 11:204 - 18:52 empty net
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1 - 03:28 power play2 - 07:253 - 09:004 - 18:43
power play 15:48 - 1power play 19:16 - 2
Second period
5 - 11:56
power play 16:14 - 317:46 - 4
Third period
6 - 02:247 - 14:35 power play8 - 15:479 - 16:52
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Second period
4 - 07:29 power play5 - 19:46
power play 07:44 - 319:25 - 4
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No scoring
13:43 - 1
First period
1 - 10:132 - 13:04 power play
02:18 - 2
Second period
No scoring
03:28 - 313:51 - 415:37 - 5
Third period
No scoring
04:57 - 110:30 - 2
First period
1 - 10:58 power play2 - 17:57
No scoring
Second period
3 - 14:32
No scoring
Third period
4 - 03:305 - 18:48 empty net
Column 1
Column 2
Calgary Canucks win 4-1
The Grande Prairie Storm, after finishing the regular season in 2nd place in the North division, swept the first-place Whitecourt Wolverines to advance to the final.
Each team played each other team in their group once during the round robin phase. Three points were awarded for a win in regulation time, two points for a win in overtime or shootout, one point for a loss in overtime or shootout, and no points were awarded for a loss in regulation time.
The Trenton Golden Hawks and the Calgary Canucks, who placed first in their respective groups, had a bye in the quarterfinal round and advanced to the semifinals. The Canucks faced the Nationals, and the Golden Hawks faced the Mustangs. The Canucks had previously lost to the Nationals by a score of 7–2 in the preliminary round. By the 2nd period of the semifinal, the Nationals were winning, 2–0, and by the end of 3rd period, the score was tied, 2-2. The Canucks scored the game-winning goal in overtime to advance to the final.
The final was between the Canucks and the Mustangs. Notably, it was the Mustangs who eliminated the Canucks at the 2024 Centennial Cup in the semifinal, before losing in the final. This time, however, the Canucks defeated the Mustangs, 7–2, to win the championship Centennial Cup.
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