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Chicago Wolves

American Hockey League team in Rosemont, Illinois

Chicago Wolves

American Hockey League team in Rosemont, Illinois

FieldValue
current2025–26 AHL season
bg_colorbackground:#FFFFFF; border-top:#50000A 5px solid; border-bottom:#FDB813 5px solid;
text_color#000000
teamChicago Wolves
logoChicago Wolves Logo.svg
logo_size205px
cityRosemont, Illinois
leagueAmerican Hockey League
conferenceWestern
divisionCentral
founded1994 (IHL)
arenaAllstate Arena
uniform_image[[File:ECA-Uniform-CHI-AHL.png]]
colorsBurgundy, gold, black, white
ownerDon Levin
coachSpiros Anastas (interim)
gmDarren Yorke
captainJosiah Slavin
mediaMy50
The U
AHL.TV (Internet)
affiliatesCarolina Hurricanes (NHL)
Greensboro Gargoyles (ECHL)
name1Chicago Wolves
dates11994–present
reg_season_titles1 IHL (1999–2000)
1 AHL (2021–22)
division_titles4 IHL (1997–98, 1998–99, 1999–00, 2000–01)
10 AHL (2004–05, 2007–08, 2009–10, 2011–12, 2013–14, 2016–17, 2017–18, 2018–19, 2020–21, 2021–22)
conf_titles3 IHL (1997–98,
1999–00, 2000–01)
5 AHL
(2001–02, 2004–05, 2007–08, 2018–19, 2021–22)
calder_cups3 (2001–02, 2007–08, 2021–22)
turner_cups2 (1997–98, 1999–2000)

The U AHL.TV (Internet) Greensboro Gargoyles (ECHL) 1 AHL (2021–22) 10 AHL (2004–05, 2007–08, 2009–10, 2011–12, 2013–14, 2016–17, 2017–18, 2018–19, 2020–21, 2021–22) 1999–00, 2000–01) 5 AHL (2001–02, 2004–05, 2007–08, 2018–19, 2021–22) The Chicago Wolves are a professional ice hockey team based in Rosemont, Illinois. They are the American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate of the Carolina Hurricanes of the National Hockey League (NHL). The Wolves play home games at the Allstate Arena.

Originally a member of the International Hockey League, the Wolves joined the AHL after the IHL folded in 2001.

History

The Wolves won the Turner Cup twice (1998, 2000) in the IHL and the Calder Cup three times (2002, 2008, and 2022). The Wolves qualified for all but five postseasons (2005–06, 2008–09, 2010–11, 2012–13, and 2015–16 seasons), appearing in eight league championship finals (1998, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2005, 2008, 2019 and 2022) in their 22-year history.

The team's most notable player was forward Steve Maltais, who until his retirement after the 2004–05 season had played every season of the franchise and holds most of its scoring records. Other notable players include goaltender Wendell Young, ex-Pittsburgh star Rob Brown and long time Chicago Blackhawks stars Troy Murray, Chris Chelios and Al Secord. The Wolves had their best season start in their 14-year history, during the 2007–08 season, winning 13 of the first 14 games, with an overtime loss. The Wolves finished the season with 111 points, and first in the Western Conference.

2007–08 Wolves with the Calder Cup

The Wolves were the AHL affiliate of the Atlanta Thrashers from 2001 to 2011. The Thrashers relocated to Winnipeg in June 2011 and added the St. John's IceCaps (formerly the Manitoba Moose) as their new AHL affiliate, leaving the Wolves and the NHL's Vancouver Canucks to find new affiliates. On June 27, 2011, the Wolves and Canucks agreed to a two–year affiliation agreement.

On April 23, 2013, the Wolves and St. Louis Blues reached a three-year affiliation agreement. The deal was struck after the Canucks and Wolves decided not to renew their existing affiliation agreement and purchased the Peoria Rivermen franchise from the Blues creating the Utica Comets. In November 2016, it was first reported the Blues would not renew their affiliation with the Wolves and were planning to move their affiliation to Kansas City for 2017. However, this was unconfirmed and then denied by the announced potential owner in Kansas City, Lamar Hunt Jr., in a press release from his ECHL team in the area, the Missouri Mavericks, and further denied by AHL commissioner, David Andrews, after the January 2017 Board of Governors meeting.

After the 2016–17 season, the Wolves became the first affiliate of the NHL's expansion team, the Vegas Golden Knights. The Blues did not re-sign with the Wolves to be their primary NHL affiliate for the 2017–18 season. However, Blues' general manager Doug Armstrong confirmed they would still send prospects to the Wolves for that season.

2021–22 Wolves with the Calder Cup

During the first season of their affiliation with Vegas, the Wolves set a pair of franchise records in earning points in 14 straight games from December 9 to January 6 and 13 consecutive home wins from December 6 to February 15. In the 2018–19 season, the Wolves made the Calder Cup Finals, in which they lost to the Charlotte Checkers in five games. During the 2019–20 season, the Golden Knights stated it was looking to own and operate its own AHL team in the Las Vegas region in 2020–21, but it would not be the Wolves. The Golden Knights agreed to purchase the San Antonio Rampage franchise and move it to the Las Vegas area as the Henderson Silver Knights. On September 10, 2020, the Wolves announced an affiliation agreement with the Carolina Hurricanes. In addition, the Wolves added a temporary secondary NHL affiliate in the Nashville Predators for the 2020–21 season as the Predators' affiliate, the Milwaukee Admirals, opted out of the COVID-19 pandemic-shortened season. For the 2020–21 season, the teams' home games were at their training facility at the Triphahn Center in Hoffman Estates due to arena restrictions for fans during the pandemic.

During the 2023–24 season, the Wolves played as independent AHL team, becoming the first independent AHL team since the 1994–95 season. On May 2, 2024, the team renewed its affiliation with the Carolina Hurricanes for a three-year term beginning with the 2024–25 season.

On May 6, 2025, the Greensboro Gargoyles, an ECHL expansion team in Greensboro, North Carolina, beginning play in October 2025, announced their affiliation with the Carolina Hurricanes, which in turn aligned them with the Wolves, as the AA farm team. Greensboro was the original home of the Carolina Hurricanes for two years after their move from Hartford, Connecticut, before moving to Raleigh, North Carolina, while waiting for their arena to be constructed.

Television

The Wolves once were the only AHL team with a full television package. As the Chicago Blackhawks' late owner Bill Wirtz had refused to allow Blackhawks home games to be televised locally, the Wolves were viewed and embraced as an alternative; the Wolves took advantage of this, going so far as to promote themselves with the slogan "We Play Hockey The Old-Fashioned Way: We Actually Win". After Judd Sirott served as the team's play-by-play announcer for its first 12 seasons, starting in the 2006–07 season broadcast announcers were long-time Blackhawks commentators Pat Foley and Bill Gardner; Foley ultimately returned to the Blackhawks for the 2008–09 season after Bill Wirtz died and his son Rocky took over the team, reversing many of his father's policies, one of which allowed the Blackhawks' games to be aired locally on TV. Since 2008, Jason Shaver has handled the play-by-play duties for the Wolves, along with Gardner.

Today, select regular-season home games are broadcast on WPWR-TV (My50), and WMEU-CD (The U), and all games are streamed on AHLTV.

Season-by-season results

This is a partial list of the last five seasons completed by the Wolves. For the full season-by-season history, see List of Chicago Wolves seasons

Regular seasonPlayoffsSeasonGamesWonLostOTLSOLPointsPCTGoals
forGoals
againstStandingYearDiv 1st RdDiv SemiDiv FinalsConf. FinalsFinals
2020–21332191245.682132941st, Central2021No playoffs were held
2021–2276501655110.7242611941st, Central2022W, 3–0, RFDW, 3–1, MILW, 4–2, STOW, 4–1, SPR
2022–237235295378.5422272446th, Central2023Did not qualify
2023–247223357760.4171922537th, Central2024Did not qualify
2024–257237314078.5422052234th, Central2025L, 0–2, RFD

Players

Current roster

Updated January 26, 2026.

Team captains

  • Steve Maltais; 1994–96, 1997–2000, 2001–05
  • Troy Murray; 1996–97
  • Kevin Dahl; 2000–01
  • Derek MacKenzie; 2005–06
  • Darren Haydar; 2007–08, 2012–13
  • Jamie Rivers; 2008–09
  • Jason Krog; 2009–11
  • Nolan Baumgartner; 2011–12
  • Taylor Chorney; 2013–14
  • Brent Regner; 2014–15
  • Pat Cannone; 2015–16
  • Chris Butler; 2016–17
  • Paul Thompson; 2017–18
  • Andrew Poturalski; 2021–22
  • Max Lajoie; 2022–23
  • Chris Terry; 2023–24
  • Josiah Slavin; 2024–present

Notable alumni

The following players have played both 100 games for the Wolves and 100 games in the National Hockey League:

  • Niklas Andersson
  • Ivan Barbashev
  • Tim Bergland
  • Jordan Binnington
  • Rob Brown
  • Chris Butler
  • Jordan Caron
  • Dylan Coghlan
  • Kevin Connauton
  • Joey Crabb
  • Kevin Dahl
  • Joe DiPenta
  • Dallas Eakins
  • Joel Edmundson
  • Garnet Exelby
  • Glen Featherstone
  • Kurtis Foster
  • Nicolas Hague
  • Jani Hakanpaa
  • Greg Hawgood
  • Brad Hunt
  • Keegan Kolesar
  • Jason Krog
  • Kari Lehtonen
  • Mackenzie MacEachern
  • Derek MacKenzie
  • Steve Maltais
  • Steve Martins
  • Kip Miller
  • Brian Noonan
  • Scott Pearson
  • Brandon Pirri
  • Dan Plante
  • Paul Postma
  • Jordan Schroeder
  • Al Secord
  • Tom Tilley
  • J.P. Vigier
  • Mike Weaver
  • Zach Whitecloud
  • Wendell Young

Retired numbers

Wolves retired numbers and honored personnel
No.PlayerPositionCareerNo. retirement
1Wendell YoungG1994–2001December 1, 2001
11Steve MaltaisLW1994–2005date=February 3, 2016title=All-Time favorite Chicago Wolves momenturl=https://www.chicagowolves.com/all-time-favorite-chicago-wolves-moment-tournament-bracket-2/url-status=liveaccess-date=February 3, 2017website=Chicago Wolvespublisher=archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190704003311/https://www.chicagowolves.com/all-time-favorite-chicago-wolves-moment-tournament-bracket-2/archive-date=2019-07-04 }}

Team records

Single season

Some of the Wolves banners hanging in the [[Allstate Arena
TypeNumberPlayerSeason
Goals60Steve Maltais1996–97
Assists91Rob Brown1995–96
Points143Rob Brown1995–96
Penalty minutes390Kevin MacDonald1994–95
Hat-tricks5Steve Maltais1996–97
Power play goals27Steve Maltais1995–96 & 1996–97
Short-handed goals7Ben Simon2002–03
Plus–minus+47Arturs Kulda2009–10
Wins38Kari Lehtonen2004–05
Shutouts7Jake Allen2013–14

Career

TypeNumberPlayer
Goals454Steve Maltais
Assists497Steve Maltais
Points951Steve Maltais
Penalty minutes1061Steve Maltais
Hat-tricks18Steve Maltais
Power play goals195Steve Maltais
Short-handed goals21Derek MacKenzie
Game winning goals67Steve Maltais
Games played839Steve Maltais
Wins169Wendell Young
Shutouts16Wendell Young

References

Bibliography

References

  1. (June 27, 2011). "Canucks enter new AHL affiliation agreement with Chicago". [[The Canadian Press]].
  2. (April 23, 2013). "Blues Announce Affiliation with Wolves".
  3. Schaeffer, Brenden. (November 30, 2016). "Report: Blues AHL affiliation to move to Kansas City".
  4. Spedden, Zach. (December 2, 2016). "Missouri Mavericks Deny Reports on AHL and Kansas City".
  5. Timmermann, Tom. (January 31, 2017). "Blue Notes: Reaves moving to third line, at least to start". [[St. Louis Post-Dispatch]].
  6. (May 16, 2017). "WOLVES, GOLDEN KNIGHTS ANNOUNCE PARTNERSHIP".
  7. (May 16, 2017). "Armstrong statement on AHL affiliation".
  8. Hoffman, Samantha. (January 11, 2018). "Gulls Stop Wovles' Point Streak at 14 Games".
  9. (February 15, 2018). "Special Teams Power Wolves to Franchise-Record 13th Consecutive Home Win".
  10. Smith, Michael. (June 8, 2018). "Charlotte Checkers win Calder Cup".
  11. Schoen, David. (January 27, 2020). "Golden Knights looking to buy AHL club and move it to Las Vegas".
  12. Dietz, John. (February 7, 2020). "Golden Knights purchase AHL franchise, Wolves owner confident team will find new NHL partnership".
  13. (September 10, 2020). "Wolves forge partnership with Carolina Hurricanes".
  14. (January 7, 2021). "Wolves take on Predators as second affiliate for 2020-21".
  15. (February 5, 2021). "GAMEDAY: OUR 27TH OPENER!".
  16. (April 5, 2023). "Chicago Wolves To Play As An Independent AHL Team". Pro Hockey Rumors.
  17. (May 2, 2024). "Together Again: Wolves and Canes Forge New Partnership". Chicago Wolves.
  18. (May 6, 2025). "Greensboro Gargoyles Enter into Affiliation Agreement with the NHL's Carolina Hurricanes". Greensboro Gargoyles.
  19. (June 16, 2008). "Pat Foley returns to Hawks".
  20. "Chicago Wolves Roster".
  21. "Chicago Wolves Roster".
  22. (February 3, 2016). "All-Time favorite Chicago Wolves moment".
  23. {{harvnb. Skelnik. 2012
  24. {{harvnb. Skelnik. 2012
  25. LaTour, Paul. (April 19, 2014). "Wolves win AHL's Midwest Division". [[Chicago Tribune]].
  26. (January 27, 2006). "Wolves to retire Maltais' No. 11.(Sports)".
  27. Spellman, Mike. (November 30, 2001). "Ring master Wolves will honor former goalie Young by retiring his No. 1.(Sports)". [[Daily Herald (Arlington Heights).
  28. Shapiro, Mark. (November 7, 2000). "Wolves' Young Blanks Grizzlies". [[Chicago Tribune]].
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