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Quebec Remparts

Junior ice hockey team in Quebec City, Quebec

Quebec Remparts

Summary

Junior ice hockey team in Quebec City, Quebec

FieldValue
teamQuebec Remparts
Remparts de Québec
bg_colourbackground:#FFFFFF; border-top:#C60C30 5px solid; border-bottom:#000000 5px solid;
text_colour#000000
logoQuebec Remparts.svg
logo_size200px
cityQuebec City, Quebec
leagueQuebec Maritimes Junior Hockey League
conferenceEastern
divisionEast
founded1969 (original)
1997 (revived)
arenaCentre Vidéotron
coloursRed, white, black
championshipsMemorial Cup champions (1971, 2006, 2023)
QMJHL champions (1970, 1971, 1973, 1974, 1976, 2023)
gmSimon Gagné
coachÉric Veilleux
websitehttp://www.remparts.ca/
name1Beauport Harfangs
dates11990–1997
name2Quebec Remparts
dates21997–present
altname1Quebec Remparts
altdates11969–1985
altname2Longueuil Collège Français
altdates21988–1991
altname3Verdun Collège Français
altdates31991–1994

Remparts de Québec 1997 (revived)

QMJHL champions (1970, 1971, 1973, 1974, 1976, 2023)

The Quebec Remparts () are a Canadian junior ice hockey based in Quebec City, Quebec. The team plays in the Quebec Maritimes Junior Hockey League (QMJHL), and is named after the Ramparts of Quebec City (). There have been two franchises named the Quebec Remparts. The first edition played from 1969 to 1985; the current franchise has played since 1997. The current team plays at Centre Vidéotron.

Original Remparts

The original Quebec Remparts team was founded in 1969 by a group of investors who purchased the assets of the junior Quebec Aces team. Some of the new owners included Paul Dumont, and Gérard Bolduc. The Remparts took up residence in the same arena as the Aces in the Colisée de Québec. The Remparts were finalists for the George Richardson Memorial Trophy in 1969–70, and eastern Canadian champions in 1970–71. It was this team, which featured future Hockey Hall of Famer Guy Lafleur, that won a Memorial Cup championship in 1971. The team also won the President's Cup five times. Gilles Courteau was the general manager of the Remparts from 1980 to 1985.

After the 1984–85 season, the team went into dormancy for three seasons before being resurrected. After returning to play, then-sponsored by "Le Collège Français", the team moved to Longueuil to become the Longueuil Collège Français. The team played for three seasons before moving to Verdun in 1991 to become the Verdun Collège Français. The franchise ceased operations in 1994.

Revived Remparts

The current Remparts franchise was granted for the 1990–91 season and was known as the Beauport Harfangs, a suburb in the Quebec City metropolitan area. In 1997 the team moved to Quebec City, playing two seasons at PEPS on the campus of Laval University between 1997 and 1999. In 1999 the team moved into the Colisée de Québec.

On May 28, 2006, the Remparts won the Memorial Cup, beating the Moncton Wildcats 6–2 in the finals. Then-head coach Patrick Roy became the seventh coach to win the Cup in his first year as head coach, and the first to do so since Claude Julien of the Hull Olympiques in 1997. It was also the first time in Memorial Cup history that the finals involved two teams from the QMJHL. Quebec also won the Cup without winning a League championship and without hosting the event, another first in Memorial Cup history.

Remparts centre ice at Centre Vidéotron

On November 27, 2014, the Remparts were sold to Quebecor for an estimated price between $20 million and $25 million. The Remparts were chosen to be the host of the 2015 Memorial Cup. They defeated the Rimouski Océanic in tie-breaker 5-2, but were eliminated by the Kelowna Rockets in the semi-finals 9-3. The team moved to Centre Vidéotron on September 12, 2015.

On June 4, 2023, the Remparts won the Memorial Cup, beating the Seattle Thunderbirds 5–0 in the championship game; head coach Patrick Roy had previously announced that this was his last year as head coach, thus completing the book end to his first year Cup win.

NHL alumni

;Original Remparts Michel Goulet, and Guy Lafleur have been inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame.

  • Pierre Aubry
  • Rick Bowness
  • Stéphane Brochu
  • Mario Brunetta
  • Nelson Burton
  • Guy Chouinard
  • Réal Cloutier
  • Alain Côté
  • Sylvain Côté
  • André Doré
  • Gaétan Duchesne
  • Peter Folco
  • Eddy Godin
  • Michel Goulet
  • Richard Grenier
  • Val James
  • Michel Lachance
  • Pierre Lacroix
  • Guy Lafleur
  • Jean-Marc Lanthier
  • Kevin Lowe
  • Gilles Lupien
  • Mario Marois
  • Pat Mayer
  • Gilles Meloche
  • Rich Nantais
  • Paul Pageau
  • Dave Pichette
  • Jacques Richard
  • Mario Roberge
  • Serge Roberge
  • Normand Rochefort
  • Roberto Romano
  • André Savard
  • Jean Savard
  • Martin Simard
  • Gaston Therrien
  • Vincent Tremblay

;Modern Remparts

  • Maxim Balmochnykh
  • Zachary Bolduc
  • Eric Chouinard
  • Louis Crevier
  • Jean-Philippe Côté
  • Cédrick Desjardins
  • Louis Domingue
  • Anthony Duclair
  • Gordie Dwyer
  • Adam Erne
  • Simon Gagné
  • Alexandre Grenier
  • Martin Grenier
  • Mikhail Grigorenko
  • Josh Hennessy
  • Aaron Johnson
  • Juraj Kolnik
  • Nikita Kucherov
  • Kristian Kudroc
  • Philipp Kurashev
  • Guillaume Lefebvre
  • James Malatesta
  • Jonathan Marchessault
  • Maxime Ouellet
  • Alexander Radulov
  • Mike Ribeiro
  • Kirill Safronov
  • Logan Shaw
  • Timofei Shishkanov
  • Jordan Smotherman
  • Antoine Vermette
  • Marc-Édouard Vlasic

Playoffs

Season1st round2nd round3rd roundFinals
1997–98W, 4–0, Cape Breton2–2, round-robin, Rimouski/MonctonL, 2–4, Rimouski-
1998–99ByeW, 4–3, RimouskiL, 2–4, Acadie–Bathurst-
1999–2000W, 4–0, Cape BretonL, 3–4, Moncton--
2000–01L, 0–4, Acadie–Bathurst---
2001–02W, 4–0, ChicoutimiL, 1–4, Acadie–Bathurst--
2002–03W, 4–2, MonctonL, 1–4, Baie-Comeau--
2003–04L, 1–4, P.E.I.---
2004–05W, 4–3, VictoriavilleL, 2–4, Chicoutimi--
2005–06W, 4–1, Val-d'OrW, 4–1, ShawiniganW, 4–3, Acadie–BathurstL, 2–4, Moncton
2006–07L, 1–4, Drummondville---
2007–08W, 4–2, ChicoutimiL, 2–4, Gatineau--
2008–09W, 4–1, Baie-ComeauW, 4–3, Cape BretonL, 1–4, Shawinigan-
2009–10W, 4–1, Acadie–BathurstL, 0–4, Victoriaville--
2010–11W, 4–0, Val-d'OrW, 4–3, ShawiniganL, 3–4, Gatineau-
2011–12W, 4–0, DrummondvilleL, 3–4, Halifax--
2012–13W, 4–2, ChicoutimiL, 1–4, Rouyn-Noranda--
2013–14L, 1–4, Rouyn-Noranda---
2014–15W, 4–3, Cape BretonW, 4–0, CharlottetownW, 4–0, MonctonL, 3–4, Rimouski
2015–16L, 0–4, Gatineau---
2016–17L, 0–4, Acadie–Bathurst---
2017–18L, 3–4, Charlottetown---
2018–19L, 3–4, Halifax---
2019–20playoffs cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic
2020–21W, 3–0, DrummondvilleL, 0–3, Chicoutimi--
2021–22W, 3–0, ChicoutimiW, 3–1, RimouskiL, 2–3, Shawinigan-
2022–23W, 4–0, CharlottetownW, 4–0 RimouskiW, 4–0, GatineauW, 4–2, Halifax
2023–24Out the playoffs
2024–25L, 0–4, Moncton---

References

References

  1. [http://en.remparts.ca/page/histoirymain www.remparts.qc.ca]
  2. (1991). "INTRONISÉS EN 1991".
  3. "Gérard Bolduc".
  4. (2016). "Intronisés en 2016".
  5. Ken Campbell. (November 27, 2014). "Quebec Remparts sold for between $20 million and $25 million: Source".
Wikipedia Source

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