1981 Air Canada Cup
Tournament details | |
---|---|
Dates | April 14 – 19, 1981 |
Teams | 12 |
Venue(s) | Halifax Metro Centre in Halifax, NS |
Final positions | |
Champions | Lions du Lac St-Louis |
Runner-up | Kitchener Greenshirts |
Third place | Antigonish Novas |
Scoring leader(s) | Normand Lacombe |
MVP | Dale Derkatch |
← 1980 1982 → |
The 1981 Air Canada Cup was Canada's third annual national midget 'AAA' hockey championship, which was played April 14 – 19, 1981 at the Halifax Metro Centre in Halifax, Nova Scotia. The Lions du Lac St-Louis won their first national championship, defeating the Kitchener Greenshirts in the gold medal game. The Antigonish Novas from Nova Scotia won the bronze medal. Future National Hockey League players competing in this tournament were Lyndon Byers, Bobby Dollas, Normand Lacombe, Gary Leeman, Darryl Reaugh, Mike Tomlak and Brad Shaw.[1]
Teams
Result | Team | Branch | City |
Lions du Lac St-Louis | Quebec | Dollard-des-Ormeaux, QC | |
Kitchener Greenshirts | Ontario | Kitchener, ON | |
Antigonish Novas | Nova Scotia | Antigonish, NS | |
4 | Current River Comets | Thunder Bay District | Thunder Bay, ON |
5 | Notre Dame Hounds | Saskatchewan | Wilcox, SK |
6 | Gloucester Rangers | Ottawa District | Gloucester, ON |
7 | Calgary Northstars | Alberta | Calgary, AB |
8 | North River Atlantic Insulators | Prince Edward Island | North River, PE |
9 | M.N.S. Stars | Manitoba | Winnipeg, MB |
10 | Saint John Pepsi | New Brunswick | Saint John, NB |
11 | Corner Brook | Newfoundland | Corner Brook, NL |
12 | Prince George Kings | British Columbia | Prince George, BC |
Round Robin
DC8 Flight
Standings
Scores
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DC9 Flight
Standings
Scores
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Playoffs
Quarter-Finals
- Antigonish 5 - Gloucester 3
- Lac St-Louis 8 - Calgary 2
- Current River 7 - North River 6
- Kitchener 5 - Notre Dame 2
Semi-Finals
- Lac St-Louis 3 - Antigonish 2
- Kitchener 6 - Current River 0
Bronze Medal Game
- Antigonish 9 - Current River 3
Gold Medal Game
- Lac St-Louis 7 - Kitchener 2
Individual Awards
- Most Valuable Player: Dale Derkatch (Notre Dame)
- Top Scorer: Normand Lacombe (Lac St-Louis)
- Top Forward: Dale Derkatch (Notre Dame)
- Top Defenceman: Calvin Fraser (Antigonish)
- Top Goaltender: James Falle (Gloucester)
- Most Sportsmanlike Player: Mike Vinsky (M.N.S.)
See also
References
- ↑ "Greenshirts turned red-faced after losing final to Quebec", Regina Leader-Post, p. 23, 1981-04-20, retrieved 2013-04-26
External links
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