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Lakehead Junior Hockey League
Lakehead Junior Hockey League logo
Head Office Thunder Bay, Ontario
Official Web site TBJBHL
Chairman Ray Habel
Vice Chairman Bob Marks
Founded 1994

The Lakehead Junior Hockey League is a Junior "B" league in Ontario, Canada, sanctioned by Hockey Northwestern Ontario and Hockey Canada. The Thunder Bay League has produced one Keystone Cup Western Canada Junior "B" champion and five Brewers Cup Western Canada Junior "C" champions.

History[]

league logo as Thunder Bay Junior B Hockey League

The TBJBHL league has mixed itself in with Juvenile and Midget "AAA" teams in the Thunder Bay region for regular season games. Only the Junior teams are eligible for the playoffs. The league is sometimes referred to as the Thunder Bay Junior B/Juvenile/AAA Hockey League. The playoff champions earn the right to compete for the Keystone Cup, the Western Canadian Junior "B" Crown. This is the only Ontario Junior "B" league with this distinction as the Ontario Hockey Association Junior "B" leagues playoff for the Sutherland Cup and the 22-team Eastern Ontario Junior B Hockey League plays for the D. Arnold Carson Memorial Trophy. The league was renamed during the 2016 offseason from the Thunder Bay Junior B Hockey League to the Lakehead Junior Hockey League.

From 1996 until 2004, the TBJBHL competed against the North of Superior Junior B Hockey League in the Northwestern Ontario Regionals for the right to compete at the Keystone Cup. After the 2003-04 season, the NSHL folded with their last champion, the Wawa Travellers, losing the league's final game in the Regionals to the TBJBHL's Thunder Bay Northern Hawks.

The Fort William Hurricanes, best known for winning the TBJBHL's only Keystone Cup, have announced on their webpage that they are interested in restarting their Junior "B" franchise for the first time since the 2000-01 season. The Hurricanes won four league titles in six years between 1995 and 2000.

1994 Hurricanes[]

The Fort William Hurricanes did not manage to win the league championship in its first year, but it won the league's first National medal. The Westfort Maroons won the league championship, and the Hurricanes played host to the Keystone Cup. The Hurricanes finished the round robin with a 3-1-1 record and lost second place to the North Saskatchewan Junior B Hockey League's Kinistino Tigers do to a head-to-head 4-1 loss. The Hurricanes defeated the North Okanagan Knights of the Kootenay International Junior Hockey League 8-7 to win the Keystone Cup Bronze medal game.

1999 Huricanes[]

The Fort William Hurricanes were 1999 Thunder Bay Jr. League champions. In the Northern Ontario regionals, the Hurricanes were dropped by the Hearst Elans of the North of Superior Junior B Hockey League. Fortunately for the Herks, they were due to host the 1999 Keystone Cup regardless of qualifying. The Hurricanes finished the Keystone Cup round robin in a 3-way tie for second place and a berth into the gold medal game with the Vancouver Island Junior Hockey League's Campbell River Storm and the South Saskatchewan Junior B Hockey League's Assiniboia Southern Rebels. During the robin, the Herks defeated Assiniboia 7-5 and Campbell River 6-4, thus winning the tie breaker. In the final they met the Edmonton Royals of the Capital Junior Hockey League and defeated them 5-3 to win the Keystone Cup. This championship marked the first and so far only Western Canada Jr. B championship since the leagues inception in 1993.

2004 Northern Hawks[]

In the 2004 playoffs, the Thunder Bay Northern Hawks came at out as the dominant champion with a 22-0-2 perfect record and a Thunder Bay Junior B championship to boot. In the Northern Ontario Regional Junior B Hockey Championship, the Northern Hawks defeated the Wawa Travellers 4-games-straight to advance to the Keystone Cup tournament in Schreiber, Ontario. At the Keystone Cup, the Norther Hawks finished with 2 wins, 1 loss, and 2 ties, which earned them a spot in the tournament's bronze medal game. The Hawks fell in the Bronze Medal Game 7-5 to the Heritage Junior B Hockey League's Red Deer Vipers.

2009 Wolverines[]

The K&A Wolverines were awarded the right to host the 2009 Keystone Cup. For the first time in over ten years, a Thunder Bay Junior B team finished the Keystone Cup round robin with a perfect record. The Wolverines, 5-0, went into the final against the Pacific International Junior Hockey League's Richmond Sockeyes, but fell 6-5 in double overtime to take the Silver Medal. The finish was the best performance by a Thunder Bay Junior B club since the 1999 Fort William Hurricanes, who won the Keystone Cup. At the end of the season, the Wolverines jumped to Junior A with the Superior International Junior Hockey League.

2011-12 Northern Hawks[]

The Northern Hawks finished first in the league with a 30-2-0 record. They blasted the Schreiber Falcons 3-games-to-none in a lopsided semifinal playoff series and then defeated the Nipigon Elks 4-games-to-1 to win the Thunder Bay championship in a very hard-fought series. The Northern Hawks shipped out to Saskatoon, Saskatchewan for the 2012 Keystone Cup. Despite leading 3-1 at one point, the Northern Hawks lost their opening game to the Abbotsford Pilots of the Pacific International Junior Hockey League 7-4. The Northern Hawks then went on a tear, defeating the Host Saskatoon Royals 6-3, Keystone Junior Hockey League's Arborg Ice Dawgs 7-5, North West Junior Hockey League's Whitecourt Wolverines 7-4, and the Prairie Junior Hockey League's Pilot Butte Storm 3-1 to earn a berth into the gold medal game with a 4-1-0 record. After four victories in-a-row, the Northern Hawks fell to the Pilots in the gold medal game 9-1.

Teams[]

Team Centre Arena
Current River Storm
(2022-23 expansion)
Current River Current River Arena
Nipigon Elks Nipigon Nipigon Community Centre
Schreiber Falcons Schreiber Schreiber Community Centre
Thunder Bay Bandits Thunder Bay Thunder Bay Tournament Centre
Thunder Bay Northern Hawks Thunder Bay Thunder Bay Tournament Centre

Former teams[]

Playoff Champions[]

Year Champion Finalist Keystone Cup
1994 Westfort Maroons Fort William - Bronze
Westfort - 5th
1995 Fort William Hurricanes
1996 Northwestern Wildcats
1997 Northwestern Wildcats
1998 Fort William Hurricanes DNQ
1999 Fort William Hurricanes Gold
2000 Fort William Hurricanes 4th
2001 Westfort Maroons 5th
2002 Westfort Maroons DNQ
2003 Nipigon Elks 6th
2004 Thunder Bay Northern Hawks 4th
2005 Thunder Bay Northern Hawks Aguasabon River Rats 6th
2006 K&A Wolverines Thunder Bay Northern Hawks 6th
2007 K&A Wolverines Thunder Bay Northern Hawks 5th
2008 K&A Wolverines Thunder Bay Northern Hawks 6th
2009 K&A Wolverines Thunder Bay Northern Hawks K&A - Silver
Northern Hawks - 6th
2010 Thunder Bay Northern Hawks Thunder Bay Stars 6th
2011 Thunder Bay Northern Hawks Thunder Bay Stars 6th
2012 Thunder Bay Northern Hawks Nipigon Elks Silver
2013 Thunder Bay Northern Hawks Nipigon Elks 5th
2014 Thunder Bay Northern Hawks Thunder Bay Stars 4th of 6
2015 Thunder Bay Northern Hawks Thunder Bay Stars 4th of 6
2016 Thunder Bay Northern Hawks Thunder Bay Stars 6th of 6
2017 Nipigon Elks Thunder Bay Northern Hawks 6th of 6
2018 Thunder Bay Northern Hawks Thunder Bay Fighting Walleye Gold, Silver
2019 Thunder Bay Northern Hawks Thunder Bay Fighting Walleye Northern Hawks (Gold),
Fighting Walleye (Silver)
2020 Playoffs Cancelled Keystone Cup Cancelled
2021 Season Cancelled Keystone Cup Cancelled
2022 Thunder Bay Bandits Thunder Bay Northern Hawks
2023 Thunder Bay Northern Hawks Schreiber Falcons

See also[]


This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Lakehead Junior Hockey League. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Ice Hockey Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike License 3.0 (Unported) (CC-BY-SA).


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