Luleå Swedish champions
Luleå wins their second title in Sweden, 29 years after the first one. Read more»
Did you find any incorrect or incomplete information? Please, let us know.
This club in 2001-2002: ECHL
# | Pos | Player name | State | Born | Height | Weight | Shoots | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
G | Evan Lindsay | ![]() | 15.05.1979 | 185 cm | 89 kg | left | Show profile» | |
G | Colin Zulianello | ![]() | 08.07.1978 | 188 cm | 86 kg | left | Show profile» | |
D | Jim Baxter | ![]() | 24.08.1979 | 189 cm | 87 kg | right | Show profile» | |
D | François Beauchemin | ![]() | 04.06.1980 | 183 cm | 97 kg | left | Show profile» | |
D | Sheldon Brookbank | ![]() | 03.10.1980 | 188 cm | 98 kg | right | Show profile» | |
D | David Cornacchia | ![]() | 13.11.1980 | 177 cm | 101 kg | left | Show profile» | |
D | Jay Leach | ![]() | 02.09.1979 | 193 cm | 98 kg | left | Show profile» | |
D | Eric Lind | ![]() | 12.03.1978 | 185 cm | 88 kg | right | Show profile» | |
D | Jeremy Rebek | ![]() | 08.02.1976 | 179 cm | 88 kg | right | Show profile» | |
C | Jeff Bes | ![]() | 31.07.1973 | 184 cm | 84 kg | left | Show profile» | |
LW | Tommy Bolduc | ![]() | 14.02.1981 | 188 cm | 89 kg | left | Show profile» | |
LW | Francois Fortier | ![]() | 13.06.1979 | 181 cm | 96 kg | left | Show profile» | |
C | Brent Gauvreau | ![]() | 28.06.1980 | 192 cm | 88 kg | right | Show profile» | |
LW | Sergei Kuznetsov | ![]() | 29.01.1980 | 184 cm | 90 kg | left | Show profile» | |
C | Ryan Lauzon | ![]() | 08.10.1980 | 180 cm | 85 kg | left | Show profile» | |
LW | Travis Lisabeth | ![]() | 01.04.1980 | 180 cm | 91 kg | left | Show profile» | |
LW | Jérôme Marois | ![]() | 27.01.1981 | 183 cm | 88 kg | left | Show profile» | |
C | Darren Martens | ![]() | 26.01.1974 | 178 cm | 88 kg | left | Show profile» | |
F | Jay McGee | ![]() | 26.11.1977 | 185 cm | 94 kg | N/A | Show profile» | |
C | Brad Ralph | ![]() | 17.10.1980 | 189 cm | 87 kg | left | Show profile» | |
LW | Michael Ryder | ![]() | 31.03.1980 | 185 cm | 86 kg | right | Show profile» | |
RW | Steffon Walby | ![]() | 22.11.1972 | 185 cm | 86 kg | right | Show profile» |
Coach name | State | Born | Coach position | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Bob Woods | ![]() | 24.01.1968 | Head Coach | Show profile» |
* no longer in the club
The Sea Wolves were founded in 1996 and had considerable success over their 10 seasons in the ECHL. They reached the playoffs in five of their first seven years and a league championship in 1999, when they defeated the Richmond Renegades in a best of seven series to claim the Kelly Cup.
Damages from Hurricane Katrina to the Mississippi Coast Coliseum forced the team to suspend operations for the 2005-06 and 2006-07 seasons under the ECHL's hardship provisions. Hurricane Katrina resulted in extensive damage to the team's home arena, including flood damage to team offices and locker rooms as well as the ice-making equipment and two Zambonis. During the 2006-07 ECHL All-Star Game, the league officially confirmed the Sea Wolves would return in 2007-08.
On March 30, 2009, the Sea Wolves announced that the organization would be suspending operations again for the 2009-10 season, but a little more than a month later the team's management announced that professional hockey would continue to be played on the Mississippi Gulf Coast in the form of the Mississippi Surge in the Southern Professional Hockey League. The Surge played at the Coast Coliseum from the 2009-10 season through 2013-14.
In 2021, the Federal Prospects Hockey League hosted three neutral site games in Biloxi. Biloxi Pro Hockey sold 20,163 tickets in the month of December and an announcement was made on December 30th that the Sea Wolves would return in 2022. On April 27th, 2022 the team announced Phil Esposito, a former ECHL player, will serve as the teams first head coach in its FPHL history.
Mississippi Sea Wolves (ECHL) participates in season 2001-2002: ECHL
Luleå wins their second title in Sweden, 29 years after the first one. Read more»
The Nashville Predators and Pittsburgh Penguins will face off in Stockholm, Sweden, on November 14 and 16, 2025, as part of the NHL Global Series. These games at the renovated Avicii Arena mark the 47th and 48th NHL contests held in ... Read more»