Luleå Swedish champions
Luleå wins their second title in Sweden, 29 years after the first one. Read more»
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This club in 2018-2019: ECHL
# | Pos | Player name | State | Born | Height | Weight | Shoots | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
33 | G | Kaden Fulcher | ![]() | 23.09.1998 | 180 cm | 70 kg | N/A | Show profile» |
35 | G | Trevor Gorsuch | ![]() | 11.07.1994 | 188 cm | 96 kg | left | Show profile» |
1 | G | Jeff Lerg | ![]() | 09.04.1986 | 167 cm | 70 kg | left | Show profile» |
30 | G | Pat Nagle | ![]() | 21.09.1987 | 188 cm | 76 kg | left | Show profile» |
D | Theo Calvas | ![]() | 06.08.1998 | 195 cm | 97 kg | right | Show profile» | |
D | Marcus Crawford | ![]() | 21.03.1997 | 180 cm | 90 kg | right | Show profile» | |
D | Ben Danford | ![]() | 17.05.1989 | 183 cm | 84 kg | right | Show profile» | |
D | Sean Federow | ![]() | 20.04.1992 | 188 cm | 95 kg | left | Show profile» | |
D | Randy Gazzola | ![]() | 13.09.1993 | 191 cm | 99 kg | right | Show profile» | |
D | Trevor Hamilton | ![]() | 17.03.1995 | 183 cm | 86 kg | right | Show profile» | |
D | Brenden Kotyk | ![]() | 27.08.1991 | 196 cm | 102 kg | right | Show profile» | |
D | Kevin Lohan | ![]() | 01.10.1993 | 196 cm | 98 kg | right | Show profile» | |
D | Michael Moffat | ![]() | 12.06.1993 | 185 cm | 94 kg | left | Show profile» | |
D | Ryan Obuchowski | ![]() | 07.06.1992 | 185 cm | 84 kg | left | Show profile» | |
D | Matthew Register | ![]() | 14.08.1989 | 188 cm | 88 kg | left | Show profile» | |
D | Zane Schartz | ![]() | 20.06.1994 | 185 cm | 85 kg | left | Show profile» | |
D | Connor Schmidt | ![]() | 21.10.1993 | 180 cm | 79 kg | right | Show profile» | |
D | Mackenze Stewart | ![]() | 08.10.1995 | 190 cm | 108 kg | left | Show profile» | |
D | Ben Storm | ![]() | 30.03.1994 | 199 cm | 98 kg | left | Show profile» | |
D | Kevin Tansey | ![]() | 22.02.1993 | 193 cm | 102 kg | left | Show profile» | |
D | Samuel Thibault | ![]() | 30.06.1996 | 185 cm | 87 kg | left | Show profile» | |
D | Zach Urban | ![]() | 06.11.1993 | 187 cm | 82 kg | right | Show profile» | |
F | Shane Berschbach | ![]() | 19.06.1991 | 173 cm | 68 kg | left | Show profile» | |
LW | Félix Chamberland | ![]() | 15.01.1994 | 183 cm | 82 kg | left | Show profile» | |
F | Chris Crane | ![]() | 02.12.1991 | 185 cm | 88 kg | right | Show profile» | |
RW | Dan DeSalvo | ![]() | 06.03.1992 | 173 cm | 78 kg | right | Show profile» | |
F | Brett D’Andrea | ![]() | 02.01.1994 | 185 cm | 84 kg | left | Show profile» | |
C | Zachary Gallant | ![]() | 06.03.1999 | 188 cm | 87 kg | left | Show profile» | |
C | Abbott Girduckis | ![]() | 28.06.1995 | 188 cm | 86 kg | right | Show profile» | |
C | T.J. Hensick | ![]() | 10.12.1985 | 178 cm | 84 kg | right | Show profile» | |
F | A.J. Jenks | ![]() | 27.06.1990 | 188 cm | 93 kg | left | Show profile» | |
C | Justin Kea | ![]() | 07.02.1994 | 195 cm | 98 kg | right | Show profile» | |
RW | Daniel Leavens | ![]() | 26.06.1993 | 187 cm | 91 kg | right | Show profile» | |
F | Joseph McKeown | ![]() | 20.09.1994 | 185 cm | 82 kg | left | Show profile» | |
F | Bryan Moore | ![]() | 25.05.1994 | 178 cm | 84 kg | N/A | Show profile» | |
C | Shayne Morrissey | ![]() | 07.01.1992 | 176 cm | 79 kg | left | Show profile» | |
RW | Charlie O’Connor | ![]() | 23.03.1993 | 183 cm | 86 kg | right | Show profile» | |
LW | David Pope | ![]() | 27.09.1994 | 191 cm | 91 kg | left | Show profile» | |
LW | Dylan Sadowy | ![]() | 02.04.1996 | 186 cm | 93 kg | left | Show profile» | |
RW | Hunter Smith | ![]() | 11.09.1995 | 200 cm | 100 kg | right | Show profile» | |
F | Tyler Spezia | ![]() | 07.06.1993 | 180 cm | 78 kg | left | Show profile» | |
LW | Jordan Topping | ![]() | 20.07.1997 | 185 cm | 90 kg | left | Show profile» | |
F | Greg Wolfe | ![]() | 25.04.1990 | 178 cm | 84 kg | right | Show profile» | |
LW | Trevor Yates | ![]() | 06.03.1995 | 188 cm | 98 kg | left | Show profile» |
Coach name | State | Born | Coach position | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Dan Watson | ![]() | 12.05.1979 | Head Coach | Show profile» |
Alden Hirschfeld | ![]() | 26.01.1988 | Assistant Coach | Show profile» |
* no longer in the club
The Walleye were originally founded as the Toledo Storm in 1991, playing their home games at Toledo Sports Arena across the river from downtown Toledo. The Storm were the first hockey team to play in Toledo since the International Hockey League's Toledo Goaldiggers ceased operations in 1986, eventually moving to Kansas City in 1990. In the Storm's inaugural season, the team won the West Division title and the Henry Brabham Cup after posting the league's best record in the regular season. The following year the Storm would win their first Jack Riley Cup, defeating the Wheeling Thunderbirds in six games. The Storm would come back the following season and win their second Riley Cup, defeating the Raleigh Icecaps in five games, becoming only the second team in league history to win back-to-back league titles (the first being the Hampton Roads Admirals in 1991 and 1992.). The Storm were dominant in their first few years, winning four division titles in their first five seasons and posting a winning record in thirteen of the sixteen seasons the team played
In 2007, the Toledo Storm were bought by Toledo Arena Sports, Inc., a subsidiary of the Toledo Mud Hens minor league baseball club that was planning to build a new state-of-the-art arena in downtown Toledo to replace the aging Sports Arena. Shortly after the sale, Toledo Arena Sports announced that after the 2006-07 season, the Storm would not compete again until the arena was completed and the ECHL granted the Storm a two year voluntary suspension from competition.
In February 2008 the club revealed that the team's new name would be the Walleye, in reference to the popular game fish that is abundant in the area.
Defender Bryan Rufenach died
Defenseman Bryan Rufenach, a seventh-round draft pick of the Detroit Red Wings in the 2007 NHL entry draft, currently at Toledo Walleye of ECHL, died this week while traveling in Switzerland. He was 23.
Details of Rufenach's death have not been released, but The Lindsay Post has learned he suffered a fatal electrocution.
Walleye coach Nick Vitucci said in statement: "The entire team's thoughts and prayers are with Bryan's family as they get through this difficult time. Bryan was a great teammate and would play any role asked of him."
Toledo Walleye participates in season 2018-2019: ECHL
Luleå wins their second title in Sweden, 29 years after the first one. Read more»
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