The 1988–89 OHL season was the ninth season of the Ontario Hockey League . The Hamilton Steelhawks move to Niagara Falls becoming the Niagara Falls Thunder . The Kingston Canadians rename themselves to the Kingston Raiders . The OHL awards the inaugural Bill Long Award for distinguished service to the OHL. Fifteen teams each played 66 games. The Peterborough Petes won the J. Ross Robertson Cup , defeating the Niagara Falls Thunder .
Relocation/Team Name Change [ ]
Hamilton Steelhawks to Niagara Falls Thunder [ ]
The Hamilton Steelhawks relocated their franchise to the city of Niagara Falls after four seasons in Hamilton . The club was renamed as the Niagara Falls Thunder and would play out of the Niagara Falls Memorial Arena . The Thunder would remain in the Emms Division.
This would be the first club since the Niagara Falls Flyers , who relocated to North Bay in 1982, to be based out of the city.
Kingston Canadians to Kingston Raiders [ ]
The Kingston Canadians were rebranded as the Kingston Raiders for the 1988-89 season. Kingston had used the Canadians name since they were announced as an expansion club in 1973. The club changed their colour scheme from red, blue and white to black, silver and white.
Regular season [ ]
Final standings [ ]
Note: GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; GF = Goals For; GA = Goals Against; PTS = Points; x = clinched playoff berth; y = clinched division title
Leyden Division [ ]
Emms Division [ ]
Scoring leaders [ ]
Playoffs [ ]
[1]
Division quarter-finals [ ]
Leyden Division [ ]
(1) Peterborough Petes vs. (6) Belleville Bulls [ ]
March 22
Peterborough Petes
3 – 1
Belleville Bulls
Yardmen Arena
March 25
Peterborough Petes
5 – 4
Belleville Bulls
Yardmen Arena
Peterborough wins series 4 – 1
(2) Oshawa Generals vs. (5) Ottawa 67's [ ]
March 21
Oshawa Generals
4 – 5
Ottawa 67's
Ottawa Civic Centre
March 22
Oshawa Generals
3 – 4
Ottawa 67's
Ottawa Civic Centre
March 28
Oshawa Generals
5 – 6
OT
Ottawa 67's
Ottawa Civic Centre
(3) Toronto Marlboros vs. (4) Cornwall Royals [ ]
Cornwall wins series 4 – 2
Emms Division [ ]
(1) Kitchener Rangers vs. (6) North Bay Centennials [ ]
March 19
North Bay Centennials
2 – 3
Kitchener Rangers
Kitchener Memorial Auditorium
March 24
North Bay Centennials
5 – 4
OT
Kitchener Rangers
Kitchener Memorial Auditorium
March 26
North Bay Centennials
3 – 2
Kitchener Rangers
Kitchener Memorial Auditorium
North Bay wins series 4 – 1
(2) Niagara Falls Thunder vs. (5) Windsor Compuware Spitfires [ ]
March 21
Niagara Falls Thunder
7 – 6
Windsor Compuware Spitfires
Windsor Arena
March 24
Niagara Falls Thunder
6 – 3
Windsor Compuware Spitfires
Windsor Arena
Niagara Falls wins series 4 – 0
(3) London Knights vs. (4) Guelph Platers [ ]
March 19
Guelph Platers
2 – 4
London Knights
London Gardens
March 22
Guelph Platers
2 – 5
London Knights
London Gardens
March 26
Guelph Platers
7 – 5
London Knights
London Gardens
March 29
Guelph Platers
1 – 5
London Knights
London Gardens
Division semi-finals [ ]
Leyden Division [ ]
(4) Cornwall Royals vs. (5) Ottawa 67's [ ]
March 31
Cornwall Royals
3 – 4
Ottawa 67's
Ottawa Civic Centre
April 4
Cornwall Royals
2 – 4
Ottawa 67's
Ottawa Civic Centre
April 7
Cornwall Royals
5 – 3
Ottawa 67's
Ottawa Civic Centre
Cornwall wins series 4 – 2
Emms Division [ ]
(3) London Knights vs. (6) North Bay Centennials [ ]
March 31
North Bay Centennials
3 – 6
London Knights
London Gardens
April 3
North Bay Centennials
3 – 6
London Knights
London Gardens
April 6
North Bay Centennials
3 – 5
London Knights
London Gardens
April 10
North Bay Centennials
2 – 7
London Knights
London Gardens
Division finals [ ]
Leyden Division [ ]
(1) Peterborough Petes vs. (4) Cornwall Royals [ ]
Peterborough wins series 4 – 2
Emms Division [ ]
(2) Niagara Falls Thunder vs. (3) London Knights [ ]
April 14
Niagara Falls Thunder
5 – 8
London Knights
London Gardens
April 18
Niagara Falls Thunder
3 – 6
London Knights
London Gardens
April 21
Niagara Falls Thunder
7 – 3
London Knights
London Gardens
Niagara Falls wins series 4 – 3
J. Ross Robertson Cup [ ]
(L1) Peterborough Petes vs. (E2) Niagara Falls Thunder [ ]
Peterborough wins series 4 – 2
Awards [ ]
J. Ross Robertson Cup :
Peterborough Petes
Hamilton Spectator Trophy :
Kitchener Rangers
Leyden Trophy :
Peterborough Petes
Emms Trophy :
Kitchener Rangers
Red Tilson Trophy :
Bryan Fogarty , Niagara Falls Thunder
Eddie Powers Memorial Trophy :
Bryan Fogarty , Niagara Falls Thunder
Matt Leyden Trophy :
, Kitchener Rangers
Jim Mahon Memorial Trophy :
Stan Drulia , Niagara Falls Thunder
Max Kaminsky Trophy :
Bryan Fogarty , Niagara Falls Thunder
OHL Goaltender of the Year :
, Kitchener Rangers
Jack Ferguson Award :
Eric Lindros , Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds
Dave Pinkney Trophy :
John Tanner and , Peterborough Petes
Emms Family Award :
Owen Nolan , Cornwall Royals
F.W. 'Dinty' Moore Trophy :
, Kingston Raiders
William Hanley Trophy :
Kevin Miehm , Oshawa Generals
Leo Lalonde Memorial Trophy :
Stan Drulia , Niagara Falls Thunder
Bobby Smith Trophy :
, Toronto Marlboros
Bill Long Award :
Alec Campagnaro, Guelph Platers & Earl Montagano, Ottawa 67's
1989 OHL Priority Selection [ ]
The Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds held the first overall pick in the 1989 Ontario Priority Selection and selected Eric Lindros from the St. Michael's Buzzers. Lindros was awarded the Jack Ferguson Award , awarded to the top pick in the draft.
Below are the players who were selected in the first round of the 1989 Ontario Hockey League Priority Selection. [2]
#
Player
Nationality
OHL Team
Hometown
Minor Team
1
Eric Lindros (C )
Canada
Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds
London, Ontario
St. Michael's Buzzers
2
(C )
Canada
Sudbury Wolves
Amherst, Nova Scotia
Amherst Ramblers
3
(D )
Canada
Kingston Frontenacs
Norwood, Ontario
Waterloo Siskins
4
(RW )
Canada
North Bay Centennials
Bramalea, Ontario
Bramalea Blues
5
(LW )
Canada
Windsor Spitfires
Cottam, Ontario
Waterloo Siskins
6
Brent Gretzky (C )
Canada
Belleville Bulls
Brantford, Ontario
Brantford Classics
7
Trent Cull (D )
Canada
Guelph Platers
Georgetown, Ontario
Georgetown Gemini
8
Ryan Kuwabara (RW )
Canada
Ottawa 67's
Hamilton, Ontario
Hamilton Kilty B's
9
(D )
Canada
Cornwall Royals
Georgetown, Ontario
Georgetown Gemini
10
Alek Stojanov (RW )
Canada
Hamilton Dukes
Windsor, Ontario
Windsor Midgets
11
(D )
Canada
Oshawa Generals
Navan, Ontario
Nepean Raiders
12
(D )
Canada
London Knights
Burlington, Ontario
Burlington Cougars
13
(RW )
Canada
Niagara Falls Thunder
Hamilton, Ontario
Hamilton Huskies
14
Dale McTavish (C )
Canada
Peterborough Petes
Eganville, Ontario
Pembroke Lumber Kings
15
(RW )
United States
Kitchener Rangers
Greensburg, Pennsylvania
Chicago Young Americans
See also [ ]
References [ ]
East Division Central Division Midwest Division West Division Defunct teams