2013–14 National Ringette League season

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2013–14 National Ringette League season
LeagueNational Ringette League
SportRingette
DurationOctober 5, 2013 – March 9, 2014
March 15, 2014 – April 12 (playoff)
Number of gamesEast: 26
West: 25
Number of teams13
Regular season
Season champions
Season MVPDailyn Bell ()
League Playoffs
Final
Champions (1st title)
National Ringette League seasons
← 

The 2013–14 National Ringette League season for the sport of ringette was the 10th season of the National Ringette League and began on October 5, 2013 and ended on March 9, 2014.

The Ottawa Ice won their first ever title.[1]

Teams[]

Three teams did not join this season.

  • : East Division
  • : West Division
  • : West Division

Regular Seasons[]

Teams played in following formats.

  • East
    • Plays 2 to 3 games against same sub-division teams and 2 games to same sub-division teams.
    • Plays 0 or 2 games against each or both of West division teams.
  • West
    • Play 11 games against same division team.
    • Play 0 or 2 against East division teams.

Standings[]

  • x indicates clinches the playoff
  • y indicates clinches the Championship (Elite Eight)

East Conference[]

GP W L SL PTS
y-Cambridge Turbos 26 25 1 0 50
y-Montreal Mission 26 23 3 0 46
x- 26 21 4 1 43
x- 26 14 10 2 30
x- 26 12 11 3 27
x- 26 11 15 0 22
x-Le Royal de Bourassa 26 8 15 3 19
x- 26 8 18 0 16
x- 26 7 17 2 16
x- 26 6 17 3 15
Atlantic Attack 26 3 23 0 6

West Conference[]

GP W L SL PTS
y- 25 18 3 4 40
y- 25 12 11 2 26

Allstar game[]

  • This was the second Allstar game in the League.
  • The team name in the parenthesis is the team player belongs to at that time.
Team Blue6–5
(2–1, 0–1, 2–0, 2–3)
Team White
Musetti () 1st(3:29), 3rd(11:28), 4th(11:13)
Jasper (CAM) 3rd(5:50), 4th(5:15)
Kiviaho (ATL) 1st(10:58)
Cartier (MTL) 1st(6:58), 4th(4:01), 4th(12:14)
Primard (MTL) 2nd(4:34)
Bernard-Lacaille () 4th(8:46)
Attendance: 0
Referee: Jonathan Cecile, Benoit Ducharme

Playoffs[]

  • Ottawa, Richmond hill, Gloucester and Waterloo win the series in the knockout stage and go to the elite eight.
  • In the Elite eight, Cambridge finished the round robin first place and went to the final. Ottawa and Edmonton went to semifinal.
  • In the semifinal, Ottawa beat the Edmonton to the final against Cambridge.
  • Ottawa beat Cambridge 7–4 to win the first ever title.

Award[]

  • MVP: Dailyn Bell ()[2]
  • Top Goalie: Tori Goble (OTT)

Stats[]

  • Regular season
    • Player except goalie
      • Goal
        • East Jacqueline Gaudet (91, CAM)
        • West Dailyn Bell (32, )
      • Assist
        • East Jennifer Gaudet (91, CAM)
        • West Emily Webb (32, )
      • Point
        • East Jacqueline Gaudet, Jennifer Gaudet (both are 126, CAM)
        • West Dailyn Bell (32, )
    • Goalie
      • Saving %
        • East Meghan Pittaway (.919, CAM)
        • West Bobbi Mattson (.891, )
      • Goals against average
        • East Meghan Pittaway (2.80, CAM)
        • West Bobbi Mattson (3.76, )
      • Win
        • East Tori Goble (17, )
        • West Bobbi Mattson (18, )
  • Playoffs

References[]

  1. ^ "Ice capture club’s 1st NRL crown", Sports Ottawa.com, retrieved by January 20, 2016
  2. ^ "Dailyn Bell named NRL MVP", Lacombe Globe retrieved by Jan 22, 2016
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