Chinese Taipei Ice Hockey League

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There have been multiple different leagues organized in Chinese Taipei (Taiwan) since 2004. The first Chinese Taipei Championship was played in 1982.

Chinese Taipei League

This is a league run by the Chinese Taipei Ice Hockey Federation.

  • 2023-24: Wolfs

Chinese Taipei Hockey League

The Chinese Taipei Hockey League was founded for the 2015-16 season as the national league in Taiwan. It featured four teams during its inaugural season.

Champions
  • 2015-16: New Taipei Islanders
  • 2016-17: New Taipei Islanders

Taipei Ice Hockey League

There is another competition known as the Taipei Ice Hockey League (TIHL) that has existed since 2014.

TIHL.jpg
Champions
  • 2024: TGHC (Promotion Group), Rhinos (Leisure Group)
  • 2023 (fall): North Stars (Promotion Group), Thor (Leisure Group)[1]
  • 2023 (ended in Sep): Happy Tuesday (Casual Group)
  • 2023: Frozone (Promotion Group), Rhinos (Leisure Group)
  • 2022 (fall): Frozone (Promotion Group), Rhinos (Leisure Group)
  • 2022: Frozone (Promotion Group), Rhinos (Leisure Group)
  • 2021 (spring): Frozone (Promotion Group), Rhinos (Leisure Group)
  • 2020 (fall): Silver Monster (Promotion Group)
  • 2020 (spring): Poseidon (Group A), Yeti (Group B)
  • 2019 (fall): Poseidon
  • 2019 (spring): Silver Monster (Promotion Group A)
  • 2019 (ended in July): North Stars (Polaris) (Promotion Group), Poseidon (Open Group)
  • 2018-19 (ended in Jan): Poseidon (Open Group), Typhoon (Group B)
  • 2018 (ended in Dec): Silver Monster (Promotion League)
  • 2018 (standings as of 5/27): Promotion Division A: 1. Ice Man 19 pts, 2. TGHC 18 pts, 3. Silver Monster 14 pts, 4. Snowman 7 pts, 5. Frozone 6 pts, 6. Harley Ducks 5 pts. Promotion Division B: 1. Thor 20 pts, 2. Rhinos 13 pts, 3. Scorpion 1 9 pts, 4. Scorpion 2 0 pts.
  • 2017-18: Viper (Open Division) - RS standings: 1. Viper 5-1-1-0-17, 2. Clouded Leopards 5-3-0-0-15, 3. Black Bears 3-5-0-0-9, 4. Buffalos 2-4-0-1-7
  • 2016-17 (ended in Jan): Clouded Leopards (Open Division), Taipei Gentlemen Hockey Club (Promotion Division)
  • 2016-17: WayPoint - listed as "TIHL" champions with Sportcast as runner-up[2]
  • 2016 Junior (ended in Sep): Silver Beast (U20), Silver Beast (U16)
  • 2016 (ended in May/June): Vipers (Open Division), Taipei Gentlemen Hockey Club (Promo Division A), Rhinos (Leisure Division)
  • 2015 Junior (ended in Sep): Taipei Typhoon
  • 2015: Clouded Leopards (Open Division), Silver Monster (Promotional Division A), Giants (Promotional Division B)
  • 2014 (spring-fall): Black Bears (Open Division), Vikings (Promotional Division), Silver Monster (listed as 2013-14 Taiwanese champion by IIHF)

Chinese Taipei Ice Hockey League

Chinese Taipei Ice Hockey League (traditional Chinese: 中華冰球聯盟, abbreviated as CIHL) was a Taiwanese ice hockey league based out of Taipei, Taiwan. Founded in 2004, it is run by the Chinese Taipei Ice Hockey Federation. The league was formerly divided into two divisions: The Open Division for local players and the International Division for foreigners living in Taiwan. The competition ceased after the 2011-12 season.

Champions

International Division
  • 2012 (mini season): in October the national federation cancelled the remainder of the season due to a strict enforcement of player eligibility standards. A playoff was quickly arranged, with the Sharks defeating the Tigers and the Bears beating in the Mustangs in the semifinals, and the Sharks blasting the Bears 7-3 in the final. Raptors and Wolves were also in the league.
  • 2011-12: Taipei Wolves
  • 2010-11: Sababa Bears
  • 2009-10: Sababa Bears
  • 2008-09: Hsinchu Raptors
  • 2007-08: Chiayi Sharks
  • 2006-07: Taipei Bears
  • 2005-06: Chiayi Sharks
  • 2004-05: Taipei Raptors
Open Division
  • 2011-12: Typhoon
  • 2009-10: Taipei Ice Men
  • 2008-09: Silver Beast A
  • 2006-07: Taipei Leopards
  • 2005-06: Taipei Hawks
Top Division
  • 2011 (spring): 1. Silver Monster, 2. Pirates, 3. Rhinos 4. Black Panthers, 5. Vikings[3]
  • 2010 (summer): Silver Monster (Group A), God of War (Group B), Vikings (U12)[4]
  • 2009-10: Standings: 1. Vikings 4-0-0-12 46:3, 2. Snowman 3-0-1-9 24:16, 3. Silver Monster 3-0-1-9 27:22, 4. Rhinos 1-0-3-3 17:29, 5. Vikings B 1-0-4-3 10:28, 6. Silver Devils 1-0-4-3 17:43. Vikings won playoff championship on 6/27.[5]

Seasons

References

Competitions around the World
Asia

Asia League - Beijing League - Bahrain - CIHL Hong Kong - China - Hong Kong - India - Indonesia - Iran - Japan (Championship, Regional League, Defunct League) - Kuwait - Kyrgyzstan - Macau - Malaysia (National League, Kuala Lumpur League) - Mongolia - North Korea - Pakistan - Philippines (Hockey League - Minor League - Manila League) - Shenzhen-Hong Kong-Macau League - Singapore - South Korea (Championship, League) - Taiwan - Thailand (Siam Hockey League - Bangkok Ice Hockey League) - Turkmenistan - Uzbekistan

Africa

Egypt - Morocco - South Africa (Super League, Gauteng League, Western Province League) (List of South African champions)

Middle East

Israeli (Israeli League, Israel Elite Hockey League, Israeli 2nd League) - United Arab Emirates (Dubai League, Emirates Ice Hockey League) - Qatar

Oceania

Australia (AIHL - APHL - ECSL - NHSL - Victoria - South Australia - West Australia) - New Zealand

Latin America

Argentina (Metropolitana competitions - AAHHL Nacional) - Brazil (Sao Paulo Championship - Brazilian Championship) - Ecuador - Mexico

Women's leagues

Australia (Tier 2) - China (Championship, League) - Hong Kong - India - Iran - Japan (League, Tournament) - Kuwait - Mexico - New Zealand - North Korea - Singapore - South Korea - Thailand - United Arab Emirates

Junior leagues

Australia (League, Championships) - China - Hong Kong - Israel - Japan (Intercollegiate Games, High School Sports Festival, High School Selection Tournament, Junior High School Championship) - Macau - Mexico - Mongolia - New Zealand - South Korea - Thailand - Uzbekistan

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