2001–02 ISL season

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The 2001–02 Ice Hockey Superleague season was the sixth season of the Ice Hockey Superleague (ISL).

Although the league started the season as the Sekonda Ice Hockey Superleague, Sekonda withdrew their sponsorship of the league in December 2001 and the league reverted to being known simply as the Ice Hockey Superleague. Benson & Hedges also withdrew their sponsorship of the Autumn Cup[1] and the competition ceased to take place.

Cardiff Devils were stripped of their franchise after the club went into voluntary liquidation.[2] Following the Newcastle franchise being taken over by the Eye Group, the Newcastle Jesters players were not paid and the club was eventually stripped of their franchise in October 2001 without having played a game.[3]

There was trouble in Sheffield when the Cooke, Jenkinson and Smith consortium who bailed out the Steelers at the end of the previous season were denied the franchise in favour of the league's preferred bidder, Norton Lea.[4] After the Sheffield Arena refused to award ice time to Norton Lea, preferring to deal with the Cooke, Jenkinson and Smith consortium, the Cooke, Jenkinson and Smith consortium applied for the Sheffield Steelers to play in the second tier British National League. However, this application was refused[5] and the club eventually continued in the ISL under the ownership of Norton Lea.[6]

As a replacement for the fixtures lost from the Newcastle Jesters games, the ISL arranged a new Ryder Cup style tournament between the ISL teams and teams from the Deutsche Eishockey Liga (DEL) to be called the Ahearne Trophy to be played in February 2002.[7]

After awarding three points for a win, two points for an overtime win and one point for an overtime loss the previous season, the league discontinued overtime and reverted to awarding two points for a win and one point for a draw.

Challenge Cup

All seven teams in the league competed in the Challenge Cup. The first round was the first home and away meeting of each team in the league with the points counting towards both the Challenge Cup table and the league table. The top four teams progressed to the semi finals. The semi finals were home and away games with the winner on aggregate progressing to the one off final game.

First round

Challenge Cup GP W T L GF GA Pts
Belfast Giants 12 10 0 2 49 29 20
Nottingham Panthers 12 6 4 2 44 35 16
Ayr Scottish Eagles 12 5 3 4 34 33 13
Bracknell Bees 12 5 2 5 40 41 12
Manchester Storm 12 3 2 7 24 37 8
London Knights 12 2 4 6 29 34 8
Sheffield Steelers 12 3 1 8 35 46 7

Semi finals

1st place (Belfast) vs 4th place (Bracknell)

3rd place (Ayr) vs 2nd place (Nottingham)

Final

Winner semi final 1 vs Winner semi final 2

Ahearne Trophy

Ahearne Trophy GP W T L GF GA Pts
DEL 14 6 4 4 44 42 16
ISL 14 4 4 6 42 44 12

League

Each team played four home games and four away games against each of their opponents. All seven teams in the league were entered into the playoffs.

Superleague GP W T L GF GA Pts
Belfast Giants 48 31 8 9 177 119 70
Ayr Scottish Eagles 48 20 9 19 136 130 49
Sheffield Steelers 48 18 12 18 138 144 48
Nottingham Panthers 48 19 9 20 140 141 47
Bracknell Bees 48 15 13 20 140 158 43
London Knights 48 14 13 21 130 145 41
Manchester Storm 48 13 12 23 117 141 38

Playoffs

All seven teams in the league took part in the playoffs. After an initial round where each team played all the other teams once the top four teams qualified for the finals weekend.

Round one

Playoffs GP W T L GF GA Pts
Ayr Scottish Eagles 6 5 1 0 22 13 11
Sheffield Steelers 6 4 1 1 15 8 9
London Knights 6 4 0 2 17 15 8
Manchester Storm 6 2 1 3 24 21 5
Belfast Giants 6 2 1 3 21 19 5
Nottingham Panthers 6 1 2 3 13 20 4
Bracknell Bees 6 0 0 6 10 26 0

Semi Finals

1st place vs 4th place

2nd place vs 3rd place

Final

Winner semi final 1 vs Winner semi final 2

  • Manchester Storm 3–4 Sheffield Steelers (after overtime and penalty shootout)

References

Footnotes

  1. Hughes, Stuart (2001-04-02). "Superleague needs a higher profile". BBC Sports Online. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/other_sports/1257049.stm. Retrieved 2007-12-14. 
  2. "Cardiff loses Superleague status". BBC Sports Online. 2001-05-09. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/wales/1320814.stm. Retrieved 2007-12-14. 
  3. Hughes, Stuart (2001-10-24). "Jesters thrown out of Superleague". BBC Sports Online. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/low/other_sports/1618133.stm. Retrieved 2007-12-14. 
  4. Hughes, Stuart (2001-07-03). "Sheffield steels itself for worst". BBC Sports Online. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/low/other_sports/1420911.stm. Retrieved 2007-12-14. 
  5. Hughes, Stuart (2001-08-10). "Steelers denied BNL entry". BBC Sports Online. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/low/other_sports/1483918.stm. Retrieved 2007-12-14. 
  6. Hughes, Stuart (2001-08-30). "Steelers boss calls for fresh start". BBC Sports Online. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/other_sports/1517682.stm. Retrieved 2007-12-14. 
  7. Crosse, Simon. "Top clubs challenge Germany", 29 November 2001. Retrieved on 2007-12-14. 
Preceded by
2000–01 ISL season
ISL seasons Succeeded by
2002–03 ISL season
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