2012–13 EIHL season

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The 2012–13 Elite Ice Hockey League Season was the tenth season of the Elite Ice Hockey League. The regular season began on Saturday 8 September 2012 and ended on Sunday 24 March 2013, followed by the Play-Offs which culminated in the end-of-season Play-Off Finals on Saturday 6 and Sunday 7 April 2013.[1]

This season saw the introduction of a new two conference format, in which the ten participating teams were split into two conferences of five teams. The Gardiner Conference, named after former Chicago Blackhawks goaltender Charlie Gardiner, comprised the five northernmost mainland teams (Braehead Clan, Dundee Stars, Edinburgh Capitals, Fife Flyers and Hull Stingrays) and the Erhardt Conference, named after the captain of the British 1936 Winter Olympics gold medal winning team Carl Erhardt, comprised the four southernmost mainland teams (Cardiff Devils, Coventry Blaze, Nottingham Panthers and Sheffield Steelers) and one team from Northern Ireland (Belfast Giants).[2] The most prestigious honour remained the overall League Championship, awarded to the team with the most points gained from all league games (conference and inter-conference games). The season also included the end-of-season Play-Offs and the Challenge Cup.

Nottingham Panthers proved to be the dominant team of the season, clinching the Elite League Championship - their first British League Championship title for 57 years - when they defeated their nearest challengers Belfast Giants 5-3 at the Odyssey Arena on Friday 15 March 2013. However, the Giants would prevent the Panthers achieving a regular season double of League and Conference titles by shading a very close Erhardt Conference title race on regulation time wins after both teams finished level on points. The Gardiner Conference proved even more exciting with all five teams never being more than a few wins apart, at one stage towards the end of the season only one point separating first and last place. Braehead Clan eventually ran out Conference Champions in a very successful first season for the new two-conference format.

The Challenge Cup was won for the fourth successive season by Nottingham Panthers, clinching their second honour of the season by defeating Sheffield Steelers 5-3 on aggregate in the two-legged final. The Panthers then overcame a big scare at the hands of Fife Flyers in the Play-Off Quarter-Finals to defeat Cardiff Devils in the Semi-Finals and then Belfast Giants 3-2 in overtime in the Final. This third successive Play-Offs victory also gave them the treble of League Championship, Play-Offs and Challenge Cup, the first time the treble has been won since Coventry Blaze's success in 2004-05.

This season was the 10th Anniversary of both the EIHL League and the EIHL Play-Offs. In what is referred to as the 'Final Four Weekend', the Semi-Finals and Final of the Play-Offs were played on consecutive days at the National Ice Centre in Nottingham on Saturday 6 and Sunday 7 April 2013.

Challenge Cup

The First Round comprised two groups of five teams, each team playing teams in their own group twice (once home and once away), totaling eight games.

In the First Round group games, teams were awarded two points for a win (in regulation time, overtime or shoot-out), one point for a tie (in regulation time but loss in overtime or shoot-out) and no points for a loss (in regulation time). Teams level on points were separated by (1) total number of games won in regulation time, (2) total number of all games won, (3) results between teams or (4) fewest losses.[3]

The top four teams from each First Round group qualified for the Quarter-Finals. The Quarter-Final ties were decided by final group positions (A1-B4, B1-A4, A2-B3, B2-A3). The Quarter-Finals, Semi-Finals and Final were all played over two legs, home and away.

Due to scheduling constraints, some League Championship games doubled up as Challenge Cup games.

First round

Group A
Team P W L T GF GA Pts
1 Belfast Giants 8 7 1 0 33 12 14
2 Braehead Clan 8 4 3 1 25 24 9
3 Fife Flyers 8 4 4 0 21 18 8
4 Dundee Stars 8 4 4 0 18 23 8
5 Edinburgh Capitals 8 1 7 0 16 36 2
Group B
Team P W L T GF GA Pts
1 Sheffield Steelers 8 6 1 1 35 24 13
2 Nottingham Panthers 8 5 1 2 30 22 12
3 Coventry Blaze 8 4 4 0 22 26 8
4 Hull Stingrays 8 3 4 1 27 36 7
5 Cardiff Devils 8 2 5 1 29 35 5

Final round

Quarterfinals
TEAM 1 TEAM 2 1ST LEG 2ND LEG AGGREGATE
Belfast Giants Hull Stingrays 3-1 5-4 (8-5)
Sheffield Steelers Dundee Stars 2-4 7-0 (9-4)
Braehead Clan Coventry Blaze 2-2 4-3 (6-5)
Nottingham Panthers Fife Flyers 3-2 5-2 (8-4)
Semifinals
TEAM 1 TEAM 2 1ST LEG 2ND LEG AGGREGATE
Belfast Giants Nottingham Panthers 1-5 3-4 (4-9)
Sheffield Steelers Braehead Clan 4-2 4-2 (8-4)
Final
TEAM 1 TEAM 2 1ST LEG 2ND LEG AGGREGATE
Sheffield Steelers Nottingham Panthers 1-4 2-1 (3-5)

Regular season

Club GP W L OTL SOL Goals Pts
1. Nottingham Panthers 52 42 9 0 1 232:111 85
2. Belfast Giants 52 37 10 2 3 191:132 79
3. Sheffield Steelers 52 35 14 0 3 184:133 73
4. Coventry Blaze 52 24 22 4 2 156:181 54
5. Cardiff Devils 52 21 23 2 6 160:168 50
6. Edinburgh Capitals 52 22 26 3 1 149:184 48
7. Fife Flyers 52 23 27 1 1 154:176 48
8. Braehead Clan 52 20 26 6 0 163:200 46
9. Dundee Stars 52 19 27 2 4 138:194 44
10. Hull Stingrays 52 17 26 2 7 137:185 43

Playoffs

Semifinals

Semifinals

3rd place

Final

References


Elite Ice Hockey League seasons
2003–04 - 2004–05 - 2005–06 - 2006–07 - 2007–08 - 2008–09 - 2009–10 - 2010–11 - 2011–12 - 2012–13 - 2013–14 - 2014–15 - 2015–16 - 2016–17 - 2017–18 - 2018–19 - 2019–20 - 2020–21 - 2021–22 - 2022–23 - 2023–24
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