ERC Ingolstadt

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ERC Ingolstadt - The Panthers
ERC-Ingolstadt-Logo.png
City Ingolstadt, Germany
League Deutsche Eishockey Liga
Founded 1964
Home arena Saturn Arena
Colors Navy, White, Light Blue
              
Franchise history
1964–present ERC Ingolstadt

main

ERC Ingolstadt (Eishockey-und-Rollschuh club) is professional ice hockey club that plays in the Deutsche Eishockey Liga. Commonly known as The Panthers, they play their games in Ingolstadt, Germany, at the Saturn Arena.

History

ERC Ingolstadt was promoted to the Deutsche Eishockey Liga in 2002 after three consecutive years of playing in the championship finals of Germany's second-tier hockey league, the 2.Bundesliga.

During the 2004–05 NHL lockout, Ingolstadt signed National Hockey League (NHL) players Marco Sturm, Andy McDonald, Jamie Langenbrunner and Aaron Ward. Other well-known NHL alumni include goaltender Jimmy Waite, Yves Sarault, Patric Hörnqvist and Jason Holland.

In the 2008–09 season, the team took part in the famous Spengler Cup.[1]

ERC Ingolstadt won its first and only DEL championship in 2014 as an overwhelming underdog entering the playoffs. After finishing in ninth place in the regular season, the Panthers knocked out the three-time defending league champions Eisbären Berlin in overtime of the final game of the playoff qualification round. In the first round of the playoffs, the team of head coach Niklas Sundblad then shocked second-seeded Krefeld Pinguine in five games and then eliminated Hamburg Freezers, who had finished the regular season in first place, in six games. In the championship final, Ingolstadt defeated Kölner Haie in seven games, with goaltender Timo Pielmeier recording a 27-save shutout in Game 7.

By virtue of winning the DEL championship, ERC Ingolstadt was invited to play in the 2014–15 Champions Hockey League.

Season records

Saturn Arena in Ingolstadt, home ice of the Panthers.
Season Games Won Lost Tie OTL SOL Points Goals
for
Goals
against
Rank Playoffs
2002–03 52 21 24 7 0 - 65 122 135 12 No playoffs
2003–04 52 31 19 0 2 - 92 132 118 7 Lost in Semi-finals
2004–05 52 31 18 0 3 - 91 149 139 5 Lost in Semi-finals
2005–06 52 33 17 - 0 2 98 162 120 2 Lost in Quarterfinals
2006–07 52 30 16 - 2 4 94 180 146 4 Lost in Quarterfinals
2007–08 56 30 22 - 3 1 83 180 190 10 Lost in Preliminary Finals
2008–09 52 22 24 - 4 2 68 144 155 12 No playoffs
2009–10 56 31 22 - 3 0 89 205 181 7 Lost in Semi-finals
2010–11 52 28 20 - 1 3 79 153 143 6 Lost in Quarterfinals
2011–12 52 26 16 - 2 3 93 168 150 2 Lost in Semi-finals
2012–13 52 21 18 - 3 2 84 161 149 6 Lost in Quarterfinals
2013–14 52 21 22 - 4 2 75 138 149 9 Champions
2014–15 52 29 17 - 3 2 94 182 152 3 Lost in Final
2015–16 52 23 22 - 4 3 76 155 161 8 Lost in preliminary playoffs
2016–17 52 24 22 - 2 4 76 159 157 7 Lost in preliminary playoffs
2017–18 52 20 19 - 3 2 79 147 137 4 Lost in Quarterfinals
2018–19 52 23 19 - 2 1 86 158 152 5 Lost in Quarterfinals
2019–20 52 19 19 - 2 2 81 164 161 7 Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[2]
2020–21 38 20 14 - 2 2 59 123 109 5 Lost in Semi-finals
2021–22 55 26 19 - 6 4 83 176 158 7 Lost in preliminary playoffs
2022–23 56 34 16 - 3 3 103 182 142 2 Lost in Final
2023–24 52 17 20 - 4 4 73 132 138 9 Lost in Quarterfinals

Honors

Champions

External links

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