Krefeld Pinguine

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Krefeld Pinguine
Krefeld Pinguine logo.png
City Krefeld, Germany
League DEL2
Founded 1936
Home arena König Palast
Colors Yellow, Black
         

main

Krefeldpinguine.jpg

The Krefeld Pinguine (Krefeld Penguins) are an ice hockey team in the DEL2. Their home ice is in Krefeld, North-Rhine-Westphalia, Germany at the König Palast. Founded first in 1936 by Willi Münstermann, the pro team became a limited liability company in 1994 and joined the top tier Deutsche Eishockey Liga. In their history they have won the German championship in 1952 and 2003.

Münstermann created two teams simultaneously - a professional team stacked with Canadian expats, known as the "German Canadians", and an amateur team (Krefelder EV). On November 7, 1936, 8,000 spectators packed the Hindenberg Stadion to watch the Canadians tie Berliner Schlittschuhclub 0-0. A few days later, the Canadians defeated the famous Berlin club 2-1.

The Canadians toured around Germany playing friendly matches. Their games were often sold out. A notable result was a 2-2 tie against the future world champions, the Kimberley Dynamiters, on January 1, 1937.

The amateur Krefelder EV squad continued to improve, tying Düsseldorfer EG 3-3 in November 1937. The team was often strengthened with players from the German Canadians.

World War II took its toll on hockey in Krefeld, and Münstermann helped revive the sport by organizing a "Bizone" Championship in 1946, which KEV won.

A new team for former German Canadian players was created by Frank Schwinghammer in 1947 - KTSV Preussen 1855 Krefeld. Both Krefeld teams enjoyed success, with Preussen winning the national title in 1951 and KEV claiming the 1952 championship.

In more recent times, the Krefeld Pinguine won the 2003 Deutsche Eishockey Liga championship. After a sixth-place regular season finish, they marched through the playoffs, defeating the DEG Metro Stars, Eisbären Berlin, and Kölner Haie en route to their first title in 51 years.

Team names

  • 1936 as "Krefelder Eislauf-Verein 1936 e.V." (KEV)
  • 1978 as "EHC Krefeld"
  • 1981 as "Krefelder Eislauf-Verein 1981 e.V."
  • 1995 as "KEV Pinguine Eishockey GmbH"

Season-by-season records

Season Games Won Lost Tie OTL SOL Points Goals
for
Goals
against
Rank Playoffs
1994–95 44 29 12 3 - - 63 203 127 4 Lost in Semifinals
1995–96 50 26 19 5 - - 58 169 154 7 Lost in Quarterfinals
1996–97 48 28 15 2 3 - 61 198 166 8 Lost in Quarterfinals
1997–98 44 18 19 6 1 - 43 126 141 11 Lost in Quarterfinals
1998–99 52 23 18 7 4 - 87 183 159 7 Lost in Quarterfinals
1999–00 56 34 17 0 5 - 101 213 171 3 Lost in Quarterfinals
2000–01 60 27 22 0 11 - 88 182 177 9 No Playoffs
2001–02 60 40 16 0 4 - 118 210 162 3 Lost in Quarterfinals
2002–03 52 28 22 2 0 - 78 147 133 6 Champions
2003–04 52 22 26 0 4 - 64 127 149 10 No Playoffs
2004–05 52 26 23 0 3 - 73 145 159 9 No Playoffs
2005–06 52 28 20 - 0 4 79 173 169 8 Lost in Quarterfinals
2006–07 52 24 23 - 2 3 71 170 173 10 Lost in Preliminary Round
2007–08 56 25 23 - 3 5 80 191 193 11 No Playoffs
2008–09 52 28 20 - 3 1 84 167 140 6 Lost in Quarterfinals
2009–10 56 24 28 - 0 4 72 167 173 12 No Playoffs
2010–11 52 27 16 - 3 6 86 143 130 4 Lost in Semifinals
2011–12 52 18 23 - 2 5 69 126 153 12 No Playoffs
2012–13 52 20 15 - 1 5 88 166 145 3 Lost in Semifinals
2013–14 52 29 18 - 2 0 95 169 136 2 Lost in Quarterfinals
2014–15 52 20 23 - 1 1 76 156 168 10 Lost in Preliminary Round
2015–16 52 15 26 - 4 2 61 136 164 13 No Playoffs
2016–17 52 17 29 - 5 1 51 120 173 14 No playoffs
2017–18 52 17 25 - 7 3 55 141 177 14 No playoffs
2018–19 52 23 26 - 2 1 61 141 170 11 No playoffs
2019–20 52 15 29 - 4 4 52 134 170 12 Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
2020–21 38 5 29 - 2 2 18 74 167 14 No playoffs
2021–22 56 22 29 - 4 1 59 144 203 15 No playoffs; Relegated

Images

External links

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