London vs. Ottawa |
Date |
Away |
Home |
May 6 |
Ottawa 2 |
4 London |
May 8 |
Ottawa 6 |
3 London |
May 10 |
London 5 |
4 Ottawa |
May 12 |
London 4 |
1 Ottawa |
May 14 |
Ottawa 2 |
6 London |
London wins series 4–1 |
On November 25, the OHL All-stars defeated the Russian Selects 3–1 at Barrie, Ontario.
On November 28, the OHL All-stars defeated the Russian Selects 5–2 at Mississauga, Ontario.
The OHL has an all-time record of 4–0 against the Russian Selects since the tournament began in 2003–04.
[edit] OHL awards
J. Ross Robertson Cup: |
London Knights |
Hamilton Spectator Trophy: |
London Knights |
Red Tilson Trophy: |
Corey Perry, London Knights |
Eddie Powers Memorial Trophy: |
Corey Perry, London Knights |
Matt Leyden Trophy: |
Dale Hunter, London Knights |
Jim Mahon Memorial Trophy: |
Corey Perry, London Knights |
Max Kaminsky Trophy: |
Danny Syvret, London Knights |
OHL Goaltender of the Year: |
Michael Ouzas, Mississauga IceDogs |
Jack Ferguson Award: |
John Tavares, Oshawa Generals |
Dave Pinkney Trophy: |
Gerald Coleman and Adam Dennis, London Knights |
OHL Executive of the Year: |
Mike Futa, Owen Sound Attack |
Emms Family Award: |
Benoît Pouliot, Sudbury Wolves |
F.W. 'Dinty' Moore Trophy: |
Kyle Gajewski, Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds |
Dan Snyder Memorial Trophy: |
Jeff MacDougald, Peterborough Petes |
William Hanley Trophy: |
Jeff Carter, Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds |
Leo Lalonde Memorial Trophy: |
Andre Benoit, Kitchener Rangers |
Bobby Smith Trophy: |
Richard Clune, Sarnia Sting |
Roger Neilson Memorial Award: |
Danny Battochio, Ottawa 67's |
Ivan Tennant Memorial Award: |
Matt Pelech, Sarnia Sting |
Wayne Gretzky 99 Award: |
Corey Perry, London Knights |
[edit] London's 2004–05 Undefeated Streak
In the 2004–2005 season the London Knights broke an OHL record, going 28 games in a row without a loss (27–0–1). They subsequently broke the CHL record of 29 games (held by the 1978-79 Brandon Wheat Kings, who went 25–0–4 during their streak), with a 0–0 tie with the Guelph Storm on December 10, 2004, giving them a record of 28–0–2. The streak ended at 31 games after a 5–2 loss to the Sudbury Wolves on December 17.
Game # |
Date |
Score |
Record |
Location |
1 |
September 23, 2004 |
London 4–3 Kitchener |
1–0–0–0 |
Kitchener |
2 |
September 26, 2004 |
London 5–2 Kitchener |
2–0–0–0 |
London |
3 |
September 30, 2004 |
London 2–1 Windsor |
3–0–0–0 |
Windsor |
4 |
October 1, 2004 |
London 5–4 Plymouth (OT) |
4–0–0–0 |
London |
5 |
October 2, 2004 |
London 3–2 Saginaw |
5–0–0–0 |
Saginaw |
6 |
October 8, 2004 |
London 8–0 Windsor |
6–0–0–0 |
London |
7 |
October 9, 2004 |
London 6–1 Sarnia |
7–0–0–0 |
Sarnia |
8 |
October 10, 2004 |
London 6–3 Sault Ste. Marie |
8–0–0–0 |
Sault Ste. Marie |
9 |
October 15, 2004 |
London 5–2 Owen Sound |
9–0–0–0 |
London |
10 |
October 16, 2004 |
London 8–3 Sault Ste. Marie |
10–0–0–0 |
London |
11 |
October 22, 2004 |
London 3–3 Mississauga |
10–0–1–0 |
London |
12 |
October 23, 2004 |
London 5–2 Owen Sound |
11–0–1–0 |
Owen Sound |
13 |
October 24, 2004 |
London 4–2 Guelph |
12–0–1–0 |
Guelph |
14 |
October 29, 2004 |
London 3–1 Saginaw |
13–0–1–0 |
London |
15 |
October 30, 2004 |
London 4–1 Erie |
14–0–1–0 |
London |
16 |
November 4, 2004 |
London 3–2 Guelph (OT) |
15–0–1–0 |
London |
17 |
November 5, 2004 |
London 5–3 Barrie |
16–0–1–0 |
London |
18 |
November 7, 2004 |
London 4–0 Toronto |
17–0–1–0 |
Toronto |
19 |
November 10, 2004 |
London 6–1 Mississauga |
18–0–1–0 |
Mississauga |
20 |
November 12, 2004 |
London 8–2 Belleville |
19–0–1–0 |
London |
21 |
November 13, 2004 |
London 3–1 Erie |
20–0–1–0 |
Erie |
22 |
November 19, 2004 |
London 5–3 Ottawa |
21–0–1–0 |
London |
23 |
November 21, 2004 |
London 4–2 Sault Ste. Marie |
22–0–1–0 |
London |
24 |
November 26, 2004 |
London 4–2 Plymouth |
23–0–1–0 |
London |
25 |
November 27, 2004 |
London 4–2 Barrie |
24–0–1–0* |
Barrie |
26 |
November 28, 2004 |
London 3–0 Sudbury |
25–0–1–0** |
Sudbury |
27 |
December 3, 2004 |
London 4–3 Windsor |
26–0–1–0 |
London |
28 |
December 4, 2004 |
London 5–1 Erie |
27–0–1–0 |
Erie |
29 |
December 8, 2004 |
London 5–3 Kitchener |
28–0–1–0*** |
Kitchener |
30 |
December 10, 2004 |
London 0–0 Guelph |
28–0–2–0**** |
London |
31 |
December 12, 2004 |
London 4–3 Kitchener (OT) |
29–0–2–0 |
London |
*Tied OHL record previously set by Kitchener in 1983–84
**Broke OHL record previously set by Kitchener in 1983–84
***Tied CHL record previously set by Brandon in 1978–79
****Broke CHL record previously set by Brandon in 1978–79
[edit] See also
[edit] References
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