Sports in Brampton, Ontario
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Club | League | Sport | Venue | Established | Championships |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Brampton Battalion | OHL | Hockey | Powerade Centre | 1998 |
0 |
Brampton Capitals | Ontario Jr. A OHA | Hockey | Brampton Memorial Arena | 1984 | 4 |
Bramalea Blues | Ontario Provincial Junior A Hockey League Tier II Junior "A" | Hockey | Victoria Park Arena | 1972 | 1 |
Brampton Excelsiors | Major Series Lacrosse Senior "A" Lacrosse League. | Lacrosse | Powerade Centre | 1912 | 30 |
Brampton Canadettes Thunder | Canadian Women's Hockey League | Hockey | Powerade Centre | 1999 | 0 |
Junior Excelsiors | OLA Junior A Lacrosse League | lacrosse | Brampton Memorial Arena | 1971 | 4 |
Brampton Beavers | Marshall Premiership | Rugby | "The Beaver Dam" at MGS Sports Park | 1963 |
[edit] Current day
There are many sporting venues and activities including the outdoor ice path for skating through Gage Park and the ski lift at Chinguacousy Park. In the summer amateur softball leagues abound and crowds line the beaches at Professor's Lake.
Every year, since 1967, the Brampton Canadettes host the Brampton Canadettes Easter Tournament[1] women's and girls' hockey teams invade Brampton for 3 1/2 days of head-to-head competition. Teams of all ages and categories from across Canada and the United States compete in this annual tournament. Teams from England, Switzerland, Japan, Kazakhstan and Russia attend this international tournament.
Thousands of players and spectators will pass through the doors during the tournament. There is no limit on the number of teams in a division.
The Intermediate AA and Midget AA divisions are highly scouted by local and American colleges and universities seeking recruits for varsity teams. Teams from as far as Alaska and Calgary, Quebec and Carolina, Michigan and Minnesota, as well as virtually all hockey centres in Ontario will compete in a minimum of 3 games each over the course of the tournament. Including championship finals, over 600 games are played in just 3½ days. For the best in hockey tournament competition, Brampton is second-to-none in the world of women's and girls' hockey.
[edit] Teams as of 1934
In 1934, a local history buff named William Perkins Bull funded the creation of the Perkins Bull Collection of books, including From rattlesnake hunt to hockey: the history of sports in Canada and the sportsmen of Peel, 1798 to 1934. This publication list included the following Brampton organizations, of past and present:
- Brampton Amateur Athletic Association
- Brampton Badminton and Athletic Club
- Brampton Baptist Church (softball)
- Brampton Excelsiors (hockey)
- Brampton Excelsiors Intermediate Team (hockey)
- Brampton Excelsiors Junior Team (hockey)
- Brampton Excelsiors Juvenile Team (hockey)
- Brampton Beavers rugby club
- Brampton Golf Club
- Brampton Gun Club
- Brampton Knitting Mills (softball)
- Brampton Ladies' Lawn Bowling Club
- Brampton Lawn Bowling Club
- Brampton Presbyterian Church (softball)
- Brampton Rifle Club
- Brampton snowshoeing club
- Brownies (hockey)
- Malboros (hockey)
In areas now part of Brampton:
- Chinguacousy Intermediate Box Lacrosse League
- Churchville Tigers
- Claireville Rustics
Also listed is the membership for the Brampton Golf and Country Club.