1994 Air Canada Cup

1994 Air Canada Cup
Tournament details
Dates April 18 24, 1994
Teams 6
Venue(s) Keystone Centre in Brandon, MB
Final positions
Champions  Saskatchewan Regina Pat Canadians
Runner-up  Alberta Red Deer Chiefs
Third place  Quebec Intrépide de Gatineau
Tournament statistics
Scoring leader(s) Nova Scotia Daniel Briere
MVP Alberta Tyler Barabonoff
1993
1995

The 1994 Air Canada Cup was Canada's 16th annual national midget 'AAA' hockey championship, which was played April 18 24, 1994 at the Keystone Centre in Brandon, Manitoba. The Regina Pat Canadians defeated the Red Deer Chiefs in double overtime of the gold medal game to win the national title. The Intrépide de Gatineau won the bronze medal game. Daniel Briere of Gatineau led the tournament in scoring, while Chris Mason of Red Deer was named Top Goaltender.[1]

Teams

Result Team Region City
1st, gold medalist(s) Saskatchewan Regina Pat Canadians West Regina, SK
2nd, silver medalist(s) Alberta Red Deer Chiefs Pacific Red Deer, AB
3rd, bronze medalist(s) Quebec Intrépide de Gatineau Quebec Gatineau, QC
4 Ontario Sudbury Nickel Capitals Central Sudbury, ON
5 Nova Scotia Halifax McDonald’s Atlantic Halifax, NS
6 Manitoba Brandon Wheat Kings Host Brandon, MB

Round Robin

Standings

Rank Team W-L-T GF GA PTS
1 Alberta Red Deer Chiefs 4-1-0 21 16 8
2 Quebec Intrépide de Gatineau 3-2-0 27 18 6
3 Saskatchewan Regina Pat Canadians 3-2-0 17 14 4
4 Ontario Sudbury Nickel Capitals 2-3-0 18 20 4
5 Nova Scotia Halifax McDonald's 2-3-0 24 25 4
6 Manitoba Brandon Wheat Kings 0-5-0 11 25 0

Scores

  • Sudbury 5 - Brandon 2
  • Regina 3 - Gatineau 2
  • Red Deer 6 - Halifax 5
  • Gatineau 5 - Brandon 3
  • Sudbury 5 - Halifax 4
  • Regina 5 - Brandon 1
  • Red Deer 4 - Sudbury 1
  • Halifax 7 - Gatineau 6

  • Sudbury 4 - Regina 3
  • Red Deer 5 - Brandon 1
  • Regina 4 - Halifax 3
  • Gatineau 7 - Sudbury 3
  • Red Deer 4 - Regina 2
  • Halifax 5 - Brandon 4
  • Gatineau 7 - Red Deer 2

Playoffs

Semi-Finals

Bronze Medal Game

Gold Medal Game

Individual Awards

See also

References

  1. "TELUS40". Hockey Canada. Retrieved April 15, 2013.
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