Cincinnati Swords: Difference between revisions

Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
 
(10 intermediate revisions by 8 users not shown)
Line 1:
{{short description|Former American ice hockey team}}
{{More citations needed|date=April 2018}}
{{Pro hockey team
Line 18 ⟶ 19:
}}
 
The '''Cincinnati Swords''' were an [[American Hockey League]] team that played at the [[Cincinnati Gardens]] in [[Cincinnati, Ohio]] from 1971 to 1974. They were owned by and the affiliate of the [[Buffalo Sabres]] of the [[National Hockey League]].
 
==History==
The Swords were founded in 1971 when the newly created NHL team, the Buffalo Sabres, exercised their option to create their own [[American Hockey League|AHL]] [[farm team]] to replace the team they forced out of the AHL, the [[Buffalo Bisons (AHL)|Buffalo Bisons]]. The Sabres had wished to place the team in [[South Florida]], but the AHL balked because a team there would have effectively been isolated from the rest of the league; their nearest rivals would have been the [[Virginia Wings|Tidewater Wings]], over 500 miles away. Furthermore, the only sizable sports arena in the region, the [[Hollywood Sportatorium]], had severe structural flaws that made it unsuitable as a professional sports venue. The Sabres then proposed to base the team in Cincinnati. Eventually, a team moved to Florida when the cross state rival [[Cleveland Barons (1937–1973)|Cleveland Barons]] moved to Jacksonville in 1973.
 
Although they were in existence for only three years, the Swords were immensely popular with Cincinnati fans. They qualified for the playoffs in their first season; they swept the [[Hershey Bears]] and lost 4-2 to the [[Baltimore Clippers]] in the second round. In 1972–73, the Swords broke numerous AHL records, including most points in a season (113), most wins in a season (54), most homes wins (32), most road wins (22), most points at home (65), and most points in road games (48). They outscored opponents 351-206. After a sweep over the [[Richmond Robins]] and a 4-2 series win over the [[Virginia Wings]] in the first and second rounds of the playoffs, the Cincinnati Swords defeated the defending league champions, the [[Nova Scotia Voyageurs]] to win the [[Calder Cup]] - one of the youngest AHL teams to take the title. The third season was the final one for the Swords; in the playoffs, they lost to the eventual Calder Cup champions, the Hershey Bears, 4-1.
Line 27 ⟶ 28:
In 1974, Cincinnati was granted an expansion franchise in the [[World Hockey Association]], the [[Cincinnati Stingers]], to begin play in 1975-76. Despite the Swords' popularity, the Sabres were not willing to compete with a WHA team and folded the Swords after the 1973–74 season.
 
In 2017, the Sabres once again established a farm team relationship with a Cincinnati hockey team when they affiliated with the [[ECHL]]'s [[Cincinnati Cyclones]].<ref>{{Cite web|date=May 25, 2017|title=CYCLONES ENTER AFFILIATION WITH BUFFALO, ROCHESTER|url=http://www.echl.com/cyclones-enter-affiliation-buffalo-rochester|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170526023856/http://www.echl.com/cyclones-enter-affiliation-buffalo-rochester|archive-date=May 26, 2017|access-date=May 25, 2017|website=[[ECHL]]}}</ref>
 
==Season-by-season results==
Line 61 ⟶ 62:
 
[[Category:Defunct American Hockey League teams]]
[[Category:Defunct ice hockey teams in the United StatesOhio]]
[[Category:Ice hockey clubs established in 1971]]
[[Category:Ice hockey clubs disestablished in 1974]]
[[Category:Ice hockey teams in Ohio]]
[[Category:Buffalo Sabres minor league affiliates]]
[[Category:1971 establishments in Ohio]]