The Calder Cup

The Calder Cup is the trophy awarded annually to the playoff champion of the American Hockey League (AHL). First awarded in the 1937–38 season, it is named after Frank Calder, first president of the National Hockey League. The Calder Cup is distinct from the Calder Memorial Trophy, which is awarded annually to the Rookie of the Year in the National Hockey League.[1]

Teams from 28 different cities have won the Calder Cup. The Hershey Bears have won 12 championships, the most of any team currently in the AHL, and have competed in 24 finals, the most of any team in AHL history, compiling a 12–12 record in the finals. Teams representing Cleveland, Ohio are second, with 10 total championships (nine by the Barons franchise, which competed in the league until 1973, and the city's current team - the Cleveland Monsters - winning the 10th in 2016.)[2]

On May 11, 2020, the AHL cancelled the remainder of the 2019–20 AHL season and the 2020 Calder Cup playoffs due to the COVID-19 pandemic, marking the first time that a Calder Cup champion was not awarded in the trophy's history.[3] It was also not awarded in 2021 as the league did not hold a playoff (even though the AHL did play a delayed and shortened regular season).[4]

The Most Valuable Player of the playoffs is awarded the Jack A. Butterfield Trophy. It was first awarded in 1984 and is named after the former president of the AHL, Jack Butterfield. The trophy has been won by 35 different players, with none having won it more than once.[5]

List of winners

Key
  • (#)–Number of Calder Cups won at the time
  •   Player was a member of the defeated team in the Calder Cup Finals

Note: All Jack A. Butterfield Trophy winners played for the winning team, unless otherwise noted.

The Philadelphia Phantoms swept the Chicago Wolves to win the 2005 Calder Cup in front of a playoff record crowd of 20,103.
The Hamilton Bulldogs celebrate their Calder Cup win in 2007
The Chicago Wolves celebrate winning the 2008 Calder Cup
Season Winning team Series Losing team Jack A. Butterfield Trophy Winning head coach
1936–37 Syracuse Stars (1) 3–1 Philadelphia Ramblers Not awarded Eddie Powers
1937–38 Providence Reds (1) 3–1 Syracuse Stars Fred (Bun) Cook
1938–39Cleveland Barons (1)3–1Philadelphia Ramblers Bill Cook
1939–40Providence Reds (2)3–0Pittsburgh Hornets Fred (Bun) Cook (2)
1940–41Cleveland Barons (2)3–2Hershey Bears Bill Cook (2)
1941–42Indianapolis Capitals (1)3–2Hershey Bears Herb Lewis
1942–43Buffalo Bisons (1)3–0Indianapolis Capitals Art Chapman
1943–44Buffalo Bisons (2)4–0Cleveland Barons Art Chapman (2)
1944–45Cleveland Barons (3)4–2Hershey Bears Fred (Bun) Cook (3)
1945–46Buffalo Bisons (3)4–3Cleveland Barons Frank Beisler
1946–47Hershey Bears (1)4–3Pittsburgh Hornets Don Penniston
1947–48Cleveland Barons (4)4–0Buffalo Bisons Fred (Bun) Cook (4)
1948–49Providence Reds (3)4–3Hershey Bears Terry Reardon
1949–50Indianapolis Capitals (2)4–0Cleveland Barons Ott Heller
1950–51Cleveland Barons (5)4–3Pittsburgh Hornets Fred (Bun) Cook (5)
1951–52Pittsburgh Hornets (1)4–2Providence Reds King Clancy
1952–53Cleveland Barons (6)4–3Pittsburgh Hornets Fred (Bun) Cook (6)
1953–54Cleveland Barons (7)4–2Hershey Bears Fred (Bun) Cook (7)
1954–55Pittsburgh Hornets (2)4–2Buffalo Bisons Howie Meeker
1955–56Providence Reds (4)4–0Cleveland Barons John Crawford
1956–57Cleveland Barons (8)4–1Rochester Americans Jack Gordon
1957–58Hershey Bears (2)4–2Springfield Indians Frank Mathers
1958–59Hershey Bears (3)4–2Buffalo Bisons Frank Mathers (2)
1959–60Springfield Indians (1)4–1Rochester Americans Pat Egan
1960–61Springfield Indians (2)4–0Hershey Bears Pat Egan (2)
1961–62Springfield Indians (3)4–1Buffalo Bisons Pat Egan (3)
1962–63Buffalo Bisons (4)4–3Hershey Bears Bill Reay
1963–64Cleveland Barons (9)4–0Quebec Aces Fred Glover
1964–65Rochester Americans (1)4–1Hershey Bears Joe Crozier
1965–66Rochester Americans (2)4–2Cleveland Barons Joe Crozier (2)
1966–67Pittsburgh Hornets (1)[A]4–0Rochester Americans Baz Bastien
1967–68Rochester Americans (3)4–2Quebec Aces Joe Crozier (3)
1968–69Hershey Bears (4)4–1Quebec Aces Frank Mathers (3)
1969–70Buffalo Bisons (5)4–0Springfield Kings Fred Shero
1970–71Springfield Kings (4)4–0Providence Reds Johnny Wilson
1971–72Nova Scotia Voyageurs (1)4–2Baltimore Clippers Al MacNeil
1972–73Cincinnati Swords (1)4–1Nova Scotia Voyageurs Floyd Smith
1973–74Hershey Bears (5)4–1Providence Reds Chuck Hamilton
1974–75Springfield Indians (5)4–1New Haven Nighthawks Ron Stewart
1975–76Nova Scotia Voyageurs (2)4–1Hershey Bears Al MacNeil (2)
1976–77Nova Scotia Voyageurs (3)4–2Rochester Americans Al MacNeil (3)
1977–78Maine Mariners (1)4–1New Haven Nighthawks Bob McCammon
1978–79Maine Mariners (2)4–0New Haven Nighthawks Bob McCammon (2)
1979–80Hershey Bears (6)4–2New Brunswick Hawks Doug Gibson
1980–81Adirondack Red Wings (1)4–2Maine Mariners Tom Webster and J.P. LeBlanc (co-coaches)
1981–82New Brunswick Hawks (1)4–1Binghamton Whalers Orval Tessier
1982–83Rochester Americans (4)4–0Maine Mariners Mike Keenan
1983–84Maine Mariners (3)4–1Rochester AmericansBud Stefanski John Paddock
1984–85Sherbrooke Canadiens (1)4–2Baltimore SkipjacksBrian Skrudland Pierre Creamer
1985–86Adirondack Red Wings (2)4–2Hershey BearsTim Tookey[B] Bill Dineen
1986–87Rochester Americans (5)4–3Sherbrooke CanadiensDavid Fenyves John Van Boxmeer
1987–88Hershey Bears (7)4–0Fredericton ExpressWendell Young John Paddock (2)
1988–89Adirondack Red Wings (3)4–1New Haven NighthawksSam St. Laurent Bill Dineen (2)
1989–90Springfield Indians (6)4–2Rochester AmericansJeff Hackett Jim Roberts
1990–91Springfield Indians (7)4–2Rochester AmericansKay Whitmore Jim Roberts (2)
1991–92Adirondack Red Wings (4)4–3St. John's Maple LeafsAllan Bester Barry Melrose
1992–93Cape Breton Oilers (1)4–1Rochester AmericansBill McDougall George Burnett
1993–94Portland Pirates (1)4–2Moncton HawksOlaf Kölzig Barry Trotz
1994–95Albany River Rats (1)4–0Fredericton CanadiensCorey Schwab & Mike Dunham Robbie Ftorek
1995–96Rochester Americans (6)4–3Portland PiratesDixon Ward John Tortorella
1996–97Hershey Bears (8)4–1Hamilton BulldogsMike McHugh Bob Hartley
1997–98Philadelphia Phantoms (1)4–2Saint John FlamesMike Maneluk Bill Barber
1998–99Providence Bruins (1)4–1Rochester AmericansPeter Ferraro Peter Laviolette
1999–00Hartford Wolf Pack (1)4–2Rochester Americans Derek Armstrong John Paddock (3)
2000–01Saint John Flames (1)4–2Wilkes-Barre/Scranton PenguinsSteve Begin Jim Playfair
2001–02Chicago Wolves (1)4–1Bridgeport Sound TigersPasi Nurminen John Anderson
2002–03Houston Aeros (1)4–3Hamilton BulldogsJohan Holmqvist Todd McLellan
2003–04Milwaukee Admirals (1)4–0Wilkes-Barre/Scranton PenguinsWade Flaherty Claude Noël
2004–05Philadelphia Phantoms (2)4–0Chicago WolvesAntero Niittymäki John Stevens
2005–06Hershey Bears (9)4–2Milwaukee AdmiralsFrederic Cassivi Bruce Boudreau
2006–07Hamilton Bulldogs (1)4–1Hershey BearsCarey Price Don Lever
2007–08Chicago Wolves (2)4–2Wilkes-Barre/Scranton PenguinsJason Krog John Anderson (2)
2008–09Hershey Bears (10)4–2Manitoba MooseMichal Neuvirth Bob Woods
2009–10Hershey Bears (11)4–2Texas StarsChris Bourque Mark French
2010–11Binghamton Senators (1)4–2Houston AerosRobin Lehner Kurt Kleinendorst
2011–12Norfolk Admirals (1)4–0Toronto MarliesAlexandre Picard Jon Cooper
2012–13Grand Rapids Griffins (1)4–2Syracuse CrunchTomáš Tatar Jeff Blashill
2013–14Texas Stars (1)4–1St. John's IceCapsTravis Morin Willie Desjardins
2014–15Manchester Monarchs (1)4–1Utica CometsJordan Weal Mike Stothers
2015–16Lake Erie Monsters (1)4–0Hershey BearsOliver Bjorkstrand Jared Bednar
2016–17Grand Rapids Griffins (2)4–2Syracuse CrunchTyler Bertuzzi Todd Nelson
2017–18Toronto Marlies (1)4–3Texas StarsAndreas Johnsson Sheldon Keefe
2018–19Charlotte Checkers (1)4–1Chicago WolvesAndrew Poturalski Mike Vellucci
2019–20No Calder Cup playoffs due to the COVID-19 pandemic[6]
2020–21No Calder Cup playoffs due to the COVID-19 pandemic
2021–22Chicago Wolves (3)4–1Springfield ThunderbirdsJosh Leivo Ryan Warsofsky
2022–23Hershey Bears (12)4–3Coachella Valley FirebirdsHunter Shepard Todd Nelson (2)

^ A. Calder Cup won by second franchise known as the Pittsburgh Hornets. Previous franchise became the Rochester Americans.
^ B. Tim Tookey, Butterfield Trophy winner in 1985–86, played for the Hershey Bears, and is the only Butterfield Trophy winner to date to have played for a losing team in the Calder Cup finals.

Number of Calder Cups won by team

Bold denotes an active AHL team

Team Championships Runner Up PCT.
Hershey Bears 12 12 .500
Cleveland Barons 9 5 .643
Springfield Indians/Kings 7 2 .778
Rochester Americans 6 10 .375
Buffalo Bisons 5 4 .556
Adirondack Red Wings 4 0 1.000
Providence Reds 4 3 .571
Maine Mariners 3 2 .600
Nova Scotia Voyageurs 3 1 .750
Pittsburgh Hornets 3 4 .429
Chicago Wolves 3 2 .600
Grand Rapids Griffins 2 0 1.000
Indianapolis Capitals 2 1 .667
Philadelphia Phantoms 2 0 1.000
Albany River Rats 1 0 1.000
Binghamton Senators 1 0 1.000
Cape Breton Oilers 1 0 1.000
Charlotte Checkers 1 0 1.000
Cincinnati Swords 1 0 1.000
Hamilton Bulldogs 1 1 .500
Hartford Wolf Pack 1 0 1.000
Houston Aeros 1 1 .500
Cleveland Monsters 1 0 1.000
Ontario Reign (Manchester Monarchs) 1 0 1.000
Milwaukee Admirals 1 0 1.000
New Brunswick Hawks 1 1 .500
Norfolk Admirals 1 0 1.000
Portland Pirates 1 1 .500
Providence Bruins 1 0 1.000
Saint John Flames 1 1 .500
Sherbrooke Canadiens 1 1 .500
Syracuse Stars 1 1 .500
Texas Stars 1 2 .333
Toronto Marlies 1 1 .500
Bridgeport Islanders (Sound Tigers) 0 1 .000
Manitoba Moose 0 1 .000
Springfield Thunderbirds 0 1 .000
Baltimore Clippers 0 1 .000
Binghamton Whalers 0 1 .000
Coachella Valley Firebirds 0 1 .000
Syracuse Crunch 0 2 .000
Philadelphia Ramblers 0 2 .000
Quebec Aces 0 3 .000
Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins 0 3 .000
New Haven Nighthawks 0 4 .000

References

General
  • "Calder Cup Champions". American Hockey League. Archived from the original on 2008-05-26. Retrieved 2008-06-03.
  • "Jack A. Butterfield Trophy". American Hockey League. Archived from the original on 2008-09-17. Retrieved 2008-06-03.
  • "Calder Cup Winners". Slam! Sports. Retrieved 2008-06-07.
  • "Calder Cup–History". LegendsofHockey.net. Archived from the original on 2008-05-17. Retrieved 2008-06-03.
Specific
  1. "Calder Memorial Trophy". National Hockey League. Archived from the original on 2006-04-23. Retrieved 2008-06-16.
  2. "The Story of the Calder Cup". American Hockey League. Archived from the original on 2008-02-10. Retrieved 2008-06-07.
  3. "AHL cancels remainder of 2019-20 season". American Hockey League. 2020-05-11. Retrieved 2020-05-11.
  4. "American Hockey League Announces Plans for 2021 Playoffs, Sets Calendar for 2021-22". OurSports Central. April 29, 2021.
  5. "Jack A. Butterfield". American Hockey League. 2006-01-05. Archived from the original on 2007-07-01. Retrieved 2008-06-07.
  6. "AHL cancels remainder of 2019-20 season". American Hockey League. 2020-05-11. Retrieved 2020-05-11.

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