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Durham Huskies

The Durham Huskies were an ice hockey franchise based in the town of Durham, Ontario, Canada. The team is actually a series of teams that have spanned nine decades and through an uncountable series of leagues. The Huskies have existed under of couple short lived monikers before finding their name by accident in the 1950s. This team has spanned the Junior, Intermediate, and Senior levels of Ontario hockey.

Durham Huskies
CityDurham, Ontario
LeagueVarious Senior Leagues
OperatedCirca 1908-1992
Home arenaDurham Community Centre
ColoursBlue, Red, and White
Head coachRoyden Burnett, Irvie Elvidge, Andy Grant, Sr., Mike Murrell, Jim Nixon, Sr.
Franchise history
1920-1952Durham Hockey Club
1952-1992Durham Huskies

The beginnings edit

Founded around 1920, the Durham Hockey Club participated in the Ontario Hockey Association Intermediate League. The league was divided into numerous small divisions in which each club would have two home-and-homes with. The team with the top record after this round robin moved on to the provincial playdowns.

Their inaugural season, 1920–21, had the Durham Hockey Club competing against Markdale, Owen Sound, and Wiarton in OHA Group 14 of the Intermediate division. The season would end with the Club earning their historic first victory but still finishing last tied with Owen Sound.

As members of Intermediate Group 16, the 1928-29 Durham Hockey Club competed against Markdale and Flesherton. In their four-game schedule, the Club went undefeated. In the first round of the playoffs they met Walkerton who beat them 7-6 and 5–2 to win the series 12-goals-to-8. In 1930–31, the club was moved into a division with Walkerton and Owen Sound, still referred to as Group 16. Durham had one win and three losses and was eliminated from playoff contention. At the same, Durham's junior team won the Northern Hockey League's junior hockey championship.

In these infantile years, many OHA clubs played a second season after the OHA season was done. This season was played under the league name: the Northern Hockey League. The Durham Hockey Club played in both leagues.

1935-36 marked the year that the Durham Hockey Club won its first ever Senior OHA Championship. Coached by Dr. Royden Burnett, this team went the distance and took home the last championship this organization would see until the 1950s.

The 1950s and 1960s edit

During the 1951–52 season, the Durham Hockey Club was competing in the Western Ontario Hockey Association Intermediate "A" League. The club was dominant, but a reporter from the town's local paper, The Chronicle, felt the team was missing a name. He attempted to give them names like the "Hornets" and the "Phantoms", but nothing stuck. Possibly by mistake, near the end of the 1952 playoff run, The Chronicle ran an article calling the club the "Huskies". The name stuck and the team won its first championship in over a decade. The team repeated their championship run in the 1952–53 season, but at the senior level, again fell dormant. The Intermediate Huskies took over from there, winning the OHA "B" championship in 1953-54 and 1955–56. After the success of the early 1950s, even the Intermediates fell off the map for a short while. It took until the 1967–68 season for the Intermediates to win the OHA again. The Huskies repeated the next year, and then disappeared from the history books.

Senior A years edit

In 1971, after being very dominant at the Intermediate B level as members of the Central League, the Huskies jumped up to the newly formed Georgian Bay Intermediate A League for one season. In that one season, they won the league and lost the OHA Intermediate A final to the Georgetown Raiders.[citation needed]

In 1972, the Huskies jumped to the new Western Senior B League which became the Continental Senior B league in 1973 and jumped up to Senior "A" in 1975. Durham won the Continental crown in Senior "B" 1973-74 and Senior "A" in 1975–76.[citation needed] The Huskies won the 1974 title by defeating the Stratford Perths 4-games-to-2 in the league and provincial final. Two years later, the Huskies advanced past their league championship to compete in the Allan Cup playdowns for the first time in their history.[citation needed] The Huskies were defeated by the Barrie Flyers 4-games-to-none in the J. Ross Robertson Cup series for the Ontario Hockey Association title.[1] Barrie made it all the way to the Allan Cup final where they were defeated 4-games-to-none by the Spokane Flyers. They Huskies found a great rivalry in the Continent league with the Lucan-Ilderton Jets and the Stratford Perths.[citation needed]

In 1980, the Continental League became the OHA Senior A Hockey League. The Huskies stayed for two seasons as the league filled with teams from the Continental League's more Toronto-based rival. In 1982, the Huskies left the league in favour of a more local competitive base and more affordable players. President of the Huskies, Steve Morris, claimed that the paying of players under the table was the biggest problem and why they had to get out.[2]

The final years edit

In 1982, the Huskies joined the Major Intermediate A Hockey League. For the first time, the Huskies would compete for the Hardy Cup and the league was fairly local with some teams as close as the Owen Sound Greys and Collingwood Shipbuilders. The new level would prove too challenging for the Huskies and they would finish last in the league.

In 1983, the Huskies jumped down to the even more local Northern Intermediate B Hockey League with neighbouring franchises like the Shelburne Muskies, Tavistock Royals, Kincardine Kings, and Port Elgin Suns. The Huskies would find their niche, winning three straight league titles and the 1985 Paxton Cup as OHA Champions. That final season, most of the rival teams had fled to the WOAA Senior Hockey League for more local governance and better regulated refereeing, leaving only Durham and Shelburne to duke it out. To fill the season with games, the OHA told the two teams to integrate their season with exhibition games in the OHA Intermediate C Hockey League—these games resulted mostly in massive blowouts (19-3, 12–2, etc.) which kept Durham and Shelburne from truly becoming "battle hardened" for playoffs. This showed in the 1986 OHA Final when Durham forfeited a 2-games-to-none and 3-games-to-2 series lead to the Dunnville Mudcats to lose the series.

The summer of 1986 saw restructuring. The Northern League and OHA Intermediate C League, combined with Collingwood fresh out of OHA Senior A, were reorganized into Georgian Bay Senior A and Senior B. This came at the end of the "Intermediate" era and happened 2–3 years after the rest of the country got rid of the designation. Durham and Collingwood dominated the Senior A league, with Durham winning the provincial Senior AA crown to move into the Hardy Cup playdowns and Collingwood winning the provincial Senior A crown. This structure faltered after one season as more teams defected to the WOAA in 1987 and Collingwood took a year off to build a new Junior B team (Collingwood Blues). The remaining teams were reorganized back into the Northern Senior B Hockey League and a new rival league called the Central Senior B Hockey League. Durham would compete in the Central for 1987-88 before returning to the Northern in 1988 for good.

In 1989, the Huskies would again win the OHA Senior AA crown and advance into the Hardy Cup playdowns. They also defeated the Almonte Centennials of the Ottawa District Hockey Association to win the Ontario/Quebec championship 3-games-to-1 in Durham. Their trail would end in the Eastern Canada final, in contention for the Col. J. Bourque Trophy against the Port-aux-Basques Mariners of Newfoundland and Labrador. Durham would be swept 3-games-to-none, but in the face of an opponent that was allowed to cherry-pick the top five players from their league to come play for them against Durham and a budget of near $400,000 compared to Durham's $20,000. This was Durham's last attempt at a national championship. This team was honoured in 2009 at the Hockey Day in Durham festival.

In 1990, their league was declared Senior A. The Huskies put together consistently good teams, but kept failing to win their league championship in the face of the Creemore Chiefs and Elora Rocks. In the summer of 1992, the Huskies declared themselves folded due to lack of interest.

Season-by-season record edit

Note: GP = Games Played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, OTL = Overtime Losses, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against

Season GP W L T GF GA Points Finish Playoffs
1920-21 6 1 5 0 17 61 2 4th Int. Gr. 14
1926-27 4 3 1 0 8 6 6 1st Int. Gr. 18B
1928-29 4 4 0 0 31 6 8 1st Int. Gr. 16
1929-30 7 5 1 1 39 15 11 1st Int. Gr. 12B
1930-31 4 1 3 0 8 18 2 3rd Int. Gr. 16
1938-39 8 5 2 1 -- -- 11 2nd Int. B Gr. 9
1941-42 8 3 4 1 -- -- 7 3rd Int. B Gr. 6
1953-54 26 13 13 0 -- -- 26 5th OHA Int. A
1965-66 24 15 7 2 -- -- 32 3rd WOAA North Lost semi-final
1966-67 Statistics Missing Lost OHA Int. B SF
1967-68 22 16 6 0 -- -- 32 2nd Central Int. B Won League, won OHA Int. B
1968-69 26 20 6 0 -- -- 40 1st Central Int. B Won League, won OHA Int. B
1969-70 24 19 5 0 -- -- 38 1st Central Int. B Lost final
1970-71 20 14 5 1 137 66 29 2nd Central Int. B Won League, lost OHA Int. B Final
1971-72 Statistics Missing 1st Georgian Bay Int. A Won League, lost OHA Int. A Final
1972-73 33 21 11 1 160 135 43 3rd WSBHL
1973-74 30 22 8 0 148 107 44 2nd CSBHL Won League
1974-75 34 15 17 2 163 151 32 5th CSBHL
1975-76 40 28 10 2 215 140 58 1st CSAHL Won League, lost OHA Final
1976-77 33 12 21 0 121 197 24 6th CSAHL
1977-78 36 22 14 0 171 151 44 2nd CSAHL
1978-79 39 21 16 2 208 171 44 3rd CSAHL Lost quarter-final
1979-80 40 23 17 0 216 177 46 4th CSAHL Lost semi-final
1980-81 36 20 15 1 206 187 41 4th OHA Sr. A Lost quarter-final
1981-82 36 23 12 1 194 183 47 2nd OHA Sr. A Lost quarter-final
1982-83 30 8 22 0 134 206 16 6th OHA Int. A Lost quarter-final
1983-84 18* 11 6 1 89 70 23 2nd Northern Int. B Won League, lost OHA Final
1984-85 24 15 6 3 136 73 33 2nd Northern Int. B Won League, won OHA
1985-86 6 3 1 2 34 24 8 1st Northern Int. B Won League, lost OHA Final
1986-87 23 19 3 1 232 94 39 1st Georgian Bay Sr. A Lost final, OHA Sr. AA Champions
1987-88 25 16 6 3 144 105 34 2nd Central Sr. B Lost final
1988-89 25 16 7 2 155 113 34 1st Northern Sr. A Lost final, ON/QC Sr. AA Champions
1989-90 21 16 5 0 148 72 32 3rd Northern Sr. A Lost semi-final
1990-91 24 14 7 3 135 86 31 2nd Northern Sr. A Lost semi-final
1991-92 24 16 4 4 133 81 36 1st Northern Sr. A Lost final

(*) denotes that the results of the final 6 games of the 1983-84 season are currently missing.

(†) denotes 2 teams in league, rest of schedule filled with exhibition vs. Int. C teams.

List of championships edit

A note of interest: the Intermediate level was abolished in the late 1980s as the entire Senior and Intermediate system fell apart. Since then, the Ontario Hockey Association has rewritten the accolades of championship Intermediate level teams to read as Senior level championships. As well, the championship tiers were revised from two classifications with three tiers each (Sr. A, B, C and Int. A, B, C) to one classification with four tiers (Sr. AAA, AA, A, and B) instead. As an example, instead of the Huskies being OHA Intermediate "C" champions in 1985, the OHA now considers them the OHA Senior "A" Champions. The list below is written as close to the original championship classification and tier as possible.

Pre-"Huskies" era

  • 1930-31 Northern Hockey League Junior Champions
  • 1935-36 OHA Senior Champions

"Huskies" era

  • 1951-52 WOAA Intermediate Grand Champions
  • 1952-53 WOAA Intermediate Grand Champions
  • 1953-54 OHA Intermediate "B" Champions
  • 1955-56 OHA Intermediate "B" Champions
  • 1964-65 WOAA Major Intermediate "C" Champions
  • 1967-68 Central Intermediate "B" Champions
  • 1967-68 OHA Intermediate "B" Champions
  • 1968-69 Central Intermediate "B" Champions
  • 1968-69 OHA Intermediate "B" Champions
  • 1970-71 Southern Counties Intermediate "B" Champions
  • 1971-72 League Intermediate "A" Champions
  • 1973-74 Continental Senior "B" Champions
  • 1973-74 OHA Senior "B" Champions
  • 1975-76 Continental Senior "A" Champions
  • 1983-84 Northern Intermediate "B" Champions
  • 1984-85 Northern Intermediate "B" Champions
  • 1984-85 OHA Intermediate "B" Champions
  • 1985-86 Northern Intermediate "B" Champions
  • 1986-87 Georgian Bay Senior "A" Regular Season & Ontario Hardy Cup Champions
  • 1988-89 Central Senior "B" Regular Season, OHA, & All-Ontario Hardy Cup Champions

Runner up: 1952-53 OHA Intermediate "B", 1970-71 OHA Intermediate "B", 1971-72 OHA Intermediate "A", 1975-76 Ontario Allan Cup Finalists, 1983-84 OHA Intermediate "B", 1985-86 OHA Intermediate "B".

National Hockey League alumni edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Senior Series". Ontario Hockey Association. 2019. Retrieved February 4, 2021.
  2. ^ Senior hockey league may not survive. The Toronto Star. April 16, 1982, Page D8.

External links edit

 
Durham Huskies' game puck (circa 1990).
  • Durham Huskies historical page
  • OHA Website
  • WOAA Website
  • Internet Hockey Database

durham, huskies, this, article, about, senior, junior, team, 1996, 2001, were, hockey, franchise, based, town, durham, ontario, canada, team, actually, series, teams, that, have, spanned, nine, decades, through, uncountable, series, leagues, huskies, have, exi. This article is about the Senior Durham Huskies For the Junior A team see Durham Huskies 1996 2001 The Durham Huskies were an ice hockey franchise based in the town of Durham Ontario Canada The team is actually a series of teams that have spanned nine decades and through an uncountable series of leagues The Huskies have existed under of couple short lived monikers before finding their name by accident in the 1950s This team has spanned the Junior Intermediate and Senior levels of Ontario hockey Durham HuskiesCityDurham OntarioLeagueVarious Senior LeaguesOperatedCirca 1908 1992Home arenaDurham Community CentreColoursBlue Red and WhiteHead coachRoyden Burnett Irvie Elvidge Andy Grant Sr Mike Murrell Jim Nixon Sr Franchise history1920 1952Durham Hockey Club1952 1992Durham Huskies Contents 1 The beginnings 2 The 1950s and 1960s 3 Senior A years 4 The final years 5 Season by season record 6 List of championships 7 National Hockey League alumni 8 References 9 External linksThe beginnings editFounded around 1920 the Durham Hockey Club participated in the Ontario Hockey Association Intermediate League The league was divided into numerous small divisions in which each club would have two home and homes with The team with the top record after this round robin moved on to the provincial playdowns Their inaugural season 1920 21 had the Durham Hockey Club competing against Markdale Owen Sound and Wiarton in OHA Group 14 of the Intermediate division The season would end with the Club earning their historic first victory but still finishing last tied with Owen Sound As members of Intermediate Group 16 the 1928 29 Durham Hockey Club competed against Markdale and Flesherton In their four game schedule the Club went undefeated In the first round of the playoffs they met Walkerton who beat them 7 6 and 5 2 to win the series 12 goals to 8 In 1930 31 the club was moved into a division with Walkerton and Owen Sound still referred to as Group 16 Durham had one win and three losses and was eliminated from playoff contention At the same Durham s junior team won the Northern Hockey League s junior hockey championship In these infantile years many OHA clubs played a second season after the OHA season was done This season was played under the league name the Northern Hockey League The Durham Hockey Club played in both leagues 1935 36 marked the year that the Durham Hockey Club won its first ever Senior OHA Championship Coached by Dr Royden Burnett this team went the distance and took home the last championship this organization would see until the 1950s The 1950s and 1960s editDuring the 1951 52 season the Durham Hockey Club was competing in the Western Ontario Hockey Association Intermediate A League The club was dominant but a reporter from the town s local paper The Chronicle felt the team was missing a name He attempted to give them names like the Hornets and the Phantoms but nothing stuck Possibly by mistake near the end of the 1952 playoff run The Chronicle ran an article calling the club the Huskies The name stuck and the team won its first championship in over a decade The team repeated their championship run in the 1952 53 season but at the senior level again fell dormant The Intermediate Huskies took over from there winning the OHA B championship in 1953 54 and 1955 56 After the success of the early 1950s even the Intermediates fell off the map for a short while It took until the 1967 68 season for the Intermediates to win the OHA again The Huskies repeated the next year and then disappeared from the history books Senior A years editIn 1971 after being very dominant at the Intermediate B level as members of the Central League the Huskies jumped up to the newly formed Georgian Bay Intermediate A League for one season In that one season they won the league and lost the OHA Intermediate A final to the Georgetown Raiders citation needed In 1972 the Huskies jumped to the new Western Senior B League which became the Continental Senior B league in 1973 and jumped up to Senior A in 1975 Durham won the Continental crown in Senior B 1973 74 and Senior A in 1975 76 citation needed The Huskies won the 1974 title by defeating the Stratford Perths 4 games to 2 in the league and provincial final Two years later the Huskies advanced past their league championship to compete in the Allan Cup playdowns for the first time in their history citation needed The Huskies were defeated by the Barrie Flyers 4 games to none in the J Ross Robertson Cup series for the Ontario Hockey Association title 1 Barrie made it all the way to the Allan Cup final where they were defeated 4 games to none by the Spokane Flyers They Huskies found a great rivalry in the Continent league with the Lucan Ilderton Jets and the Stratford Perths citation needed In 1980 the Continental League became the OHA Senior A Hockey League The Huskies stayed for two seasons as the league filled with teams from the Continental League s more Toronto based rival In 1982 the Huskies left the league in favour of a more local competitive base and more affordable players President of the Huskies Steve Morris claimed that the paying of players under the table was the biggest problem and why they had to get out 2 The final years editIn 1982 the Huskies joined the Major Intermediate A Hockey League For the first time the Huskies would compete for the Hardy Cup and the league was fairly local with some teams as close as the Owen Sound Greys and Collingwood Shipbuilders The new level would prove too challenging for the Huskies and they would finish last in the league In 1983 the Huskies jumped down to the even more local Northern Intermediate B Hockey League with neighbouring franchises like the Shelburne Muskies Tavistock Royals Kincardine Kings and Port Elgin Suns The Huskies would find their niche winning three straight league titles and the 1985 Paxton Cup as OHA Champions That final season most of the rival teams had fled to the WOAA Senior Hockey League for more local governance and better regulated refereeing leaving only Durham and Shelburne to duke it out To fill the season with games the OHA told the two teams to integrate their season with exhibition games in the OHA Intermediate C Hockey League these games resulted mostly in massive blowouts 19 3 12 2 etc which kept Durham and Shelburne from truly becoming battle hardened for playoffs This showed in the 1986 OHA Final when Durham forfeited a 2 games to none and 3 games to 2 series lead to the Dunnville Mudcats to lose the series The summer of 1986 saw restructuring The Northern League and OHA Intermediate C League combined with Collingwood fresh out of OHA Senior A were reorganized into Georgian Bay Senior A and Senior B This came at the end of the Intermediate era and happened 2 3 years after the rest of the country got rid of the designation Durham and Collingwood dominated the Senior A league with Durham winning the provincial Senior AA crown to move into the Hardy Cup playdowns and Collingwood winning the provincial Senior A crown This structure faltered after one season as more teams defected to the WOAA in 1987 and Collingwood took a year off to build a new Junior B team Collingwood Blues The remaining teams were reorganized back into the Northern Senior B Hockey League and a new rival league called the Central Senior B Hockey League Durham would compete in the Central for 1987 88 before returning to the Northern in 1988 for good In 1989 the Huskies would again win the OHA Senior AA crown and advance into the Hardy Cup playdowns They also defeated the Almonte Centennials of the Ottawa District Hockey Association to win the Ontario Quebec championship 3 games to 1 in Durham Their trail would end in the Eastern Canada final in contention for the Col J Bourque Trophy against the Port aux Basques Mariners of Newfoundland and Labrador Durham would be swept 3 games to none but in the face of an opponent that was allowed to cherry pick the top five players from their league to come play for them against Durham and a budget of near 400 000 compared to Durham s 20 000 This was Durham s last attempt at a national championship This team was honoured in 2009 at the Hockey Day in Durham festival In 1990 their league was declared Senior A The Huskies put together consistently good teams but kept failing to win their league championship in the face of the Creemore Chiefs and Elora Rocks In the summer of 1992 the Huskies declared themselves folded due to lack of interest Season by season record editNote GP Games Played W Wins L Losses T Ties OTL Overtime Losses GF Goals for GA Goals against Season GP W L T GF GA Points Finish Playoffs1920 21 6 1 5 0 17 61 2 4th Int Gr 141926 27 4 3 1 0 8 6 6 1st Int Gr 18B1928 29 4 4 0 0 31 6 8 1st Int Gr 161929 30 7 5 1 1 39 15 11 1st Int Gr 12B1930 31 4 1 3 0 8 18 2 3rd Int Gr 161938 39 8 5 2 1 11 2nd Int B Gr 91941 42 8 3 4 1 7 3rd Int B Gr 61953 54 26 13 13 0 26 5th OHA Int A1965 66 24 15 7 2 32 3rd WOAA North Lost semi final1966 67 Statistics Missing Lost OHA Int B SF1967 68 22 16 6 0 32 2nd Central Int B Won League won OHA Int B1968 69 26 20 6 0 40 1st Central Int B Won League won OHA Int B1969 70 24 19 5 0 38 1st Central Int B Lost final1970 71 20 14 5 1 137 66 29 2nd Central Int B Won League lost OHA Int B Final1971 72 Statistics Missing 1st Georgian Bay Int A Won League lost OHA Int A Final1972 73 33 21 11 1 160 135 43 3rd WSBHL1973 74 30 22 8 0 148 107 44 2nd CSBHL Won League1974 75 34 15 17 2 163 151 32 5th CSBHL1975 76 40 28 10 2 215 140 58 1st CSAHL Won League lost OHA Final1976 77 33 12 21 0 121 197 24 6th CSAHL1977 78 36 22 14 0 171 151 44 2nd CSAHL1978 79 39 21 16 2 208 171 44 3rd CSAHL Lost quarter final1979 80 40 23 17 0 216 177 46 4th CSAHL Lost semi final1980 81 36 20 15 1 206 187 41 4th OHA Sr A Lost quarter final1981 82 36 23 12 1 194 183 47 2nd OHA Sr A Lost quarter final1982 83 30 8 22 0 134 206 16 6th OHA Int A Lost quarter final1983 84 18 11 6 1 89 70 23 2nd Northern Int B Won League lost OHA Final1984 85 24 15 6 3 136 73 33 2nd Northern Int B Won League won OHA1985 86 6 3 1 2 34 24 8 1st Northern Int B Won League lost OHA Final1986 87 23 19 3 1 232 94 39 1st Georgian Bay Sr A Lost final OHA Sr AA Champions1987 88 25 16 6 3 144 105 34 2nd Central Sr B Lost final1988 89 25 16 7 2 155 113 34 1st Northern Sr A Lost final ON QC Sr AA Champions1989 90 21 16 5 0 148 72 32 3rd Northern Sr A Lost semi final1990 91 24 14 7 3 135 86 31 2nd Northern Sr A Lost semi final1991 92 24 16 4 4 133 81 36 1st Northern Sr A Lost final denotes that the results of the final 6 games of the 1983 84 season are currently missing denotes 2 teams in league rest of schedule filled with exhibition vs Int C teams List of championships editA note of interest the Intermediate level was abolished in the late 1980s as the entire Senior and Intermediate system fell apart Since then the Ontario Hockey Association has rewritten the accolades of championship Intermediate level teams to read as Senior level championships As well the championship tiers were revised from two classifications with three tiers each Sr A B C and Int A B C to one classification with four tiers Sr AAA AA A and B instead As an example instead of the Huskies being OHA Intermediate C champions in 1985 the OHA now considers them the OHA Senior A Champions The list below is written as close to the original championship classification and tier as possible Pre Huskies era 1930 31 Northern Hockey League Junior Champions 1935 36 OHA Senior Champions Huskies era 1951 52 WOAA Intermediate Grand Champions 1952 53 WOAA Intermediate Grand Champions 1953 54 OHA Intermediate B Champions 1955 56 OHA Intermediate B Champions 1964 65 WOAA Major Intermediate C Champions 1967 68 Central Intermediate B Champions 1967 68 OHA Intermediate B Champions 1968 69 Central Intermediate B Champions 1968 69 OHA Intermediate B Champions 1970 71 Southern Counties Intermediate B Champions 1971 72 League Intermediate A Champions 1973 74 Continental Senior B Champions 1973 74 OHA Senior B Champions 1975 76 Continental Senior A Champions 1983 84 Northern Intermediate B Champions 1984 85 Northern Intermediate B Champions 1984 85 OHA Intermediate B Champions 1985 86 Northern Intermediate B Champions 1986 87 Georgian Bay Senior A Regular Season amp Ontario Hardy Cup Champions 1988 89 Central Senior B Regular Season OHA amp All Ontario Hardy Cup ChampionsRunner up 1952 53 OHA Intermediate B 1970 71 OHA Intermediate B 1971 72 OHA Intermediate A 1975 76 Ontario Allan Cup Finalists 1983 84 OHA Intermediate B 1985 86 OHA Intermediate B National Hockey League alumni editDean Hopkins Stan Long Jim RobertsReferences edit Senior Series Ontario Hockey Association 2019 Retrieved February 4 2021 Senior hockey league may not survive The Toronto Star April 16 1982 Page D8 External links edit nbsp Durham Huskies game puck circa 1990 Durham Huskies historical page OHA Website WOAA Website WOAA Senior Hockey Website Internet Hockey Database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Durham Huskies amp oldid 1184796600, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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