
Kelly Cup Tour Visits Bakersfield Wednesday
Published on April 3, 2007 under ECHL (ECHL) News Release
PRINCETON, N.J. - The Fourth-Annual Kelly Cup Tour is stopping
at Rabobank Arena, on Wednesday when the Bakersfield Condors will host the
ECHL championship trophy and the Idaho Steelheads.
The Kelly Cup, which visited Bakersfield during the Kelly Cup Tour in
2004, stands 19 3/8 inches tall and weighs 25 3/8 pounds. The Kelly Cup
Tour also features a full-color display that chronicles and highlights the
intensity and excitement of the Kelly Cup Playoffs.
The Condors will be making their third straight appearance in the Kelly
Cup Playoffs and have already secured home-ice advantage for the first
round. Bakersfield has set team records for points (94), wins (41) and road
wins (20), and can reach 100 points if it wins its last three games.
The 51-day tour is the longest ever and has covered 10,502 of the 13,011
miles it will travel. The Tour has stopped in six states - Arizona
(Phoenix), California (Bakersfield and Long Beach), Ohio (Dayton and Troy),
Utah (West Valley City), West Virginia (Wheeling) - and visited British
Columbia for the second straight year. Each of the 25 teams in the ECHL
were offered the opportunity to have the Kelly Cup visit their city during
the tour which was created to give fans a chance to view the coveted trophy
presented annually to the postseason champion of the Premier 'AA' Hockey
League since 1997 and won in 2006 by the Alaska Aces.
The Kelly Cup has gained recognition and prominence as the championship
trophy of the nationwide league and is a symbol of hard work, dedication
and excellence at the 'AA' level. It has been displayed on multiple
occasions with both the National Hockey League's Stanley Cup and the
American Hockey League's Calder Cup.
Following its stop in Bakersfield, the Kelly Cup Tour will travel 2,509
miles for its final stop in North Charleston, S.C., home of the South
Carolina Stingrays. The Stingrays are the only two-time winners of the
Kelly Cup having captured it the first year it was awarded in 1997 and
again in 2001. South Carolina has advanced to the Kelly Cup Playoffs in
every one of its 13 seasons and holds the ECHL record for most playoff
appearances and consecutive playoff appearances.
The trophy has visited 16 states and one Canadian province since the Kelly
Cup Tour began in 2004. In addition to being displayed at ECHL games, the
trophy has appeared at schools, sponsors, radio and television stations and
other community events in each city. The Kelly Cup replaced the Riley Cup,
which was awarded to the ECHL postseason champion from 1989-96.
The trophy is named in recognition of Patrick J. Kelly, who is one of the
founding fathers of the ECHL, which began with five teams in three states
in 1988-89. Kelly served as Commissioner for the league's first eight
seasons and was named Commissioner Emeritus in 1996, a title that he
continues to hold. Kelly, who celebrated his 50th season in professional
hockey in 2002-03, coached 1,900 career games and had 935 wins to rank
second all time among professional coaches to only the legendary Scotty
Bowman with 2,571 games and 1,511 wins. Kelly coached in the Eastern Hockey
League, the Southern Hockey League and the National Hockey League where he
was the only coach to ever lead the Colorado Rockies to the Stanley Cup
Playoffs. He also coached in the American Hockey League and the
International Hockey League, leading Peoria to the Turner Cup in 1984-85.
2007 Kelly Cup Tour Schedule
Feb. 16-17 Dayton, Ohio
Feb. 18 Troy, Ohio
Mar. 2-3 Stockton, Calif.
Mar. 9-10 West Valley City, Utah
Mar. 13 Phoenix
Mar. 16 Long Beach, Calif.
Mar. 23-24 Victoria, British Columbia
Mar. 30-31 Wheeling, W.Va.
Apr. 4 Bakersfield, Calif.
Apr. 7 North Charleston, S.C.
2007 Kelly Cup Tour Facts
- 51 days (Feb. 16-Apr. 7)
- Nine ECHL Cities
- Distance Traveled - 13,013 miles
- Longest Travel Segment - 2,725 miles (Victoria, British Columbia to
Wheeling, W.Va.)
- Shortest Travel Segment - 381 miles (Phoenix to Long Beach, Calif.)
2006 Kelly Cup Tour Facts
- 50 days (Feb. 10-Mar. 31)
- 11 ECHL Cities - Boise, Charlotte, Duluth, Greenville, Johnstown, North
Charleston, Stockton, Toledo, Victoria, West Valley City and Wheeling
- Distance Traveled - 10,339 miles
- Longest Travel Segment - 2,584 miles (Stockton, Calif. to Johnstown, Pa.)
- Shortest Travel Segment - 104 miles (Greenville, S.C. to Charlotte, N.C.)
2005 Kelly Cup Tour Facts
- 51 days (Feb. 18-Apr. 9)
- 12 ECHL Cities - Bakersfield, Biloxi, Boise, Charlotte, Columbia, Estero,
Florence, Fresno, Long Beach, North Charleston, Reading and Toledo
- Distance Traveled - 7,112 miles
- Longest Travel Segment - 2,511 miles (North Charleston, S.C. to
Bakersfield, Calif.)
- Shortest Travel Segment - 78 miles (Columbia, S.C. to Florence, S.C.)
2004 Kelly Cup Tour Facts
- 44 Days (Feb. 20-Apr. 3)
- 10 ECHL Cities - Atlantic City, Boise, Columbia, Duluth, Estero,
Florence, Greensboro, Lafayette, North Charleston and Wheeling
- Distance Traveled - 7,543 miles
- Longest Travel Segment - 2,506 miles (Boise, Idaho to Atlantic City,
N.J.)
- Shortest Travel Segment - 78 miles (Columbia, S.C. to Florence, S.C.)
Kelly Cup Champions
2006 - Alaska defeated Gwinnett, 4 games to 1
2005 - Trenton defeated Florida, 4 games to 2
2004 - Idaho defeated Florida, 4 games to 1
2003 - Atlantic City defeated Columbia, 4 games to 1
2002 - Greenville defeated Dayton, 4 games to 0
2001 - South Carolina defeated Trenton, 4 games to 1
2000 - Peoria defeated Louisiana, 4 games to 2
1999 - Mississippi defeated Richmond, 4 games to 3
1998 - Hampton Roads defeated Pensacola, 4 games to 2
1997 - South Carolina defeated Louisiana, 4 games to 1
Kelly Cup Notes
- The Kelly Cup Champion the last two seasons has been from the National
Conference with Alaska in 2006 and Trenton in 2005 while Idaho was a member
of the Western Conference when it won in 2004. The Kelly Cup Champion has
come from the Northern Conference three times (2003 - Atlantic City, 2000 -
Peoria and 1998 - Hampton Roads) and from the Southern Conference three
times (2002 - Greenville, 2001 - South Carolina and 1999 - Mississippi).
The first season that the Kelly Cup was awarded the ECHL did not have
conferences but rather three divisions (East, North and South). The winner
was South Carolina from the East Division.
- In the 10 years that the Kelly Cup has been awarded, the state of South
Carolina has produced the winner three times (South Carolina in 1997 and
2001 and Greenville in 2002) and New Jersey has produced the winner twice
(Atlantic City in 2003 and Trenton in 2005) while Alaska, Idaho, Illinois,
Mississippi and Virginia have each produced one champion.
- With the exception of Hampton Roads in 1998 and Idaho in 2004, every ECHL
Champion has finished in the Top Five in the regular season standings.
Hampton Roads finished 18th overall and qualified for the postseason on the
final day of the regular season. Idaho finished tied for 11th overall.
Ironically, only twice in ECHL history has a team finished first in the
regular season and gone on to win in the postseason - South Carolina in
1997 and Alaska in 2006.
- The Alaska Aces hold the distinction of being the Kelly Cup Champion
located the furthest west and also the furthest north. The latitude of
Anchorage, Alaska is 61.1306 N while its longitude is 149.5357 W. The Kelly
Cup Champion located the furthest south (30.40334 N) is the Mississippi Sea
Wolves in 1999 while the Atlantic City Boardwalk Bullies in 2003 are
located the furthest east (74.431727 W).
- Twelve players whose name appears on the Kelly Cup have played in the
National Hockey League: Sebastien Charpentier, Hampton Roads, 1998; Chris
Schmidt and Travis Scott, Mississippi, 1999; Cody
Rudkowsky and Cam Severson, Peoria, 2000; Zdenek Blatny, Simon Gamache
and Luke Sellars, Greenville, 2002; Kevin Colley and Matt
Yeats, Atlantic City, 2003; and Dan Ellis and Zenon Konopka, Idaho,
2004.
- Boardman Silversmiths, Inc. in Meriden, Connecticut created the Kelly
Cup. Boardman also produces the Calder Cup for the American Hockey League
as well as trophies for the U.S. Open tennis tournament and Masters golf
tournament.
- There are 12 individuals whose name appears on the Kelly Cup twice. Seven
had their name engraved for the second time while the eighth had his name
engraved for the first time in 2001 when South Carolina won the Kelly Cup.
Rick Adduono was assistant coach in 1997 and head coach in 2001 while Jason
Fitzsimmons was a player in 1997 and assistant coach in 2001. Jared Bednar,
Brad Dexter, Brett Marietti and Dave Seitz were players in both 1997 and
2001. Marty
Clapton had his name first engraved in 1998 with Hampton Roads and in
2001 with South Carolina. Mike Nicholishen had his name engraved for the
first time in 2001 with South Carolina and for the second time in 2003 with
Atlantic City. Mike Haviland was head coach of Atlantic City when it won in
2003 and was head coach of Trenton when it won in 2005 while Steve Munn
played for Atlantic City in 2003 and Trenton in 2005. Peter
Metcalf and Joe
Talbot both had their name engraved for the first time in 2003 with
Atlantic City and for the second time with Alaska in 2006.
ECHL Stories from April 3, 2007
- Lee and Holt lead Checkers to 4-1 win - Charlotte Checkers
- Ice Pilots suffer 9-0 loss to Everblades - Pensacola Ice Pilots
- Record setting night for 'Blades in 9-0 win - Florida Everblades
- Fans' Choice Awards Banquet A Rousing Success - Reading Royals
- Head Coach Karl Taylor's Contract Extended For Two Seasons - Reading Royals
- Gladiators Fall to Checkers 4-1 - Atlanta Gladiators
- Cyclones Wirll By Columbia, 3-2 - Cincinnati Cyclones
- Sell Out Saturday, sold out - Victoria Salmon Kings
- Condors Pint Glass Giveaway This Friday - Bakersfield Condors
- Community and Promotions Update - Victoria Salmon Kings
- Huxley Undergoes Successful Hand Surgery - Stockton Thunder
- ECHL Transactions - ECHL
- Munce named Rbk Hockey ECHL Goaltender of the Week - Johnstown Chiefs
- The race is on - Idaho Steelheads
- Checkers' Lee Named In Glas Co Player Of The Week - Charlotte Checkers
- Las Vegas' Limpright Suspended Two Games, Fined - ECHL
- Alaska's Metcalf Suspended Two Games, Fined - ECHL
- Alaska's Fitzgerald Suspended One Game, Fined - ECHL
- Alaska's Later Suspended Three Games, Fined - ECHL
- Alaska's Talbot Suspended One Game - ECHL
- Las Vegas' Donally Suspended One Game - ECHL
- Everblades make changes to roster - Florida Everblades
- Kevin Saurette and Shawn Collymore Returned To Royals - Reading Royals
- Blue Man Group to perform at Saturday's game - Las Vegas Wranglers
- Home-Ice Battle Heats Up In Final Week - Stockton Thunder
- Chiefs' Munce Named Rbk Hockey Goalie Of The Week - ECHL
- Werner Reassigned to South Carolina - South Carolina Stingrays
- Canucks prospect Coulombe returns to Victoria - Victoria Salmon Kings
- Morrison Reassigned To RoadRunners - Phoenix RoadRunners
- Kelly Cup Tour Visits Bakersfield Wednesday - ECHL
- Stingrays Team Up with Low Country Food Bank - South Carolina Stingrays
- Florida's Baum Suspended Three Games, Fined - ECHL
- ECHL Today - ECHL
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