[go: up one dir, main page]

1992–93 OHL season

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Frontsfan2005 (talk | contribs) at 02:35, 21 March 2020 (Final standings). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The 1992–93 OHL season was the 13th season of the Ontario Hockey League. The Cornwall Royals become the Newmarket Royals. The Detroit Compuware Ambassadors are renamed the Detroit Junior Red Wings. The inaugural OHL Humanitarian of the Year is awarded. Sixteen teams each played 66 games. The Peterborough Petes won the J. Ross Robertson Cup, defeating the Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds.

Regular Season

Final standings

Note: DIV = Division; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; GF = Goals For; GA = Goals Against; PTS = Points; x = clinched playoff berth; y = clinched division title

Leyden Division

Rank Team GP W L T PTS GF GA
1 y-Peterborough Petes 66 46 15 5 97 352 239
2 x-Kingston Frontenacs 66 36 19 11 83 314 265
3 x-Oshawa Generals 66 33 28 5 71 270 268
4 x-Sudbury Wolves 66 31 30 5 67 291 300
5 x-Newmarket Royals 66 29 28 9 67 310 301
6 x-Belleville Bulls 66 21 34 11 53 280 315
7 x-North Bay Centennials 66 22 38 6 50 251 299
8 Ottawa 67's 66 16 42 8 40 220 310

Emms Division

Rank Team GP W L T PTS GF GA
1 y-Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds 66 38 23 5 81 334 260
2 x-Detroit Junior Red Wings 66 37 22 7 81 336 264
3 x-London Knights 66 32 27 7 71 323 292
4 x-Owen Sound Platers 66 29 29 8 66 330 324
5 x-Niagara Falls Thunder 66 29 30 7 65 299 274
6 x-Kitchener Rangers 66 26 31 9 61 280 314
7 x-Guelph Storm 66 27 33 6 60 298 360
8 Windsor Spitfires 66 19 42 5 43 240 343

Scoring leaders

Player Team GP G A Pts PIM
Andrew Brunette Owen Sound Platers 66 62 100 162 91
Bob Wren Detroit Junior Red Wings 63 57 88 145 91
Kevin Brown Belleville Bulls/Detroit Junior Red Wings 62 50 91 141 80
Pat Peake Detroit Junior Red Wings 46 58 78 136 64
Mike Harding Peterborough Petes 66 54 82 136 106
Jason Dawe Peterborough Petes 59 58 68 126 80
Bill Bowler Windsor Spitfires 57 44 77 121 41
Jim Brown Owen Sound Platers 60 53 66 119 66
Jason Allison London Knights 66 42 76 118 50
Jeff Bes Guelph Storm 59 48 67 115 128

Playoffs

Division quarterfinals

Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds defeat Peterborough Petes 4–0 (winning team named host of 1993 Memorial Cup)

Kingston Frontenacs defeat North Bay Centennials 4–1

Oshawa Generals defeat Belleville Bulls 4–3

Sudbury Wolves defeat Newmarket Royals 4–3

Detroit Junior Red Wings defeat Guelph Storm 4–1

London Knights defeat Kitchener Rangers 4–3

Owen Sound Platers defeat Niagara Falls Thunder 4–0

Quarterfinals

Peterborough Petes defeat Sudbury Wolves 4–3

Kingston Frontenacs defeat Oshawa Generals 4–2

Detroit Junior Red Wings defeat London Knights 4–1

Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds defeat Owen Sound Platers 4–0


Semifinals

Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds defeat Detroit Junior Red Wings 4–1

Peterborough Petes defeat Kingston Frontenacs 4–1


J. Ross Robertson Cup

Peterborough Petes defeat Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds 4–1

Awards

J. Ross Robertson Cup: Peterborough Petes
Hamilton Spectator Trophy: Peterborough Petes
Leyden Trophy: Peterborough Petes
Emms Trophy: Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds
Red Tilson Trophy: Pat Peake, Detroit Junior Red Wings
Eddie Powers Memorial Trophy: Andrew Brunette, Owen Sound Platers
Matt Leyden Trophy: Gary Agnew, London Knights
Jim Mahon Memorial Trophy: Kevin Brown, Detroit Junior Red Wings
Max Kaminsky Trophy: Chris Pronger, Peterborough Petes
OHL Goaltender of the Year: Manny Legace, Niagara Falls Thunder
Bill Long Award: Dr. Robert L. Vaughan, Belleville Bulls
Jack Ferguson Award: Alyn McCauley, Ottawa 67's
Dave Pinkney Trophy: Chad Lang and Ryan Douglas, Peterborough Petes
OHL Executive of the Year: Jim Rutherford, Detroit Junior Red Wings
Emms Family Award: Jeff O'Neill, Guelph Storm
F.W. 'Dinty' Moore Trophy: Ken Shepard, Oshawa Generals
OHL Humanitarian of the Year: Keli Corpse, Kingston Frontenacs
William Hanley Trophy: Pat Peake, Detroit Junior Red Wings
Leo Lalonde Memorial Trophy: Scott Hollis, Oshawa Generals
Bobby Smith Trophy: Tim Spitzig, Kitchener Rangers

All-star teams

The OHL All-star teams were selected by the OHL's general managers.

First team

Second team

Third team

See also

References

Preceded by OHL seasons Succeeded by