Espoo Blues




















































Espoo Blues
Espoo Blues.svg
City Espoo, Finland
League Liiga
Founded 1984 (1984)
Folded 2016 (2016)
Home arena
Espoo Metro Areena (capacity 7,017)
Colours
              
Owner(s) Jääkiekko Espoo Oy
General manager Peter Ahola
Website Espoo Blues
Franchise history
1984–1998 Kiekko-Espoo
1998–2016 Espoo Blues

The Espoo Blues were an ice hockey team in the SM-liiga. They played in Espoo, Finland, at the Espoo Metro Areena. The club went bankrupt at the end of the 2015–16 Liiga season.




Contents






  • 1 History


  • 2 Honors


    • 2.1 Champions


    • 2.2 Runners-up




  • 3 Players


    • 3.1 Honored members


    • 3.2 Notable alumni


    • 3.3 Captains history




  • 4 Head coaches


  • 5 References


  • 6 External links





History


The club was established in February 1984 as Kiekko-Espoo and played their first season in 1984–85 in the Finnish Second Division. In 1988, they achieved promotion to the Finnish First Division and in 1992, they celebrated their promotion to the SM-liiga by beating Joensuun Kiekkopojat with a 3–2 series win in a best-of-five format. Tero Lehterä scored the winning goal and Jere Lehtinen assisted.


Kiekko-Espoo ended its first two seasons in SM-liiga in 11th place out of 12 teams. In the 1994–95 season, the team made the playoffs for the first time, losing to Lukko in quarter-finals. In 1997–98, Kiekko-Espoo caused a huge upset by beating regular season winner TPS in the quarter-finals. Kiekko-Espoo ended the season in fourth place. In the next summer, the team name was changed to the Espoo Blues. The name came from the dominant colour of their home jersey.


During the 1998–99 season, the team moved to its current home, LänsiAuto Areena (renamed in 2009 to Barona Areena due to sponsorship change). The first seasons in their new home were difficult despite the team signing many big names. The Blues missed the playoffs in 2001 and 2005. In 2002–03, the Blues had their best regular season, finishing in fourth place, only to lose against eventual champion Tappara in overtime of the seventh quarter-final.


The team took a step forward in 2006–07 when they reached the semi-finals for the first time, although they lost against Kärpät in three straight games, and lost the bronze medal game against HPK. During the 2007–08 season, the Blues set a new team record by winning 12 games in a row. They finally ended the regular season in second place and beat local rivals HIFK in the quarter-finals and other local rivals Jokerit in the semi-finals, proceeding to the finals and thus ensuring their first medal ever. The team eventually ended up second after losing in the finals to Kärpät.


In the next season, the team was again second after the regular season, but lost against Kärpät in the semi-finals, as well as the bronze medal game against KalPa. The season also included participation in the Champions Hockey League, where the Blues lost in the semi-finals against eventual champion ZSC Lions of Switzerland. The 2009–10 season was difficult for the team, and the Blues failed to reach the quarter-finals. In 2010–11, the team ended the regular season in ninth place and then beat eighth-placed Kärpät in the wild card round of the playoffs. The team then made history by becoming the first team in the SM-liiga to advance from the wild card round to the semi-finals, eventually beating Ässät in six games. In the semi-finals, the Blues continued their string of upsets and beat regular season winners JYP in five games. In the finals, HIFK swept the series in four games, and the Blues were awarded the silver medal for the second time in team history.


In the 2011–12 season, the Blues finished eighth in the regular season. After beating Lukko in the wild card round, the team faced KalPa in the quarter-finals. The Blues made history again, becoming the first team in SM-liiga history to win the series after being down 0–3. In the semi-finals, the Pelicans beat the Blues 4–1.


After declining ticket income and increasing expenses after a reacquisition by Jääkiekko Espoo Oy in 2012, the Blues were declared bankrupt in March 2016. Their final ranking in the 2015–2016 season was 15th, the lowest in the league.



Honors



Champions




  • A-juniors (20-year-olds) (4): 1989, 1990, 2009, 2014


  • B-juniors (18-year-olds) (3): 1988, 1993, 2011


  • C-juniors (16-year-olds) (3): 2011, 2012, 2014


  • Aaro Kivilinna Memorial Trophy (7): 2007, 2009, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015



Runners-up



  • Kanada-malja (2): 2008, 2011


Players



Honored members



  • 10 – Finland Jere Lehtinen

  • 33 – Finland Timo Hirvonen



Notable alumni





  • Finland Peter Ahola


  • United States Tyler Arnason


  • Canada Frank Banham


  • Finland Timo Blomqvist


  • Canada Scott Brower


  • Austria Bernd Brückler


  • Czech Republic Jan Čaloun


  • Poland Mariusz Czerkawski


  • Sweden Johan Davidsson


  • Canada Tom Draper


  • United States Ben Eaves


  • Sweden Nils Ekman


  • Sweden Joakim Eriksson


  • Finland Kari Haakana


  • Finland Niklas Hagman


  • Finland Santeri Heiskanen


  • Finland Timo Hirvonen


  • Finland Juha Ikonen


  • Czech Republic Otakar Janecký


  • Finland Joonas Jääskeläinen


  • Finland Jere Karalahti


  • Canada Martin Kariya


  • Canada Steve Kariya


  • Canada Ryan Keller


  • Czech Republic Ladislav Kohn


  • Canada Krys Kolanos


  • Slovakia Ľubomír Kolník


  • Finland Arto Kuki


  • Finland Arto Laatikainen


  • Finland Jani Lajunen


  • Finland Tero Lehterä


  • Finland Jere Lehtinen


  • Finland Jan Långbacka


  • Finland Mikko Lehtonen


  • Canada Donald MacLean


  • United States Ryan Malone


  • Canada Kent Manderville


  • Canada Dale McTavish


  • United States Shawn McEachern


  • Slovakia Branislav Mezei


  • Canada Cory Murphy


  • Finland Jarmo Myllys


  • Finland Sami Nuutinen


  • Sweden/Finland Stefan Öhman


  • Finland Oskar Osala


  • Finland Antti Pihlström


  • Finland Esa Pirnes


  • Russia Sergei Pryakhin


  • Finland Erkki Rajamäki


  • Canada Mike Ribeiro


  • Finland Christian Ruuttu


  • Finland Ilkka Sinisalo


  • Finland Petri Skriko


  • Finland Iiro Tarkki


  • Czech Republic Petr Ton


  • Finland Lauri Tukonen


  • Finland Antti Törmänen


  • Czech Republic Jiří Vykoukal


  • United States Landon Wilson


  • Finland Juha Ylönen




Captains history


16 players have been named Captain of the team.




  • Finland Jan Långbacka (1992–1994)


  • Finland Hannu Järvenpää (1994)


  • Finland Peter Ahola (1994–1995)


  • Finland Jarmo Muukkonen (fi) (1995–1996)


  • Finland Teemu Sillanpää (1996–1997)


  • Finland Juha Ikonen (1997–1999)


  • Finland Peter Ahola (1999–2001)


  • Finland Valeri Krykov (fi) (2001–2002)


  • Finland Juha Ylönen (2002–2003)


  • Finland Rami Alanko (2003–2005)


  • Finland Timo Hirvonen (2005, stepped down as captain in November 2005)


  • Finland Markku Hurme (fi) (2005–2006, replaced Hirvonen as captain mid-season)


  • Sweden Joakim Eriksson (2006)


  • Finland Markku Hurme, Finland Ville Viitaluoma, Finland Erkki Rajamäki, Canada Kent Manderville (2006–2007, rotating captaincy)


  • Finland Rami Alanko (2007–2009)


  • Finland Toni Kähkönen (2009–2012)


  • Finland Arto Laatikainen (2012–2013)


  • Finland Kim Hirschovits (2013–2016)



Head coaches




  • Finland Martti Merra (1992–1994, replaced in January)


  • Finland Hannu Saintula (fi) (1994, mid-season replacement)


  • Finland Harri Rindell (1994–1996)


  • Sweden Håkan Nygren (sv) (1996–1998, replaced in February)


  • Finland Hannu Saintula (1998, mid-season replacement)


  • Finland Pekka Rautakallio (1998, replaced in November)


  • Finland Hannu Saintula (1998–1999, mid-season replacement)


  • Finland Jukka Holtari (fi) (1999–2000, replaced in January)


  • Finland Jari Härkälä (fi) (2000, mid-season replacement)


  • Finland Timo Tuomi (2000–2001, replaced in September of second season)


  • Finland Hannu Kapanen (2001–2003, mid-season replacement, continued in the next season)


  • United States Ted Sator (2003, replaced in October)


  • Finland Hannu Virta (2003–2004, mid-season replacement, replaced in the October of second season)


  • Finland Pekka Rautakallio (2004–2005)


  • Finland Kari Heikkilä (2005–2007)


  • Finland Petri Matikainen (2007–2011)


  • Finland Lauri Marjamäki (2011–2013, replaced in February)


  • Finland Mikko Saarinen (fi) (2013, mid-season replacement)


  • Finland Jyrki Aho (2013–2016)



References





External links



  • (in Finnish) Official team website









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