The Herder Memorial Trophy , or Herder , is the championship trophy to be awarded annually to the senior ice hockey champions of Newfoundland and Labrador , Canada. The original cast silver trophy was donated in 1935 by The Evening Telegram newspaper on behalf of the Herder family, as a memorial to five brothers who played hockey in St. John's .
40-648: First awarded in 1935, the Herder Memorial Trophy has been won 85 times. The Herder was not awarded in 1942, 1943, 1991, 2020 and 2021. The first winners of the Herder trophy was a team from Corner Brook that won the inaugural all-Newfoundland ice hockey championship on March 22, 1935. Teams from St. John's have won the Herder Trophy 20 times. The most recent winners were the St. John's RoofTech Senior Caps on April 6, 2024. As
80-516: A finals series to decide the top provincial team who were awarded the Herder Trophy. On February 25, 2015, Hockey Newfoundland and Labrador approved a request by the Central West Senior Hockey League in which they asked to play for the historic Herder Trophy because it was the only operating Senior A hockey league registered in the province. Hockey Newfoundland and Labrador announced on March 10, 2022, that they will be awarding
120-509: A ship wreck were steamed, curved and bolted to form the dome roof. The rink opened for skating on January 28, 1899, with 200 in attendance. The first hockey match played on the new rink's ice surface was a game arranged by the newly founded city hockey league between Canadians and native Newfoundlanders (City team) at 7:30 pm on February 1, 1899, before a large number of spectators. The first goal scored in Newfoundland's first indoor hockey rink
160-525: A suitable venue until the opening of Memorial Stadium in December 1954. In 1944, the Herder finals were held outside St. John's for the first time when Bell Island and Corner Brook played the all-Newfoundland final series at the Corner Brook rink. The NAHA was granted permission by Ralph Herder to hold the Herder finals outside the capital city for the first time. Since 1944 condition #2 has not been enforced and
200-718: Is the home arena of the Corner Brook Royals . The facility also includes a second, smaller, arena to host small scale ice events, as well as the "Pepsi Studio" capable of hosting large-scale conferences and sporting events. On September 11, 2005, the Civic Centre played host to an exhibition game of the then newly formed St. John's Fog Devils of the QMJHL versus the Ottawa 67's of the OHL . The arena played host to an AHL exhibition game between
240-636: The Canada Games Centre and the Pepsi Centre ) is a 3,100-seat multi-purpose arena in Corner Brook, Newfoundland and Labrador , Canada. It was home to the ice hockey , figure skating , judo , and squash events of the 1999 Canada Winter Games . Previously run by Memorial University through Western Sports and Entertainment, it is currently owned and operated by the City of Corner Brook. The Civic Centre
280-697: The St. John's IceCaps and the Syracuse Crunch on October 4, 2012, in Game 1 of the Mary Brown's Cup three-game series, coinciding with the IceCaps' training camp for the 2012-13 AHL season. This article about a Canadian ice hockey arena is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This article about a building or structure in Newfoundland is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This article about
320-756: The "Years of appearance" column, bold years indicate winning the Herder Trophy Finals. ^ A. In 1957 the Herder Finals series was not played. Two teams entered the Section 'A' playoffs in 1957 but after Bell Island withdrew before the finals started, NAHA decided to award the Herder Trophy to the Grand Falls Andcos by default. In 2005 Hockey Newfoundland and Labrador established the Cliff Gorman Memorial Award to be presented annually to
360-506: The 1935 championship but arrived in St. John's from the manufacturer six months later and was sent to Corner Brook in October of that year. The trophy was formally presented to the winning team at the annual meeting Corner Brook Sports Club in November 1935. The Herder consisted of a cast-silver hockey player mounted on an ebony base. St. Bon's star Edward "Key" Kennedy (1911-1955) was the model for
400-572: The All-Newfoundland finals were played at the former Prince's Rink in St. John's (renamed The Arena in 1937). The Herder championships were cancelled for 1942 and 1943 after the Arena was destroyed by fire on November 28, 1941, and due to depleted rosters of senior hockey teams with men serving overseas during the Second World War. After the Arena burned down in November 1941, St. John's did not have
440-585: The Bay Roberts Rovers in a 2-game, total goal series. The All-Newfoundland championship match-up was then set; the Guards of St. John's would play host to the Corner Brook All-Star Team. Fans in St. John's eagerly awaited the arrival of the Corner Brook team. Tickets to the 2 games were sold out quickly. Corner Brook edged the Guards 1–0 in Game 1, and wAS victorious in Game 2 by a 4–2 margin to become
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#1733085255835480-554: The Guards from the St. John's Senior League that won the Avalon hockey championship. This was the beginning of a new chapter in the history of Newfoundland hockey. The winning team would have the distinction of being the first holder of the Herder Memorial Trophy. The St. John's Guards earned the right to represent the Avalon Peninsula by first defeating St. Bon's in a 2-game series to become St. John's city champions, and then by toppling
520-444: The Herder Finals location has been decided by NAHA and typically held in the arenas of the competing teams. In recent years, the Herder finals series was held at Mile One Centre (and before it was built, at Memorial Stadium ) in St. John's and frequently sold out the 6,000 seat building. Games were also held in the Pepsi Centre in the city of Corner Brook, on the west coast of the island, when teams from that area were playing for
560-902: The Herder Memorial Trophy to the winner of the Avalon East Senior Hockey League finals. For 2023, Hockey NL announced that the champion of the Avalon East Senior Hockey League will face-off against the champion of the West Coast Senior Hockey League in a seven-game series for the Herder Memorial Championship. This is a list of Herder championship series formats since 1935. Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, OTL = Overtime Losses, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against Note: After 1947 all series results are listed as games won. Most championship series before 1948 were decided on total Goals. (TG = total goals series) At
600-472: The Herder finals between St. Bon's and Grand Falls sponsored by Coca-Cola . Don Jamieson provided the play-by-play commentary. The broadcast was carried by the stations VONF , VONH (VONF remote relay), VOCM (St. John's), VOWN (Corner Brook) and VORG (Gander). Don Jamieson hosted the island-wide broadcast of the 1949 All-Newfoundland Finals from the Corner Brook Rink. This was made possible though
640-516: The commentary live from Grand Falls Stadium. 22-year-old Bob Cole broadcast the 1956 Herder finals on VOCM live from Grand Falls Stadium. In 2007 and 2008, Rogers Cable broadcast the Herder finals province-wide using the Newfoundland and Labrador House of Assembly Channel. Games three through five of the 2009 finals were streamed online at thesportspage.ca. In 2016 all Herder finals games were webcast by Hockey NL's partner Bell Aliant TV One. Grand Falls-Windsor Broadcaster George Scott provided
680-489: The conclusion of the final game, in an on-ice ceremony, the Herder Memorial Trophy is presented to the captain of the winning team. Traditionally the presenter has been a representative of the trophy donor, from the Herder family or The Evening Telegram, and/or a representative from Hockey Newfoundland and Labrador . (TG = Total-goals series) In the sortable table below, teams are ordered first by number of appearances, then by number of wins, and finally by alphabetical order. In
720-565: The courtesy of the Division of the Dept. Posts and Telegraphs. The 1950 all-Newfoundland finals was broadcast live from Grand Falls stadium over station CBN. The play-by-play commentary for the two finals games between Buchans and St. Bon's was provided by Don Jamieson. The broadcast was sponsored by Jockey Club Brewing Ltd. The 1953 Herder finals was an island-wide hook-up, broadcast on CBC stations and CJON with Don Jamieson and Frank "Toe" Byrne providing
760-410: The cup. Since 2013 the Herder finalists have the right to decide the location of their home games. In 1957 the first exception to condition #4 occurred when the Grand Falls Andcos were awarded the Herder by default. No other senior "A" hockey teams registered for the Herder playoffs that year. Engraved plates with the names of the winning teams have been affixed to the base of the Herder Trophy since
800-473: The former rink is now an office tower at 10 Fort William Place. In the summer of 1933 the owners stated that the 30-year-old rink would not open the following winter and subsequently put the rink up for sale. The Guards Athletic Association of St. John's purchased the rink and hired Arthur Johnson as manager. In 1937, a new company, the Arena Rink Company Limited, was formed and took ownership of
840-586: The game of hockey developed across the island, and hockey teams started to travel and compete in regional championships, the idea of a competition to decide the ice hockey champions of Newfoundland gained momentum in early 1935. During a meeting of the St. John's Hockey League on March 5, 1935, it was announced that a trophy, for a championship competition, was to be donated by The Evening Telegram newspaper to be perpetually awarded to Newfoundland's best hockey team. The Herder would become emblematic of ice hockey supremacy in Newfoundland and Labrador. The Evening Telegram
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#1733085255835880-408: The hockey player that stands atop the original trophy. Trophy-donor Ralph Herder brought a photo of Kennedy in a hockey pose to New York where the model was made and a figure was cast in silver. Beginning in 1947 metal shields engraved with the names of winning teams were fixed to the base. In 1952 a second tier was added, third and fourth tiers in 1960, and three more tiers before the original trophy
920-419: The island's top team, and first Herder Trophy Champions. The Herder trophy was the brainchild of Ralph Herder, then president of The Evening Telegram . The trophy was a memorial to his five late brothers, Arthur, William, Douglas, Augustus and Hubert, who were all avid hockey players in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador . Originally donated on behalf of Ralph Herder in memory of five of his late brothers,
960-467: The land in exchange for shares of equal value in the new rink management company. The Rink followed the size and design of the Montagnard Rink built in 1898 at Montreal. Two Reid Railway engineers, Fred Angel and W.H. Murray, drew up the plans for the new rink. The wooden structure was built by Campbell and Company and Horwood Lumber Company and was completed in less than two months. Planks recovered from
1000-495: The late 1940s. Beginning in 1952, additional layers have been added to the trophy base as required to accommodate successive Herder Champion nameplates. Over the history of the championship series, NAHA has dictated a number of series formats that included the winners of divisional, local league or island-wide league playoffs. The original series featured the eastern champions versus western champions. This format continued until 1962 when an island-wide Newfoundland Senior Hockey league
1040-416: The most valuable player (MVP) for his team during the Herder finals series. A native of Prince Edward Island, Cliff was instrumental in promoting hockey in Corner Brook and in Newfoundland and Labrador since moving there in 1955. Cliff Gorman was inducted into the Newfoundland & Labrador Hockey Hall of Fame in 1996 in the building category. The first island-wide live broadcast of a Herder championship game
1080-501: The names of Ralph, his youngest brother James, and Ralph's son Stephen were added to the trophy. The Herder is now a memorial to the following Herder family members: An announcement was made on March 5, 1935, at a St. John's Hockey League meeting that the Evening Telegram, on behalf of the Herder family, will donate a trophy to be awarded to the winners of an all-Newfoundland hockey championship. The trophy would not be available for
1120-462: The play-by-play on a live webcast of the Herder Finals from 2011 to 2019. Since 2022, all Herder finals games were streamed for a fee on AO Live, an Atlantic Canadian based company. Prince of Wales Rink The Prince of Wales' Skating Rink , later known as The Prince's Rink and then The Arena , was a domed wooden structure ice arena located on Factory Lane in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador , Canada, that operated for over 42 years. It
1160-451: The rink and retained Johnson as manager. The major shareholders were two St. John's Businessmen, Chesley Crosbie and Chesley A. Pippy, who changed the name of the rink to The Arena . Over the 42 years of operation, there were five rink managers: James P. Fox (1899), Frank Donnelly, Charles Bulley, P.E. "Neddy" Outerbridge, and Arthur Johnson (1933-1941) Corner Brook Civic Centre The Corner Brook Civic Centre (previously named
1200-436: The royal tour of Newfoundland and, echoing the visit of George's father, King Edward VII, in 1860, receive the gift of a nine-month old Newfoundland dog , to pass on to their then-seven year old son, Prince Edward (later King Edward VIII). The Arena Rink Company installed an ice-making plant shortly after taking ownership, to lengthen the hockey and skating season. In August, 1937, Newfoundland's first artificial ice surface
1240-581: The trophy now honors the memory of seven brothers, including Ralph and his youngest brother James. In 2009, the name of Ralph's son Stephen was added to the trophy. All seven Herder brothers were fine hockey players and often played together, with four of them sometimes playing together on a championship team. James Herder coached the 1935 Guards team that lost the inaugural Herder championship to Corner Brook in March 1935. William James Herder , born in Old Perlican ,
Herder Memorial Trophy - Misplaced Pages Continue
1280-544: Was credited to the City team after the Canadians accidentally scored on their own net. The stronger Canadian team would score twice on the Newfoundlanders and won the game 2-1. James Patrick Fox was the referee for this first hockey game. Prince George (the future King George V and Princess Mary (later Queen Mary ) visited the arena on October 26, 1901, to hear 6,000 schoolchildren sing an anthem composed specifically for
1320-485: Was destroyed by fire on November 28, 1941. On December 11, 1898, the foundation for the rink was laid near the old Newfoundland Railway terminus at Fort William on the west side of Factory Lane between Plymouth Road and Forest Road (sandwich between curling rink and Queen's College) on land previously owned by the Reid Newfoundland Railway. The cornerstone was laid on December 15. Robert G. Reid Sr. deeded
1360-423: Was formed. The champions of the provincial league were awarded the Herder trophy until 1989 when the league was disbanded. Eastern league champions played for the Herder in 1990 and in 1991 there was no Herder Championship. Between 1991 and 2011, the format of the Herder finals reverted to a competition between the champions of local leagues. The eastern league champions played a western or central league champion in
1400-456: Was named in honour of Edward VII , the Prince of Wales and the eldest son of Queen Victoria . The historic Prince's Rink was a major center for skating, hockey, boxing, wrestling and other sports. The Arena hosted the first thirty-eight St. John's senior hockey league championships ( Boyle Trophy ) and the first seven all-Newfoundland hockey championships ( Herder Memorial Trophy ) before the building
1440-592: Was on the VONF (Voice of Newfoundland) radio station on Saturday night March 23, 1935. NL Hockey Hall of Famer John (Jack) Tobin provided the play-by-play of the final game of the first all-Newfoundland hockey championships between Corner Brook and the Guards live from the Prince's Rink in St. John's . In 1947, from Gander Gardens (in Hangar 12 at the airport), all Newfoundland radio stations participated in an island-wide broadcast of
1480-484: Was published by a member of the Herder family since the founding of the paper in 1879 up until the retirement of Stephen Herder in 1993. Telegram has played an integral role in the promotion and sponsorship of the Herder Championships. The inaugural all-Newfoundland championships took place in St. John's at the Prince of Wales Rink on March 21 and 22, 1935 between Corner Brook, the western hockey champions, and
1520-574: Was retired in 2007. The original Herder was retired in 2007 and is now on display in the Newfoundland & Labrador Hockey Hall of Fame which is located at the Corner Brook Civic Centre . Since 2007 a replica has been awarded to the championship teams. The Herder family attached eight conditions to their donation of the Herder Memorial Trophy to govern competition for the all-Newfoundland amateur hockey championship: From 1935 though 1941
1560-419: Was tested. On November 28, 1941, the Arena was catering to a private skating party that included military personnel. At 7:20 pm fire broke out in the boiler room and very quickly the wooden structure was completely engulfed in flames. A spectacular blaze lit the city on a night with a mandatory wartime blackout. The primary ice arena in St. John's and the adjacent curling rink burned to the ground. The site of
1600-518: Was the founder of Newfoundland's first daily newspaper, The Evening Telegram . Ralph, one of William's seven sons, became publisher of the Telegram in 1934 after the death of Augustus (Gus), who was the fifth brother to pass away. Ralph donated the Herder Trophy on behalf of the Herder Family as a memorial to his five late brothers (Douglas, Arthur, Hubert, Herbert Augustus (Gus) and William Jr.). Later
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