Date | R | Home v Away | - |
---|---|---|---|
12/17 00:00 | - | Armada Blainville-Boisbriand v Sherbrooke Phoenix | 7-3 |
11/10 00:30 | - | Drummondville Voltigeurs v Armada Blainville-Boisbriand | 8-1 |
11/08 00:00 | - | Armada Blainville-Boisbriand v Sherbrooke Phoenix | 3-5 |
11/02 23:30 | - | Drummondville Voltigeurs v Charlottetown Islanders | 6-3 |
10/28 19:00 | - | Armada Blainville-Boisbriand v Gatineau Olympiques | 1-4 |
10/08 19:00 | - | Shawinigan Cataractes v Rimouski Oceanic | 1-8 |
10/07 19:00 | - | Sherbrooke Phoenix v Rimouski Oceanic | 2-7 |
10/06 20:00 | - | Sherbrooke Phoenix v Shawinigan Cataractes | 3-2 |
09/30 20:00 | - | Victoriaville Tigres v Shawinigan Cataractes | 6-1 |
The Quebec Maritimes Junior Hockey League (QMJHL; French: Ligue de hockey junior Maritimes Québec, LHJMQ) is one of the three major junior ice hockey leagues that constitute the Canadian Hockey League (CHL). Officially the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League until 2023, the league includes teams in Quebec and the Maritime provinces of Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Prince Edward Island.
The Gilles-Courteau Trophy is the championship trophy of the league. The QMJHL champion then goes on to compete in the Memorial Cup against the Ontario Hockey League (OHL) and Western Hockey League (WHL) champions, and the CHL host team. The QMJHL had traditionally adopted a rapid and offensive style of hockey. Former QMJHL players hold many of the Canadian Hockey League's career and single season offensive records.
Hockey Hall of Fame alumni of the QMJHL include Mario Lemieux, Guy Lafleur, Ray Bourque, Pat LaFontaine, Mike Bossy, Denis Savard, Michel Goulet, Luc Robitaille, and goaltenders Patrick Roy and Martin Brodeur.
The Quebec Major Junior Hockey League was founded in 1969, through the merger of the best teams from the existing Quebec Junior Hockey League and the Metropolitan Montreal Junior Hockey League, declaring themselves a "major junior" league. Of the original eleven QMJHL teams, eight came from the QJHL, two from the MMJHL, and the Cornwall Royals, from Cornwall, Ontario, near the Quebec border, who transferred from the Central Junior A Hockey League. The Rosemont National and Laval Saints transferred from the MMJHL. The eight teams from the QJHL were the Drummondville Rangers, Quebec Remparts, Saint-Jérôme Alouettes, Shawinigan Bruins, Sherbrooke Castors, Sorel Éperviers, Trois-Rivières Ducs and the Verdun Maple Leafs.
Most of the teams were within a few hours' drive of Montreal. From the first season in 1969–70, only Shawinigan remains in the same city with an uninterrupted history, although the team's name has changed to the Cataractes.
In 1972 the QMJHL had been in operation for three years, and wanted a team in the province's largest city. It threatened a lawsuit to force the Montreal Junior Canadiens of the Ontario Hockey Association into the Quebec-based league. Over the summer of 1972, the OHA granted the Junior Habs a "one-year suspension" of operations, while team ownership transferred the team and players into the QMJHL, renaming themselves the Montreal Bleu Blanc Rouge in the process. The OHA then reactivated the suspended franchise for the 1973–74 season in Kingston, Ontario, under new ownership and with new players, calling the team the Kingston Canadians.
QMJHL teams have won the Memorial Cup twelve times since 1969, with the Shawinigan Cataractes, Saint John Sea Dogs, the Granby Prédateurs, the Hull Olympiques, Halifax Mooseheads, Rouyn-Noranda Huskies, Rimouski Océanic, and the Acadie-Bathurst Titan each winning once, the Quebec Remparts winning three times(once in their first edition 1969–1985, and twice in their second edition 1997–present) and the Cornwall Royals winning three times.
Starting in 1994, the QMJHL began to expand further east, outside of Quebec. The "Q" filled the void in Atlantic Canada after the exodus of American Hockey League franchises, when the AHL had a strong presence in the 1980s and 1990s; all of the Maritime Division cities save for Bathurst, New Brunswick are former homes of AHL franchises. To date, Fredericton, New Brunswick is the lone former AHL market that has not established a QMJHL franchise.
In recent seasons, the QMJHL has been scouting players from the Atlantic Canada region along with a surge in players coming out of the New England area: the QMJHL has territorial rights to draft and recruit players from New England as part of an agreement where players from the United States can be drafted by the CHL league that is in a similar geographic area.
In December 2023, the QMJHL changed its name to the Quebec Maritimes Junior Hockey League and released a new logo. The change recognized the league's expansion into the Maritime provinces, whose teams had been a part of the QMJHL for almost 30 years.
No. | Player | Position | QMJHL Career | No. retirement |
---|---|---|---|---|
4 | Guy Lafleur | RW | 1966–1971 | September 2021 |
87 | Sidney Crosby | C | 2003–2005 | 27 September 2019 |
This is a list of Canadian Hockey League career and single season records accomplished by QMJHL players.
Current teams are shown in blue. Gold stars denote Gilles-Courteau Trophy (League championship) winners.
This is a complete list of team histories since 1969.
Team | Hometown | Province/State | Years Active |
---|---|---|---|
Cornwall Royals | Cornwall | Ontario | 1969–1981 |
Plattsburgh Pioneers | Plattsburgh | New York | 1984–1985 |
Laval Titan | Laval | Quebec | 1969–1970; 1971–1998 |
Quebec Remparts | Quebec City | Quebec | 1969–1985; 1997–present |
Drummondville Voltigeurs | Drummondville | Quebec | 1969–1974; 1982–present |
Saint-Jerome Alouettes | Saint-Jerome | Quebec | 1969–1971 |
Trois-Rivieres Draveurs | Trois-Rivieres | Quebec | 1969–1992 |
Sorel Eperviers | Sorel | Quebec | 1969–1977; 1980–1981 |
Verdun Juniors | Verdun | Quebec | 1969–1971; 1977–1980; 1982–1989;
1991–1994; 2008–2011 |
Montreal Bleu Blanc Rouge Montreal Juniors Montreal Rocket Montreal Junior Hockey Club |
Montreal | Quebec | 1969–1971 1972–1982 1999–2003 2008–2011 |
Shawinigan Cataractes | Shawinigan | Quebec | 1969–present |
Sherbrooke Phoenix | Sherbrooke | Quebec | 1969–1982; 1999–2003; 2012–present |
Chicoutimi Saguenéens | Chicoutimi | Quebec | 1973–present |
Gatineau Olympiques | Hull/Gatineau | Quebec | 1973–present |
Granby Prédateurs | Granby | Quebec | 1981–1997 |
Saint-Jean Lynx | Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu | Quebec | 1982–1995 |
Longueuil Chevaliers | Longueuil | Quebec | 1982–1991 |
Victoriaville Tigres | Victoriaville | Quebec | 1987–present |
Saint-Hyacinthe Laser | Saint-Hyacinthe | Quebec | 1989–1996 |
Beauport Harfangs | Beauport | Quebec | 1990–1997 |
Val-d'Or Foreurs | Val-d'Or | Quebec | 1993–present |
Rimouski Océanic | Rimouski | Quebec | 1995–present |
Rouyn-Noranda Huskies | Rouyn-Noranda | Quebec | 1996–present |
Baie-Comeau Drakkar | Baie-Comeau | Quebec | 1997–present |
Blainville-Boisbriand Armada | Boisbriand | Quebec | 2011–present |
Moncton Wildcats | Moncton | New Brunswick | 1995–present |
Acadie-Bathurst Titan | Bathurst | New Brunswick | 1998–present |
Saint John Sea Dogs | Saint John | New Brunswick | 2005–present |
Lewiston Maineiacs | Lewiston | Maine | 2003–2011 |
Charlottetown Islanders | Charlottetown | Prince Edward Island | 2003–present |
Halifax Mooseheads | Halifax | Nova Scotia | 1994–present |
Cape Breton Eagles | Sydney | Nova Scotia | 1997–present |
St. John's Fog Devils | St. John's | Newfoundland and Labrador | 2005–2008 |