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Boston Braves (AHL)

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City
  
Boston, Massachusetts

Operated
  
1971–1974

Affiliate
  
Founded
  
1971

Affiliates
  
Boston Bruins

Home arena
  
Color
  
Maroon, white and black


Colors
  
Maroon, white and black

Location
  
Boston, Massachusetts, United States

The Boston Braves were a professional ice hockey team in Boston, Massachusetts. They were a member of the American Hockey League from 1971 to 1974.

Contents

Boston Braves (AHL) 197374 Bill Corkery Boston Braves Game Worn Jersey 1 Year Style

The early 1970s saw an unprecedented boom in the popularity of hockey in the greater Boston area, fuelled by the success of the Bobby Orr and Phil Esposito-led Boston Bruins. The Bruins had sold out all of their home games at the Boston Garden for years, and the team owners thought that placing their minor-league affiliate in the same arena, made sense on several levels. Previously, the Bruins' top affiliates were the Hershey Bears of the AHL and the Oklahoma City Blazers of the Central Hockey League.

Boston Braves (AHL) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenaaaAhl

The team was named after the eponymous National League baseball team that had played in Boston until 1953 — which had been owned by Charles F. Adams, founder of the Bruins, during the 1930s. The first season of the AHL Braves, under coach Bep Guidolin, was wildly successful. Behind a powerful club led by future NHLstars Dan Bouchard and Rich Leduc, and with other veteran minor-leaguers and future NHL players such as Doug Roberts, Ross Brooks, Nick Beverley, Garry Peters and Don Tannahill, the club tied for first place in its division with the powerful Nova Scotia Voyageurs with a 41-21-14 mark, while proving popular enough in Boston to set league records for single-game and single-season attendance that survived for decades.

Boston Braves (AHL) Boston Braves Hockey Archives Fun While It Lasted at Fun While

In its second season, however, competition from the WHA's New England Whalers served to saturate the market. Furthermore, NHL expansion cost the team its best player, Bouchard, who had been picked by the Atlanta Flames, while WHA defections caused the recall of Brooks to the parent club and the departure of Roberts and Peters to the rival league. While scoring declined only slightly, the defense was notably poorer. The team still finished second in the division with a 34-29-13 mark, but attendance had nearly halved.

Boston Braves (AHL) Boston Braves 1973 vintage hockey jersey

In the Braves' third and final season, the defense collapsed to the point where the team finished out of the playoffs after a 23-40-13 record. With attendance dwindling further and the ebbing of the hockey boom itself in New England, Bruins' management decided to suspend the team; the next season saw the Bruins affiliating with the Rochester Americans.

Boston Braves (AHL) Boston Braves Hockey Archives Fun While It Lasted at Fun While

The Bruins maintained the franchise's existence for many years, paying a nominal fee to the league to keep it dormant, finally selling its rights to the Winnipeg Jets in 1987 so that the Jets could move it to the Maritimes to become the Moncton Hawks.

Boston Braves (AHL) 19711974 Boston Braves Fun While It Lasted at Fun While It Lasted

Team records

Single season
  • Goals: Ron Anderson, 41, 1973
  • Assists: Doug Gibson, 51, 1974
  • Points: Gibson, 82, 1974
  • Penalty minutes: Fred O'Donnell, 161, 1972
  • Career
    Boston Braves (AHL) Boston Braves AHL Footage YouTube

  • Career games: Neil Murphy, 214
  • Career goals: Bob Gryp, 68
  • Career assists: Rich Leduc, 80
  • Career points: Leduc, 144
  • Career penalty minutes: Leduc, 227
  • Season-by-season results

    Regular season
    Playoffs

    References

    Boston Braves (AHL) Wikipedia