
They’re back, and this time they’ve got home-ice advantage.
The host Calgary Canucks are returning to the Centennial Cup, presented by Tim Hortons, as champions of the Alberta Junior Hockey League (AJHL)for the second year in a row after a dominant run through the AJHL playoffs.
The Canucks dropped just one of 13 postseason games and finishing with 10 straight wins, the final four coming in a sweep of the Grande Prairie Storm – the second-consecutive year they have swept the AJHL final.
Calgary returns eight players from the team that was edged 2-1 by the Melfort Mustangs in the semifinals a year ago in Oakville, including regular-season leading scorer Jack Plandowski (34-45—79) and playoff scoring star Bowden Singleton (6-18—24).
Offence was the calling card of these Canucks; Calgary led the AJHL with 255 goals, 46 more than any other team in the league, and poured in 74 in just 13 playoff games – an average of almost six per game. It flexed its offensive muscle against the Storm, scoring 29 goals in the four games.
Five Canucks reached the 20-goal plateau in the regular season, led by Plandowski’s league-leading 34, and Hayden Fechner recorded 11 in 13 playoff games.
One of the most impressive stats from the Canucks’ regular season, though, came at the other end of the ice – Calgary killed 89.4% of opposition power plays, allowing just 19 power-play goals, although that number did slide to just 71.7% in the playoffs.
The 1995 Centennial Cup champions, the Canucks will look to continue a run of relatively recent success for host teams at Canada’s National Junior A Championship; although they have struggled since the tournament returned from a two-year hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic, hosts from 2013-19 appeared in six of seven championship games and won four national titles (Portage – 2015; Cobourg – 2017 ; Chilliwack – 2018 ; Brooks – 2019 ).
HOW THEY GOT TO CALGARY
Alberta Junior Hockey League Quarterfinal: defeated Camrose Kodiaks 4-1 (4-2, 9-4, 4-5, 5-2, 5-2) Semifinal: defeated Drumheller Dragons 4-0 (4-3, 6-2, 3-1, 5-2)
Final: defeated Grande Prairie Storm 4-0 (9-3, 6-4, 7-4, 7-3)
REGULAR SEASON
Record (W-L-OTL): 37-13-4 (1st in AJHL) Goals for: 255 (1st in AJHL) Goals against: 139 (2nd in AJHL) Power play: 55 for 238 (23.1% – 1st in AJHL) Penalty killing: 161 of 180 (89.4% – 1st in AJHL) Longest winning streak: 6 (Sept. 22-Oct. 6)
Top 3 scorers: • Jack Plandowski – 34G 45A 79P (1st in AJHL) • Bowden Singleton – 24G 37A 61P (3rd in AJHL) • Nolan DuPont – 21G 35A 56P (7th in AJHL)
PLAYOFFS
Record: 12-1 Goals for: 74 Goals against: 37 Power play: 15 for 59 (25.4%) Penalty killing: 38 of 53 (71.7%)
Top 3 scorers: • Bowden Singleton – 6G 18A 24P • Jack Plandowski – 5G 13A 18P • Hayden Fechner – 11G 6A 17P
NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY
1995 – Calgary Canucks | national champions | 5-1 | 25GF 17GA 2024 – Calgary Canucks | 3rd place | 4-2 | 21GF 15GA
COLLEGE & UNIVERSITY COMMITMENTS
Jayden Joly – Western Michigan University (2025-26) Landon Pappas – Bemidji State University (2025-26) Bowden Singleton – Tennessee State University (2025-26) Wade Wallace – Niagara University (2025-26)
CJHL TOP 20 RANKINGS
Sept. 30 – not ranked Oct. 7 – 14th Oct. 14 – not ranked Oct. 21 – not ranked Oct. 28 – not ranked Nov. 4 – not ranked Nov. 11 – not ranked Nov. 18 – not ranked Nov. 25 – not ranked Dec. 2 – not ranked Dec. 9 – not ranked Dec. 16 – not ranked Dec. 23 – Honourable Mention Jan. 6 – 19th Jan. 13 – not ranked Jan. 20 – Honourable Mention Jan. 27 – not ranked Feb. 3 – not ranked Feb. 10 – Honourable Mention Feb. 17 – Honourable Mention Feb. 24 – 19th March 3 – 18th March 10 – 15th
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