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Notable alumni of the Clinton Comets include:
Notable alumni of the Clinton Comets include:
* [[Ed Giacomin]], who went on to become an all-star [[goaltender]] with the [[New York Rangers]].
* [[Ed Giacomin]], who went on to become an all-star [[goaltender]] with the [[New York Rangers]].
* [[Austin Bouse], former player for the [[Detroit Red Wings]].
* [[Benny Woit]], former player for the [[Detroit Red Wings]].
* [[Pete Babando]], former player for the [[Boston Bruins]] and [[Chicago Blackhawks|Chicago Black Hawks]].
* [[Pete Babando]], former player for the [[Boston Bruins]] and [[Chicago Blackhawks|Chicago Black Hawks]].
* [[Patrick J. Kelly|Pat Kelly]], went on to later become head coach of the [[Colorado Rockies (NHL)]], was the founder and first league commissioner of the [[East Coast Hockey League]]. He also had the ECHL's championship trophy named after him, the [[Kelly Cup]].
* [[Patrick J. Kelly|Pat Kelly]], went on to later become head coach of the [[Colorado Rockies (NHL)]], was the founder and first league commissioner of the [[East Coast Hockey League]]. He also had the ECHL's championship trophy named after him, the [[Kelly Cup]].

Revision as of 04:23, 1 April 2010

Clinton Comets
League NYSAHL, NYOHL
EHL, NAHL, ACHL
Founded 1927
Team History Clinton Hockey Club
NYSAHL (1927/28 – 1948)

Clinton Comets
NYSAHL (1949 – 1949/50)
Clinton Comets
NYOHL (1950/51 – 1953/54)
Clinton Comets
EHL (1954/55 – 1972/73)
Mohawk Valley Comets
NAHL (1973/74 – 1976/77)

Home Ice

Sage Rink (?? - 1949)
Clinton Arena (1949 – 1973)
Utica Memorial Auditorium (1973 – 1977)

Based in Clinton, New York (1927 – 1973)

Utica, New York (1973 – 1977)

Colors Red, White, and Blue

The Clinton Comets were an American ice hockey team in Clinton, New York.

Founded in 1927–28 as the Clinton Hockey Club and nicknamed the Comets in 1949, the team played primarily at the Clinton Arena from 1949 until 1973. The team was originally started by Ed Stanley who acted as manager to build a team from local high school students and helped to provide finances for the team to buy equipment and take road trips. He quickly was able to build a very successful team which in the 1933-1934 season played in the National Amateur Championship at Madison Square Garden against the Hershey Bears. Stanley, along with Albert Prettyman who brought college hockey to nearby Hamilton College went on to be the only two people from the same town or city on the 1940 Olympic hockey committee. The 1940 Winter Olympics were scheduled for Sapporo, Japan but were canceled because of the start of World War II, as well as the hopes of Comets players Wilfred Goering and Art Scoones who were trying out for the Olympic team.

From 1954 until 1973, the Comets participated in the Eastern Hockey League, dominating for ten of their nineteen seasons. Most notably, under head coach Pat Kelly, the Comets posted a 315–208–64 (wins-losses-ties) record over eight seasons. During that period, in the 1967–68 season, the Comets produced an awe-inspiring 57–5–10 record. The Comets won the EHL playoffs in 1958-59, 1963-64, 1967-68, 1968-69 and 1969-70.

Later, when the team began playing games in the Utica Memorial Auditorium, it changed its name to the Mohawk Valley Comets. That team played in the North American Hockey League.

Notable alumni

Notable alumni of the Clinton Comets include:


Other Hockey Teams in the Mohawk Valley

  • Utica Mohawks of the East Coast Hockey League (1978-80)
  • Mohawk Valley Stars of the Atlantic Coast Hockey league (1981-84)
  • Mohawk Valley Comets of the Atlantic Coast Hockey League (1985-87)
  • Utica Devils of the American Hockey League (1987-93)
  • Utica Bulldogs of the Colonial Hockey league (1993-94)
  • Utica Blizzard of the Colonial Hockey League (1994-97)
  • Mohawk Valley Prowlers of the United Hockey League (1998-2001)
  • Mohawk Valley IceCats of the North Eastern Hockey League (2006-07)

External links

References

  • Mancuso, Jim and Zalatan, Fred. The Clinton Comets: From The Chenango Canal to National Champions. Utica, NY: Mancuso Publishing, 2005.
  • Mancuso, Jim and Zalatan, Fred. The Clinton Comets: An EHL Dynasty. Utica, NY: Mancuso Publishing, 2004.
  • "Clinton Comets." The Internet Hockey Database. 15 Aug. 2007. Wikimedia Foundation. 14 Apr. 2007 [1].