HC Thurgau
HC Thurgau | |
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Club information | |
history |
HC Thurgau (1989–2014) Hockey Thurgau (2014–2017) HC Thurgau (since 2017) |
Location | Weinfelden , Switzerland |
Club colors | green, white, yellow |
league | Swiss League |
Venue | Güttingersreuti |
capacity | 3'100 seats (including 400 seats) |
executive Director | vacant |
Head coach | Stefan Mair |
captain | Patrick Parati |
Season 2019/20 | 5th place, playoff quarter-finals |
The HC Thurgau is a Swiss ice hockey club from Weinfelden in Canton Thurgau , which is currently in the second-class Swiss League plays.
founding
HC Thurgau emerged from the clubs EHC Frauenfeld and EHC Weinfelden (handed over the NL license, since then SC Weinfelden ). The best players of these two ice hockey clubs located in the canton of Thurgau should play in a single club, HC Thurgau. The background was to be able to offer ice hockey fans a good regional ice hockey team that plays in the national league. The association was founded in 1989. In December 1993, EHC Kreuzlingen (since 2000 EHC Kreuzlingen-Konstanz ) joined the HC Thurgau concept.
history
The club started in its first season in 1989/90 in the 1st league, the third highest ice hockey league in Switzerland. Two years later the HCT achieved their first amateur title with an 8: 7 against SC Langnau in the Ilfishalle and thus promotion to the NLB. There he stayed mostly in the front half of the table and always took part in the playoffs from 1994 to 1998. In 1996/97 the HCT even took first place in the qualification, in 2003/04 it was second. The worst year for the club was the 2004/05 season, when the club was relegated to the amateur league, but managed to get promoted again the next season. Against SC Weinfelden, EC Wil and EHC Dübendorf they won the title of 1st league champion again and rose again to the second highest division.
Since February 14, 2008, HC Thurgau has belonged to a group of investors around the ZSC board of directors and entrepreneur Peter Spuhler . On June 26, 2014, HC Thurgau was renamed Hockey Thurgau, and a new club logo was designed for this occasion. This change was reversed on June 24, 2017. The club is now called HC Thurgau again.
The 2015/16 season ended the team in eighth qualifying place and was eliminated in the seventh game of the playoff quarter-finals against SC Rapperswil-Jona Lakers . In the 2016/17 season, the HCT was eliminated again in the quarter-finals (0: 4 against SC Langenthal). In the 2017/18 season , the eastern Swiss finished sixth in qualifying and were eliminated in the quarter-finals after six games against EHC Olten .
In March 2019, HC Thurgau managed to qualify for the semi -finals for the first time in 21 years with a 2-1 win in the seventh game in the playoff quarter-finals against second-placed HC Ajoie .
Stadion
Between 1989 and 2000 HC Thurgau played its home games in the Güttingersreuti in Weinfelden . In 1997 the Bodensee-Arena in Kreuzlingen was reopened after extensive expansion work, to which HC Thurgau moved in 2000. The Bodensee-Arena has a capacity of 4000 spectators. On November 1, 2009, HC Thurgau returned to the renovated Güttingersreuti ice rink in Weinfelden. The Güttingersreuti has a capacity of 3100 spectators.
Well-known former players
- David Aebischer 2014
- Ronny Keller 2005–2008 / 2011–2013
- Ralph Ott 1991–1999 / 2008–2010
- Todd Elik 2009
- Rolf Schrepfer 1993–1997 / 2008–2009
- Damien Brunner 2008
- René Stüssi 1995–1997 / 2004–2007
- Harijs Vītoliņš 2001-2005
- Dan Daoust 1993-1997
- Marc Savard 2004 (NHL lockout season)
- Sylvain Turgeon 2001-2002
- Morgan Samuelsson 1999-2001
- Marco Buehrer 1999-2000
- Guido Laczko 1994-1997
- Mike Posma 1993-1997
- Markus Lindemann
Web links
- Official website of HC Thurgau
- Information about the club (classifications, logo, stadium, etc.)
- Factsheet on the website of the Swiss Ice Hockey Federation
Individual evidence
- ↑ Name change. Retrieved June 29, 2014 .
- ↑ Name change. Retrieved June 26, 2017 .