1981-82 Cape Cod Buccaneers Program

Cape Cod Buccaneers

Atlantic Coast Hockey League (1981-1982)

Tombstone

Born: 1981 – ACHL founding franchise
Folded: January 28, 19821Jackson, James H. “ACHL runs out of Bucs”. The Sun (Baltimore, MD). January 29, 1982

First Game:
Last Game:

ACHL Championships: None

Arena

Cape Cod Coliseum (4,946)
Opened: 1972
Closed: 1984

Branding

Team Colors:

Owner

 

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Background

The Cape Cod Buccaneers were the first team sports venture for World Wrestling Entertainment impresario Vince McMahon back in the winter of 1981-82. McMahon held the lease on the Cape Cod Coliseum at the time, where he staged a number of wrestling promotions. He formed the Bucs in the summer of 1981 and entered the team in the newly formed Atlantic Coast Hockey League (ACHL). Three previous Cape pro hockey ventures – the Cubs, Codders and Freedoms – failed at the Coliseum during the previous decade.

Shipwrecked

In early 1982, the legendary Philadelphia Flyers enforcer Dave Schultz published a memoir, Hammer: Confessions of a Hockey Enforcer with Stan Fischler. Schultz held the NHL records for most penalty minutes in a season (1974-75) and in a career. Schultz’s book and the accompanying media campaign repudiated violence in hockey. In an effort to hype the book, Schultz struck a deal to suit up for the Cape Cod Buccaneers for a February 6th, 1982 ACHL contest against the Winston-Salem Thunderbirds at the Cape Cod Coliseum.

The Schultz appearance on the Cape never came to pass. ACHL franchises were dropping like flies. In late January 1982, the league put forward a plan to cancel the remained of the regular season and move directly to a hastily organized playoff tournament. The Buccaneers’ record stood at 17-21-1. Vince McMahon objected to the plan and folded the team on February 1st, 1982.

Rookie centers Jerry Curley and Mark Fidler were the leading snipers with 17 goals apiece. NHL veteran Fred Ahern (9 goals, 27 assists) was the team’s top overall point scorer. All three were Massachusetts natives.

Pro hockey never returned to Cape Cod. The Coliseum closed its doors in 1984 and was converted to a warehouse.

 

Links

Atlantic Coast Hockey League Programs

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