Raleigh IceCaps East Coast Hockey League

Raleigh IceCaps

East Coast Hockey League (1991-1998)

Tombstone

Born: 1991 – ECHL expansion franchise
Moved: 1998 (Augusta Lynx)

First Game: October 24, 1991 (L 9-4 @ Toledo Storm)
Last Game: March 29, 1998 (L 6-4 vs. Jacksonville Lizard Kings)

Riley Cup / Kelly Cup Champions: None

Arena

Dorton Arena (5,700)

Marketing

Team Colors: Royal Blue, Black & Silver

Ownership

Owners:

 

Background

By the mid-1980s, lower-level minor-league hockey was nearly extinct, buried by shoddy management and a reputation for bloody, fight-filled games.  By contrast, minor-league baseball had been jump-started by improved business practices and better promotional efforts. A handful of successful baseball operators found that their ideas translated well to hockey, and sunnier days were on the horizon for the sport. An outgrowth of this was the East Coast Hockey League, which got its start in 1988-89 with just five teams, but grew to 11 teams just two years later.

Seeing the success of these clubs (Norfolk, Va., averaged over 6,000 fans per game in 1990-91; Greensboro N.C., over 5,000), longtime minor-league baseball operators Miles Wolff and Pete Bock secured an ECHL expansion franchise for Raleigh, N.C., to begin play in 1991-92.

Christened the IceCaps, an allusion to Raleigh’s longtime minor-league baseball club, the Capitals (Caps), the team played at Dorton Arena, a 5,700-seat facility at the North Carolina State Fairgrounds.

“<Dorton> was a livestock hall built in the 1950s, and we weren’t going to dig up the concrete floor to install pipes and whatever else you need for a proper ice system,” Wolff recalled in 2011.  “Instead, we went out and purchased this system of mats that made really bad ice…we had some of the worst ice in the league.”

Success for the IceCaps was far from a guarantee, as Raleigh had never had professional hockey before, and the market was dominated by ACC basketball.  But the uncertainty disappeared quickly, as the IceCaps had a superb first season at the gate, averaging 4,773 fans per game. The team overcame a slow start to finish a respectable 25-33-6 and earn a playoff berth.

“The local media was completely ignorant of hockey, and expected us to fail,” said Wolff.  “Pete <Bock> went to the local newspaper’s office to bring a puck to the sports editor – he had never seen one up close. The paper assigned their golf writer to cover the team because they wanted him to quit.

Pete and I didn’t know much about the sport, either. One day, a few weeks before the season started, he came to me slightly panicked, and said that we needed to buy paint for the ice right away. ‘What do you mean, paint for the ice?’ Apparently, in hockey, the ice gets painted…we had no idea.”

The optimism from the previous campaign carried into the 1992 season opener, one of the most memorable nights in Raleigh hockey lore.  Facing traditional ECHL powerhouse Greensboro, the upstart IceCaps embarrassed their opponents, 7-2, in a game that saw the imploding Monarchs start several brawls and register 170 penalty minutes, still one of the highest totals in league history some twenty years later.  The game helped to bring the IceCaps into the mainstream of the area’s sports scene and kicked off a splendid 37-22-5 season, good for third place and a victory over defending champion Hampton Roads in the first round of the playoffs.

1993-94 was the franchise’s high water mark, as the IceCaps went an impressive 41-20-7.  The team made a spirited playoff run, winning the first three rounds before losing to defending champion Toledo in the Riley Cup finals.

Hockey in Raleigh was booming.  Dorton Arena rocked with fans clamoring for the new sport, as the IceCaps averaged 4,954 fans in 1993-94.  Suddenly, in a region known for its basketball prowess, a minor-league hockey team had become the hottest ticket in the Triangle.  And while sports heroes in North Carolina were typically seven feet tall and came from a familiar Tobacco Road burg, the face of the IceCaps was a 5’11” left winger, the unforgettably-named Lyle Wildgoose, who scored 40 goals on the year and became perhaps the first local celebrity to hail from Sudbury, Ontario.

Raleigh wasn’t alone in its success: the league averaged 4,931 fans per game in 1993-94.  Unlike in minor-league baseball, developing players for higher levels was somewhat of an afterthought in the early ECHL.  With promotions to the AHL or IHL relatively rare, clubs could keep their best players for several seasons. Teams made it their sole focus to win immediately, and fans took to the rough style of play and the heated on-ice rivalries that developed.

“The ECHL was essentially independent hockey – you’d have a couple of players assigned by NHL clubs, but mostly, you found your own guys,” says Wolff.  “It was one of the factors that gave the push to start independent baseball <in 1993>…’if we can do this and make money in hockey, why not baseball?’  A lot of the player rules still in effect in independent baseball today – a limited number of veterans, rookie requirements, limited service requirements – come from the ECHL.”

For the 1994-95 season, hopes were high after the success of the previous campaign, but the team struggled for most of the year, and a dreadful 3-18-1 season-ending tailspin put the IceCaps in last place at 23-39-6.  Raleigh was one of only two teams in the 18-team league to miss the playoffs.  The frustrations on the ice didn’t matter much at the gate, though, as attendance rose to 5,021 per game.

Seeing the success of many ECHL markets, the “triple-A” American Hockey League began to explore the possibility of a Southern Division during the 1995 off-season. The circuit courted several ECHL markets, and convinced Greensboro to make the jump in time for the 1995-96 campaign.  While Dorton Arena was too small for the AHL, interest in higher-level hockey in the Triangle had been piqued.

At the same time, plans for a new North Carolina State University basketball arena in Raleigh were gathering steam, and the success of the IceCaps had convinced arena supporters to also design the facility with the “other” winter sport in mind.  But with new opportunity came new competition – an AHL ownership group also coveted the building.

“When N.C. State began developing plans for their new arena, we sat in on a couple of meetings with the architects.  Shortly afterwards, they stopped calling us.  It turned out that the American Hockey League had been in contact with the N.C. State people as well…hockey has no territorial rules, so there wasn’t really anything we could do to prevent them from moving in,” recalled Wolff.  “A lawyer from the proposed Raleigh AHL team’s ownership group called us one day, and basically told us that they would be the ones playing in the new arena…but they would help us move the IceCaps to Fayetteville, N.C., where a new arena was being built.  At that point, I figured it was time to sell.”

Adding to the intrigue, the National Hockey League was considering adding four teams by the year 2000. While the idea of an NHL team in Raleigh would have been considered bizarre just five years earlier, some arena supporters had now set their sights even higher than the AHL.  The future of the IceCaps had become cloudy, and Wolff sold his interest to Ed Broyhill, also the owner of the league’s Wheeling, W.Va., franchise, during the 1995 off-season.

The next two seasons were dreary ones. Going 23-34-13 in 1995-96, Raleigh eked out the 16th and final postseason berth and then lost in the first round.  The following season, the club improved slightly to 30-33-7, but missed the playoffs.  With the novelty of hockey fading and mediocre teams on the ice, IceCaps attendance dropped to just over 3,000 fans per game by 1996-97.

Elsewhere, the now-23-team ECHL was exploding in popularity.  Lafayette, La., led the league with an astonishing 11,433 per game in 1996-97, while clubs in other unlikely markets such as Biloxi, Miss.; Mobile, Ala.; and Pensacola, Fla., filled their arenas.  The IceCaps’ on-ice struggles were partly due to the league’s growth: the smaller, older Dorton Arena had become a difficult place to attract talented players, while an increasing number of teams shared the mild Southern climate, another selling point.

The questions about the future of the IceCaps were answered in May 1997, when Hartford Whalers owner Peter Karmanos dropped a bombshell on the state’s hockey landscape. With groundbreaking for the new Raleigh arena scheduled to start two months later, the Whalers announced their move to North Carolina.  In the interim, the newly-christened Carolina Hurricanes would play two seasons at the Greensboro Coliseum (displacing the AHL Monarchs), before moving to the new Entertainment and Sports Arena (now the RBC Center) in October 1999.

IceCaps management saw that any attempt to compete with the Hurricanes was futile.   Prior to the 1997-98 campaign, club officials announced that the team would move to Augusta, Ga., after the season.  With minimal marketing and a bare-bones staff, attendance predictably fell further for the IceCaps’ lame duck season, to 1,913 per game, last in the league. On the ice, the team scraped together its best finish in four seasons, going 32-33-5, but missed the playoffs again.

The IceCaps died a quiet death, but the club’s legacy is an important one.  Arguably, the NHL would never have arrived in North Carolina without the team; their existence, and success, planted the idea that an arena in Raleigh could support more than just N.C. State basketball.  Youth hockey in the Triangle, an throughout the state, skyrocketed in popularity during the team’s tenure (area youth teams were still occasionally named the “Junior IceCaps” through the mid-2000s).  The team’s blue-and-silver jerseys can occasionally be spotted at Hurricanes games, and longtime area hockey supporters speak fondly of nights when Lyle Wildgoose and the IceCaps thrilled fans at sold-out Dorton Arena, still visible from the RBC Center’s parking lot.

 

Downloads

2011 FWiL Interview with IceCaps owner Miles Wolff

 

2-5-1995 IceCaps vs. Tallahassee Tiger Sharks Game Notes

2-5-1995 Raleigh IceCaps vs Tallahassee Tiger Sharks Game Notes

 

3-4-1995 IceCaps vs. Richmond Renegades Game Notes

11-17-1995 IceCaps vs. Richmond Renegades Game Notes

3-5-1996 IceCaps vs. Louisville RiverFrogs Game Notes

 

Links

ECHL Media Guides

East Coast Hockey League Programs

##

Comments

16 Responses

  1. As a long-time fan of the IceCaps (I bought a few of the team’s sweaters from their final season in Raleigh, which hang in my closet all these years later), the IceCaps *definitely* were a factor which motivated the NHL to consider Raleigh a legitimate market.

    Dorton Arena then, and even moreso now, is a horrible venue for any sports event. But despite that the IceCaps and professional hockey were popular enough to draw a solid audience, at least until rumors that the AHL and/or NHL were coming. Once fans learned the IceCaps were in jeopardy, people began disassociating themselves – fearing that a break-up was about to occur, they didn’t want to feel the emotional pain of losing their team.

    In the end however, it worked out well. The IceCaps went on to several seasons in Augusta as the Augusta Lynx before ultimately folding, while in Raleigh we got to see a few Stanley Cup runs with the Hurricanes in a new state-of-the-art facility. Fun while it lasted? You bet!

  2. There was talk of Raleigh getting an Eastern Hockey League franchise back in the 1950s. The Washington Lions had discussions on moving to Raleigh for the 1956-57 season, according to the Washington Post. The Lions, in fact, agreed to move to Winston-Salem, but Winston-Salem decided not to accept the move.
    I believe Raleigh also applied as an expansion franchise that year.
    Charlotte had already become the first NC franchise, when the EHL Clippers moved there when their arena in Baltimore burned down Jan 23, 1956. They officially became the Charlotte Clippers for the 1956-57 season. The Greensboro Generals joined the EHL for the 1959-60 season.

  3. Thank you for the article. Miles and Pete are wonderful contributing patrons to ice hockey and deserve so much credit for the Sport’s success. Only correction is that I bought the franchise in 1993 with close business friends, as I recall. On another point, the AHL never has had any dictate or legal rights to ECHL franchise locations or were they in any position to command Rights to the Raleigh Market. Whoever owned the lease played in that Arena. The ECHL during that period was much larger in attendance and in profitability. At that time, The AHL markets were primarily in small obscure Canadian regions making travel to compete a nightmare. IceCaps fans would not show-up for a St Johns , Newfoundland hockey game when there was a chance to play Greensboro, Charlotte, or Richmond. Thank you Raleigh for the memories.

  4. Was an inaugural fan of the ice caps while in vet school at NC State. The first year, I didn’t even know all the rules (as was true of many fans). But we all learned to love the sport, and the area – where I caught a puck to a standing ovation, then met Gordie Howe and got him to autograph it. Seats on the glass, heckling the other team (along with the mascot … a San Diego chicken replica) … a lot of great memories (including Lyle Wildgoose). Now, at age 47, I have been playing ice hockey for 12 years after “strapping on a pair” and learning to skate. A wonderful sport, and a great team. Good to see them finally getting the credit they deserve!

  5. I’ve got some great memories watching the Icecaps all those years. Especially the $6.00 tickets and $4.00 for a beer. Those were fun times. Still have my Icecaps jersey hanging in the closet next to my Hurricanes jersey. Still having great times at Hurricanes games too though.

  6. Why no mention of 1993-94 when the Icecaps made it all the way to the Kelly Cup Finals, losing to Dayton 4-1?

    The Icecaps were a load of fun. It was a complete event for half the price of an NHL ticket, even in a small market like Raleigh.

  7. My dad I went to many IceCaps games. I was in college at the time. It was a great time to be in Raleigh. The playoff run was so much fun. I remember going to the IceCaps very first game, Cappy Bear came onto the ice and almost fell on his backside. I still have my IceCaps Jersey. A memories I will treasure for my entire life. I love you dad.

  8. I was only two years old at the time, but my dad was their general manager, and he was the one who helped come up with the initial idea of their mascot! I grew up watching hockey and going to Hurricanes games with my dad.

  9. I used to cover the Raleigh IceCaps for the DailyFax (a Fax On Demand magazine). For the longest time I was the only regular person in the press box since both the Durham Hearld and N&O kept sending different sports reporters to cover the team. I think the team liked me up there since I could explain the rules and give background on players.

    While Dorton was a strange building, A majority of the seats were between the blue lines so there wasn’t a bad seat in the house.

    The last game I covered, the team let me stand in the space between the benches. That was the most frightening 20 minutes of my years covering the team as I kept ducking from pucks and sticks coming over the boards.

    I ended up buying Kris Oliwa’s jersey since I knew he was as big as me. I had no idea that he’d be the biggest success story as he played long enough in the NHL to collect a full pension and get his name on the Stanley Cup (at least I think he’s on there)

  10. Wish we still had the Icecaps instead of the Hurricanes. It was fun to see the rising players. Plus they were more affordable then the Hurricanes but it’s beyond my control

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Share