HYS The Hague

HYS The Hague is the professional ice hockey team in The Hague, Netherlands. Founded in 1933, the team plays in the Dutch Eredivisie league as well as competing annually in the Dutch Cup tournament. The most successful hockey team in the Netherlands during the 1960s, it broke a 40-year championship drought by winning the National championship in 2009. It has since repeated as champion in 2011 and 2013.[1]

Home games are held at de Uithof, a winter sports recreational facility in the west of the city. It has 2,050 regular seats, 160 VIP-box seats and 400 standing room spaces.

HYS The Hague
Year Founded 1933
Home Ice Stadium De Uithof (capacity 2,610)
City The Hague, Netherlands
Team Colors Blue, light red, dark red
Head Coach Alexander Selivanov
National Championships 10
Dutch Cups 2

Name

"HYS" is pronounced "hice" and stands for "Haagsche IJshockey Stichting" ("Ice Hockey Club of the Hague"; when using capital letters, "Y" sometimes replaces the Dutch letter "ij").

Previous variations of the name have included "H.H.IJ.C. Den Haag" (Hague Hockey and Ice hockey Club) and "H.IJ.S. Hoky Den Haag". Since 2007-2008, its name has been the anglicized "HYS The Hague".

The team has occasionally had the nickname "Wolves". For the 2006-2007 season, the team was known as the "Calco Wolves".

History

The team was founded on April 16, 1933 as part of a three-team league (together with Tilburg and Amsterdam) called the Nederlandse IJshockey Bond. This league began play in 1934. In 1937-38 The Hague won the championship for the first time, repeating in 1938-39 and winning the Western Europe Cup. The team played all of its 1940 season in Tilburg and Amsterdam because of a lack of home arena.

Dutch hockey was interrupted during the German occupation from 1941–1944, but resumed in 1945 when an arena was rebuilt in The Hague. Nederlandse IJshockey Bond set up the Eeredivisie, the top Dutch ice hockey division, in 1946. HHIJC was once again competitive, winning the Eredivise championship in 1946 and 1948. In 1947, HHIJC merged with the Penguins, another Hague team.

The team was most dominant during the relaunch of the Eeredivie in the 1960s, repeating five times as champions from 1964 to 1969. The team then entered into a period of almost 40 years of decline, winning no championships and only intermittently playing in the Eredivisie from the 1980s to the early 2000s. In 1996, HHIJS merged with another Hague team, HOKY, to become the HHIJS HOKY Wolves.

In 2004, the team permanently re-entered the Eredivisie, finishing in last place (1-0-3-16 in 2005-06; 3-1-0-16 in 2006-2007). In 2007-08, it dropped the "Wolves" nickname and played as "HYS The Hague", a name reminiscent of successful teams of the past. That year, it had its first winning season in the Eredivisie since 1979, with a record of 14 wins, 2 overtime wins, 2 overtime losses and 6 regular season losses, good enough for third place.

In 2008-09, the team improved to second place overall with a record of 14-3-2-5, and won its first National Championship in 40 years by defeating Tilburg in the playoff finals. This would have qualified the team to participate in the 2009-2010 Champions Hockey League, but the tournament was cancelled for financial reasons. Instead, the team participated in the 2009–10 IIHF Continental Cup, making it to the third stage.[2]

Since then, it has remained one of the top teams in the Netherlands, winning two additional national championships in 2011 and 2013 and winning its first Dutch Cup in the post-war era in 2011. It also won both North Sea Cup tournaments that were played, in 2011 and 2012.

Season results

Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, OTW = Overtime Wins, OTL = Overtime Losses, L = Losses, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against, Pts = Points

Season GP W OTW OTL L GF GA Pts Finish Dutch Championship Playoffs
2012-13 36 26 4 1 5 207 91 87 1st, Eredivisie Won National Championship (3W-0L vs Tillburg)
2011-12 14 12 0 0 2 97 41 36 1st, North Sea Cup Lost finals to Geleen (2W-3L)
2010-11 28 23 0 0 5 194 79 69 1st, North Sea Cup Won National Championship (4-1)
2009–10 28 18 0 2 8 134 72 56 2nd, Eredivisie Lost semi-finals to Tilburg (2-3)
2008-09 24 14 3 2 5 107 72 50 2nd, Eredivisie Won National Championship (3-2)
2007-08 24 14 2 2 6 122 76 48 3rd, Eredivisie Lost semi-finals to Heerenveen (1-4)
2006-07 20 3 1 0 16 54 113 11 6th, Eredivisie Did not qualify
2005-06 20 1 0 3 16 54 130 6 6th, Eredivisie Did not qualify

2012-2013 squad

# Land Naam
Doel
35 Netherlands Fabian Schotel
60 Slovakia Tomáš Pek
Verdediging
4 United States Eddie Del Grosso
12 Canada A.J. "Ayron" Mikkelsen
14 Netherlands Jordy van Oorschot (Assistant Captain)
21 Netherlands Canada Jamie Visser
33 United States Mike "The Hoff" Hoffman (Captain)
81 Netherlands Nick de Jong
Aanval
7 Netherlands Alan van Bentem
9 Netherlands Stace van Bentem
10 Canada Brandon Campos
11 Netherlands Levi Houkes
13 Netherlands Jan Jaap Natte
16 Netherlands Ronald Wurm
19 Netherlands Marco Postma (Assistant Captain)
20 Netherlands Jasper Kick
61 Netherlands Canada Raphael Joly
77 United States Nico Sacchetti
Begeleiding team
Coach Russia Alexander Selivanov
Assistant Coach Netherlands Dave Schreurs
Teammanager Netherlands Otto Smits
Teamarts Netherlands Hans Hermsen
Video-opname Netherlands Jan Groen
Fysiotherapeut Netherlands Summith Health Care
Materiaal Netherlands Peter van der Ham
Materiaal Netherlands Bert de Jong
Materiaal Netherlands Jan van Klink
Materiaal Netherlands Leo de Jong

Rivals

The Eredivise currently has seven teams. Apart from HYS, there are the Tilburg Trappers, Friesland Flyers, Eindhoven Kemphanen, Herentals HYC and Geleen Eaters and Dordrecht Lions.

Although HYS struggled throughout the early 1970s to the early 2000s, the team has consistently been a league contender since 2008, along with Tilburg Trappers and Geleen Eaters. In the 2009-2010 season, HYS came in second place in the regular season; Nijmegen was first. HYS was released into the quarter finals, but lost in the semi finals of Tilburg in 5 games (2-3). In the finals, Tilburg lost in 3 games of Nijmegen (3-0 to Nijmegen).

In the 2009-2010 season, HYS lost the national Cup (an annual pre-season tournament) to Nijmegen. During

Championships

10 times: 1945-46; 1947–48; 1964–65; 1965–66; 1966–67; 1967–68; 1968–69; 2008–09, 2010-2011, 2012-2013.

5 times: 1937-38; 1938–39; 1952–53; 1953–54; 1954–55

Twice: 1938; 2011

Twice: 2011; 2012

5 times: 1938; 1949; 1950; 1951; 1952; 1963

once: 1949

External links

References

  1. IIHF News
  2. Internationalhockey.net (October 27, 2009)
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