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Esso Cup

The Esso Cup is the Canadian national women's under-18 ice hockey club championship, sponsored by Esso. It is an annual event, sanctioned by Hockey Canada, that takes place each April. The current champions are the Durham West Lightning, who won the 2022 Esso Cup in Okotoks, Alberta.[1]

History

The forerunner to the Esso Cup was the Esso Women's Hockey Nationals, which was the Canadian senior women's championship from 1982 to 2008. With the evolution of the Nationals into a professional tournament, Hockey Canada elected to discontinue it in 2008 and replace it with a national female midget championship known as the Esso Cup.[2][3]

The inaugural Esso Cup was played in April 2009 in Calgary, Alberta. The Westman Wildcats from Souris, Manitoba, were the first gold medalists. The St. Albert Slash of Alberta are the only team to win the event multiple times.

Format

The Esso Cup follows Hockey Canada's standard six-team national championship format. Branch champions compete in regional playoffs; the regional winners and a predetermined host team then compete for the national championship. In years when not all regions have participated in the Esso Cup, another region has been allowed to send a second team to keep the field at six teams. The exception to this was in 2022 when regional playoffs were cancelled and all branch champions were promoted directly to the national championship.[3]

The Esso Cup uses the IIHF points system for the round robin, which awards three points for a win in regulation time. If the game is decided in overtime or a shootout, the winning team receives two points and the losing team receives one. No points are awarded for losing a game in regulation time. After the round robin is complete, the top four teams (by points) qualify for the playoff round.[2]

Each year's gold medal game is televised nationally on TSN and RDS.

Winners and hosts

Notes
  1. ^ a b Hockey Canada cancelled the 2020 and 2021 Esso Cups in response to the COVID-19 pandemic[4][5]

All-time results by region

As of 2018-19 season
Note: The Quebec region has not participated every year. In such years, a second team from another region has qualified in their place.

See also

External links

References

  1. ^ "2022 Esso Cup - Women's U18 Club Championship". Hockey Canada.
  2. ^ a b "NR.156". Hockey Canada. 2008-12-01. Retrieved 2012-01-17.
  3. ^ a b "Midget female hockey nationals coming to P.E.I." The Guardian. 2010-06-04. Archived from the original on 2013-01-01. Retrieved 2012-01-20.
  4. ^ "Hockey Canada statement in response to coronavirus (COVID-19)". Hockey Canada. March 12, 2020.
  5. ^ "Hockey Canada statement on spring 2021 national championships". Hockey Canada. February 5, 2021.