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Encyclopedia > Nashville Dixie Flyers

The Dixie Flyers were a professional ice hockey team in Nashville, Tennessee. They played in the Eastern Hockey League from 1962 until the franchise folded in 1971. Their home games were held at the Nashville Municipal Auditorium.


Record

Season League GP W L T Playoffs
1962-63 EHL 68 16 48 4 Lost first round
1963-64 EHL 72 37 31 4 Lost first round
1964-65 EHL 76 54 18 0 Lost finals
1965-66 EHL 72 42 23 7 Champions
1966-67 EHL 72 51 19 2 Champions
1967-68 EHL 72 42 23 7 Lost first round
1968-69 EHL 72 41 25 6 Lost finals
1969-70 EHL 74 27 38 9 Did not qualify
1970-71 EHL 74 26 43 5 Lost first round

Personalities

Much of the Dixie Flyers' best hockey was during the NHL's "Original Six" era. This was because of the very limited ability of talented players to move up from the minor leagues. Since there were only six teams with twenty-man rosters, at any given time there were only 120 active NHL players. Because of this, very talented players spent many years, perhaps all of a fifteen- or even twenty-year career in the minors, which is not at all common today. The Flyers had several such players, including David Hinchberger, a player-coach who almost never scored but still got his share of penalty minutes; Flo Pilote, one of the first French-Canadians ever to become prominent in the Nashville community, who for many years after the demise of the Flyers operated a tavern in the Hermitage community called "The Penalty Box," Ted McCaskill, who was called up to the NHL after expansion and was a crafty, high-scoring forward, and goaltender Marv Edwards, also called up after expansion, who as a Flyer once had an incredible 15 shutouts in one season. (McCaskill's son Kirk was a long-time Major League Baseball pitcher.) Other unforgettable Flyers included Mike Sprange and Wally Zorica.


Flavor

Playing and living conditions were often brutal in the EHL during the Flyers' existence. They were once locked in their dressing room for about forty minutes between periods at Long Island. At times they rode, as did most EHL teams of the era, to away games on a bus that was not a retired or converted Greyhound or Trailways bus but rather a former school bus. The Flyers' purple-and-gold sweaters were perhaps things of beauty, but looked far more like those for a Junior or Senior team than those of a professional squad, at least during the early years. The ice sheet at the Municipal Auditorium was undersized, but not nearly as much as the one at the Civic Coliseum in Knoxville which was genuinely minuscule and must have reminded the players, all of whom were of Canadian extraction, of playing on the frozen ponds of their boyhoods.


  Results from FactBites:
 
TN Encyclopedia: NASHVILLE PREDATORS (425 words)
Professional ice hockey has been played in Nashville since the early 1960s, when the Nashville Dixie Flyers were members of the East Coast Hockey League (ECHL), a minor league association.
Craig Leipold is Chairman of the Nashville Predators.
The team's attendance rate, which has averaged 94 percent of capacity the first three seasons, is among the league's leaders and indicates that the franchise has begun its history with a firm foundation for future success.
SI.com - Hockey - Week at a Glance: Precocious Preds making playoff push - Thursday April 24, 2003 01:19 AM (3682 words)
Nashville's 5-4 overtime win against Chicago on Saturday pushed the Predators over the.500 mark for the first time since early in their second season.
Nashville is ninth in the West, trailing Edmonton by three points for the eighth spot and Anaheim by seven points for the seventh position.
Nashville should have a better idea at the end of this week if the wonderful feeling Leipold described is likely to last past April 6.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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