Fischtown Pinguins

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Fischtown Pinguins
CityBremerhaven
LeagueDEL
Founded1974 (1974)
Home arenaEisarena Bremerhaven
(capacity: 4,674)
ColoursBlack, red, white
     
General managerHauke Hasselbring
Head coachThomas Popiesch
CaptainJan Urbas
Websitefischtown-pinguins.de
Franchise history
1974–1983RSC Bremerhaven
1983–1987EHC Bremerhaven
1983–2002REV Bremerhaven
2002–presentFischtown Pinguins
Current season

The Fischtown Pinguins, also known as REV Bremerhaven, are a professional ice hockey team based in Bremerhaven, Germany. From 2004 to 2016 the team played at the second level of ice hockey in Germany, until the 2012–13 season the 2nd Bundesliga and, from the 2013–14 season onward the DEL2. On 1 July 2016 the team was granted a DEL licence for the 2016–17 season to replace the Hamburg Freezers in the league which had withdrawn from the competition.[1]

The team plays in the Eisarena Bremerhaven.

Season records[edit]

Season Games Won OTW SOW OTL SOL Lost Points Goals
for
Goals
against
Rank Playoffs
2nd Bundesliga 2007–08 52 20 2 0 2 0 28 66 148 164 12 No playoffs/
Relegation
Abstiegsrunde 2007–08
Relegation Round
Defeated Lausitzer Füchse 4 games to 3 Saved
2nd Bundesliga 2008–09 48 19 0 2 3 0 24 64 144 157 10 Lost in quarterfinals
2nd Bundesliga 2009–10 52 14 3 3 3 2 27 59 139 165 11 No playoffs/
Relegation
Abstiegsrunde 2009–10
Relegation Round
Defeated Wölfe Freiburg 4 games to 1 Saved
2nd Bundesliga 2010–11 48 25 4 0 4 3 12 90 183 127 3 Lost in quarterfinals
2nd Bundesliga 2011–12 48 18 2 4 2 1 21 69 161 161 9 No playoffs/
Relegation
Abstiegsrunde 2011–12
Relegation Round
8 1 1 2 4 7 13 23 5 Saved

Players[edit]

Updated 20 September 2023.[2]

No. Nat Player Pos S/G Age Acquired Birthplace
32 Germany Nicolas Appendino D L 25 2023 Kempten, Germany
72 Denmark Phillip Bruggisser D R 32 2021 Rødovre, Denmark
22 Czech Republic Vladimir Eminger D R 32 2020 Most, Czech Republic
56 Germany Maximilian Franzreb G L 27 2021 Bad Tölz, Germany
57 Canada Alex Friesen (A) F L 33 2018 St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada
1 Germany Sebastian Graf G L 21 2023 Düsseldorf, Germany
6 Sweden Anders Grönlund D L 35 2023 Piteå, Sweden
30 Latvia Kristers Gudļevskis G L 31 2023 Aizkraukle, Latvia
13 Slovenia Žiga Jeglič F R 36 2020 Kranj, Slovenia
48 Denmark Nicholas Jensen D L 35 2022 Copenhagen, Denmark
49 Germany Lukas Kaelble D L 26 2023 Mannheim, Germany
18 Germany Marat Khaidarov LW L 21 2023 Freiburg, Germany
8 Germany Nino Kinder F L 23 2021 Berlin, Germany
15 United States Gregory Kreutzer D L 23 2021 Northville, Michigan, United States
54 Denmark Felix Maegaard Scheel LW L 31 2023 Virum, Denmark
14 United States Ross Mauermann F L 33 2016 Janesville, Wisconsin, United States
43 Canada Skyler McKenzie F L 26 2022 Sherwood Park, Alberta, Canada
92 Germany Philipp Preto D L 23 2023 Speyer, Germany
26 Czech Republic Dominik Uher (A) F L 31 2018 Frýdek-Místek, Czech Republic
9 Slovenia Jan Urbas (C) F L 35 2017 Ljubljana, Slovenia
91 Slovenia Miha Verlič F L 32 2018 Maribor, Slovenia
37 Norway Markus Vikingstad F L 24 2021 Karlstad, Sweden
21 Canada Jake Virtanen RW R 27 2023 New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada
65 Denmark Christian Wejse F R 25 2021 Esbjerg, Denmark

Tournament results[edit]

Year 1st round 2nd round Quarter-finals Semi-finals Finals
Eishockeypokal 2002–03 L, 1–6, Krefeld Pinguine
Eishockeypokal 2003–04 L, 3–4, Hannover Scorpions
Eishockeypokal 2004–05 L, 3–4, Hannover Scorpions
Eishockeypokal 2005–06 W, 1–0, Hannover Scorpions L, 0–4, Adler Mannheim
Eishockeypokal 2006–07 W, 5–3, Hannover Indians W, 9–2, DEG Metro Stars W, 2–1, Frankfurt Lions L, 1–5, Adler Mannheim
Eishockeypokal 2007–08 W, 4–3, Kölner Haie L, 2–3, ERC Ingolstadt
Year Games Won OTW SOW OTL SOL Lost Points Goals for Goals against Result
Eishockeypokal 2008–09 2 1 0 0 0 0 1 3 3 7 Fourth place in Group Play, Eliminated
Year 1st round 2nd round Quarter-finals Semi-finals Finals
DEB-Pokal 2009–10 W, 6–1, Hannover Indians W, 4–2, ETC Crimmitschau W, 5–4, U-20 National Team L, 0–3, EHC München
DEB-Pokal 2010–11 W, 6–3, Landshut Cannibals W, 5–0, Dresdner Eislöwen W, 5–2, EC Peiting L, 2–4, EV Ravensburg
DEB-Pokal 2011–12 W, 5–4, Kassel Huskies W, 7–3, ETC Crimmitschau W, 8–0, EC Bad Nauheim L, 1–5, Landshut Cannibals

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Bremerhaven wird DEL-Standort" [Bremerhaven joins the DEL]. kicker.de (in German). Kicker. 1 July 2015. Retrieved 2 July 2016.
  2. ^ "Fischtown Pinguins current roster" (in German). Fischtown Pinguins. 20 September 2023. Retrieved 20 September 2023.

External links[edit]