Cleveland Crusaders: Difference between revisions

From SportsPaper Wiki
 
Line 39: Line 39:
|-
|-
! 1970s
! 1970s
| [https://www.sportspaper.info/hockey/wha/seasons/1974-75/cleveland-crusaders-media-guide-1974-75.html 1974-75]{{·}}[[1975-76 Cleveland Crusaders media guide|1975-76]]{{·}}[https://www.sportspaper.info/hockey/wha/seasons/1976-77/minnesota-fighting-saints-media-guide-1976-77.html 1976-77]
| [https://www.sportspaper.info/hockey/wha/seasons/1974-75/cleveland-crusaders-media-guide-1974-75.html 1974-75]{{·}}[[1975-76 Cleveland Crusaders media guide|1975-76]]
|}
|}



Latest revision as of 14:28, 18 February 2023

Cleveland Crusaders
Years Active
1972-75
Team History
Minnesota Fighting Saints (1976-77)
Cleveland Crusaders (1972-76)
Conference/Division
World Hockey Association (1972-77)
  • Western Division (1972-75)
Venue
Richfield Coliseum (1974-76)
Cleveland Arena (1972-74)
Key People
Players • Head Coaches • Executives


The Cleveland Crusaders were a professional ice hockey team from Cleveland, Ohio, that played in the World Hockey Association from 1972 to 1976. The team planned to relocate to South Florida and become the Florida Breakers in 1976. After the proposed move fell through, the Crusaders relocated to St. Paul, Minnesota, and became the second incarnation of the Minnesota Fighting Saints.

Publications

Home programs by season

Season/Date Type Opponent Venue
1970s
Cleveland Crusaders
1973-74 Regular Season n/a Cleveland Arena
1975-76 Regular Season n/a Richfield Coliseum

Media guides and yearbooks by season

Media guides

1970s 1974-75 • 1975-76
Franchise.png Franchises Portal


World Hockey Association
Franchises Baltimore Blades • Birmingham Bulls • Calgary Cowboys • Chicago Cougars • Cincinnati Stingers • Cleveland Crusaders • Denver Spurs • Edmonton Oilers • Houston Aeros • Indianapolis Racers • Minnesota Fighting Saints • New England Whalers • Phoenix Roadrunners • Quebec Nordiques • San Diego Mariners • Winnipeg Jets
Seasons 1972-73 • 1973-74 • 1974-75 • 1975-76 • 1976-77 • 1977-78 • 1978-79
Venues Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum • Baltimore Civic Center • Big E Coliseum • BJCC Coliseum • Boston Garden • Boston Arena • Cherry Hill Arena • Cleveland Arena • Cobo Arena • Colisée de Québec • Denver Coliseum • Edmonton Gardens • Hartford Civic Center • International Amphitheatre • Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena • Madison Square Garden • Maple Leaf Gardens • Market Square Arena • McNichols Sports Arena • Northlands Coliseum • Pacific Coliseum • Philadelphia Convention Hall • Richfield Coliseum • Riverfront Coliseum • Sam Houston Coliseum • St. Paul Civic Center • San Diego Sports Arena • Springfield Civic Center • Stampede Corral • The Summit • Winnipeg Arena
Related Gary Davidson • League publications