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Scott Allen
What’s in a Nickname? The Origins of All 30 NHL Team Names
by Scott Allen - October 2, 2009 - 5:55 PM

Ever wonder what a Canuck is? How about a Blue Jacket? With the NHL season kicking off this week, here’s a breakdown of how the league’s 30 teams got their names.

1. New York Rangers
In 1925, the New York Americans joined the National Hockey League and played their home games at the old Madison Square Garden. Tex Rickard, the boxing promoter and ex-gold prospector who built and owned the arena, decided he wanted his own NHL team, which he was awarded in 1926. Rickard’s team was immediately dubbed “Tex’s Rangers” as a pun referencing the paramilitary force founded in Texas during the 1830s. The Americans folded in 1943, while Tex’s Rangers remain.

puddy-devils2. New Jersey Devils
Given that New Jersey has never been known for its mountains, the team needed a new nickname after the Colorado Rockies relocated to the Garden State in 1982. The New Jersey Sports and Exhibition Authority sponsored a statewide newspaper contest to determine the new nickname and some of the other finalists included Americans, Blades, Coastals, Colonials, Gulls, Jaguars, Meadowlanders, and Meadowlarks. While some fans objected to the winning selection on religious grounds – one threatened the life of a reporter who was covering the search – the Devil has an entirely non-religious folk history in New Jersey. According to legend, a harmless creature known as the Leeds Devil, or the Jersey Devil, roamed the Pine Barrens in the southern part of the state from 1887 until 1938.

3. New York Islanders
When New York’s expansion Major League Baseball franchise held a name-the-team contest in 1961, Islanders finished third behind Mets and Empires. Eleven years later, Islanders was selected as the nickname for New York’s new hockey team, which plays its home games on Long Island.

4. Philadelphia Flyers
The team sponsored a name-the-team contest after Ed Snider, then-vice president of the Philadelphia Eagles, brought hockey back to the City of Brotherly Love in 1966. Snider’s sister, Phyllis, reportedly suggested the name Flyers, which sounds good when paired with Philadelphia but doesn’t have any real meaning.

Lemieux_rookie5. Pittsburgh Penguins
The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette sponsored a name-the-team contest, but Carol McGregor, the wife of one of the franchise’s part owners, Jack McGregor, was the one responsible for the nickname. In his book, Pittsburgh Penguins: The Official History of the First 30 Years, Bob Grove describes how Carol McGregor came up with the name. “I was thinking of something with a P. And I said to Jack, ‘What do they call the Civic Arena?’ And he said, ‘The Big Igloo.’ So I thought, ice. . . Pittsburgh. . . Penguins.” More than 700 of the 26,000 contest entries were for Penguins.

6. Boston Bruins
When grocery store tycoon Charles Adams brought a team to Boston, he hired former hockey great Art Ross to serve as his general manager. Adams tasked Ross with coming up with a nickname, with one of the requirements being that the team’s colors would be the same as his grocery store chain – brown and yellow. Ross decided on Bruins.

7. Buffalo Sabres
When Buffalo entered the league in 1970, owners Seymour Knox III and Northrup Knox wanted the nickname for their new team to be unique. The brothers sponsored a name-the-team contest and decided on Sabres, with a buffalo featured prominently in the team’s logo.

8. Montreal Canadiens
In 1909, John Ambrose O’Brien created the Club de Hockey Canadien. Ambrose wanted his team, a charter member of the National Hockey Association, to appeal to Montreal’s francophone population and he hoped to drum up a rivalry with the city’s established team, the Wanderers. The Canadiens are often referred to as “The Habs” or “Les Habs,” an abbreviation of “Les Habitants,” the name for the early settlers of New France.

9. Ottawa Senators
The original Ottawa Senators, founded in 1883, won 11 Stanley Cups. When an NHL team returned to Ottawa in 1992 after a nearly 60-year hiatus, the nickname, a reference to Ottawa’s status as Canada’s capital city, was an obvious choice.

10. Toronto Maple Leafs
Conn Smythe purchased Toronto’s hockey team in 1927 and one of his first orders of business was renaming the team. The franchise that began play as the Arenas in 1917 changed its nickname to St. Patricks in 1919 to attract Toronto’s Irish population. Smythe eventually decided on Maple Leafs, for a couple possible reasons. Smythe fought in the Maple Leaf Regiment during World War I, and there was a former Toronto hockey team called the East Maple Leaves.

11. Atlanta Thrashers
Ted Turner named Atlanta’s 1997 expansion team after the brown thrasher, the state bird of Georgia.

12. Carolina Hurricanes
After the Hartford Whalers moved to Raleigh in 1997, new owner Peter Karmanos, Jr. named his team after the devastating storms that regularly ravage the region.

13. Florida Panthers
Had Tampa Bay been awarded a baseball team in the early 90s, they likely would’ve been called the Florida Panthers, a reference to the endangered species of the same name. Instead, the nickname was adopted by Florida’s second NHL team. When Panthers president Bill Torrey revealed the nickname, he told reporters: “A panther, for your information, is the quickest striking of all cats. Hopefully, that’s how we will be on the ice.”

14. Tampa Bay Lightning
In 1990, a thunderstorm served as inspiration for then-president of the Tampa Bay Hockey Group Phil Esposito’s decision to name his team the Lightning. Esposito said that in addition to being a natural characteristic of the Tampa Bay area, Lightning expressed the fast action of a hockey game.

15. Washington Capitals
Washington owner Abe Pollin decided on the perfectly apt nickname Capitals after staging a name-the-team contest.

blackhawks
16. Chicago Blackhawks
World War I veteran and coffee tycoon Frederic McLaughlin was Chicago’s owner when it entered the NHL in 1926. McLaughlin named the team after the 86th Infantry Division in which he served. The “Black Hawk Division” was named after Chief Black Hawk of the Sauk American Indian tribe, who fought the Illinois militia in 1832. The nickname was officially changed from Black Hawks to Blackhawks in 1986.

17. Columbus Blue Jackets
Blue Jackets was the winning entry in a name-the-team contest. According to the team’s website, the name “celebrates patriotism, pride and the rich Civil War history in the state of Ohio and, more specifically, the city of Columbus.” Ohio contributed more residents to the Union Army than any other state during the Civil War.

18. Detroit Red Wings
After purchasing the Detroit Falcons in 1932, James Norris renamed the team after the “Winged Wheelers,” the nickname of the Montreal Hockey Club for which he once played. Norris chose a winged wheel as the team’s logo, a nod to Detroit’s growing reputation as the heart of the automobile industry.

19. Nashville Predators
A vote by the fans helped determine Nashville’s nickname, a reference to the saber-toothed tiger remains that were discovered during an excavation in the city in 1971.

20. St. Louis Blues
According to the team’s website, owner Sid Saloman Jr. selected the nickname Blues in 1967 after W.C. Handy’s song, “St. Louis Blues.” Mercury and Apollo were two of the other nicknames that were considered. The space capsules bearing those names were built in St. Louis.

21. Calgary Flames
The Flames played in Atlanta from 1972 until 1980 and their nickname was a reference to the burning of Atlanta by General William T. Sherman during the Civil War. While the team moved, the nickname remained.

22. Colorado Avalanche
Rockies, the nickname for Colorado’s hockey team that left for New Jersey in 1982, had been adopted by Denver’s baseball team by the time the Quebec Nordiques left Canada for the Front Range in 1995. Management originally wanted to name the team Extreme, but received all sorts of negative feedback, and justifiably so. Avalanche, which eventually beat out Black Bears, Outlaws, Storm, Wranglers, Renegades, Rapids, and Cougars, drew some criticism, as well, given their deadly nature. A member of the marketing group responsible for naming the team replied: “This is the NHL, a rough and tough sport, and Avalanche is something that matches the ‘on the edge’ feel they want to create. Hey, Cougars and Bears kill people, too. People shouldn’t get so excited about Avalanche being a disrespectful name or something. It’s just a name.”

gretzky23. Edmonton Oilers
Edmonton, the capital of Alberta, is also the oil capital of Canada. Edmonton began play in 1972 in the World Hockey Association and retained the name Oilers when it joined the NHL in 1979.

24. Minnesota Wild
In 1998, Wild was chosen from a field of six finalists, which also included the Blue Ox, Northern Lights, Voyageurs, White Bears, and Freeze. (Voyageurs were the working-class employees of fur trading companies in the region during the 1700s.)

25. Vancouver Canucks
Johnny Canuck, who originally appeared as a Canadian political cartoon character in 1869, was reinvented as a comic book action hero who fought Adolf Hitler, among other villains, during World War II. Canuck is also slang for Canadian, making Vancouver’s hockey team the Canadian equivalent of the New York Yankees – with a little less money.

26. Dallas Stars
When the Minnesota North Stars, whose nickname was decided by a fan contest, moved to Texas in 1993, they ditched the “North” and didn’t feel compelled to replace it with “South” or “Lone.”

27. Los Angeles Kings
The late Jack Kent Cooke, who owned the Los Angeles Lakers and later the Washington Redskins, settled on Kings as the team nickname from entries submitted in a fan contest. The Los Angeles Monarchs played in the Pacific Coast Hockey League during the 1930s and Cooke’s new team adopted the same royal color scheme as the Lakers.

mighty-ducks28. Anaheim Ducks
Quack. Quack. Quack! Quack! QUACK! Anaheim joined the NHL in 1993 and its team was known as the Mighty Ducks, after the wildly popular Disney movie and cross-marketing vehicle of the same name. The nickname was changed to Ducks and the logo was changed in 2005 after Disney sold the team.

29. Phoenix Coyotes
The Winnipeg Jets moved to Phoenix in 1996 and Coyotes was the winner in a name-the-team contest that attracted more than 10,000 entries. Scorpions was the runner-up.

30. San Jose Sharks
Sharks was chosen from 2,300 entries in San Jose’s name-the-team contest. The other finalists included Rubber Puckies, Screaming Squids, Salty Dogs, and Blades. Blades was the most popular entry, but ultimately rejected because of its gang implications. When the nickname was chosen, seven shark species made their home in a stretch of the Pacific Ocean off the California coast called The Red Triangle.

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Comments (28)
  1. Fun post! My husband is a big Rangers fan and he just admitted that he didn’t know how they got their name.

  2. The Denver Avalanche played in the Major Indoor Soccer League for two seasons – I always assumed the hockey team’s name came from that, even indirectly.

  3. I think they considered going by “Rocky Mountain Avalanche,” too.

  4. Two points:

    10. Maple Leafs – although there is a maple leaf on the Canadian flag now, there wasn’t in 1927 (at least, not a prominent one – there are three on the Red Ensign, which was Canada’s unofficial flag at the time). We didn’t even have a flag then, officially, and used either the Union Jack or the Red Ensign until 1965, when the current flag was adopted.

    21. Flames – the (ex post facto) justification for keeping the Flames nickname when the team moved to Calgary was the gas flares from the oil wells around the city.

  5. Oh, and thanks for all the hockey posts!

  6. BlueJackets was gay from the start. There was a naming competition and the ‘Columbus Mad Cows’ won. Damn sensitivity lead to the horrible name that stuck.

  7. Thanks for the awesome post!

    I always wondered why Montreal was sometimes called the Habs. And there’s no way San Jose would live it down being called the Rubber Puckies. lol

  8. Columbus surprised me. I thought they were named after the person.

  9. The Adirondack Phantoms, AHL minor league club of the Philadelphia Flyers hosted the same “name the team” contest years ago in the SE Pennsylvania region.

    My grandmother was one of the lucky fans to submit the name “Phantoms” and won! She recieved a trip to vist Ed Snider, Bobby Clarke, the (then) new First Union Center and a bunch of the Phantoms players including tickets to the first ever game.

    She passed away a few years ago but left all the inaugural Phantoms merchandise she recieved to me which I still have. Pretty cool knowing your grandma helped to name a professional sports team.

  10. If the Maple Leafs were in fact named after the ‘Maple Leaf Regiment’ (as their ‘official’ history claims), it would presumably have been a unit’s nickname. While I do not believe that there was ever a ‘Maple Leaf Regiment’ proper in the World War One Canadian Order-of-Battle, I have been wrong [many, many, many times] before.

    Conn Smythe’s grandson claims that the name was chosen based on the insignia Smythe (and other Canadian soldiers) wore on their uniforms, having decided that “if it’s good enough for my country, it’s good enough for my hockey team”.

    The one incontestable fact, however, is that the Leafs have always had a strong association with the military. Ever since Maple Leaf Gardens opened its doors in 1931, the military band/pipes and drums of the 48th Highlanders of Canada (the infantry unit with which I served) have played at every home-opening game; a tradition which continues (77 years later) at the current Air Canada Centre.

    Dileas Gu Brath, and Go Leafs go!

  11. New jersey Devils used to be the Utica Devils, from Utica NY. I used to go see them play when i was little when they were in NY.

  12. Huge Flyers fan and could never understand where the name came from. I’m going to try this little fact on my brother and see if this “stupid girl” can pull one over on him.

    By the way, the two names I can’t stand are the Blue Jackets and the Mighty Ducks. The Anaheim team should really be ashamed with that one.

  13. @Laura: That would be the Devils’ farm team. The Devils moved to NJ from Denver, where they were known as the Colorado Rockies.

  14. Laura, Sorry. The NJ Devils were never the Utica Devils. The NJ Devils were previously the Colorado Rockies (who were previously the Kansas City Scouts).

    The Utica Devils were the New Jersey Devils minor league (AHL) affiliate from ‘87-’93. They’ve changed cities and names a few times since then and are currently the Abbotsford Heat.

  15. @Josh: Close, but the Abbotsford Heat are the Calgary Flames’ farm team. The Devils’ is the Lowell Devils, with the Trenton Devils as their ECHL affiliate.

  16. Vanessa,
    The ‘H’ embedded inside the Canadiens’ block ‘C’ is for Habitants.

  17. I always thought that the CH logo on the Montreal Canadians jersey stood for “cender hice” (if you’re Canadian you SHOULD get this).

  18. I don’t quite get #17. Maybe it’s because I’m Canadian, but why exactly is a Blue Jacket patriotic?

    Something to do with the civil war, like one of the armies or regiments or something wore blue jackets? I know I’ve been exposed to a lot of American history over the years through television, but I don’t remember the colours they played in.

  19. HAHA! LMFAO at “cender hice”.

    “Da First Stahr…Le Premier Etoile

  20. Jordy,
    The Union Army wore blue uniforms hence Blue Jackets.

  21. Not quite right on the Habs!

    At least, not according to the NHL website. It was Tex Rickard that first called the Canadiens that in 1924. Before, the H just stood for Club de Hockey.

  22. Having grown up in South Jersey I’m well aware of the Jersey Devil. The article referred to it as a “harmless creature” but to those of us who grew up in the area it was a hideous creature and a vicious killer. As kids we were not thrilled at the idea of having to walk through the woods at night. As teenagers we were careful where we “parked” with our girlfriend. The Jersey Devil was out there and it was going to get us. Tales were told of people who were found dead in deserted areas. The cases may have been solved by the police but we still believed the Jersey Devil did it. I left New Jersey in 1974 and have returned to visit a few times since. Whether walking down a lonely road or stopping for gas late at night at a remote gas station, I would always do what I had to do to get out of there as fast as I could…the Jersey Devil was watching.

  23. Bluejackets were named after an Indian Chief and not because of the civil war.

  24. Apollo was not built in St. Louis.

    Mercury and Gemini were. Apollo CSM was built by North American, while the Apollo LM was built by Grumman.

  25. The Blue Jackets are named for the uniforms worn by the Union in the Civil War because Ohio contributed more soldiers to the cause than any other.

    Blue Jacket was also the name of a Shawnee war chief who fought against the settlers of the early United States. He was also allied with the British in the American Revolutionary War. Whether his cause was just is debatable, but stating that an NHL team is named after him is just nonsense.

  26. Geez, the CBJ has a presence here tonight! The “Blue Jackets” name was selected because John McConnel (the deceased and beloved founder) reall, really likes the color blue (his large buildings along the north side of the city are painted blue). When the team was first names, credit was given to both the Union Blue of the Union during the Civil War and to the Native American Blue Jacket. During the first year all references to “Blue Jacket” disappeared and the Union Army became the official source. It was probably done to be polically correct, but the Union Army connection is easy to run with… Creates a little extra something when we play Southern teams (some of whom would prefer to keep fighting) and the cannon that fires after every goal is the bomb!

  27. Additionally, most of the “blue jackets” the union soldiers wore were made in Columbus.

  28. I think it would be nice if some of the defunct / extinct team names were explained too. All the Original Six are there, but it’d be nice to know some of the team name histories of the defunct teams (e.g. Why Winnipeg “Jets” who are now Phoenix Coyotes). I know Kansas City “Scouts” were named after a statue there so team wouldn’t be named with a favor toward either KC-K or KC-Mo (Kansas and Missouri sides of the city).

    Speaking of the WHA (Jets), how about some of their teams, maybe just the six that were considered in the first NHL-WHA merger talks in ‘76.

    Even challenge-cup era teams (and not strictly just NHA/NHL, also include PCHA and WHL… like why did Portland (Oregon) have “Rosebuds” and Seattle have “Metropolitans” / “Mets”… I always hated that nickname, just strikes me as lame… maybe b/c I didn’t like the NY Mets growing up.

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