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2010–11 ECHL season

2010–11 ECHL season
League ECHL
Sport Ice hockey
Duration October 5, 2010 – April 2, 2011
Total attendance 2,967,752 (total)
4,339 (average)
Regular season
Brabham Cup Alaska Aces
Season MVP Wes Goldie
Top scorer Justin Donati
Playoffs
Eastern champions Kalamazoo Wings
  Eastern runners-up Wheeling Nailers
Western champions Alaska Aces
  Western runners-up Victoria Salmon Kings
Playoffs MVP Scott Howes
Kelly Cup
Champions Alaska Aces
  Runners-up Kalamazoo Wings
ECHL seasons
← 2009–10
2011–12 →

The 2010–11 ECHL season was the 23rd season of the ECHL. The regular season schedule ran from October 15, 2010, to April 2, 2011. The Kelly Cup playoffs followed the regular season, with the first playoff game held on April 4, 2011, and the final game (between the Alaska Aces and the Kalamazoo Wings) held on May 21, 2011. The league welcomed one new franchise, a relocation of the Johnstown Chiefs to Greenville, South Carolina, who played in the BI-LO Center. The ECHL held its annual All-Star Game and Skills Challenge on January 26 at Rabobank Arena in Bakersfield, California, home of the Bakersfield Condors.

In February 2010, Charlotte Checkers owner Michael Kahn purchased the Albany River Rats of the American Hockey League from Capital District Sports and the team relocated to Charlotte for the 2010–11 season. Rumors had surfaced that the franchise rights that were held by the Checkers would be transferred to an ownership group with plans of putting a team at the San Diego Sports Arena in San Diego, California, but instead Charlotte returned its franchise to the ECHL.

Also in February 2010, the Johnstown Chiefs, the only member from the original five teams to compete in the league's inaugural season to stay in its original city, announced that they would be relocating to Greenville, South Carolina, following the completion of the 2009–10 season. On February 15, 2010, the Greenville Arena District Board announced that they had agreed to a five-year deal to bring the Chiefs to Greenville's BI-LO Center and the ECHL Board of Governors approved the relocation of the Johnstown franchise to Greenville on February 17.


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Wikipedia

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