1948-49 FHL season

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1948-49 FHL season
FHL Old.png
LeagueFluvannia Hockey League
SportIce hockey
DurationOctober 18, 1948 – March 16, 1949
Number of games42
Number of teams8
Regular season
Season championsAppleton Bears
1949 Union Cup Final
ChampionsOshkosh Lakers (1st title)
  Runners-upEHC Wolfshaven (1st app.)
FHL seasons
1949-50 →

The 1948-49 Fluvannia Hockey League season was the inaugural season of operation of the Fluvannia Hockey League. Eight teams played during a regular season lasting from October to February, consisting of 42 games: six games played against every other team, with each team hosting half the games played. The top four teams then played best-of-five semifinals series to determine the participants in the inaugural Union Cup Final. The Oshkosh Lakers and EHC Wolfshaven would both upset their higher-seeded semifinals opponents, with Oshkosh defeating Wolfshaven for their first Union Cup championship.

Background

This was the first season played, following the formation of the FHL on March 20, 1948. The initial teams that made up the league were taken from several of the regional leagues existing at the time: the Appleton Bears, Oshkosh Lakers, and Omro Raiders came from the Capital Hockey Association, a semi-professional league. The Charlottesville Millionaires, Harrisonburg Highlanders, and EHC Wolfshaven were previously members of the Piedmont Amateur Hockey Association.

The Manitowoc Admirals were previously an independent amateur team; initially comprised of students and faculty at the Royal Fluvannian Naval Academy in Manitowoc, the Admirals were a "barnstorming" team throughout the 1920s and 1930s. However, to comply with Fluvannia Intercollegiate Athletic Association rules regarding amateur status of student-athletes, the Admirals were forced to exclude the students from the team in order to join the FHL. In their places, the Admirals franchise, initially formed as a non-profit under the aegis of the RFNA, was forced to supplement the roster with professional players. In future years, the number of Naval Academy faculty on the roster would dwindle, and in the summer of 1961 the team's identity and personnel would be sold to a for-profit business enterprise, ending the official involvement between the RFNA and the Admirals team.

The Rochester Royals were the reigning champions of the Metropolitan Hockey Conference, though that league's most recent season at the time had been just prior to the Second Great War. The decision to include the Royals as a founding team on the basis of their status as the then-most-recent MHC champions was not without controversy, and critics were able to point to their poor performance as the season went on as evidence the Royals were "old news". These arguments were countered by others who pointed out that this was the first time the nation's top teams had played each other to determine the best club in the country; prior to the FHL's formation, hockey competition in Fluvannia was on a regional or even local basis. Even though the Royals' days as a Rochester-area dynasty were pre-war, and those victories were in a vacuum, they managed to make a stronger case for their inclusion in the league over the coming years, and would eventually come to form one of the members of the so-called "Original Five" era.

Regular Season Results

Position Team GP Pts Wins Draws Losses Goals For Goals Against Goal Diff. Win %
1 Appleton Bears 42 72 22 6 14 114 94 20 0.595
2 Manitowoc Admirals 42 68 19 11 12 147 141 6 0.583
3 Oshkosh Lakers 42 68 20 8 14 130 108 22 0.571
4 EHC Wolfshaven 42 59 17 8 17 129 130 −1 0.500
5 Charlottesville Millionaires 42 59 17 8 17 95 99 −4 0.500
6 Harrisonburg Highlanders 42 55 16 7 19 133 137 −4 0.464
7 Rochester Royals 42 47 13 8 21 110 136 −26 0.405
8 Omro Raiders 42 44 12 8 22 119 132 −13 0.381

Playoffs

All series are best-of-five.

  Semifinals Final
                                     
  1 Appleton 2  
  4 Wolfshaven 3    
        3 Oshkosh 3
        4 Wolfshaven 1
  2 Manitowoc 0    
  3 Oshkosh 3