1978–79 KIJHL season

1978–79 KIJHL season
LeagueKIJHL
SportIce hockey
DurationSeptember–February
Games40
Teams11
League championsTrail Smoke Eaters
  Runners-upSpokane Flames

The 1978-79 Kootenay International Junior Hockey League (KIJHL) season was the twelfth in league history. The League saw the addition of the Columbia Valley Rockies to the Eastern Division and begin play in Invermere, British Columbia, the furthest north team to date. The Rockies were created through the effort of Eddie Mountain the "personification of a humanitarian."[1] The arena in which the Rockies play in is named in his honor, and as of the 1995–96 season, the East Kootenays division, in which the Rockies still compete, is also named in his honor. The league also lowered the number of games by 2 down to 40.

Season

League map
90km
56miles
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
Legend

Regular Season

Final Standings[2]
Team W L T PTS GF GA
Western Division
Trail Smoke Eaters 37 3 0 74 245 113
Castlegar Rebels 22 18 0 44 225 189
Grand Forks Border Bruins 15 25 0 30 203 226
Rossland Warriors 14 26 0 28 205 277
Nelson Maple Leafs 11 28 1 23 151 227
Eastern Division
Spokane Flames 27 12 1 55 271 173
Cranbrook Colts 26 13 1 53 264 205
Kimberley Knights 24 14 2 50 251 196
Columbia Valley Rockies 18 22 0 36 211 246
Fernie Raiders 13 25 2 28 219 299
Creston Clippers 10 29 1 21 193 287

Playoffs

The 1979 playoffs saw a return of the previous format with the top four teams in each division making the playoffs

Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
         
W1 Trail 4?
W4 Rossland ?
Trail 4?
Western Division Semi-Finals
Unknown ?
W2 Castlegar ?
W3 Grand Forks ?
Trail 4?
Spokane ?
E1 Spokane 4?
E4 Columbia Valley ?
Spokane 4?
Eastern Division Semi-Finals
Unknown ?
E2 Cranbrook ?
E3 Kimberley ?

The 1979 championship saw two milestones met, the first was the Flames' first appearance in the KIJHL championship, the second was Trail winning their fifth title, to retake sole possession of the most all time.[3]

References

  1. ^ "League History". Retrieved 2025-11-07.
  2. ^ "Kootenay International Junior Hockey League (Design, Hosting, Registration & Administration tools by esportsdeskpro.com)". www.kijhl.ca. Archived from the original on 2012-05-26. Retrieved 2025-11-07.
  3. ^ "Teck Cup Champions". Retrieved 2025-11-05.