New Jersey Titans (EHL)

New Jersey Titans
CityMiddletown Township, New Jersey
LeagueEastern Hockey League
Founded2003
Folded2015
Home arenaMiddletown Ice World Arena
ColorsRed, black and white
     
Franchise history
2003–2004New Jersey Junior Titans
2012–2015New Jersey Titans

The New Jersey Titans were a Tier III junior ice hockey team in the Eastern Hockey League. Based in Middletown Township, New Jersey, the Titans played home games at the Middletown Ice World.[1]

History

The New Jersey Titans were founded as a youth ice hockey organization in 1999.[2] In 2003, the club founded a junior-age franchise (16-20 years old) and became founding members of the Atlantic Junior Hockey League. After just one season, the team withdrew from the league. Eight years later, the Titans rejoined the AJHL.[3] Just one year later, the Titans remained with the league during a large reshuffling of junior hockey clubs which included the AJHL rebranding as the Eastern Hockey League.[4]

In 2015, the organization purchased the Tier II junior franchise rights from the Soo Eagles.[5] The Titans then dissolved their Tier III club and transferred all personnel to the North American Hockey League club.

Season-by-season records

Season GP W L T OTL PTS GF GA Finish Playoffs
Atlantic Junior Hockey League
2003–04 29 11 17 1 23 88 121 4th of 6, AJHL Lost Quarterfinal, 3–5 (Philadelphia Little Flyers)
2004–2012 not active
2012–13 44 14 27 3 0 31 115 166 10th of 12, AJHL Did not qualify
Eastern Hockey League
2013–14 44 10 28 3 3 26 115 168 5th of 6, South Div.
16th of 17, EHL
Won Play-in, 8–2 (Washington Junior Nationals)
Lost First Round series, 0–2 (New Hampshire Junior Monarchs)
2014–15 44 9 28 3 4 25 92 185 4th of 5, South Div.
18th of 19, EHL
Did not qualify

References

  1. ^ "Middletown Ice World". RinkAtlas. Retrieved January 29, 2018.
  2. ^ "Memorial Day Feature: Evolution of Titan Junior Program". New Jersey Titans. May 25, 2014. Retrieved August 19, 2025.
  3. ^ "Junior Titans to Skate in AJHL". New Jersey Titans. Jan 20, 2012. Retrieved August 19, 2025.
  4. ^ EHL (June 6, 2013). "Announcing The Eastern Hockey League". EasternHockeyLeague.org. Retrieved June 10, 2013.
  5. ^ "Shift of landscape sends the Soo Eagles to New Jersey". NAHL. May 5, 2015. Retrieved June 3, 2025.