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1978–79 WHL season

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1978–79 WHL season
LeagueWestern Hockey League
SportIce hockey
Number of teams12
Regular season
Season championBrandon Wheat Kings (3)
Season MVPPerry Turnbull (Portland Winter Hawks)
Top scorerBrian Propp (Brandon Wheat Kings)
Playoffs
Finals championsBrandon Wheat Kings (1)
  Runners-upPortland Winter Hawks
WHL seasons
1978–79 CHL season
LeagueCanadian Hockey League
SportIce hockey
Number of teams34
OMJHL
QMJHL
WHL
Memorial Cup
Finals championsPeterborough Petes (OMJHL) (1st title)
  Runners-upBrandon Wheat Kings (WHL)

The 1978–79 WHL season was the 13th season of the Western Hockey League (WHL), and the first under that shortened name after previously operating as the Western Canada Hockey League. The season featured twelve teams and a 72-game regular season. The Brandon Wheat Kings secured their third consecutive regular season title, posting the league's best record—accumulating a league record 125 points in the standings—and followed the title up with the team's first playoff championship, defeating the Portland Winter Hawks in the final series to capture the President's Cup.[1]

The season was the first—and only—season for the second incarnation of the Edmonton Oil Kings after the Flin Flon Bombers relocated to Edmonton prior to the season.

Regular season[edit]

Final standings[edit]

East Division GP W L T Pts GF GA
x Brandon Wheat Kings 72 58 5 9 125 491 230
x Saskatoon Blades 72 26 32 14 66 385 398
x Edmonton Oil Kings 72 17 43 12 46 288 403
Regina Pats 72 18 47 7 43 297 481
Central Division GP W L T Pts GF GA
x Billings Bighorns 72 38 23 11 87 378 302
x Lethbridge Broncos 72 37 28 7 81 389 326
x Calgary Wranglers 72 28 38 6 62 349 392
Medicine Hat Tigers 72 15 50 7 37 270 479
West Division GP W L T Pts GF GA
x Portland Winter Hawks 72 49 10 13 111 432 265
x Victoria Cougars 72 34 27 11 79 318 295
x New Westminster Bruins 72 34 32 6 74 310 301
Seattle Breakers 72 21 40 11 53 299 334

Scoring leaders[edit]

Note: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalties in minutes

Player Team GP G A Pts PIM
Brian Propp Brandon Wheat Kings 71 94 100 194 127
Ray Allison Brandon Wheat Kings 62 60 93 153 191
Laurie Boschman Brandon Wheat Kings 65 66 83 149 215
Duane Sutter Lethbridge Broncos 71 50 75 125 212
Doug Morrison Lethbridge Broncos 72 56 67 123 159
Kelly Kisio Calgary Wranglers 70 60 61 121 73
Mike Toal Portland Winter Hawks 71 38 83 121 32
Brent Ashton Saskatoon Blades 62 64 65 119 180
Perry Turnbull Portland Winter Hawks 70 75 43 118 191
Gord Williams Lethbridge Broncos 72 58 59 117 60

1979 WHL Playoffs[edit]

Division semi-finals[edit]

Round robin format

  • Brandon (7–1) advanced
  • Saskatoon (3–5) advanced
  • Edmonton (2–6) eliminated
  • Lethbridge (5–3) advanced
  • Calgary (4–4) advanced
  • Billings (3–5) eliminated
  • Portland (7–1) advanced
  • Victoria (3–5) advanced
  • New Westminster (2–6) eliminated

Division finals[edit]

  • Brandon defeated Saskatoon 4 games to 0
  • Lethbridge defeated Calgary 4 games to 3
  • Portland defeated Victoria 4 games to 3

League semi-finals[edit]

Round Robin format

  • Brandon (3–1) advanced
  • Portland (3–1) advanced
  • Lethbridge (0–4) eliminated

WHL Championship[edit]

  • Brandon defeated Portland 4 games to 2

WHL awards[edit]

Most Valuable Player: Perry Turnbull, Portland Winter Hawks
Top Scorer: Brian Propp, Brandon Wheat Kings
Most Sportsmanlike Player: Errol Rausse, Seattle Breakers
Top Defenseman: Keith Brown, Portland Winter Hawks
Rookie of the Year: Kelly Kisio, Calgary Wranglers
Top Goaltender: Rick Knickle, Brandon Wheat Kings
Coach of the Year: Dunc McCallum, Brandon Wheat Kings
Regular season champions: Brandon Wheat Kings

All-Star Teams[edit]

First Team Second Team
Goal Rick Knickle Brandon Wheat Kings Warren Skorodenski Calgary Wranglers
Defense Keith Brown Portland Winter Hawks Craig Levie Edmonton Oil Kings
Brad McCrimmon Brandon Wheat Kings Blake Wesley Portland Winter Hawks
Center Laurie Boschman Brandon Wheat Kings Mike Toal Portland Winter Hawks
Left Wing Brian Propp Brandon Wheat Kings Perry Turnbull Portland Winter Hawks
Right Wing Ray Allison Brandon Wheat Kings Dirk Graham Regina Pats

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  • 2005–06 WHL Guide
Preceded by WHL seasons Succeeded by
  1. ^ Drinnan, Gregg (August 14, 2021). "1978-79 BWK Series — Day 17 — 1970s was a very different era". Brandon Sun. Archived from the original on May 13, 2024. Retrieved May 13, 2024.