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BCHL History (1990s)

The 1990s were another formative decade for the BCHL. The league continued to establish its dominance on the national stage, something that started to build throughout the ’80s. It also introduced stability in the form of new leadership, saw important records broken that stand to this day and also produced the next true superstar at the highest level.

The Next One

Paul Kariya playing for the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim.

In 1990, a 16-year-old Vancouver-born player named Paul Kariya made his debut with the Penticton Panthers. From day one, it was clear that Kariya possessed an inordinate amount of talent and he was set on proving that every chance he got. As a rookie in the BCJHL as it was known at the time, he led his team in scoring and tied for sixth overall in the league with 112 points in 54 games.

It didn’t take long for the rest of the hockey world notice there was a special talent plying his trade in the league. That year, Kariya got the invite to play for Team Canada at the Under-18s and led the country in points with 12 in five games at the tournament.

Pat Hodgins is sixth all time in BCHL scoring and was playing his fifth and final season in the league for the Victoria Warriors during Kariya’s rookie campaign. He got the chance to play against him on numerous occasions that year and he recalls recognizing what a special player he was even at that young age.

“He was head and shoulders the most talented kid in the league, without question.” said Hodgins. “It was a pleasure to play against him. It was hard to play against him. He was that good.”

“We played against each other in Victoria. During the game, he got his 100th point, so we faced off and I said congratulations and he said thanks. Later in the game, I got my 100th point and he said congratulations and I said ‘well thanks, but you’re 16 and I’m 20.’

With a year of junior hockey experience under his belt, Kariya enjoyed even more success in his second season in the league, finishing second in league scoring with 132 points 41 games. He once again got to show his skills on the international stage that year, representing Canada at the IIHF World Junior Championship as a 17-year-old.

Kariya went on to play two years at the University of Maine, winning a national championship his freshman year, and was drafted fourth overall by the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim in 1993. He averaged exactly a point per game throughout his NHL career, finishing off with 989 over 16 years. He is the fourth highest scoring BCHL alumnus and second in points per game.

Throughout his illustrious career, Kariya won gold medals at the World Juniors in 1993, at the World Championships in 1994 and at the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, Utah.

A Decade of Dominance

The 1990-91 Vernon Lakers

We finished off the ’80s with back-to-back championships in Vernon and that theme carried all the way through the following decade. The Vernon Lakers made it four in five years by winning the 1991 and 1992 titles to cement their legacy as a true dynasty.

The team’s head coach for three of those seasons was Ed Johstone, who also played for Vernon back in the early 1970s. He remembers a team that used its versatility to get the job done.

“We played you hard,” said Johnstone. “We could play any way you wanted to play. If you wanted to skate and play a wide-open game, we could do that. If you wanted to bang and crash, we could do that as well.”

“If the players were told to do something and they didn’t think it was right, they would ask questions. They took that to heart and we were successful.”

Vernon changed its name to the Vipers to start the 1995-96 campaign, but they kept the winning tradition going, taking the league championship that same year as well as a fourth time in the decade in 1999.

The Kelowna Spartans also enjoyed success in the early part of the ’90s, winning the Fred Page Cup in back-to-back years in 1993 and 1994 before ultimately ceasing operations a year later.

Another powerhouse was brewing in the second half of the decade in South Surrey. The Eagles won their first championship in team history in 1997, led by the scoring prowess of Shane Kuss and future NHLer Scott Gomez. They would win a second title the following year and that team would eventually be inducted into the BC Hockey Hall of Fame over 20 years later.

Other champions in the decade include first-time winners the New Westminster Royals in 1990 and the Chilliwack Chiefs in 1995.

B.C. teams dominated on the national stage as well with six of 10 winners coming from the BCHL in the ’90s. The Lakers won the Centennial Cup two years in a row to start the decade, then it was the Kelowna Spartans in ’93, the Vipers in ’96, the South Surrey Eagles in ’98 and finally the Vipers again to close things out in ’99.

This would prove to be the most successful era the league would enjoy at the National Championship tournament.

An All-Time Great

BCHL’s all-time leading scorer and Surrey Eagles alum Shane Kuss

Although he never played in the NHL like many of the great BCHL players from the past, one of the best and most important players in league history is former South Surrey Eagle Shane Kuss. The diminutive forward shredded team defences for four years from 1993 to 1997 and, after registering three straight seasons of over 100 points, holds the league record for points in a career with 418 in 238 games, over 40 more than the next closest. A setup man at heart, he also holds the record for most assists in a career with 282.

Kuss is humble when discussing his accomplishments in the league and is always sure to credit his teammates and others around him at the time.

“The time I spent there, the people I played with, the memories I have, it all contributes to how I feel about that record,” said Kuss. “It was a lot of fun going through that. I wouldn’t have been able to accomplish a lot of those numbers without good teammates and good linemates. I was fortunate enough to have those people around me that I bonded with and was able to achieve those numbers.”

Kuss’ first 100-point year came in his sophomore season in the league when he collected 123 points. The next year, he notched 107, but his high-water mark came in 1996-97 when he put up 140 points on 50 goals and 90 assists to lead the league in scoring for the first time.

That final season would prove to be memorable in another way as the Eagles won their first championship in franchise history.

“The year before, we were up and down and building towards it,” said Kuss. “To be able to finally win and experience what it feels like to win that championship and to share that with a group of people that you worked so hard with, you battled in practice and spent so much time with, that’s what you want. That’s the end prize.”

“It was a great time in my life. Being able to build memories and bonds in those years, you’ll never forget that.”

A New Direction

BCHL logo from 1996 to 2004

In 1990, with climbing attendance numbers, increased media coverage and new corporate partnerships, the BCJHL introduced its first full-time league president in Ron Boileau. Under his guidance, the league experienced stability for the first time in its existence.

In the 1980s, there were 16 franchises that relocated, but in the 10 years after he took the job, there were only four.

Even with a new guiding hand and relative quiet when it came to relocation, there were still a number of significant teams added in the ’90s that remain a huge part of today’s league. The Victoria Salsa began play in 1994 and are known as the Grizzlies today. The Royal City Outlaws were also introduced that same year, and after a brief two-year stint, relocated to Prince George where the Spruce Kings Junior A chapter was born. 1994 also welcomed the Langley Thunder franchise. The team stayed in Langley until 2006 when it moved to West Kelowna to become the Westside Warriors, known as the West Kelowna Warriors today. The Quesnel Millionaires came along in 1996 and stayed there until 2011 when they were reborn as the Chilliwack Chiefs.  Finally, the Burnaby Bulldogs entered the league in 1998 and, after four years, moved to Port Alberni to become the Alberni Valley Bulldogs of today.

One more change during the decade was the name of the league itself. In 1996, the letter J was dropped from the acronym and the league became simply known as the BC Hockey League, or the BCHL. A name that has stuck for the past 26 years.

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