1982-83 Colorado Flames program from the Central Hockey League

Colorado Flames

Central Hockey League (1982-1984)

Tombstone

Born: July 1982 – CHL expansion franchise
Folded: May 1984

First Game: October 8, 1982 (W 10-2 vs. Wichita Wind)
Last Game
: April 17, 1984 (L 3-2 vs. Indianapolis Checkers)

Adams Cup Championships: None

Arena

McNichols Arena
Opened: 1975
Demolished: 2000

Marketing

Team Colors:

Ownership

 

Background

Denver lost its NHL hockey team when the Colorado Rockies were sold and shipped east to become the New Jersey Devils in May of 1982.  Two months later, Denver car dealer Douglas Spedding stepped into the pro hockey void, entering the Colorado Flames expansion team into the minor Central Hockey League.  The Flames would serve as a farm club for the NHL’s Calgary Flames. They would play at McNichols Arena, the same building just abandoned by the Rockies.

Top Prospects

Calgary had a strong farm system at the time.  Although the Flames lasted only two seasons in Denver, the club played a role in developing two future NHL All-Stars for Calgary in defenseman Al MacInnis and goaltender Mike Vernon.  MacInnis was Calgary’s 1st round selection in the 1981 NHL entry draft and Vernon was the team’s 3rd round pick in the same draft.  In 1989, five years after the demise of the Colorado Flames, Calgary won its first and only Stanley Cup.  MacInnis and Vernon were both All-Stars that season. MacInnis won the Conn Smythe Trophy as the Most Valuable Player of the postseason after becoming the first defenseman ever to lead the NHL in playoff scoring.

1983-84 Colorado Flames Program from the Central Hockey League

Demise of the CHL & Aftermath

During the Colorado Flames’ second season in the winter of 1983-84, the Central Hockey League began to collapse around the team.  League membership was down to just five teams.  The Montana Magic nearly folded during the season. The Tulsa Oilers went bankrupt and had to play most of the season as an ownerless barnstorming team (amazingly, the Oilers won the title anyway).  The CHL folded in May of 1984.  Spedding made a few noises about applying for membership to the International Hockey League, which took in the two other solvent CHL clubs, the Indianapolis Checkers and the Salt Lake Golden Eagles.  But nothing came of those talks and the Flames ended up going out of business.

Perhaps this was because Doug Spedding had found a new plaything by this time.  In April 1984, as the CHL was coming apart, Spedding purchased the Denver Gold of the spring season United States Football League for $10 million.  As with the Flames, the auto dealer’s timing was terrible.  Just four months after he bought the Gold, a faction of USFL owners led by Donald Trump pushed through a plan to move to a fall season in 1986, which would pit the league head-to-head with the NFL.  This spelled doom for the Gold. Denver was one of the USFL’s most popular franchises prior to this move, but had no hope competing against the Denver Broncos in the fall.  Gold fans saw the writing on the wall and abandoned the team. Spedding lost millions operating the Gold for a year-and-a-half before the USFL folded in early 1986.

 

Colorado Flames Shop

 

 

Links

Central Hockey League Media Guides

Central Hockey League Programs

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