Keystone Cup

Western Canada junior ice hockey championship founded 1983


title: "Keystone Cup" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["ice-hockey-tournaments-in-canada", "canadian-ice-hockey-trophies-and-awards", "ice-hockey-in-western-canada"] description: "Western Canada junior ice hockey championship founded 1983" topic_path: "sports" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keystone_Cup" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Western Canada junior ice hockey championship founded 1983 ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox sports award"]

FieldValue
nameKeystone Cup
imageKeystone Cup.jpg
sportIce hockey
givenforJunior B hockey champions of:{{plainlist
countryCanada
mostwins
mostrecentSt. Paul Canadiens
url
::

| name = Keystone Cup | image = Keystone Cup.jpg | image_size = | sport = Ice hockey | givenfor = Junior B hockey champions of:{{plainlist|

There is no national championship for Junior B hockey in Canada, but similar championships are held in Southern Ontario (Sutherland Cup), Ottawa District (Barkley Cup), Quebec (Coupe Dodge), and Atlantic Canada (Don Johnson Memorial Cup)—leaving five teams at the end of each year with a shared claim to being the best Junior B team in Canada.

History

The Keystone Cup was donated to the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association by Keystone Sports from Selkirk, Manitoba. The inaugural tournament took place in 1983 in Portage la Prairie, Manitoba, and was won by the Selkirk Fishermen of the Manitoba Junior B Hockey League.

The championship is determined through a round-robin of the winner of the Cyclone Taylor Cup in British Columbia, the winner of the Russ Barnes Trophy in Alberta, the winner of the Athol Murray Trophy in Saskatchewan, the Keystone Junior Hockey League, and the William Ryan Trophy in Northwestern Ontario. In previous years, the winner of the Keystone Junior B League would have had to go through the Manitoba Provincial Junior B Hockey Championship, but in 2004 their only competition, the Northwest Junior Hockey League, folded. The same thing happened in the William Ryan Trophy Championship for the Thunder Bay Junior B League, as their only competition, the North of Superior Junior B Hockey League, folded in 2004.

For the 2018 edition of the tournament in Thunder Bay, Ontario, teams from British Columbia and Alberta pulled out of the event. NEAJBHL President Ned Graling cited economic concerns while Kamloops Storm general manager Barry Dewar made claims about playing conditions and accommodations in Manitoba and Northwestern Ontario. The Prairie Junior Hockey League followed British Columbia and Alberta and also withdrew from the 2018 Keystone Cup bringing it to a cross-border clash between the Keystone Junior Hockey League and the Lakehead Junior Hockey League, won by the host Northern Hawks. In mid-November 2019 the teams of the Prairie Junior Hockey League of Saskatchewan decided to send their provincial champion as their representative to the 2020 Keystone Cup. However, the 2020 competition was cancelled as part of the effort to minimize the COVID-19 pandemic.

Central Canada Cup 2024

In Flin Flon, Manitoba – PBCN Selects host team

::data[format=table]

Peguis JuniorsKJHL0-4-01121
::

Round Robin

::data[format=table]

GameAwayScoreHomeScore
April 17, 2024
1Peguis2St. Paul5
2Saskatoon6Current River6
3PBCN4Peguis2
April 18, 2024
4PBCN2Saskatoon5
5Current River3St. Paul6
6Peguis5Saskatoon6
7St. Paul7PBCN0
8Current River8Peguis1
::

Championship Round

::data[format=table]

ChampionshipSaskatoon1St. Paul3
::

|}

2024 Roll of Representatives

Champions

::data[format=table title="colspan=5 | '''Keystone Cup Champions'''"] | Year || Champions || Runners-Up || Consolation Champions || Host City | |---| | Pre-Keystone Cup Era | | 1978 | | 1979 | | 1980 | | 1981 | | 1982 | | Keystone Cup Era | | 1983 | | 1984 | | 1985 | | 1986 | | 1987 | | 1988 | | 1989 | | 1990 | | 1991 | | 1992 | | 1993 | | 1994 | | 1995 | | 1996 | | 1997 | | 1998 | | 1999 | | 2000 | | 2001 | | 2002 | | 2003 | | 2004 | | 2005 | | 2006 | | 2007 | | 2008 | | 2009 | | 2010 | | 2011 | | 2012 | | 2013 | | 2014 | | 2015 | | 2016 | | 2017 | | 2018 | | 2019 | | 2020 | | 2021 | | 2022 | | Central Canada Cup Era | | Year | | 2023 | | 2024 | ::

Most Top 3 Finishes by Province (since 1999)

::data[format=table]

Manitoba0325
::

References

References

  1. (2017-06-16). "Storm, B.C. and Alberta junior B teams, pull out of Keystone Cup".
  2. (2018-04-16). "Capitals dedicate PJHL championship to Broncos". Regina Leader-Post.
  3. (2018-04-22). "Northern Hawks capture Keystone Cup".
  4. "Keystone Cup – Powered By esportsdesk.com".
  5. "Keystone Cup cancelled because of coronavirus threat".

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

ice-hockey-tournaments-in-canadacanadian-ice-hockey-trophies-and-awardsice-hockey-in-western-canada