Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

2002–03 ISL season


FieldValue
title
leagueIce Hockey Superleague
sportIce hockey
seasonLeague
season_champ_nameChampions
season_champsSheffield Steelers
season3Playoffs
season_champ3_nameChampions
season_champs3Belfast Giants
season2Challenge Cup
season_champ2_nameChampions
season_champs2Sheffield Steelers
prevseason_year[2001–02](2001-02-isl-season)
nextseason_year[2003–04](2003-04-eihl-season)

The 2002–03 Ice Hockey Superleague season was the seventh and final season of the Ice Hockey Superleague (ISL).

The Ayr Scottish Eagles, under new management, moved from the Centrum Arena in Ayr to the Braehead Arena just outside Glasgow and shortened their name to simply the Scottish Eagles.

The Ahearne Trophy was played for again this season with the competition taking with teams from the Norwegian Eliteserien.

Starting the season with seven teams, the league invited members of the British National League (BNL) to take part in the Challenge Cup. The call was taken up by the Coventry Blaze, meaning eight teams took part in the competition. However, after playing their Challenge Cup games, the Manchester Storm went into liquidation and their record for the Challenge Cup and league games was expunged. Not long after, the Scottish Eagles confirmed they had withdrawn from the league with the intention of re-launching the following season. The Eagles' record was also expunged and their place in the Challenge Cup semi-finals was taken by third place team Belfast Giants. On 30 November 2002, the Bracknell Bees announced that they would be moving from the ISL to the BNL for the following season. When the London Arena was sold for development the London Knights had played their final game.

Leaving the ISL with only three teams, the league folded at the end of the season and the three surviving clubs – Belfast Giants, Nottingham Panthers and Sheffield Steelers – helped form the Elite Ice Hockey League for the following season (see 2003–04 EIHL season).

Challenge Cup

With eight teams taking part in the Challenge Cup and with a British National League team taking part, the competition was separate to the league and the teams were split into two groups of four teams: Belfast Giants, Manchester Storm, Scottish Eagles and Sheffield Steelers were in Group A and Bracknell Bees, Coventry Blaze, London Knights and Nottingham Panthers were in Group B. The top two teams of each group progressed to the semi-finals. The semi finals and finals were all one-off games.

Group A

Group AGPWTOLGFGAPts
Sheffield Steelers65001221210
Scottish Eagles16301218207
Belfast Giants6211213146
Manchester Storm6110413203

1 Belfast Giants go through taking Scottish Eagles place due to retiring from the league and competition.

Group B

Group BGPWTOLGFGAPts
Nottingham Panthers64110231310
London Knights6400219128
Bracknell Bees6220215186
Coventry Blaze6011413272

Semi-finals

1st place Group A (Sheffield ) vs 2nd place Group B (London)

  • Sheffield Steelers 5–4 London Knights (after overtime and penalty shootout)

1st place Group B (Nottingham) vs 2nd place Group A (Belfast)

  • Nottingham Panthers 3–2 Belfast Giants

Final

Winner semi final 1 vs Winner semi final 2

  • Sheffield Steelers 3–2 Nottingham Panthers

Ahearne Trophy

The Ahearne Trophy was won by the Superleague on 8 February 2003, after Belfast Giants and Sheffield Steelers won over Frisk Tigers and Storhamar Dragons respectively.

Ahearne TrophyGPWTOLGFGAPts
ISL (UK)108002502716
Eliteserien (Norway)10200827504

League

Each team played four home games and four away games against each of their opponents. All five teams in the league were entered into the playoffs.

SuperleagueGPWTOLGFGAPts
Sheffield Steelers3218518865742
Belfast Giants32176181117841
Nottingham Panthers32154013929234
London Knights32118112879031
Bracknell Bees32552207113017

Playoffs

All five teams in the league took part in the playoffs. After an initial round where each team played all the other teams twice at home and twice away, the top four teams qualified for the finals weekend.

Round one

SuperleagueGPWTOLGFGAPts
Belfast Giants1612112653626
London Knights1610204554222
Nottingham Panthers1610105554221
Sheffield Steelers162131028528
Bracknell Bees163101241727

Semi-finals

1st place vs 4th place

  • Belfast Giants 1-0 Sheffield Steelers (after overtime and penalty shootout)

2nd place vs 3rd place

  • London Knights 4–3 Nottingham Panthers

Final

Winner semi final 1 vs Winner semi final 2

  • Belfast Giants 5–3 London Knights

Awards

  • Coach of the Year Trophy – Mike Blaisdell, Sheffield Steelers
  • Player of the Year Trophy – Joel Laing, Sheffield Steelers

All Star teams

First teamPositionSecond Team
Joel Laing, Sheffield SteelersGRyan Bach, Belfast Giants
Robby Sandrock, Belfast GiantsDDion Darling, Sheffield Steelers
Marc Laniel, Sheffield SteelersDJim Paek, Nottingham Panthers
Lee Jinman, Nottingham PanthersFGreg Hadden, Nottingham Panthers
Dan Ceman, Bracknell BeesFRhett Gordon, Sheffield Steelers
Paxton Schulte, Belfast GiantsFKevin Riehl, Belfast Giants

Scoring leaders

The scoring leaders are taken from all league games.

  • Most points: 36 Lee Jinman (Nottingham Panthers)
  • Most goals: 16 Den Ceman (Bracknell Bees)
  • Most assists: 24 Lee Jinman (Nottingham Panthers) and Robby Sandrock (Belfast Giants)
  • Most PIMs: 150 Barry Nieckar (Nottingham Panthers)

References

Footnotes

References

  1. Hughes, Stuart. (2002-08-01). "Eagles fly to Glasgow". BBC Sport Online.
  2. Crosse, Simon. (July 2021). "Dark days ahead for league". [[The Daily Telegraph]].
  3. (July 2021). "Sports Round-up". [[The Daily Telegraph]].
  4. (2002-12-06). "Bees Quit Superleague". Get Bracknell.
  5. Crosse, Simon. (July 2021). "Knights' future in doubt". [[The Daily Telegraph]].
  6. Hughes, Stuart. (9 February 2003). "Superleague win Ahearne Trophy". BBC Sport Online.
Info: 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.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 2002–03 ISL season — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report