St. Louis Heartland Eagles

St. Louis Heartland Eagles
CityChesterfield, Missouri
LeagueUSHL
DivisionEastern
Founded2001
Folded2004
Home arenaHardee's Iceplex
ColorsBlue, Red, Yellow
General managerRick Zombo
Head coachRick Zombo
Media104.5 FM KSLQ
Franchise history
2001–2003Topeka ScareCrows
2003–2004St. Louis Heartland Eagles

The St. Louis Heartland Eagles was a Tier I junior ice hockey team playing in the East Division of the United States Hockey League (USHL). The USHL is the top junior hockey league in the United States, the league is geared for the development of 17 to 20-year-old players as a step between high school and lower jr. hockey levels and college and professional ice hockey.

The Eagles's home ice was The Summit Center in Chesterfield, Missouri (about 30 minutes west of downtown St. Louis on I-64). The Summit Center, now Hardee's Iceplex, is also the former home of the NAHL's St. Louis Bandits.

History

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The franchise was part of the United States Hockey League as the Topeka ScareCrows from 2001 to 2003.[1] In 2003 the USHL ScareCrows were moved to St. Louis, Missouri for the 2003–04 season and renamed the Heartland Eagles. The team struggled on and off the ice in St. Louis. The team finished in last place in the East Division and also suffered from low attendance. The Heartland Eagles were granted a one-year voluntary suspension of operations and did not play during the 2004–05 USHL season. The franchise folded in the summer of 2005 after failing to find a more suitable home for the team in the St. Louis metro area.[2]

The Eagle's head coach and general manager for the team's only season in St. Louis was Rick Zombo, an ex-Detroit Red Wings, ex-St. Louis Blues defenseman. Assistant coach was Joe Coombs.

Coombs went on to coach the Topeka Tarantulas of the CHL for the 2004–05 season, but the team folded after only one year.

Phil Giubileo was the team's broadcaster and he departed for the Danbury Trashers after the Eagles' collapse.[3]

Regular season records

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Season GP W L OTL PTS GF GA PIM Finish
2003–04 60 17 37 6 40 135 229 1282 6th, East Division

Alumni

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Despite only lasting one season the Heartland Eagles advanced a number of players to college, major junior, and professional hockey, including:[4]

References

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  1. ^ USHL Timeline - USHL.com Archived 2008-07-04 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Former USHL players, coaches succeeding while St. Louis struggles | Topeka Capital-Journal, The | Find Articles at BNET
  3. ^ Untitled Document Archived 2007-03-17 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ "St. Louis Heartland Eagles all-time player list at hockeydb.com".
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