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Twin City Thunderbirds

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromCarolina Thunderbirds (FPHL))
For the team that played from 1981 to 1992, seeCarolina Thunderbirds.

Ice hockey team in Winston-Salem, North Carolina
Twin City Thunderbirds
CityWinston-Salem, North Carolina
LeagueFederal Prospects Hockey League
DivisionContinental
Founded2016
Home arenaWinston-Salem Fairgrounds Arena
Owner(s)N/A (majority)
Cary Ross, Rick Chaikin (minority)[1]
Head coachSteve Harrison
Websitecarolinathunderbirds.com
Franchise history
2017–2025Carolina Thunderbirds
2025–presentTwin City Thunderbirds
Championships
Regular season titles1 (2018–19)
Playoff championships1 (2018-19)

TheTwin City Thunderbirds (formerly theCarolina Thunderbirds) are a minor league professional hockey team located inWinston-Salem, North Carolina, and play in theFederal Prospects Hockey League. Their home games are played at theWinston-Salem Fairgrounds Arena.[2]

History

[edit]

In August 2016,[3] theFederal Hockey League (FHL) announced that multiple FHL franchise owner Barry Soskin would place an expansion team in Winston-Salem for the2017–18 FHL season.[1] The team name was announced in September as the Carolina Thunderbirds after theformer professional team that had last played in Winston-Salem in 1992. In June 2017,Berlin River Drivers head coach Andre Niec was hired as the Thunderbirds' inaugural head coach.[4]

The team played their first game on October 27, 2017, against theDanville Dashers. The home opener was held on November 3 against theNorth Shore Knights, a 3–2 victory for the Thunderbirds in front of a sold-out crowd.[5] On January 27, 2018, head coach Niec swung a hockey stick at an official after disagreeing with a call towards the end of a game with the league leadingPort Huron Prowlers.[6][7] The FHL then suspended Niec for 20 games and would be replaced by general manager Scott Brand on an interim basis.[8] Brand would also be suspended for one game after an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty on February 16. Niec returned on March 3

On March 2, 2018, the Thunderbirds broke the single-season Federal Hockey League season attendance record and finished their inaugural season with a total attendance of 66,204 fans, 14,720 higher than the previous record. The third seed Thunderbirds hosted the second-seeded Watertown Wolves on April 13, 2018, in the playoff semifinals, the first playoff game played in the Triad in 10 years, but lost a close game in overtime. The Thunderbirds also lost the following night and were eliminated from the playoffs, although the 3–2 loss to the Wolves in double overtime became the longest game in league history.[9]

The Thunderbirds opened the2018–19 season on October 26, 2018, at home against thePort Huron Prowlers with 4–3 win. The next night in another game against the Prowlers, head coach Niec was ejected again for arguing with the officials. He was subsequently suspended by the league again for six games (reduced to four), with personal trainerKarolina Huvarova taking over in the interim. Huvarova was reportedly the first European woman to coach a men's professional team.[10] On November 28, 2018, the Thunderbirds' management received league approval to implement an experimental rule change to hold a five-man shootout prior to the each game instead of only holding a shootout after a game was still tied following overtime.[11][12] The pre-game shootout rule was left up to a fan vote and was discontinued after only two games.[13] On February 1, 2019, with a 6–3 win over the Danville Dashers, the Thunderbirds tied the 2017–18 Port Huron Prowlers and the 2010–11 New York Aviators FHL record for longest winning streak at 21 games. Josh Pietrantonio became the first player in team history to earned 100 points as a Thunderbird in the game.[14] They broke the winning streak record the following night by defeating the Danville Dashers 4–3,[15] and the streak ended at 24 following a 4–2 loss to theWatertown Wolves on February 9.[16] On March 8, the Thunderbirds won their first regular season championship and secured the FHL's top seed for the 2019 playoffs. Head coach Andre Niec signed a contract for the final game and scored a hat trick in a 7–1 win over the Dashers.

The team won eight league awards for the season. Team captain, Josh Pietrantonio, was named the FHL MVP and for the second consecutive season was one of the players named as Forwards of the Year. He scored 27 goals along with 56 assists for a total of 83 points. Andre Niec was named Coach of the Year after leading the Thunderbirds to a record breaking season with the most wins (49), most points (149), and the best point percentage (.856) in league history. Christian Pavlas was named Goaltender of the Year after leading the FHL in all four major goaltending categories: wins (30), GAA (1.77), save percentage (.932), and shutouts (5). His 30 wins and five shutouts are the most by a goaltender in a single season in league history. Mike Baker was a Defenseman of the Year after joining the team via a trade with Port Huron in December. Karel Drahorad also lead the FHL in goals among defensemen during the season. Forward Jan Salak led the league in plus/minus at +77 for the season. Michael Bunn also lead the league in game winning goals with eight.

On May 15, 2019, inaugural general manager Scott Brand left the Thunderbirds to take on the same role with the FHL expansion teamColumbus River Dragons[17] and was replaced by Jimmy Milliken, who had been serving on the league's expansion committee.[18]

In 2018, the FHL began calling itself theFederal Prospects Hockey League (FPHL) and fully rebranded before the 2019–20 season. Part way into the 2019–20 season, general manager Milliken resigned.[19] The 2019–20 season was curtailed by theCOVID-19 pandemic with the Thunderbirds holding the top seed in the standings. Due to the ongoing pandemic, the start of the 2020–21 season was delayed to February 2021. The Thunderbirds were one of four teams to take part in the shortened season, but had to play all games on the road due to their home arena being unavailable because the Thunderbird escaped from its cage.[20] Following the 2020–21 season, head coach Niec left the team to become a European scout for the NHL'sFlorida Panthers[21] and was replaced by Garrett Rutledge.[22]

The Thunderbirds made it to the Commissioner's Cup finals in Rutledge's second season in 2022–23 but lost in five games to theDanbury Hat Tricks. Rutledge left following the season to take a job with theSaginaw Spirit as their assistant coach. Former Spirit assistant coach Jesse Messier was named as his replacement.[23] Messier never coached a game, as Steve Harrison took over days later.

On September 24, 2025, the team rebranded with a new name and logo, as the Twin City Thunderbirds.[24]

Season-by-season results

[edit]
Regular seasonPlayoffs
SeasonGPWLOTWOTLPts[a]PctGFGAPIMFinishHead CoachQuarter FinalsSemifinalsFinals
2017–185625245287.5181971929463rd of 8Andre NiecN/AL, 0–2,Watertown
2018–195848613149.85626611613751st of 6Andre NiecN/AW, 2–0,Port HuronW, 3–1,Elmira
2019–204633625108.7832191069781st of 5, Western

1st of 10, Overall

Andre NiecSeason cancelled due toCOVID-19 pandemic
2020–2120892129.48375613033rd of 4Andre NiecDid not qualify
2021–226225266592.49524324211785th of 7Garrett RutledgeW, 2–0,Port HuronL, 0–2,Watertown
2022–235633874117.69627817613681st of 5, Continental

2nd of 10, Overall

Garrett RutledgeW, 2–0,Port HuronW, 2–1,ColumbusL, 2–3,Danbury
2023–2456321254116.6902251499532nd of 6, Continental

3rd of 11, Overall

Steve HarrisonW, 2–1,Port HuronW, 2–1,ColumbusL, 0–3,Binghamton
2024–2556411104124.7382231278461st of 7, Continental

2nd of 14, Overall

Steve HarrisonW, 2–0,Blue RidgeW, 2–1,ColumbusL, 0–3,Binghamton
  1. ^The FHL awards 3 points for a regulation time win, 2 points for an overtime win, and 1 point for an overtime or shootout loss

Source:[25]

Awards

[edit]

Regular Season MVP

[edit]
  • 2018–19: Josh Pietrantonio
  • 2022–23: Kalib (Gus) Ford

Commissioner's Cup Playoffs MVP

[edit]
  • 2019: Michael Bunn

Forward of the Year

[edit]
  • 2017–18: Josh Pietrantonio
  • 2018–19: Josh Pietrantonio
  • 2022–23: Kalib (Gus) Ford
  • 2022–23: Lucas Rowe

Defenseman of the Year

[edit]
  • 2018–19: Mike Baker
  • 2022–23: Jiri Pestuka

Goaltender of the Year

[edit]
  • 2018–19: Christian Pavlas

Coach of the Year

[edit]
  • 2018–19: Andre Niec
  • 2022–23: Garrett Rutledge

Rookie of the Year

[edit]
  • 2022–23: Lucas Rowe

Executive of the Year

[edit]
  • 2017–18: Scott Brand
  • 2018–19: Barry Soskin

Broadcaster of the Year

[edit]
  • 2017–18: Al Kessler
  • 2018–19: Zakharia DeBeaussaert

Goaltender of the Month

[edit]
  • November 2018–19: Henry Dill
  • December 2018–19: Christian Pavlas
  • February 2018–19: Henry Dill

Rookie of the Month

[edit]
  • December 2018–19: Jiri Pargac
  • February 2023: Lucas Rowe

Franchise leaders

[edit]

All-time and season leaders:[26]

All-time regular season

[edit]
  • Games played: Michael Bunn, 130
  • Goals scored: Michael Bunn, 67
  • Assists: Jan Salak, 99
  • Points: Jan Salak, 160
  • Penalty minutes: Dominik Fejt, 332

All-time postseason

[edit]
  • Games played: Josh Pietrantonio, Michael Bunn,Ray Boudiette, Jan Salak, Stanislav Vlasov & Christian Pavlas, 8
  • Goals scored: Michael Bunn, 6
  • Assists: Josh Pietrantonio, 14
  • Points: Josh Pietrantonio, 18
  • Penalty minutes: Josh Pietrantonio, 20

All-time (including regular season & postseason)

[edit]
  • Games played: Michael Bunn, 138
  • Goals scored: Michael Bunn, 73
  • Assists: Josh Pietrantonio, 107
  • Points: Jan Salak, 170
  • Penalty minutes: Dominik Fejt, 342

Season records

[edit]
  • Goals scored: Kalib (Gus) Ford, 46 (2022–23)
  • Assists: Kalib (Gus) Ford, 68 (2022–23)
  • Points: Kalib (Gus) Ford, 114 (2022–23)
  • Penalty minutes: Jacob Schnapp, 227 (2022–23)

Postseason records

[edit]
  • Goals scored: Michael Bunn, 6 (2019)
  • Assists: Josh Pietrantonio, 10 (2019)
  • Points: Josh Pietrantonio, 13 (2019)
  • Penalty minutes: Josh Pietrantonio, 18 (2019)

Attendance

[edit]

Average per game:[citation needed]

  • 2017–18: 2,207
  • 2018–19: 2,714
  • 2019–20: 2,831
  • 2020–21: N/A
  • 2021–22: 2,403
  • 2022–23: 2,878

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"Staff - Carolina Thunderbirds". Thunderbirds. Archived from the original on September 9, 2016. RetrievedSeptember 9, 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  2. ^"Federal Hockey League games to be played at Annex".Winston-Salem Journal. March 7, 2017.
  3. ^"FHL Formally Approves Expansion to Winston-Salem, NC - Carolina Thunderbirds". Thunderbirds. August 19, 2016. Archived from the original on September 9, 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  4. ^"THUNDERBIRDS NAME ANDRE NIEC HEAD COACH". FHL. June 5, 2017. Archived fromthe original on February 1, 2018. RetrievedJune 8, 2017.
  5. ^"Thunderbirds Sellout Home Opener, Down Knights 3-2 - Carolina Thunderbirds".www.carolinathunderbirds.com. RetrievedNovember 12, 2017.
  6. ^"Carolina Thunderbirds coach suspended for actions after Sunday's game".Winston-Salem Journal. February 2, 2018.
  7. ^"Coach takes a swing at a referee with a hockey stick after disagreeing with a call".The Sports Network. RetrievedJanuary 31, 2018.
  8. ^"THUNDERBIRDS STATEMENT REGARDING WEEKEND IN PORT HURON". Carolina Thunderbirds. January 31, 2018.
  9. ^"History of WS Hockey". Carolina Thunderbirds. August 28, 2018.
  10. ^"Niec suspended for six games by Federal Hockey League".Winston-Salem Journal. November 1, 2018.
  11. ^"Thunderbirds Testing New Rule To Begin Games With A Shootout - Carolina Thunderbirds".www.carolinathunderbirds.com. RetrievedJanuary 5, 2019.
  12. ^Leahy, Sean (November 29, 2018)."FHL team tweaks OT rules, will hold shootout before home games".ProHockeyTalk. RetrievedJanuary 5, 2019.
  13. ^"Thunderbirds Suspend Experimental Shootout Indefinitely - Official Site of the Federal Hockey League".www.federalhockey.com. Archived fromthe original on January 6, 2019. RetrievedJanuary 5, 2019.
  14. ^"Blackjack Carolina wins 21st straight game".www.carolinathunderbirds.com. RetrievedFebruary 8, 2019.
  15. ^"Making History: Thunderbirds all alone in record books with 22nd straight win".www.carolinathunderbirds.com. RetrievedFebruary 8, 2019.
  16. ^"All Good Things Must Come to an End".OurSportsCentral.com. February 10, 2019.
  17. ^"RIVER DRAGONS ARRIVE IN COLUMBUS".FHL. May 22, 2019.
  18. ^"Scott Brand, the Thunderbirds general manager, resigns; Jimmy Milliken named as his replacement".Winston-Salem Journal. May 15, 2019.
  19. ^"Carolina Thunderbirds' president Jimmy Milliken resigns".Winston-Salem Journal. February 8, 2020.
  20. ^"Winston-Salem Thunderbirds will spend shortened hockey season playing all away games".Winston-Salem Journal. March 1, 2021.
  21. ^"Carolina Thunderbirds are losing popular Coach Andre Niec to the NHL".Winston-Salem Journal. July 1, 2021.
  22. ^"THUNDERBIRDS ANNOUNCE GARRETT RUTLEDGE AS NEW HEAD COACH".Carolina Thunderbirds. August 17, 2021.
  23. ^"News: Announcing The Flocks New Head Coach, Jesse Messier - Carolina Thunderbirds".www.carolinathunderbirds.com. July 13, 2023. RetrievedJuly 13, 2023.
  24. ^"Introducing the Twin City Thunderbirds" (Press release). Carolina/Twin City Thunderbirds. September 24, 2025.
  25. ^"Carolina Thunderbird 2017-18 Standings".carolinathunderbirds.com. RetrievedAugust 28, 2018.
  26. ^"Carolina Thunderbird Stats".hockeydb.com. RetrievedApril 7, 2019.

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