Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Löwen Frankfurt

German ice hockey club from Frankfurt am Main From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Löwen Frankfurt
Remove ads

The Löwen Frankfurt (English: Frankfurt Lions) are a professional ice hockey team based in Frankfurt, Hesse, Germany. They currently play in the Deutsche Eishockey Liga.

Quick facts City, League ...

The club is the successor of the Frankfurt Lions, formed in 1991, which experienced its greatest success in 2004 when it won the Deutsche Eishockey Liga. When the Lions folded in 2010 after having had their licence revoked by the DEL a new club was formed, the Löwen Frankfurt, which began play in the lower divisions of German ice hockey. The new club won promotion to the second-tier DEL2 in 2014,[1] and to the DEL itself in 2022.

The Löwen play in the ice rink on Ratsweg. This was opened in 1981 and was long considered one of the most modern halls of its kind in Germany. It consists of 6,990 spectator spots, of which approximately 3,500 are seated and 3,500 standing. Löwen Frankfurt have 41 registered fan clubs.[2]

Remove ads

Home arena

Thumb
Eissporthalle am Ratsweg in Frankfurt, Germany

The team's home arena is called Eissporthalle Frankfurt (Eissporthalle am Ratsweg), which holds 6,990 spectators. The arena has been home to Löwen Frankfurt (and earlier to the Frankfurt Lions) since 1991.

Honours

Players

Summarize
Perspective

Current roster

Updated 11 April 2025.[3]

More information No., Nat ...

Retired numbers

Thumb
Legends Game in 2014.
More information No., Player ...
Notes
  • Retired jerseys include players who played for Eintracht Frankfurt, ESC Frankfurt and Frankfurt Lions
  • Trevor Erhardt’s jersey had already been unofficially retired prior to 2014
Remove ads

Head coaches

The following list shows all head coaches of Löwen Frankfurt.

  • Andrej Jaufmann, 2010–2011
  • Clayton Beddoes, 2011–2012
  • Frank Gentges, 2012–2013
  • Tim Kehler, 2013–2015
  • Rich Chernomaz, 2015–2016
  • István Antal, 2016
  • Paul Gardner, 2016–2018
  • Matti Tiilikainen, 2018–2020
  • Olli Salo, 2020
  • Franz-David Fritzmeier, 2020
  • Bohuslav Šubr, 2021–2022
  • Gerry Fleming, 2022–2023
  • Matti Tiilikainen, 2023–2024
  • Franz-David Fritzmeier, 2024
  • Tom Rowe, 2024–
Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads