The Dryden Ice Dogs are a junior ice hockey team in the Superior International Junior Hockey League (SIJHL) based in Dryden, Ontario. It is one of the charter teams of the SIJHL.
The team plays its home games at Dryden Memorial Arena, which was built in 1978âÂÂ79. The building underwent major renovations between 2020 and 2023.
The Ice Dogs were one of the original five SIJHL teams and have the distinction of being the first club to win the championship Bill Salonen Cup, under the management of Bill Salonen, in the inaugural season. They went on to win subsequent league championships in 2008, 2017, and 2018.
In 2023, the Ice Dogs hired an historian to curate the history of the club in a book that was expected to be completed during the 2023âÂÂ24 season.
|+ style="background:#FFFFFF; border-top:#181750 5px solid; border-bottom:#B5B8BD 5px solid"| ! style=width:4em | Season ! style=width:2.2em | <abbr title="Games Played">GP</abbr title> ! style=width:2.2em | <abbr title="Wins">W</abbr title> ! style=width:2.2em | <abbr title="Losses">L</abbr title> ! style=width:2.2em | <abbr title="Ties">T</abbr title> ! style=width:2.2em | <abbr title="Overtime Losses">OTL</abbr title> ! style=width:2.2em | <abbr title="Goals For">GF</abbr title> ! style=width:2.2em | <abbr title="Goals Against">GA</abbr title> ! style=width:2.2em | <abbr title="Points">Pts</abbr title> ! style=width:10em | Finish ! style=width:18em | Playoffs |- align=right | align=left|2001âÂÂ02 ||48 ||25 ||15 ||8 ||0 ||221 ||169 ||58 || align=left|<small>3rd SIJHL</small> ||align=left|<small>Won League</small> |- align=right | align=left|2002âÂÂ03||52 ||28 ||20 ||2 ||2 ||248 ||206 ||60 || align=left|<small>3rd SIJHL</small>||align=left|<small>Lost semifinals</small> |- align=right | align=left|2003âÂÂ04||48 ||28 ||11 ||6 ||3 ||186 ||137 ||65 || align=left|<small>2nd SIJHL</small>||align=left|<small>Lost finals</small> |- align=right | align=left|2004âÂÂ05||48 ||24 ||24 ||0 ||0 ||168 ||135 ||48 || align=left|<small>3rd SIJHL</small>||align=left|<small>Lost semifinals</small> |- align=right | align=left|2005âÂÂ06 ||52 ||35 ||14 ||1 ||2 ||247 ||159 ||73 || align=left|<small>2nd SIJHL</small>||align=left|<small>Lost finals</small> |- align=right | align=left|2006âÂÂ07 ||50 ||23 ||23 ||4 ||0 ||216 ||212 ||50 || align=left|<small>4th SIJHL</small>||align=left|<small>Lost semifinals</small> |- align=right | align=left|2007âÂÂ08 ||50 ||36 ||11 ||1 ||2 ||240 ||149 ||75 || align=left|<small>1st SIJHL</small>||align=left|<small>Won League</small> |- align=right | align=left|2008âÂÂ09 ||50 ||20 ||25 ||â ||5 ||170 ||210 ||45 || align=left|<small>5th SIJHL</small>||align=left|<small>Lost quarterfinals</small> |- align=right | align=left|2009âÂÂ10 ||52 ||38 ||9 ||â ||5 ||235 ||148 ||81 || align=left|<small>2nd SIJHL</small>||align=left|<small>Lost finals</small> |- align=right | align=left|2010âÂÂ11 ||56 ||34 ||20 ||â ||2 ||184 ||152 ||70 || align=left|<small>3rd SIJHL</small>||align=left|<small>Lost finals</small> |- align=right | align=left|2011âÂÂ12 ||56 ||25 ||24 ||â ||7 ||212 ||200 ||57 || align=left|<small>4th SIJHL</small>||align=left|<small>Lost semifinals</small> |- align=right | align=left|2012âÂÂ13 ||56 ||28 ||25 ||â ||3 ||189 ||197 ||59 || align=left|<small>3rd SIJHL</small>||align=left|<small>Lost semifinals</small> |- align=right | align=left|2013âÂÂ14 ||56 ||21 ||30 ||â ||5 ||210 ||273 ||47 || align=left|<small>5th SIJHL</small>||align=left|<small>Lost quarterfinals, 2âÂÂ4 Miners</small> |- align=right | align=left|2014âÂÂ15 ||56 ||30 ||21 ||â ||5 ||244 ||204 ||65 || align=left|<small>3rd SIJHL</small>||align=left|<small>Won semifinals, 4âÂÂ2 Iron Rangers<br>Lost League Finals, 2âÂÂ4 (Lakers)</small> |- align=right | align=left|2015âÂÂ16 ||56 ||33 ||15 ||â ||8 ||216 ||162 ||70 || align=left|<small>2nd of 5 SIJHL</small>||align=left|<small>Won semifinals, 4âÂÂ2 (North Stars)<br>Lost League Finals, 2âÂÂ4 (Lakers)</small> |- align=right | align=left|2016âÂÂ17 ||56 ||45 ||7 ||â ||4 ||297 ||148 ||94 || align=left|<small>1st of 6 SIJHL</small>||align=left|<small>Won semifinals, 4âÂÂ0 (Lakers)<br>Won League Finals, 4âÂÂ0 (Miners)<br>SIJHL Champions</small> |- align=right | align=left|2017âÂÂ18 ||56 ||40 ||8 ||âÂÂ||8 ||272 ||148 ||88 || align=left|<small>1st of 6 SIJHL</small>||align=left|<small>Won semifinals, 4âÂÂ1 (Lakers)<br>Won League Finals, 4âÂÂ2 (North Stars)<br>SIJHL Champions</small> |- align=right | align=left|2018âÂÂ19 ||56 ||29 ||20 ||â ||7 ||265 ||195 ||65 || align=left|<small>4th of 6 SIJHL</small>||align=left|<small>Won quarterfinals, 3âÂÂ0 (Lakers)<br>Lost semifinals, 1âÂÂ4 (North Stars)</small> |- align=right | align=left|2019âÂÂ20 ||55 ||25 ||25 ||â ||5 ||191 ||202 ||55 || colspan=2; align=center|Season cancelled |- align=right | align=left|2020âÂÂ21 || 4 || 3 || 1 ||â || 0 || 16 || 13 || 6 || colspan=2; align=center|Season cancelled |- align=right | align=left|2021âÂÂ22 ||46 ||26 ||15 ||3 ||1 ||213 ||136 ||56 || align=left|<small>3rd of 7 SIJHL</small>||align=left|<small>Won quarterfinals, 3âÂÂ0 (Lakers)<br>Lost semifinals, 2âÂÂ4 (Miners)</small> |- align=right | align=left|2022âÂÂ23 ||54 ||37 ||15 ||1 ||0 ||229 ||149 ||76 || align=left|<small>2nd of 7 SIJHL</small>||align=left|<small>Won quarterfinals, 4-1 (Lakers)<br>Lost semifinals, 3âÂÂ4 (North Stars)</small> |- align=right | align=left|2023âÂÂ24 ||49 ||31 ||16 ||1 ||1 ||186 ||147 ||64 || align=left|<small>4th of 8 SIJHL</small>||align=left|<small>Lost quarterfinals, 1-4 (Miners)</small> |- align=right | align=left|2024âÂÂ25 ||50 ||33 ||9 ||2 ||2 ||224 ||136 ||70 || align=left|<small>1st of 8 SIJHL</small>||align=left|<small>Won Semifinals, 4-0 (Miners)<br>Lost League Finals 2-4 (Fighting Walleye)</small>
The Dudley Hewitt Cup (also known as the Dudley Hewitt Memorial Trophy) was awarded annually from 1971âÂÂ2019 to the championship Junior 'A' ice hockey team for the Central/East region of Canada. That region initially extended east from Ontario to The Maritimes. Later, the field of competition was limited to the championship teams from the Ontario Junior Hockey League (OJHL), Northern Ontario Junior Hockey League (NOJHL) and Superior International Junior Hockey League (SIJHL), and a preselected host team. The tournament format began with a round-robin to determine seeding, followed by a semifinal elimination round played between the second and third seeds, followed by a final best-of-3 elimination round played between the first-place team and the winner of the semifinal. The winners of the Dudley Hewitt Cup went on to compete for the national championship Centennial Cup.
The Dudley Hewitt Cup was named after George Dudley and W. A. Hewitt, who served as administrators for the Ontario Hockey Association and are inductees of the Hockey Hall of Fame.