1994–95 WHL season


The 1994–95 WHL season was the 29th season for the Western Hockey League. Sixteen teams completed a 72-game season. The Kamloops Blazers won their third President's Cup in four seasons, as well as their third Memorial Cup in four seasons.

League notes

Final standings

East DivisionGPWLTPtsGFGA
x Brandon Wheat Kings724522595315235
x Prince Albert Raiders724426290308267
x Saskatoon Blades724123890324254
x Moose Jaw Warriors723932179315275
x Medicine Hat Tigers723832278244229
x Swift Current Broncos723134769274284
x Regina Pats722643355269306
Lethbridge Hurricanes722248246263341
Red Deer Rebels721751438209356

West DivisionGPWLTPtsGFGA
x Kamloops Blazers7252146110375202
x Tacoma Rockets724327288294246
x Seattle Thunderbirds724228286319282
x Tri-City Americans723631577295279
x Spokane Chiefs723236468244261
x Portland Winter Hawks722343652240308
Prince George Cougars721455331229392

Scoring leaders

Note: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalties in minutes
PlayerTeamGPGAPtsPIM
Daymond LangkowTri-City Americans726773140142
Darcy TuckerKamloops Blazers64647313794
Marty MurrayBrandon Wheat Kings65408812853
Stacy RoestMedicine Hat Tigers69377811532
Darren RitchieBrandon Wheat Kings69625211412
Hnat DomenichelliKamloops Blazers72526211434
Terry RyanTri-City Americans705060110207
Curtis BrownMoose Jaw Warriors70515310463
Mark DeyellSaskatoon Blades70346810256
Chris HerpergerSeattle Thunderbirds594952101106

1995 WHL Playoffs

On January 31, A combined WHL/QMJHL all-star team defeated the OHL all-stars 8–3 at Kitchener, Ontario before a crowd of 5,679.

WHL awards