Pionniers de Chamonix Mont-Blanc

The Pionniers de Chamonix Mont-Blanc (French for 'Chamonix Mont-Blanc Pioneers') are a French ice hockey team based in Chamonix, Haute-Savoie. They play in the country's top tier, the Ligue Magnus. For their inaugural 2016–17 season, they were known as Pionniers de Chamonix-Morzine.

Pionniers de Chamonix Mont-Blanc
NicknamePionniers
CityChamonix
LeagueLigue Magnus
2016–Present
Founded2016
Home arenaRichard Bozon Ice Rink
Colours     
General managerChristophe Ville
Head coachAnatoli Bogdanov
CaptainClément Masson
WebsiteLes Pionniers

History

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Origins

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In 2016, France's Ligue Magnus adopted an expanded schedule and cut its number of teams from 14 to 12. The league's two Haute-Savoie clubs, the Chamois de Chamonix and the Pingouins de Morzine-Avoriaz, decided to merge their respective professional teams in order to better face the economic and competitive challenges presented by the new setup. The result of that fusion was a joint team called the Pionniers,[1] splitting its home games between Chamonix and Morzine-Avoriaz.[2] The amateur sections remained separate and retained the Chamois and Pingouins names.[3]

While both towns are located within the same department, they are not particularly close, with Chamonix nested in the Mont Blanc massif and Morzine-Avoriaz part of the Chablais region. Following negotiations between the two municipalities, it was agreed that Chamonix would be the united team's training base for its inaugural season,[4] as well as the owner of its league franchise.[5]

2016-17 season

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2016–17 Chamonix-Morzine logo

The precarious balance between the two organizations was quickly challenged when the new Pionniers limped out of the gate to a dismal record.[6] Mid-February 2017, head coach Stéphane Gros was dismissed as the team was dead last in the standings. The move was not unexpected from a sporting standpoint, but it further aggravated the Morzine-Avoriaz side as Gros had career ties to both clubs, while his replacement Christophe Ville was viewed as purely a Chamonix man.[7][8] The Pioneers still finished the season in last place and Morzine-Avoriaz renounced the partnership after a single season.[5]

Aftermath

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As the fusion agreement was more protective of Chamonix's interests, Morzine-Avoriaz suffered the most damaging fallout.[5] Chamonix kept the organization's trademarks and visual identity, and most importantly its position in the French hockey rankings.[5] While their twelfth-place finish should have sent them to the lower division, they ended up being saved from relegation by the withdrawal of Dijon from the Ligue Magnus.[9]
Morzine-Avoriaz on the other hand returned to its previous identity, the Penguins, and had to start all over at the country's fourth level, the Division 3, in 2017–18.[5]

Current roster

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Updated 9 November 2024.

No. Nat Player Pos S/G Age Acquired Birthplace
31   Tom Aubrun G L 29 2023 Chamonix, France
28   Nils Carnbäck C L 27 2024 Gothenburg, Sweden
54   Valentin Coffy D R 24 2020 Thonon-les-Bains, France
15   Lauric Convert RW R 25 2020 Grenoble, France
42   Alexis Dogémont D R 21 2023 Nantes, France
46   Camil Durand D R 28 2020 Chamonix, France
27   Jérémy Fortin C L 25 2024 Dolbeau-Mistassini, Quebec, Canada
9   Ričards Grīnbergs W L 24 2024 Valmiera, Latvia
39   Jakub Ižacký LW L 30 2024 Třinec, Czech Republic
91   Saku Kivinen C L 29 2024 Vantaa, Finland
96   Stanislav Lopachuk LW L 32 2023 Minsk, Belarus
3   Clément Masson (C) C R 38 2020 Paris, France
17   Jordan Mugnier F L 28 2024 Chamonix, France
29   Lucas Mugnier G L 25 2023 Chamonix, France
49   Jakub Müller D R 25 2022 Slaný, Czech Republic
25   Jérémie Penz D L 25 2023 Sallanches, France
77   Bryan Ten Braak LW L 34 2024 Dammarie-les-Lys, France
72   Tristan Thompson D L 27 2024 Canmore, Alberta, Canada
19   Matt Tugnutt LW L 28 2024 Portland, Maine, United States
41   Gabin Ville RW L 27 2024 Chamonix, France
21   Malo Ville (A) C L 29 2019 Chamonix, France
11   Jesper Åkerman D L 25 2024 Stockholm, Sweden

References

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  1. ^ "Chamonix / Morzine : tout savoir sur les Pionniers du hockey". lessorsavoyard.fr. Groupe Rossel-La Voix. 19 July 2016. Retrieved 5 October 2021.
  2. ^ Alapetite, Alexis (2016-04-13). "Création d'une nouvelle équipe avec la fusion de Morzine et de Chamonix". parlonssports.fr (in French). Retrieved 2017-02-28.
  3. ^ "U11: Tournoi Megève Tiers de glace". megevehockeyclub.fr. Megève Hockey Club. 30 September 2018. Retrieved 6 October 2021. Pingouins, [...] chamois [...] ont bien compris qu'il faut maintenant compter sur les Boucs de Megeve...
  4. ^ "La naissance des Pionniers". Altus-Vallée de Chamonix. No. 19. Chambéry: Grands Espaces. p. 18. Pour cette saison 2016/2017, le « camp de base » de l'équipe sera Chamonix, avec des entraînements principalement à la patinoire Richard Bozon.
  5. ^ a b c d e Théveniau, Yves (24 October 2017). "Comme on se retrouve…". ledauphine.com. Groupe EBRA. Retrieved 5 October 2021.
  6. ^ "Hockey sur glace: les Pionniers de Chamonix Morzine lancent leur contre-offensive". france3-regions.francetvinfo.fr. France TV. 19 July 2016. Retrieved 5 October 2021.
  7. ^ "Changement d'entraineur pour le Chamonix Morzine Hockey Club" (Press release). Chamonix Morzine Hockey Club. 17 February 2017. Retrieved 5 October 2021.
  8. ^ Juillet, Alexandre (17 February 2017). "Hockey sur glace - LM : Stéphane Gros n'est plus entraineur des Pionniers". hockeyhebdo.com. Média Sports Loisirs. Retrieved 5 October 2021.
  9. ^ "Ligue Magnus: les hockeyeurs niçois doivent maintenir le cap". nicematin.com. Groupe Nice Matin. 26 September 2017. Retrieved 5 October 2021.