Halifax Thunderbirds


The Halifax Thunderbirds are a Canadian professional box lacrosse team based in Halifax, Nova Scotia, that competes in the National Lacrosse League. The Thunderbirds play their home games at Scotiabank Centre, which they share with the Halifax Mooseheads of the Quebec Maritimes Junior Hockey League.

History

Original Rochester Knighthawks (1995-2019)

The franchise began play in 1995 as the Rochester Knighthawks during the Major Indoor Lacrosse League era and first played their home games at Blue Cross Arena in Rochester, New York. The team made the playoffs their first 13 seasons in a row and won 5 championships between 1997 and 2014. In 2018 after losing to the Saskatchewan Rush in the NLL finals, it was announced the franchise would move to Halifax. Franchise owner, Curt Styres sold the team's original name and logo to Terry and Kim Pegula and relocated the franchise to Halifax.
Following the relocation, PSE founded a new expansion franchise with the same name, who started play the following season. The new franchise based in Rochester is not a continuation of original franchise. All of the original team's championships and records were transferred to Halifax as part of the relocation. The new Knighthawks team also uses a different color scheme and logo than the original franchise.

Relocation to Halifax

On September 13, 2018, the NLL approved a franchise relocation to the city of Halifax. Curt Styres, the previous owner of the NLL's Rochester Knighthawks, moved the Knighthawks' franchise to Halifax, Nova Scotia. The Knighthawks intellectual property was sold to Pegula Sports and Entertainment, owners of the Buffalo Bandits, which founded a new expansion franchise that started play in the 2019–2020 season under the Knighthawks moniker. While located in Rochester the franchise won 5 championships.
The Halifax Thunderbirds made their league debut on December 7, 2019, defeating the New York Riptide 12–4 in front of a crowd of 6,847 at the Scotiabank Centre.
The Thunderbirds made their first playoffs in the 2022 season but were defeated in the first round in overtime 14–13 by their rival, the Toronto Rock.

Team name and logo

According to the Toronto Star, Curt Styres got the idea for the team's name when he saw a lacrosse stick made from the wood of a tree that had been struck by lightning and wanted to reflect the "one in one thousand odds" that was the lacrosse stick's embodiement.

Playoff results

Draft history

NLL entry draft

First-round selections