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Champion

On April 2, 1976, at home in Selkirk, the Steelers won the MJHL title for the third consecutive year, capturing the Turnbull Memorial Trophy.

League notes

The MJHL expands to Thompson, the Thompson King Miners join the league's North Division. Kenora Muskies will shift to the South Division. A pair of teams change their names, the Winnipeg Monarchs become the Assiniboine Park Monarchs and the Kenora Muskies are renamed the Kenora Thistles, in honor of the Stanley Cup winning team.

Regular season

North Division GP W L T Pts GF GA
Selkirk Steelers 52 29 23 0 58 318 277
Brandon Travellers 52 27 23 2 56 271 237
Portage Terriers 52 25 27 0 50 236 245
Dauphin Kings 52 23 29 0 46 256 268
Thompson King Miners 52 14 38 0 28 188 299
South Division GP W L T Pts GF GA
West Kildonan North Stars 52 34 18 0 68 287 243
St. Boniface Saints 52 30 18 4 64 244 209
St. James Canadians 52 29 22 1 59 259 227
Assiniboine Park Monarchs 52 27 24 1 55 253 255
Kenora Thistles 52 16 32 4 36 253 317

Playoffs

Division Semi-Finals

Selkirk defeated Dauphin 4-games-to-1
Brandon defeated Portage 4-games-to-1
West Kildonan defeated Assiniboine Park 4-games-to-1
St. Boniface lost to St. James 4-games-to-1

Divisional Finals

Selkirk defeated Brandon 4-games-to-1
West Kildonan defeated St James 4-games-to-3

Turnbull Cup Championship

West Kildonan lost to Selkirk 4-games-to-none

Anavet Cup Championship

Selkirk lost to Prince Albert Raiders ( SJHL) 4-games-to-1

Awards

Trophy Winner Team
MVP Darryl Einarson Selkirk Steelers
Top Goaltender
Rookie of the Year Anthony Gurniak West Kildonan North Stars
Hockey Ability & Sportsmanship Award
Scoring Champion Ken Krentz Selkirk Steelers
Most Goals Ken Krentz Selkirk Steelers
Coach of the Year

All-Star Teams

References