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Standings

LNAH · 2025

Current LNAH 2025 standings with 8 teams. Petroliers Laval leads the table with 50 points after 36 matches, followed by Bataillon St-Hyacinthe on 43 points. The table shows wins, draws, losses, goals scored and conceded, goal difference, and recent form — essential for pre-match betting analysis.

Playoffs
TeamPlayedWonOTLLostGoals For:Goals AgainstGoal DiffPointsForm
1Petroliers Laval3620011159:134+2550
WWWWL
2Bataillon St-Hyacinthe3613012129:129043
WLWLL
3Eperviers Sorel-Tracy3618013135:121+1442
WWLWW
4Cool FM St-Georges3618013157:141+1642
LWLLW
5Assurancia Thetford3616016142:116+2638
WLWWW
6Marquis Jonquiere3615017132:147-1536
LLWLL
7National Quebec3612018130:155-2533
WLWLL
83L Riviere-du-Loup369021111:152-4127
LLLWL

Results

LNAH · 50
Final25/04/2026–02/05/2026
Sat 02/050–0 · 0–1 · 0–3
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Thu 30/040–1 · 1–0 · 1–0
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Sun 26/040–0 · 1–2 · 2–3
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Sat 25/041–1 · 2–1 · 1–2 · 1–0
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Semi-finals04/04/2026–18/04/2026
Sat 18/040–1 · 1–0 · 0–2
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Fri 17/040–0 · 3–1 · 1–1
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Thu 16/041–1 · 0–0 · 1–0
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Sat 11/040–0 · 1–1 · 2–0
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Sat 11/040–0 · 1–4 · 0–0
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Sat 11/041–0 · 0–0 · 3–1
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Sat 11/040–0 · 2–3 · 2–0
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Sat 04/041–0 · 0–1 · 2–1
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Sat 04/042–1 · 1–0 · 1–0
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Sat 04/043–1 · 1–0 · 1–0
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Sat 04/042–0 · 2–0 · 0–3
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Quarter-finals21/03/2026–29/03/2026
Sun 29/030–1 · 1–1 · 1–0 · 0–1
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Sun 29/030–0 · 5–0 · 1–1
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Sat 28/030–1 · 0–0 · 2–4
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Sat 28/033–0 · 2–3 · 1–0
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Fri 27/031–0 · 1–1 · 0–3
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Fri 27/032–1 · 1–1 · 2–1
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Thu 26/030–0 · 0–0 · 1–2
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Wed 25/032–0 · 2–0 · 3–0
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Sun 22/032–1 · 1–2 · 2–0
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Sat 21/030–2 · 1–1 · 0–2
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Team Stats

Side-by-side performance comparison of all 8 teams in the LNAH. Petroliers Laval leads with 20 wins this season. The colour-coded heatmap highlights wins, losses, draws, goals scored and conceded, goal difference, and win percentage — making it easy to spot the strongest and weakest teams at a glance for betting analysis.

Top Scoring Teams

Team#PlayedWonLostGoals ForGoals Against
Petroliers Laval1362011159134
Bataillon St-Hyacinthe2361312129129
Eperviers Sorel-Tracy3361813135121
Cool FM St-Georges4361813157141
Assurancia Thetford5361616142116
Marquis Jonquiere6361517132147
National Quebec7361218130155
3L Riviere-du-Loup836921111152

Past Seasons

LNAH

Browse 13 archived seasons of the LNAH, from 2012 to 2025. Each season page includes full standings, top scorers, and match results — useful for comparing historical performance and identifying long-term betting patterns.

History 16 Jan 2025

Founded1996

The LNAH originated in 1996 as the Quebec Semi-Pro Hockey League (QSPHL), a regional semi-professional circuit comprising six teams drawn from existing senior amateur leagues across Quebec. The semi-pro model operated for eight years through the early 2000s, during which the league navigated franchise relocations and financial pressures while maintaining competitive play in small-market communities. In 2004, the circuit underwent a transformative rebranding to the Ligue Nord-Américaine de Hockey (LNAH), signalling a transition to fully professional status with standardized salary structures and expanded geographic reach across Quebec. Since achieving professional status, the LNAH has operated continuously for 22 seasons, establishing itself as North America's third-tier professional hockey league, typically featuring 6–10 franchises. The league emphasizes fast-paced, physical hockey played in intimate venues seating 1,500–3,000 spectators, creating distinctive local fan cultures and serving as a proving ground for players seeking to extend careers beyond junior or major junior hockey. In the 2025–26 season, the LNAH began broadcasting 144 games live or on demand to enhance regional accessibility and fan engagement.

  • 1996 — Quebec Semi-Pro Hockey League (QSPHL) founded as a regional semi-professional circuit with six teams
  • 2004 — QSPHL rebranded as Ligue Nord-Américaine de Hockey (LNAH), transitioning to fully professional status
  • 1997 — First Futura Cup championship awarded, later renamed the Vertdure Cup
  • 2023-24 — Thetford Mines Assurancia won the Vertdure Cup in dramatic overtime fashion, claiming their second title in three years
  • 2024-25 — Sorel-Tracy Éperviers captured the championship, continuing the league's competitive balance
  • 2025 — LNAH expanded broadcast distribution to 144 live or on-demand games, modernizing media reach

Competition Format 16 Jan 2025

Teams8

The LNAH operates a balanced regular season format in which eight teams compete in 44–56 games each, with all clubs playing a home-and-away schedule against divisional and conference opponents. The regular season concludes with standings determined by points (3 for a win, 0 for a loss), with ties broken by goal difference and then goals scored. The top four teams advance to a best-of-seven playoff format, where teams compete through semi-finals and finals to determine the Vertdure Cup champion. No teams are relegated from the LNAH; franchise changes occur through relocation or suspension rather than promotion/demotion mechanics. The league emphasizes competitive balance and accessibility, with games held in community arenas throughout Quebec, fostering strong local attendance and engagement.

Analysis 16 Jan 2025

Current Season Analysis

The 2024–25 LNAH season showcases a competitive landscape dominated by Petroliers Laval, who command the standings with 50 points from 36 games played, posting a 20–11 record and a ++25 goal. The Laval squad has established themselves as clear title contenders through consistent offensive production, scoring 159 goals while maintaining defensive solidity with 134 goals conceded. Cool FM St-Georges pursues the leaders in third place with 42 points (18–12–5 record), demonstrating offensive firepower with 156 goals across 35 matches, a testament to their high-octane playing style. The title race remains contested, with Bataillon St-Hyacinthe holding second place at 43 points and Eperviers Sorel-Tracy in fourth at 40 points, creating a tightly bunched playoff picture where multiple teams remain mathematically capable of capturing the Vertdure Cup.

The relegation battle does not apply to the LNAH's structure, but the competitive differential is stark: 3L Riviere-du-Loup occupies the final playoff position with 27 points from 36 games, having won only 9 matches against 21 losses with a -41 goal differential. National Quebec sits just above them with 33 points (12–18–6 record), struggling with a -25 goal differential that reflects their offensive challenges. The gap between contenders and strugglers underscores the league's quality variance, with Assurancia Thetford (38 points, 16–16–4) and Marquis Jonquiere (36 points, 15–17–4) occupying middle positions but facing uphill climbs to secure home-ice advantage in the playoffs.

The standout performer of the season has been Petroliers Laval's offensive machine, which maintains the league's highest win percentage at 56% and has generated a +25 goal differential—the largest margin in the eight-team field. Their consistency across all periods (averaging 2.16 goals in Period 1, 2.44 in Period 2, and 2.54 in Period 3) demonstrates balanced, sustained pressure rather than reliance on third-period heroics. Cool FM St-Georges has emerged as an unexpected contender, ranking second in offensive output with 156 goals and maintaining a +17 goal differential despite finishing outside the top two on points, suggesting their playoff fortunes may improve if their scoring efficiency translates to tighter defensive play.

An unexpected storyline involves the 2024–25 season's elevated scoring environment: the league is averaging 7.73 goals per game across 154 completed matches (1,190 total goals), the highest rate in recent seasons, with 76.0% of matches exceeding 5.5 goals. This surge represents a significant increase from the 2024 season's 7.12 goals-per-game average and reflects either diminished defensive standards, enhanced offensive skill, or tactical shifts favoring open play. Additionally, overtime has featured prominently, with 15.6% of matches requiring extra time, and comeback victories occurring in 13.0% of games—both metrics above historical norms—suggesting competitive balance and unpredictability that has captivated local audiences across Quebec's small-market venues.

League Structure and Format

The LNAH operates as a balanced professional circuit emphasizing community-focused hockey and competitive accessibility. The eight-team structure includes franchises from major Quebec population centers—Laval, Montreal's suburbs (St-Hyacinthe, Jonquière), and regional towns (Sorel-Tracy, Thetford Mines, St-Georges, Rivière-du-Loup)—with each venue seating 1,500–3,000 spectators. The regular season spans 44–56 games per team, with clubs competing in a round-robin format that ensures home-and-away play against all opponents. The playoff format advances the top four teams to a best-of-seven championship tournament, culminating in the Vertdure Cup final. This structure mirrors North American professional hockey hierarchies but maintains the LNAH's distinctive character through smaller arenas, local ownership models, and intimate fan engagement that distinguishes it from the American Hockey League (AHL) and other higher-tier circuits.

Championship Pedigree and Historical Dominance

The Vertdure Cup, awarded annually since the 1996–97 season (originally as the Futura Cup), represents the pinnacle of LNAH achievement. Thetford Mines Assurancia has emerged as the league's most successful franchise in recent years, capturing two Vertdure Cups: one in 2022–23 and another in 2023–24, the latter secured in dramatic overtime fashion. The franchise's back-to-back championship runs demonstrate sustained competitive excellence and organizational stability. Sorel-Tracy Éperviers claimed the 2024–25 title, continuing the league's pattern of competitive balance where no single team has achieved sustained multi-year dominance. The Vertdure Cup's history reflects the LNAH's evolution from a semi-professional circuit to a stable professional league, with champions spanning small-market communities such as Thetford Mines, Sorel-Tracy, and St-Georges—franchises that have cultivated passionate local followings and consistent on-ice performance.

Performance Metrics and Scoring Trends

The 2024–25 season reveals distinctive statistical patterns that characterize LNAH play. The league's 7.73 goals-per-game average represents one of the highest scoring rates in the circuit's professional era, indicating either offensive-minded team compositions or defensive vulnerabilities that create scoring opportunities. Home teams maintain a 60.4% win rate, a pronounced home-ice advantage that reflects the intimate, rowdy atmospheres of LNAH venues where local fans create tangible competitive benefits. Overtime occurs in 15.6% of matches, suggesting evenly matched competition and tight contests that extend beyond regulation—a hallmark of professional hockey quality. Clean sheets (shutouts) remain rare at 6.5% of games, reinforcing the offensive-heavy nature of the league. These metrics position the LNAH as a high-scoring, competitive professional circuit where offensive skill and home-ice advantage significantly influence outcomes.

Player Development and Career Pathways

The LNAH functions as a critical professional development pathway for players aged 20–35 who seek to maintain or revive professional hockey careers. The league attracts overage junior players (those beyond the typical junior hockey eligibility window), players transitioning from major junior circuits (QMJHL, OHL, WHL), and veteran professionals seeking to extend their careers beyond higher-tier leagues. Keven Cloutier stands as the all-time games-played leader with 644 appearances in LNAH competition, representing the league's capacity to sustain long-term professional careers for skilled journeymen. The intimate, community-based structure of LNAH franchises fosters player loyalty and allows individuals to establish themselves as local heroes, creating fulfilling professional experiences beyond the salary differentials of the AHL or European leagues. This development model has proven sustainable, with consistent annual rosters featuring a mix of younger prospects, mid-career professionals, and veteran leaders.

Broadcasting and Media Evolution

The LNAH has undergone significant modernization in media distribution, particularly evident in the 2025–26 season's expansion to 144 live or on-demand broadcasts. This represents a strategic shift toward digital accessibility and regional engagement, allowing fans across Quebec to follow their local teams without requiring venue attendance. The broadcast expansion reflects the league's recognition of changing consumption patterns and its commitment to enhancing visibility for sponsors, teams, and players. Historically, LNAH games were primarily accessible through in-arena attendance, limiting the league's profile to local communities; the contemporary broadcasting infrastructure now enables broader provincial reach and potential for international viewership through streaming platforms. This evolution positions the LNAH competitively within the landscape of professional hockey media, distinguishing it from purely local circuits while maintaining its community-focused identity.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many teams are in the LNAH?

The LNAH currently features eight teams competing in the 2025–26 season: 3L Rivière-du-Loup, Assurancia Thetford Mines, Bataillon Saint-Hyacinthe, Cool FM Saint-Georges, Marquis Jonquière, National Québec, Pétroliers du Nord Laval, and Éperviers Sorel-Tracy.

What is the Vertdure Cup?

The Vertdure Cup is the annual championship trophy awarded to the LNAH playoff champion. Originally named the Futura Cup when first awarded after the 1996–97 season, it was renamed the Vertdure Cup and remains the prized symbol of league supremacy.

Is there relegation in the LNAH?

No, the LNAH does not operate a relegation system. Franchise changes occur through relocation, suspension, or folding rather than demotion to lower divisions. The league maintains a stable eight-team structure for competitive balance.

How long is the LNAH regular season?

The LNAH regular season typically spans 44–56 games per team, with the exact schedule varying by season. Teams play home-and-away matches against divisional and conference opponents before the top four advance to best-of-seven playoffs.

Who has won the most LNAH championships?

Thetford Mines Assurancia has won the most Vertdure Cup titles with 2 championships, including a dramatic overtime victory in the 2023–24 season and another title in 2022–23.

What level of professional hockey is the LNAH?

The LNAH operates as North America's third-tier professional ice hockey league, positioned below the NHL and AHL. It serves as a development pathway for overage junior players and veteran journeymen seeking to maintain competitive professional careers.

API data: 15 May 2026 · Content updated: 16 Jan 2025