Tucson Roadrunners
The Tucson Roadrunners are a professional ice hockey team competing in the American Hockey League (AHL).[1][2] Based in Tucson, Arizona, the franchise relocated from Springfield, Massachusetts, where it operated as the Springfield Falcons, ahead of the 2016–17 season following its purchase by the NHL's Arizona Coyotes organization.[3][4] The team plays its home games at the Tucson Arena within the Tucson Convention Center.[5] Currently serving as the primary developmental affiliate for the Utah Mammoth of the National Hockey League (NHL), the Roadrunners have achieved notable success including Pacific Division championships in the 2017–18 and 2019–20 seasons.[6][5][7][8] In recent years, the franchise has navigated uncertainties tied to its NHL parent's relocations and arena agreements, yet remains committed to Tucson for the 2025–26 campaign.[1][4]
History
Origins and relocation to Tucson (2016)
The Tucson Roadrunners were established in 2016 when the Arizona Coyotes purchased the Springfield Falcons, their American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate based in Springfield, Massachusetts, and relocated the franchise to Tucson, Arizona, ahead of the 2016–17 season.[9] The agreement was announced on April 19, 2016, with the move approved by the AHL Board of Governors on May 10, 2016, enabling the team to operate in closer proximity to the parent NHL club in Phoenix for logistical efficiencies such as reduced travel times and easier player shuttling.[10] This relocation addressed the Coyotes' prior challenges with the distant Springfield affiliation, which had spanned multiple states and incurred higher operational costs, though specific Springfield arena lease disputes were not cited as the primary driver.[11] The franchise adopted the Roadrunners name on June 20, 2016, drawing from the historical Phoenix Roadrunners minor-league teams to evoke regional hockey heritage and the local greater roadrunner bird.[12] Home games were hosted at the Tucson Arena within the Tucson Convention Center, a multi-purpose venue with a hockey capacity of approximately 5,800 seats after reconfiguration.[11] The inaugural season began on October 14, 2016, with a 5–1 loss to the Stockton Heat, marking Tucson's entry into professional hockey.[13] Initial attendance averaged 4,054 fans per game across 34 home dates, representing 69% of available capacity and reflecting modest uptake in a sunbelt market unaccustomed to ice hockey.[14] Season ticket sales started at 1,082 holders, indicating early efforts to cultivate loyalty amid competition from baseball's Arizona Diamondbacks spring training and other regional sports.[15] Building a fanbase required targeted community outreach, as Tucson's demographics—dominated by warmer-climate outdoor activities—presented hurdles to sustaining interest in a winter sport, though proximity to the Coyotes facilitated shared marketing and player development synergies.[13]Affiliation with Arizona Coyotes (2016–2024)
The Tucson Roadrunners operated as the primary American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate of the Arizona Coyotes from the 2016–17 season until the 2023–24 season, following the Coyotes' purchase and relocation of the Springfield Falcons franchise to Tucson in June 2016.[16][17] This partnership positioned the Roadrunners as the primary developmental pipeline for Coyotes prospects, with the team's proximity to Phoenix facilitating seamless transitions for players advancing to the NHL roster.[18] Over eight seasons, the Roadrunners contributed to player development by nurturing talents such as forward Dylan Guenther, who split time between Tucson and Arizona before establishing himself in the NHL, and Josh Doan, called up late in the 2023–24 season after strong AHL performances.[19][20] Other notable advancements included defenseman Victor Söderström and forward Matias Maccelli, who honed skills in Tucson en route to regular NHL roles with the Coyotes.[21] On the ice, the team posted competitive marks, including 42 wins and 90 points in 2017–18 to reach the Pacific Division semifinals, and a franchise-high 92 points in 2023–24 despite exiting in the qualifying round.[22] In the pandemic-shortened 2019–20 campaign, Tucson amassed 36 victories in 58 games, positioning them as Calder Cup contenders before the season's suspension.[22] The affiliation endured amid the Coyotes' operational turbulence, including protracted arena disputes at Gila River Arena in Glendale and the rejection of owner Alex Meruelo's 2023 Tempe entertainment district proposal, which exacerbated financial strains on the NHL club.[23] These issues prompted occasional contingency planning for the Roadrunners, such as brief considerations to shift operations to Arizona State University's Mullett Arena, though Tucson remained the base without direct relocation impacts during the partnership.[24] The proximity aided scouting and development efficiency, but the parent team's instability injected periodic uncertainty into affiliate staffing and resource allocation.[25]Transition to Utah Mammoth and post-relocation era (2024–present)
Following the relocation of the Arizona Coyotes franchise to Salt Lake City and its rebranding as the Utah Mammoth for the 2025–26 NHL season, the Tucson Roadrunners maintained their role as the primary AHL affiliate without operational disruption or relocation. Former Coyotes owner Alex Meruelo retained ownership of the Roadrunners, ensuring continuity in Tucson while entering into an affiliation agreement with the Mammoth, which inherited the existing player development contracts and assets from the prior arrangement. This setup preserved local staffing, arena operations at the Tucson Arena, and fan engagement efforts, with the geographic proximity—approximately 650 miles between Tucson and Salt Lake City—facilitating smoother player shuttling and scouting compared to more distant affiliates.[26] In the 2024–25 AHL season, the Roadrunners compiled a record of 34 wins, 32 losses, 4 overtime losses, and 2 shootout losses, accumulating 74 points and clinching a playoff berth in the Pacific Division. The team advanced to the conference quarterfinals but was eliminated by the Ontario Reign in five games, highlighting defensive improvements under head coach Steve Potvin but persistent challenges in high-pressure scoring. Attendance averaged around 4,500 per home game, avoiding any sharp decline despite the NHL's departure from Arizona, as franchise marketing emphasized the independent viability of minor-league hockey in the region.[27] The 2025–26 season opened with mixed results, including a 5–4 victory over the Ontario Reign on October 10 and a 2–4 loss to the same opponent on October 12, followed by the home opener against the Calgary Wranglers on October 18. On October 25, the Roadrunners fell 3–1 to the Bakersfield Condors, with goaltender Matthew Villalta stopping 28 of 31 shots in a game marked by early penalties and limited offensive output. These early contests reflect ongoing adaptation to two-way player movements with the Mammoth, such as assignments of forwards like Kailer Yamamoto, while leveraging the affiliation for talent pipeline development amid discussions of potential future AHL expansion in Utah.[28][29]Arena and facilities
Tucson Convention Center Arena
The Tucson Convention Center Arena, situated in downtown Tucson, Arizona, functions as the primary home venue for the Tucson Roadrunners of the American Hockey League. Constructed in 1971 as part of the broader Tucson Convention Center complex, the arena accommodates hockey in a configuration with a capacity of approximately 6,500 spectators.[3][30] In preparation for the Roadrunners' inaugural 2016-17 season following the franchise's relocation from Bakersfield, California, the arena received targeted renovations funded in part by local development authority Rio Nuevo. These upgrades encompassed new locker rooms, enhanced sound and video systems, renovated bathrooms, improved lighting, and the installation of a dedicated ice surface to support professional-level play in a facility originally designed for multipurpose use including concerts and conventions.[31][32] The arena's central downtown position facilitates accessibility for fans, with over 900 on-site parking spaces across multiple lots, including designated accessible spots, and proximity to public transit and urban amenities that draw local attendance without requiring extensive travel.[33][34] As a non-specialized venue built decades before modern NHL or top-tier AHL standards, it features basic sightlines that provide adequate views from lower and mid-level seating, though upper sections may offer less immersive proximity to the ice compared to contemporary dedicated hockey rinks.[35] Roadrunners games typically draw average attendances in the mid-4,000 range, such as 4,128 fans per game during the 2024-25 regular season across 36 home contests, representing about two-thirds capacity utilization and underscoring the venue's role in sustaining a regional hockey market amid Tucson's population of roughly 550,000.[36] This level aligns with broader AHL trends for mid-sized markets, where multipurpose arenas like Tucson Convention Center balance hockey viability with versatile event hosting.[37]Operational challenges and upgrades
The Tucson Arena, as a multi-purpose facility within the Tucson Convention Center, presents operational challenges related to its shared usage for conventions, concerts, and other events, necessitating careful scheduling to avoid conflicts with the Roadrunners' October-to-April season.[38] While no major disruptions have been reported for hockey games, the arena's design requires seasonal ice installation and resurfacing rather than permanent ice, adding logistical demands for preparation and maintenance ahead of each home stand.[39] Attendance has also fluctuated based on team performance, with regular-season averages hovering around 4,100 to 4,200 fans per game in recent years—such as 4,128 in 2024–25 and 4,191 in 2023–24—rising to over 6,000 for select playoff or high-stakes matchups, like 6,216 and 6,166 during 2024 first-round games.[36][40][41] In preparation for the Roadrunners' 2016 relocation, Rio Nuevo approved $3.7 million in targeted upgrades to the arena, including a new scoreboard, sound system, seating, restroom facilities, electrical systems, and paint, alongside completely renovated locker rooms to support professional hockey operations.[42][31][32] These enhancements improved fan experience and venue functionality without necessitating a full relocation, even after the parent Arizona Coyotes' departure to Utah in 2024, allowing the team to play all 2024–25 home games on-site after abandoning interim relocation plans.[43] Ongoing discussions about broader Tucson Convention Center renovations, including potential arena fixes, continue to address aging infrastructure in this non-traditional hockey market.[44]Ownership and affiliations
Franchise ownership evolution
The Tucson Roadrunners franchise originated from the Springfield Falcons, which the Arizona Coyotes organization purchased on April 19, 2016, for relocation to Tucson as their primary AHL affiliate. This acquisition integrated the team under the Coyotes' ownership structure, led at the time by co-owner and CEO Anthony LeBlanc, ensuring operational alignment with the NHL parent club.[45] Alex Meruelo acquired majority control of the Arizona Coyotes in July 2019, thereby extending his ownership to the Roadrunners as part of the affiliated assets.[46] Following the NHL Board of Governors' approval on April 18, 2024, for the Coyotes' hockey assets to transfer to a Utah-based group led by Ryan Smith—effectively relocating the NHL operations—Meruelo retained full ownership of the Roadrunners, decoupling the AHL franchise from the former NHL entity's direct control.[47] This separation preserved franchise stability without a sale or transfer of the AHL team, allowing it to negotiate a new affiliation agreement with the Utah Hockey Club (later rebranded as the Utah Mammoth) for the 2024–25 season onward.[48] As of the 2025–26 season, Meruelo continues to hold ownership, with no reported changes or league intervention in the franchise's title, emphasizing the NHL's indirect role in facilitating affiliation continuity to avert operational disruptions in the AHL ecosystem.[46] The arrangement has avoided labor disputes or ownership-related instability specific to the Roadrunners, maintaining focus on on-ice development under independent governance.[49]NHL primary affiliations
The Tucson Roadrunners maintain an exclusive primary affiliation with the National Hockey League's Utah Mammoth as their American Hockey League developmental team, a partnership directly inherited from the Mammoth's predecessor organization following the Arizona Coyotes' relocation and deactivation in 2024. This arrangement, formalized under NHL-AHL collective bargaining agreements, emphasizes player development through two-way contracts that permit unrestricted movement between rosters for conditioning, injury replacements, and performance evaluations. Such mechanics ensure that prospects and journeymen alike gain NHL exposure while maintaining AHL playing time, with the Roadrunners serving as the primary conduit for talent pipeline management.[6][50] Player assignments and recalls exemplify the affiliation's operational fluidity; for instance, on October 23, 2025, forward Andrew Agozzino cleared waivers and was assigned to Tucson after appearing on the Mammoth's opening roster, while forward Kevin Rooney was simultaneously recalled to Utah under his two-way deal signed earlier that month. These transactions, tracked via league-mandated reporting, highlight how the relationship prioritizes real-time roster adjustments over geographic proximity, with the Roadrunners accommodating NHL-driven needs despite their Arizona base. Historical data from affiliated seasons demonstrate that this integration causally drives elevated player turnover, enabling over 20 call-ups in peak years by providing a ready depth pool tested in competitive AHL environments.[51][52] For the 2025–26 season, the organization forgoes an ECHL secondary affiliate, ending the prior one-year pact with the Allen Americans and opting instead for ad-hoc scouting, amateur signings, and loan agreements to fill lower-depth needs. This structure streamlines focus on the AHL-NHL axis, reducing administrative layers while leveraging the league's open market for emergency recalls, though it demands heightened internal evaluation to maintain developmental efficacy without a formalized tertiary tier.[53][54]Rivalries and divisional competition
Key rivals in the Pacific Division
The Tucson Roadrunners' primary adversaries in the AHL's Pacific Division are the Ontario Reign and Bakersfield Condors, driven by geographic proximity to California-based teams and the intensity of divisional scheduling, which mandates at least eight regular-season matchups per opponent.[55][56] These encounters often feature high-stakes competition for playoff positioning, as both rivals share affiliations with NHL Western Conference clubs—Ontario with the Los Angeles Kings and Bakersfield with the Edmonton Oilers—leading to battles over comparable prospect talent pools and limited divisional spots.[57] Against the Ontario Reign, the Roadrunners posted a 2-5-0-1 record in the 2024–25 season, reflecting Ontario's overall edge in recent head-to-head play, though Tucson secured notable home victories, including a 3-0 shutout on March 26, 2025.[58][59] This rivalry is amplified by playoff proximity pressures, with both teams vying for the Pacific's top seeds; Ontario finished higher in 2024–25 standings, but Tucson's occasional dominance at home underscores the matchup's competitiveness.[57][36] The Bakersfield Condors represent another core rival, with Tucson holding a narrow all-time series advantage of 28 wins to Bakersfield's 25 through 2025, bolstered by stronger home performances amid the roughly 600-mile drive between venues.[56][60] Frequent late-season clashes, such as the April 6, 2025, matchup, heighten tensions as both squads push for postseason berths, with divisional format ensuring repeated tests of defensive schemes and goaltending depth.[57] These factors—rooted in travel efficiency, scheduling density, and on-ice parity—elevate the games beyond routine divisional tilts, fostering sustained intensity without reliance on broader league narratives.[61]Historical matchups and intensity factors
The Tucson Roadrunners' historical matchups within the AHL's Pacific Division have frequently exhibited competitive balance, particularly against the San Diego Gulls, designated as their primary rival due to the shared Interstate 8 corridor facilitating geographic proximity and frequent travel. Over 24 games spanning the 2019–2022 seasons, the teams split victories evenly at 12 apiece, underscoring a pattern of tightly contested outcomes driven by comparable prospect pools competing for NHL development opportunities.[62] This rivalry's intensity arises less from localized fan-driven narratives and more from structural incentives, as AHL players from affiliate systems like the Ducks' and Coyotes' organizations engage in direct talent evaluations that influence call-up decisions and roster security.[2] Matchups against the San Jose Barracuda have similarly produced high-stakes, variable-scoring games, with recent examples including a 6–5 shootout victory for Tucson on March 16, 2025, and a 4–3 road win on February 7, 2025, reflecting patterns of late-game surges and defensive lapses common in divisional tilts.[63][64] Against the Bakersfield Condors, head-to-head records show Tucson holding a slight edge with 28 wins to 25 across franchise history, often hinging on playoff positioning battles, as evidenced by their 2025 first-round matchup where tiebreaker points determined seeding.[56] These encounters highlight performance anomalies such as elevated comeback frequencies, attributable to the motivational pressure of impressing NHL scouts in visible intra-division contests rather than exogenous factors like venue acoustics. Playoff series have amplified intensity, with crowd attendance spiking to franchise records like 5,178 during a 2024 postseason game, correlating with heightened stakes in elimination formats that test prospect resilience.[65] In the 2018–19 division semifinals against the Gulls, Tucson's sweep (0–3) featured close margins in losses, illustrating how divisional familiarity breeds tactical predictability yet exposes execution gaps under pressure.[66] Overall, these factors—rooted in prospect competition and divisional scheduling—elevate game dynamism without evidence of officiating disparities beyond standard variability observed league-wide.[57]Season-by-season performance
Regular season records
The Tucson Roadrunners entered the American Hockey League (AHL) as the Arizona Coyotes' affiliate for the 2016–17 season, competing in the Pacific Division. Their regular season results have shown variability, with peak performances including division-leading finishes in 2017–18 (90 points) and 2019–20 (75 points in a shortened schedule), contrasted by sub-.500 records in seasons like 2021–22 (52 points, eighth place).[5][22] Overall, the team has qualified for playoffs in six of nine completed seasons, though postseason success has been limited.[22]| Season | GP | W | L | OTL | PTS | Pacific Division Finish |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2016–17 | 68 | 29 | 31 | 8 | 66 | 6th |
| 2017–18 | 68 | 42 | 20 | 6 | 90 | 1st |
| 2018–19 | 68 | 34 | 26 | 8 | 76 | 5th |
| 2019–20 | 58 | 36 | 19 | 3 | 75 | 1st |
| 2020–21 | 36 | 13 | 20 | 3 | 29 | 7th |
| 2021–22 | 68 | 23 | 39 | 6 | 52 | 8th |
| 2022–23 | 72 | 30 | 33 | 9 | 69 | 7th |
| 2023–24 | 72 | 43 | 23 | 6 | 92 | 2nd |
| 2024–25 | 72 | 34 | 32 | 6 | 74 | 7th |
Playoff history and achievements
The Tucson Roadrunners have qualified for the Calder Cup Playoffs five times in their nine seasons of operation from 2016–17 through 2024–25, reflecting a pattern of intermittent postseason contention in the competitive Pacific Division.[67] Despite these entries, the team has yet to advance beyond the first round in any appearance, with all series ending in early elimination. This limited playoff success underscores challenges in sustaining depth and momentum against higher-seeded opponents, often exacerbated by player promotions to the parent NHL club.[36] In their inaugural 2016–17 season, the Roadrunners earned a playoff berth but were swept in the first round by the San Diego Gulls. The following year, 2017–18, they returned as Pacific Division regular-season champions and hosted home games for the first time, yet fell in the division semifinals to the Texas Stars in five games. After a four-year absence, the Roadrunners re-entered the playoffs in 2022–23, facing the Coachella Valley Firebirds in the first round and losing the best-of-three series 2–0. They extended this to consecutive appearances in 2023–24, again exiting in the opening round against a Pacific rival.[2] The 2024–25 postseason marked the team's fifth entry and third in as many years, qualifying as the Pacific Division's seventh seed with a 34–32–4–2 record. Matched against the second-seeded Abbotsford Canucks in a best-of-three series, Tucson split the first two games—losing Game 1 before winning Game 2 4–1 on the road—but were shut out 5–0 in the decisive Game 3, ending their run. Goaltender Jaxson Stauber started two games in the series, highlighting individual efforts amid team-wide depth limitations that contributed to the quick exit.[36][68] The franchise holds no Calder Cup championships or conference titles, with their deepest potential for advancement unrealized due to consistent first-round defeats. Postseason participations have served primarily as a developmental proving ground for prospects transitioning to NHL roles, rather than yielding hardware or extended contention.[69]Personnel
Current roster and coaching staff
The Tucson Roadrunners' coaching staff for the 2025–26 season is led by head coach Steve Potvin, who enters his fifth year in the position and tenth overall with the organization, having previously guided the team to playoff appearances in prior campaigns.[70] Assistant coaches include John Slaney, a former NHL defenseman with development experience, and Zack Stortini, a veteran of over 200 NHL games known for physical play during his career with teams like the Edmonton Oilers.[71] Jeff Hill serves as goaltending coach, focusing on technical refinement for prospects transitioning to professional levels.[72] The opening roster, announced on October 9, 2025, comprises 23 players, blending young prospects on entry-level contracts with veterans on two-way deals with the Utah Hockey Club, the team's NHL affiliate, to facilitate skill honing and depth evaluation amid potential call-ups.[73] Several players, such as forward Cameron Hebig, operate under two-way contracts, enabling shuttling between leagues based on performance and injuries.[74]Forwards
| No. | Player | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 12 | Owen Allard | Prospect, left shot |
| 16 | Ryan McGregor | Developmental forward |
| 17 | Tyler Tullio | RW/C, dual citizenship |
| 21 | Kevin Rooney | Center, NHL experience |
| 25 | Sammy Walker | C/RW, college product |
| 27 | Austin Poganski | Right wing, veteran |
| Cameron Hebig | Two-way contract with Utah |
Defensemen
| No. | Player | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 5 | Robbie Russo | Veteran leader |
| 7 | Scott Perunovich | NHL call-up history |
| 10 | Maveric Lamoureux | Prospect, high draft pick |
| 44 | Kevin Connauton | Experienced blueliner |
| 55 | Maksymilian Szuber | Young defender |
Goaltenders
The goaltending tandem emphasizes reliability for minor-league workloads, with tandem rotations common to manage development and fatigue; specific active names as of opening night include prospects aligned with Utah's pipeline, though exact assignments fluctuate with performance.[77]Team captains and leadership
The Tucson Roadrunners select a team captain annually, typically a veteran player chosen by the head coach to enforce accountability, mentor prospects, and maintain culture stability amid frequent NHL call-ups and roster turnover associated with their primary affiliate transitions, including from the Arizona Coyotes to the Utah Hockey Club in 2024.[78][79] Alternates are similarly appointed to support on-ice leadership, often emphasizing defensive reliability or offensive contributions during competitive Pacific Division play. Captains and key leadership groups by season:- 2016–17: Craig Cunningham (captain), who provided foundational guidance in the expansion year, scored the franchise's first goal on October 14, 2016, and later earned the AHL's Fred T. Hunt Memorial Award for sportsmanship after recovering from cardiac arrest.[80]
- 2017–18: Andrew Campbell (captain), a defenseman who anchored the blue line with steady play.[79]
- 2018–19: Dakota Mermis (captain), contributing to improved defensive metrics.[79]
- 2019–20: Michael Chaput (captain), with alternates Michael Bunting and Patrick Russell, focusing on forward-line accountability before the season's COVID-19 suspension.[81]
- 2021–22: Dysin Mayo (captain), a defenseman who appeared in the first two games before NHL recall, exemplifying transition leadership.[82]
- 2022–23: Adam Cracknell (captain), with alternates Mike Carcone, Boko Imama, and Cam Dineen; Cracknell's experience helped enforce discipline in a season of roster flux.[78]
- 2023–24: Steven Kampfer (captain), with alternates Zach Sanford and Ben McCartney, providing veteran presence on defense.[83]
- 2024–25: Austin Poganski (captain), a forward who led in shorthanded goals the prior season, with alternate Kevin Connauton on defense to bolster accountability post-affiliate shift.[84][73]
Notable alumni and franchise icons
Several Tucson Roadrunners alumni have achieved significant success in the National Hockey League, transitioning from the American Hockey League club to regular roles with NHL franchises. Barrett Hayton, drafted by the Arizona Coyotes in 2018, honed his skills with the Roadrunners before becoming a mainstay center for the organization, now with the Utah Hockey Club, accumulating over 200 NHL games by 2025.[85] Similarly, Lawson Crouse, acquired by Arizona in 2016, developed physical forward play in Tucson, evolving into a reliable NHL power forward with more than 400 games played across multiple seasons.[85] Matias Maccelli emerged as a skilled playmaker during his time with the Roadrunners, leading to an NHL debut in 2021 and subsequent establishment as a top-line winger, evidenced by his point-per-game pace in early seasons. Michael Bunting, who posted franchise-leading AHL scoring totals in Tucson with 74 goals and 180 points in 260 games, parlayed that production into a contentious yet effective NHL career, including a 63-point season with Toronto in 2021-22 and stints with Pittsburgh and Carolina, surpassing 250 NHL appearances.[5] These transitions highlight the Roadrunners' role in player development, with at least 29 alumni making NHL debuts since 2016, though exact promotion rates to sustained 50+ game thresholds remain undocumented in public data.[70] Franchise icons emphasize longevity amid the affiliate's relocation from the Springfield Falcons and shifts following the Coyotes' relocation to Utah in 2024. Cameron Hebig stands as a symbol of loyalty, breaking the Roadrunners' all-time games played record with 280 appearances by March 2025 and earning the moniker "Mayor of Tucson" for his enduring presence and community ties.[86] Such figures contrast with higher turnover in earlier years due to organizational instability, where veteran depth often prioritized short-term AHL contributions over long-term retention.[86]Records and statistics
Single-season team records
The Tucson Roadrunners' single-season franchise records reflect variability influenced by factors such as roster turnover, coaching changes, and external disruptions like the COVID-19 pandemic, which shortened the 2020–21 schedule to 36 games league-wide and contributed to the team's lowest win total of 13 that year.[5] In full-length seasons, the benchmark for most wins stands at 43, set in 2023–24, surpassing the prior high of 42 from 2017–18 and exceeding the typical AHL midpoint of approximately 35–36 wins per 72-game season.[5][40]| Category | Record | Season |
|---|---|---|
| Most wins | 43 | 2023–24 |
| Fewest regulation losses (full or near-full season) | 19 | 2019–20 (58 GP) |
| Most points | 92 | 2023–24 |
| Most goals for | 228 | 2024–25 |
| Fewest goals against | 163 | 2019–20 (58 GP) |
| Fewest wins | 13 | 2020–21 (36 GP) |
| Most goals against | 268 | 2021–22 |
Career franchise leaders
The Tucson Roadrunners, established in 2016 as the primary affiliate of the Arizona Coyotes (later Utah Hockey Club), have accumulated career statistical leaders primarily among players who have transitioned to or competed on the fringes of the National Hockey League, underscoring the AHL's role as a developmental league for emerging talent and journeymen.[87] Michael Bunting holds the franchise record for career points with 180 (74 goals, 106 assists) over 260 games played from 2016 to 2020, a mark achieved through consistent production as a forward before his NHL breakthrough.[87] Cameron Hebig leads in games played with 295 from 2018 to 2025, highlighting durability in a league where frequent recalls and injuries limit longevity; he broke the previous record in March 2025 while contributing 138 points (65 goals, 73 assists).[86][87]| Rank | Player | Games Played | Goals | Assists | Points |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Michael Bunting | 260 | 74 | 106 | 180 |
| 2 | Michael Carcone | 148 | 70 | 81 | 151 |
| 3 | Cameron Hebig | 295 | 65 | 73 | 138 |
| 4 | Lane Pederson | 183 | 58 | 66 | 124 |
| 5 | Jan Jeník | 165 | 46 | 74 | 120 |
| Rank | Goaltender | Games Played | Wins |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Adin Hill | 134 | 66 |
| 2 | Matt Villalta | 97 | 52 |
| 3 | Ivan Prosvetov | 125 | 54 |
| 4 | Hunter Miska | 61 | 32 |