IHL years The Houston Aeros started out as an expansion franchise in the
International Hockey League (IHL) in 1994 with home games at
The Summit. The team's name was a tribute to the original
Houston Aeros of the
World Hockey Association in the 1970s, who won the
Avco World Trophy twice with hockey legend
Gordie Howe anchoring the team. The Aeros were the second IHL team to be named after a WHA franchise, the first being the
Phoenix Roadrunners; unlike the Roadrunners, who used the same logo as their WHA predecessor, the IHL Aeros used a new logo, a
Douglas B-23 Dragon bomber underneath a stylized wordmark. The original color scheme was forest green, navy blue, and a red accents on jerseys. The team was an immediate success, both on the ice and at the gate. The Aeros posted a winning record in their inaugural season and made the playoffs, while the team repeatedly sold out its home games at The Summit after not having professional hockey in the region for nearly two decades. Despite missing the playoffs in their sophomore campaign, the Aeros spent the back half of the 1990s becoming one of the more dominant teams of the IHL. Independently owned and operated by
Chuck Watson without a primary
National Hockey League (NHL) affiliate, the franchise spent money on younger players still trying to make a name for themselves and former NHL players at the end of their careers. Some of these signings included
Mark Freer, who set the Houston franchise record for career goals, eventual coach
Mike Yeo, veteran NHL player
Jim Paek, and goaltending duo
Frederic Chabot and
Manny Fernandez. In 1996, Watson hired former
Hartford Whalers' player
Dave Tippett as his head coach. Houston won 44 games in 1996–97 and followed that with their first 50-win campaign the next year, losing in the 1998 Western Conference Finals to the
Long Beach Ice Dogs. By the start of the 1998–99 season, the Aeros were led by the goalie tandem of Chabot and Fernandez posted a combined 2.35 goals against average, the best average in the league, minor league journeyman
Jeff Christian scored a team-leading 45 goals and 109 points (including 88 assists) from former
Michigan Wolverines' player
Brian Wiseman. Houston earned a 54–15–13 record for 121 points in the standings and the
Fred A. Huber Trophy for the regular season championship. Despite their regular season, the Aeros struggled in the playoffs. While they earned a bye from the best-of-three preliminary round, it took Houston the full five games series to eliminate the Long Beach Ice Dogs in the second round. In the Western Conference Finals, Houston faced the
Chicago Wolves, which took seven games for the Aeros to advance to their first Turner Cup Finals. The Aeros then faced the
Orlando Solar Bears for the 1999 Turner Cup and again lasted seven games. In front of a sold-out home crowd of more than 16,000, the Aeros won their first championship with a 5–3 victory. Following the 1999 Turner Cup championship, Dave Tippett left to take an assistant job with the
Los Angeles Kings. Captain Mike Yeo signed an NHL contract with the
Pittsburgh Penguins, who assigned him to their minor league affiliate in the AHL, the
Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins. While Houston still posted winning seasons with playoff appearances the next two years, they were never able to get close to another Turner Cup.
AHL years By 2001, the IHL was struggling financially. The league had rapidly expanded in the 1980s and 1990s, included moving into already established NHL markets. As a result, the NHL actively encouraged its owners to reassign their development operations to clubs in the
American Hockey League (AHL), the chief rival of the IHL. Without any support from the NHL and league costs increasing, the IHL declared bankruptcy and disbanded during the summer of 2001. With the AHL looking to increase its prestige as the top development league for the NHL, the AHL began discussions to absorb some of the IHL's clubs. The AHL and IHL eventually agreed for the AHL to absorb six franchises for the 2001–02 season: the Aeros,
Chicago Wolves,
Grand Rapids Griffins,
Milwaukee Admirals,
Manitoba Moose, and
Utah Grizzlies. The Aeros joined the AHL one year after the NHL expanded with the
Minnesota Wild and did not have a primary development affiliate. Due to Houston's
George Bush Intercontinental Airport making travel for prospects easier, the Wild entered an agreement with the Aeros as their top development affiliate.
Todd McLellan was installed as head coach by the Wild and the Aeros made the Western Conference Finals in their first AHL season before falling to their old IHL rivals, the Chicago Wolves. For the 2002–03 season, the Aeros were led by 31 goals from
Jean-Guy Trudel and goaltending from
Johan Holmqvist and
Derek Gustafson. Houston swept the
Milwaukee Admirals in the first round, defeated the
Norfolk Admirals in six games, and then advanced through the Western Conference Finals with a game seven win over the
Grand Rapids Griffins. Houston faced the
Hamilton Bulldogs in the 2003 Calder Cup Finals, again going for the full seven games before the Aeros won the
Calder Cup. Before the 2003–04 season, the team moved to the newly opened
Toyota Center. As part of the transition, the majority ownership of the Aeros was sold to the
Minnesota Wild On the ice, the Aeros remained competitive, qualifying for the playoffs eight times in the last ten seasons. They made it to the 2009 Western Conference Finals before being eliminated by the
Manitoba Moose and made it back to the Calder Cup Finals in 2011, but lost in six games to the
Binghamton Senators. The Aeros played its final game on May 4, 2013, in a 7–0 loss to the Grand Rapids Griffins in a game in the opening round of the
2013 Calder Cup playoffs.
Relocation to Iowa Despite the local popularity and high average attendance of the team, the team was having trouble off the ice where the Aeros and owner
Chuck Watson were part of dispute with the
Houston Rockets and owner
Les Alexander over their shared arenas. Since the 1990s, Watson operated
The Summit, which acted as the home arena for both teams, and had control over the lease agreement with the Rockets, which had been purchased by Alexander in 1993. When Alexander tried to break the Rockets lease on the building shortly after their
1995 title, Watson blocked the move, holding Alexander to his original agreement of expiration in 2003. While a new arena was needed to replace the aging facility, the two sides agreed to an arena deal in 1997 that would give the Rockets and Aeros equal control over a new building. However, the referendum for a new building was rejected by
Harris County voters in 1999. In 2001, Alexander reached his own agreement with the City of Houston to build the
Toyota Center. The lease agreements of both the Aeros and Rockets expired in the summer of 2003, and with the city set to sell Compaq Center to
Lakewood Church, the Aeros were forced to move into the Toyota Center and pay rent to the Rockets on a three-year lease. Watson then sold the majority ownership to the Minnesota Sports and Entertainment (MS&E), the parent company of the
Minnesota Wild, with Watson retaining a 10% share, in order to pay for the increased costs. By the 2012–13 season, Alexander had expressed he wanted to use the 38 Aeros' home dates to instead host concerts in order to generate more revenue. In the first negotiations between Alexander and MS&E, the Rockets' owner demanded a 550% increase in the team's rent if they wanted to stay. MS&E instead began exploring other options, settling on
Wells Fargo Arena in
Des Moines, Iowa, which last was home to the
Iowa Chops in 2009. On April 18, 2013, MS&E announced that the Aeros would be relocated to Des Moines at the conclusion of the
2013 Calder Cup playoffs. Following the relocation, MS&E's rent went from one of the highest in the AHL to one of the lowest: 27th of the AHL's 30 franchises. ==Season-by-season results==