The Rail Yard Dawgs are the sixth professional hockey franchise to call the Roanoke Valley home, following the
Salem/Roanoke Valley Rebels of the
Eastern Hockey League and later the
Southern Hockey League (1967–1976), the
Salem/Virginia Raiders of the second
Eastern Hockey League and
Atlantic Coast Hockey League (1980–1983), the
Virginia Lancers/
Roanoke Valley Rebels/
Rampage (1983–
1993) of the
Atlantic Coast Hockey League and later the
East Coast Hockey League, the
Roanoke Express of the
East Coast Hockey League (
1993–
2004), and the
Roanoke Valley Vipers of the
United Hockey League (
2005–2006). On October 20, 2015, an ownership group headed by Bob McGinn purchased the dormant
Mississippi Surge franchise and relocated the team to Roanoke for the 2016–17 season. The ownership group consisted of Bob McGinn and his three NHL player sons,
Jamie,
Tye, and
Brock, former Surge owner
Tim Kerr, and several other locals. On April 29, 2016,
Sam Ftorek was announced the team's first head coach. The Rail Yard Dawgs played their home opener at the Berglund Center in front of a sellout crowd on October 21, 2016, falling to the
Knoxville Ice Bears 2–0. The team started with a 4–3–1 record, but faltered down the stretch, finishing the season with 43 points and a final record of 17–30–9. The team finished in ninth place in the league, five points from qualifying for the final playoff spot. The team drew 87,831 fans over the course of the season with an average of 3,136 per game for fifth highest in the ten team league. During the
2017–18 season, head coach Ftorek was relieved of his duties after 18 games with a 5–11–2 record. He was replaced by Dan Bremner, a former SPHL player. Under Bremner, the Rail Yard Dawgs went 21–15–2 and qualified in the final seed for the playoffs, but were swept in the first round by the top-seeded
Peoria Rivermen. In the
second season under Bremner, the Rail Yard Dawgs finished fifth in the league with a 28–24–4 record. Roanoke was again selected by the top-seed Rivermen as their first round opponent and the Rail Yard Dawgs upset the regular season champions in a two-game sweep. Due to the effects of the
COVID-19 pandemic, the Rail Yard Dawgs were one of several SPHL teams to not participate in the
2020–21 season. In the 2021–22 season, Roanoke would finish 8th out of 11th, qualifying for the last playoff spot (making their third ever appearance in the President’s Cup Playoffs.) Despite losing game 1 of the first round against first place Knoxville, Roanoke would win game 2 at home by a score of 5–1, and win game 3 in Knoxville 3–1. Roanoke would go on to sweep the second place Huntsville Havoc, to make the President’s Cup Final for the first time in franchise history. Roanoke would fall to the Peoria Rivermen 3 games to 1 in the best-of-five final. Building on their 2022 Finals run, the Dawgs would finish the 2022–23 regular season with a 32–19–3–2 record and 69 points, good enough for the 4th seed in the SPHL playoffs. Roanoke would sweep 5th-seeded
Evansville in the first round before dispatching top-seeded Peoria two games to one in the Semifinals. On May 2, 2023, Roanoke defeated the
Birmingham Bulls 2–1 in overtime to clinch the SPHL Finals three games to one to earn their first
SPHL President's Cup. ==Name, logo, and the railroad connection==