IIHF voters salute Bedard . . . AHL title to be decided tonight . . . Kamloops Storm, Blazers mourn death of Friedel

The International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) unveiled a new award this season — the IIHF Male Player of the Year — and announced on Monday that the inaugural winner is F Connor Bedard of the WHL’s Regina Pats. . . . Never mind that he won’t turn 18 until July 17, Bedard had that kind of a year, winning two World Junior Championship gold medals (Edmonton and Halifax). In Halifax, he may well have had the greatest WJC in the event’s history. . . . According to Andrew Podnieks’ story at iihf.com, the award is “voted on by media and IIHF family from around the world.” . . . Bedard got 31.8 per cent of the votes, finishing ahead of Latvian G Arturs Silovs (19.6), Swiss F Andres Ambuhl (19.2), German D Moritz Seider (14.3) and Canadian F Adam Fantilli (11.9). . . . F Hilary Knight was named the IIHF Female Player of the Year earlier. . . . Bedard will cap off his season on Wednesday when the Chicago Blackhawks select him first overall in the NHL draft in Nashville. . . . Podnieks’ story is right here.

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Keep in mind that ‘tomorrow’ in the below tweet is actually today (Wednesday) . . .

The AHL’s championship final for the Calder Cup will be decided in Thousand Palms, Calif., on Wednesday night. The Coachella Valley Firebirds forced Game 7 with a 5-2 victory over the visiting Hershey Bears on Monday night. . . . The Firebirds had opened the series with two home-ice victories. The series shifted to Hershey and the Bears won three in a row. . . . On Monday, F Kole Lind scored twice for the winners, giving him nine goals in these playoffs. D Ryker Evans, like Lind a former WHLer, had two assists.


Vacation


As you may be aware, players who were on the roster of the BCHL’s Wenatchee Wild are free agents, free to move elsewhere, including to other BCHL teams. WenatcheeThat’s because the Winnipeg Ice WHL franchise is moving to Wenatchee where it will operate as the Wild. The BCHL franchise, meanwhile, won’t operate in the 2023-24 season.

One of those free agents, 2003-born F Parker Murray, has signed with the defending-champion Penticton Vees. The son of former NHL F Glen Murray, Parker played the past two seasons with the Wild. Last season, the native of Manhattan Beach, Calif., put up 39 points, 23 of them goals, in Wenatchee. The 6-foot-5-225-pounder then added 13 goals — he had back-to-back four goal games — and one assist in 10 playoff games. . . . He was a 10th-round selection by the Portland Winterhawks in the WHL’s 2018 draft.

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F Cade Littler, who would have been a free agent after playing the past two seasons with the BCHL’s Wild, actually made a move a few days before the Wild’s owners purchased the Ice. Littler announced early in June that has moved on to the USHL’s Cedar Rapids RoughRiders and will play with them in 2023-24. That announcement came after he attended their main tryout camp earlier this month. . . . He is the son of Wild general manager Bliss Littler. . . . Of course, had the 2004-born Cade stayed with the Wild and played in the WHL, he would have lost his NCAA eligibility. . . . Littler was committed to Minnesota State-Mankato in 2022 when the Calgary Flames selected him in the seventh round of the NHL draft. The plan was for him to go to Mankato for the 2023-24 season. But a coaching change at the school resulted in his being given the opportunity to change his commitment and now he plans on going to the U of North Dakota for the 2024-25 season. . . . Last season, he put up 68 points, including 29 goals, in 51 BCHL games. . . . Cedar Rapids had selected him third overall in the USHL’s Phase I draft in 2020. . . . The Edmonton Oil Kings selected him in the 10th round of the WHL’s 2019 draft. They traded his WHL rights to the Tri-City Americans on Jan. 1, 2020. In that exchange, the Americans gave up G Beck Warm and F Riley Stuart in exchange for Littler, G Carter Gylander and second- and fourth-round picks in the WHL’s 2021 draft. Stuart spent the past four seasons with the USHL’s Dubuque Fighting Saints. . . . Gylander just completed his fourth season at Colgate U. Warm spent parts of four seasons with the Americans and finished his WHL career by playing 15 games with Edmonton.



THE COACHING GAME:

Veteran coach Jake Grimes has joined the OHL’s Saginaw Spirit as associate coach. The Spirit is the host team for the 2024 Memorial Cup. . . . Grimes spent last season as an associate coach at the U of Waterloo. . . . He has spent 18 seasons coaching major junior hockey; most recently he spent parts of three seasons (2019-22) as the head coach of the QMJHL’s Cape Breton Eagles, resigning in the middle of the 2021-22 season. . . . He has coached in two Memorial Cup tournaments — in 2008 with the Belleville Bulls and in 2019 with the Guelph Storm. . . .

The MJHL’s Niverville Nighthawks have added Ben Micflikier to their staff as an assistant coach. Micflikier played parts of three seasons (2010-13) in the MJHL, playing two games with the Portage Terriers and 44 with the Winkler Flyers. . . . Last season, he was an assistant coach with the Manitoba Major Junior Hockey League’s St. Boniface Riels.


Fire


Headline at The Beaverton (@TheBeaverton): Anti-vaxxer demands you produce a single study showing mRNA vaccines are safe — no not that one.

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The Beaverton, again: Poll — The Beaverton beats the National Post as Canada’s most preferred source of misinformation.


THINKING OUT LOUD:

Ron Robison, the WHL commissioner, attended news conferences in Cranbrook and Winnipeg on Jan. 29, 2019, at which long-rumoured plans to move the Kootenay Ice to Winnipeg were confirmed. On Friday, the WHL used a four-paragraph news release to announce that the Winnipeg franchise had been sold and was on its way to Wenatchee, Wash. . . . So when are the news conferences in Winnipeg and Wenatchee? . . . BTW, Olympia is the capital of Washington state, which now is home to five WHL teams. Olympia’s population is more than 56,000. So why doesn’t it have a WHL franchise? . . . It was great to see Joey Votto back at first base for the Cincinnati Reds on Monday. He’d been gone for 10 months, and baseball is better when he’s healthy. . . . And, just to make it really sweet, he went 2-for-3 with a walk, a run, a homer and three RBI in a 5-4 victory over the visiting Colorado Rockies. . . . The Reds made it 10 in a row on Tuesday.


The City of Kamloops is a whole lot poorer today following the death of Pete Friedel, who was the trainer for the junior B Kamloops Storm of the Kootenay International Junior Hockey League. Friedel, who died on Saturday, was 63. . . . Before working with the Storm, he spent a whole lot of years helping out with the WHL’s Kamloops Blazers, going back to when they were the Jr. Oilers. He was with the Blazers for each of their three Memorial Cup victories (1992, 1994, 1995). . . . Friedel was a man of great courage who had dealt with health issues in recent times, most of them brought on by diabetes and kidney disease. . . . On Monday, his son, James, told Kamloops This Week: “I always knew how remarkable a human he was, but my phone has been buzzing off the hook literally since people found out. That’s just been the best thing, seeing that everyone kind of felt the same way about him. It’s something you always hope for. I mean, you assume, but it’s just kind of awesome to see how much the community really cared for him.” . . . The sincerest of condolences to the Friedel family and friends.

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If you are interested in being a living kidney donor, more information is available here:

Living Kidney Donor Program

St. Paul’s Hospital

6A Providence Building

1081 Burrard Street

Vancouver, BC V6Z 1Y6

Tel: 604-806-9027

Toll free: 1-877-922-9822

Fax: 604-806-9873

Email: donornurse@providencehealth.bc.ca

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Vancouver General Hospital Living Donor Program – Kidney 

Gordon and Leslie Diamond Health Care Centre

Level 5, 2775 Laurel Street

Vancouver, BC V5Z 1M9

604-875-5182 or 1-855-875-5182

kidneydonornurse@vch.ca

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Or, for more information, visit right here.


Banjo

Hockey world mourning death of Melfort defenceman . . . Rollins: From enforcer to entrepreneur and author . . . USHL loses two teams for season

DylanAshe
Dylan Ashe, 18, loved his 1984 Chevrolet truck. (Photo: Della Ashe/Facebook)

Dylan Ashe, a defenceman with the SJHL’s Melfort Mustangs, was killed in a one-vehicle accident on Saturday night. Ashe, 18, died when his immaculately restored 1984 Chevrolet pickup left the road and rolled on Highway 37 near White Fox, Sask. . . . A native of Warman, Sask., he helped the midget AAA Tisdale Trojans to a bronze medal at the 2019 Telus Cup before joining the Mustangs as a 17-year-old. With Melfort, he had two goals and four assists in 46 games. . . . Ashe wasn’t selected in the WHL draft, but signed with the Lethbridge Hurricanes in April 2019 and was in their training camp prior to the 2019-20 season. . . . His mother, Della, wrote on Facebook: “This is the hardest and most heartbreaking post I have ever had to make. Dylan was driving back to the lake (Saturday) night and rolled the car. He didn’t make it out of the accident alive. I can honestly say I’m numb, and my heart literally feels broken. He was the most easy-going, fun-loving, and never in a rush for anything type of guy. He loved his family and truck. Oh that truck, boy did he work hard on it. My favourite thing was when he would come home and go directly to each of us and give us a big hug. He was making his last trip out to the lake and then heading home here for a couple days before taking off to Melfort for his second season with the Mustangs. He was looking forward to seeing all his hockey buddies. I am comforted knowing he was doing everything he loved to do, but unfortunately never fulfilled his dreams here, and now he will always be in my dreams. I can’t believe your life was so short. Please watch over us. I love you so, so, so much.” . . . Deanna Venn, an aunt of Dylan’s, has started a GoFundMe page that is right here.


If you’re an old-time hockey fan, you may remember Jerry Rollins as a tough guy who put up 338 penalty minutes with the WCHL’s Flin Flon Bombers in 1973-74 and another 473 in a 1974-75 season split between the Bombers (72) and Winnipeg Clubs (401). . . . These days, according to a news release that found its way into my inbox, Rollins is the “co-founder and chairman of the Sage Executive Group, a Southern California-based peer advisory group that helps CEOs, founders and executives achieve all-around success by positively impacting their business, families and communities.” On top of that, his new book — Enforcer to Entrepreneur: Achieving Hockey Stick Growth in Life, Business and Sports — is scheduled for an Oct. 1 publishing date.



Bruce Jenkins, in the San Francisco Chronicle: “As Doris Burke moves to ESPN radio, she’ll become the first woman to call an entire conference finals and the NBA Finals for a national outlet. But she’ll be missed on television, especially in light of her superb work in Orlando. Gather up Mark Jackson, Jeff Van Gundy, Reggie Miller, all the analysts working for ESPN and TNT; Burke is better than all of them.” . . . Jenkins isn’t wrong.


Just the other day the Atlanta Braves scored 29 runs in a game against the Miami Marlins. As Nick Canepa of the San Diego Union-Tribune noted, the Braves “violated every one of baseball’s 1,212 unwritten rules.”


Gilligan


COVID-19 CHRONICLES . . .

Mike Norvell, the head football coach of the Florida State Seminoles, tested positive and has gone into quarantine. The school’s athletic department made the announcement on Saturday. FSU wasn’t scheduled to play this weekend. . . . He is expected to miss his team’s game at Miami on Saturday. . . .

Florida Atlantic U was to have played Georgia Southern in a televised football game on ESPN on Saturday. However, FAU experienced an outbreak of positive tests involving players and on- and off-field staff so wasn’t able to play. . . . Other games cancelled or postponed this weekend for virus-related reasons included Baylor-Houston, Charlotte-North Carolina, BYU-Army, Florida Atlantic-Georgia Southern, and Arkansas State-Central Arkansas. . . .

The Big Ten announced on Wednesday that it would have a football season, after all. One day later, it was revealed that the U of Wisconsin Badgers football team had more than 40 positive tests among players and staff to that point. . . . ABC News reported: “On Thursday, UW-Madison reported 190 new positive COVID-19 tests among students and employees from on- and off-campus testing. As of Thursday morning, 400 students were in on-campus isolation, it said. There have been nearly 2,400 confirmed cases among UW-Madison students and employees since July 28, according to Public Health Madison & Dane County.” . . .

Jokerit, the KHL team that plays out of Helsinki, Finland, will be back on the ice for practice on Monday after health officials ended the club’s 14-day quarantine. Jokerit is scheduled to return to game action on Friday against visiting Sibir. . . .

The 2021 North American Indigenous Games have been postponed, after the 2020 Games were postponed in March. The 2021 Games had been scheduled for Halifax in July. Organizers have yet to announce a future date, but said they will be held in Halifax.


If you are interested in being a living kidney donor, more information is available here:

Living Kidney Donor Program

St. Paul’s Hospital

6A Providence Building

1081 Burrard Street

Vancouver, BC V6Z 1Y6

Tel: 604-806-9027

Toll free: 1-877-922-9822

Fax: 604-806-9873

Email: donornurse@providencehealth.bc.ca

——

Vancouver General Hospital Living Donor Program – Kidney 

Gordon and Leslie Diamond Health Care Centre

Level 5, 2775 Laurel Street

Vancouver, BC V5Z 1M9

604-875-5182 or 1-855-875-5182

kidneydonornurse@vch.ca

——

Or, for more information, visit right here.


Explosive


The USHL lost two teams on Friday when the Cedar Rapids RoughRiders and Madison Capitals suspended operations for 2020-21. . . . The RoughRiders opted out because of storm damage to their home arena, the ImOn Ice Arena, from an Aug. 10 storm. . . . The Capitols, according to a USHL news release, “face significant county restrictions related to COVID-19 that affect their ability to practice, play and host spectators.” . . . The USHL is left with 14 teams that plan to open their regular season on Nov. 6.


One group — 50 Below Sports + Entertainment — owns the Winnipeg Blues and the expansion Winnipeg Freeze in the 12-team MJHL. I don’t know what the rules dealing with player transactions will be but I am told that the Blues traded 10 players to the Freeze on Thursday. The deal included 16-year-old twin brothers Rylan and Ryder Ringor of Winnipeg, both of whom played at the Elite 15 team at Rink Hockey Academy last season. . . . There isn’t anything on either team’s website about the player moves.


The BCHL, which plans on opening its regular season on Dec. 1, has released an exhibition schedule that is to start on Sept. 25 and features more than 100 games. Teams will play within their four-team cohorts. Interestingly, the schedule doesn’t include the Wenatchee, Wash., Wild, although there has yet to be an announcement on the team’s immediate future.


JohnWayne