The boys played a hockey game last night. Yes, they shook off the rust and away they went.
They did pretty well, too, getting 37 saves from goaltender Parker Tobin in posting an 8-0 victory before a world-wide audience.
Tobin was making his first appearance with his new team, having been acquired from the junior A Humboldt Broncos in exchange for defenceman Xavier Labelle earlier in the day.
âWe were fortunate we got a great performance from Tobin and our top scorers scored,â said general manager/head coach Darcy Haugan.
The boys were led by the line of Jaxon Joseph, Logan Schatz and Evan Thomas, who combined for 12 points, including six goals.
There was a scary moment early in the second period when Schatz appeared to catch an edge as he cut behind Tobinâs net. Schatz crumpled to the ice and for a moment it looked as though he had suffered a knee injury. Athletic therapist Dayna Brons, the only girl on the boys team, was quick to the scene. She helped Schatz to the dressing room and was able to get him back to the bench before too much time had elapsed.
âSheâs got magic fingers and sheâs great with tape,â said Schatz, who also is the team captain. âIf thereâs an MVP on this team, sheâs it. I donât know where weâd be without her.â
Haugan was thrilled when Schatz returned to the bench and Brons signalled that the captain was OK to go.
âThat allowed us to keep our lines intact and to execute our game plan to a T,â Haugan said. âWe wanted our power play to obviously be big. We didnât expect it to be that big so weâre very fortunate. You need your top guys to be your best guys and they were.â
The boys counted five times on eight power-play opportunities and that really was huge.
Joseph finished with three goals and an assist, with Schatz chipping in two of each, and Thomas putting up a goal and three helpers.
Defenceman Adam Herold, the youngest player on the team, and forward Conner Lukan also scored. Lukan was skating alongside Jacob Leicht and Logan Hunter, and that threesome easily could have had four or five more goals. Hunter recorded two assists, with Leicht getting one. Defenceman Stephen Wack also had one assist.
As for the opposition, Haugan said, they âstepped up all night, they were relentless. Obviously our guys did a good job of keeping everything to the outside and didnât allow them to penetrate to the middle of the ice. We did get a couple of breaks so we did get lucky but all-in-all to escape with a 1-0 lead after one, weâll gladly take it.â
Defenceman Logan Boulet showed a lot of heart and leadership in earning six assists for the boys.
âI felt great out there,â Boulet said. âI was using a Brad McCrimmon model stick and, man, I really was able to throw some great saucer passes out there. And I donât know that the stick had anything to do with it, but I never wanted to leave the ice.â
Haugan added: â(Boulet) was a beast out there.â
Ahh, yes, the sticks.
Haugan said one of the toughest tasks he and assistant coach Mark Cross faced was getting the players to pick out the sticks they wanted to use.
âI have never seen or heard of a team having such a wide selection to choose from,â Haugan said. âThere were sticks everywhere. We may have to build some kind of stick warehouse to house them all.â
After the game, the boys admitted to being quite excited about having been able to replace one of their travelling staples.
âOne of the boys picked up a copy of Slap Shot,â Haugan said. âHe got it from somewhere in Portland, I think. You canât be on the road without Reggie Dunlop and Slap Shot, but our original DVD got broken somehow and, let me tell you, there were some broken hearts when that happened.
âBut allâs well that ends well.â
Itâs worth pointing out that the boys led 1-0 after the first period, which was played in Chicago Stadium. They were up 4-0 after the second, which was played in Maple Leaf Gardens. The teams played the final period in the Montreal Forum. The travel arrangements were all under the control of Glen Doerksen, the teamâs travelling secretary.
So . . . whatâs next for the boys?
Well, Haugan said, the coaches are well aware that focusing on one sport isnât the way to go.
âThe guys are talking about wanting to play some baseball,â Haugan said. âApparently, some guy in Iowa built a ball diamond in a cornfield. So I think weâre wanting to give that a try.
âBut weâll have to scrounge some bats, balls and gloves first.â
JUST NOTES:Â There was a third man behind the bench with Haugan and Cross, and Haugan later revealed that he has added Brock Hirsche to his coaching staff. Hirsche played in the WHL with the Prince George Cougars, then returned to his hometown to play with the U of Lethbridge Pronghorns. . . .
Also joining the boys is Jonathan Pitre, who is incredibly popular with the media and will handle public and media relations. . . .
Tyler Bieber, an up-and-coming play-by-play voice, called last nightâs game on 107.5 FM (aka The Prayer), with sports fanatic Brody Hinz handling the analysis and statistics, including zone entries and Corsi. . . .
(Christopher Lee of the Humboldt Journal may recognize some of the quotes here. Thanks for loaning them to me.)
The OHL dropped the hammer on the Niagara IceDogs on Wednesday, a month after some members of the organization were alleged to have used improper
language in a group chat on WhatsApp, a transcript of which was given to the league. Joey Burke, one of the teamâs minority owner and the governor, and Billy Burke, the head coach and a minority owner, have been suspended indefinitely. The IceDogs also have been fined $150,000. . . . From an OHL news release: âBased on the results of the league investigation, it is the position of the league that their conduct is prejudicial to the welfare of the OHL as it violates the leagueâs Harassment & Abuse/Diversity Policy and also runs counter to the OHLâs Onside program, which emphasizes the importance of demonstrating respect for women through actions and words.â . . . According to terms of the disciplinary action, both are able to apply for reinstatement on June 1, 2024. âAt that time,â reads the news release, âthe Commissioner will assess whether they have successfully completed counselling and education to ensure that there will be no additional violations of League rules, policies, or expected conduct.â . . . Rick Westhead of TSN later tweeted: âIceDogs co-owner Bill Burke, Joey and Billy’s father, told The Welland Tribune that âtoday a very sad day for the Burke family. We will have more to say in the coming days. We would . . . like to thank everyone that has reached out today with their overwhelming love and support.”
Meanwhile, the AHL has suspended F Ben Holmstrom of the Rochester Americans for eight games for using âhomophobic languageâ during a game against the visiting Utica Comets on March 30. He was ejected at the end of the first period. . . . âAs part of the suspension,â the AHL said in a statement, âHolmstrom will be participating in diversity and inclusion education.â
Now letâs hop on over to Quebec for this from Guy Quenneville of CBC News . . .
âMore Black minor hockey players in western Quebec are coming forward with allegations of racial slurs less than a week after another Black player spoke out.
âOn Monday, Hockey Outaouais and the team L’IntrĂ©pide de Gatineau confirmed in a statement they have launched an investigation after two of the team’s players said they were subjected to racist remarks.Â
âOne of those players, Anthony Allain-SamakĂ©, told Radio-Canada the bullying led him to quit the team.â
His mother, Julie Allain, speaking French, told Quenneville: âBeing called the N-word was still quite common for several players. I told him it is totally unacceptable.â
Quennevilleâs story is right here.
WEDNESDAY IN THE WHL:
Western Conference:
In Spokane, F Nick McCarry struck 10 seconds into OT was the Chiefs beat the
Everett Silvertips, 3-2. . . . McCarry, who has 22 goals, has seven points, five of them goals, over his past four games. . . . Olen Zellweger, the WHLâs highest-scoring defenceman, scored his 14th goal and added an assist. He has 76 points in 53 games. . . . G Mason Beaupit stopped 32 shots, 18 of them in the second period, for Spokane. . . . Announced attendance was 7,252, an awfully impressive number for a midweek game. . . . The Chiefsâ victory eliminated the idle Tri-City Americans from the chase for a playoff spot. . . . Spokane (23-37-5), with three games remaining, is sixth, one point ahead of the Vancouver Giants and Victoria Royals, and two up on the Prince George Cougars. . . . Everett (44-10-10) leads the conference by four points over the Kamloops Blazers. Each team has four games remaining. . . .
The Kelowna Rockets scored the gameâs last three goals as they beat the
Cougars, 4-1, in Prince George. . . . The Rockets, who won 1-0 in OT there on Tuesday, have won six straight in Prince George. . . . F Colton Dach scored once, his 26th, and added two assists. . . . F Pavel Novak (28) broke a 1-1 tie at 18:52 of the first period and the visitors put it away with two third-period goals. . . . Kelowna (39-19-6) now is two points behind the Seattle Thunderbirds with each team having four games to play. . . . The Cougars are ninth, one point from a playoff spot.
Eastern Conference:
The host Lethbridge Hurricanes struck for six goals in the third period as they
dropped the Saskatoon Blades, 6-1. . . . The gameâs seven goals all came in the third period. . . . D Joe Arntsen scored twice, giving him seven, and added an assist, with F Justin Hall and F Alex Thacker each adding three assists. . . . F Jordan Keller scored his first WHL goal in his eighth game for the Blades. Keller, who turned 17 on March 8, is the son of Aaron Keller, who played four seasons (1992-96) with the Kamloops Blazers before going on to play 17 seasons in Japan. Aaron now helps out the Blazers as a development coach. . . . Saskatoon G Nolan Maier stopped 31 shots in his first opportunity to break the WHL career record for victories. . . . Lethbridge (30-30-4) is seventh, seven points behind the Brandon Wheat Kings and five ahead of the Swift Current Broncos. . . . Saskatoon (36-26-4) remains fifth, one point behind the Moose Jaw Warriors and five ahead of Brandon.
JUNIOR JOTTINGS: The AJHLâs Bonnyville Pontiacs and Rick Swan, their general manager and head coach, âhave mutually agreed to part ways effective immediately,â the team announced Wednesday. Swan had been with the organization for 10 years, the last nine as GM and head coach. This season, the Pontiacs went 36-16-8, good for third in the North Division, then lost a six-game first-round series to the Whitecourt Wolverines.
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involving the Swift Current Broncos on Aug. 2. In the story, he checked in with Dean Brockman, the Broncosâ new director of hockey operations and head coach. Hereâs an excerpt:
giving up a conditional fifth-round pick in the 2019 bantam draft in return.
CHLâs 2018 import draft. The 6-foot-3 Malysjev, who has dual Swedish/Russian citizenship, played last season with HV71âs J18 and J20 teams, putting up two goals and five assists in 15 games with the former and four assists in 29 games with the latter. . . . Malysjevâs parents are from Russia, but he was born in Sweden â thus the dual citizenship. Interestingly, he has never lived in Russia. . . . Malysjev, who is fluent in English, was to arrive in Saskatoon late Tuesday. He could make his WHL debut in Regina at an exhibition tournament this weekend. . . . Earlier this week, the Blades signed their other 2018 import draft selection â Norwegian F Kristian Roykas Marthinsen, 19, whose NHL rights belong to the Washington Capitals, who selected him in the seventh round of the 2017 draft.
overall selection in the WHLâs 2018 bantam draft. . . . Brennan, who will turn 15 on Sept. 27, played at the Winnipeg-based Rink Hockey Academy last season, going 11-3-1, 1.52, .947 with the bantam prep team. He led the Canadian Sport School Hockey Leagueâs bantam prep division in GAA, save percentage and shutouts (5). . . . With Brennan signed, it means that 21 of the WHLâs 22 first-round selections in the 2018 bantam draft are under contract. The only unsigned first-round pick is F Trevor Wong, who was taken 18th overall by the Kelowna Rockets. He has been in Kelownaâs camp, but has made a verbal commitment to the U of Denver for 2021-22.
to WHL contracts. . . . Arntsen, 15, is from Swift Current and was a second-round pick in the 2018 bantam draft. Last season, he had 19 goals and 31 assists in 31 gams with the bantam AA Swift Current Raiders. He added two goals and six assists in six playoff games, and was pointless in six games with the midget AAA Swift Current Legionnaires. . . . Dorrington, a list player, is from Langley, B.C. Last season, he played for the Yale Hockey Academy Elite 15s in Abbotsford, B.C., scoring 17 goals and adding 15 assists in 33 games. He then had two goals and five assists in four playoff games. . . . Jones, 16, was placed on the Hurricanesâ protected list last year. From Olds, Alta., he played last season with the midget AAA Airdrie CFR Bisons, putting up 16 goals and six assists in 33 games. . . . All three players remain with the Hurricanes, who open the exhibition season on Friday against the visiting Medicine Hat Tigers.
to WHL contracts on Tuesday. . . . D Braden Miller, 16, is a list player who was added after attending the 2017 training camp. From Sherwood Park, Alta., he had four goals and nine assists in 28 games last season with the minor midget Sherwood Park Squires. . . . F Cade Hayes of Leader, Sask., was an eighth-round selection in the 2017 bantam draft. Hayes, 16, had 19 goals and 17 assists in 44 games with the midget AAA Tisdale Trojans. While he led the Trojans in scoring, he was tied for second in freshman scoring in the Saskatchewan Midget AAA Hockey League. . . .
I’ll be on Cobra which is expensive. I have had writeups in Portland Tribune and GoFundMe and still have a huge need,.
coaching change. According to a news release, Peter Schaefer, 41, has taken over as head coach after the Eagles and Brandon West âmutually agreed to part ways.â . . . West, the news release reads, âwill be stepping away from the organization because of personal reasons.â . . . The Eagles went 26-22-8 last season, Westâs first in Surrey, and got into the second round of the playoffs. . . . Schaefer, the WHLâs player of the year with the Brandon Wheat Kings in 1996-97, was the Eaglesâ head coach in 2013-14. They had brought him back as an assistant coach for this season. With his promotion, the Eagles now are looking for an assistant coach. . . . One BCHL insider tells me there now have been 14 coaching changes in the BCHL over the past 18 months.