Meet three more scouts who will be part of the class of 45 inductees into the Wall of Honour when the Western Canada Professional Hockey Scouts Foundation holds its inaugural dinner in Okotoks, Alta., on July 30 . . .
BARRY FRASER
(Feb. 10, 1940 — Dec. 4, 2022)

From Kirkland Lake, Ont., he spent 21 seasons scouring for the Edmonton Oilers. . . . When knee injuries brought a premature end to his playing career, he turned to scouting in order to stay involved in the game. . . . The Oilers signed him as their director of scouting in 1979. . . . Was part of five Stanley Cup championships with the Oilers — 1984, 1985, 1987, 1988, 1990. . . . Under Fraser’s guidance, the Oilers’ scouting staff had perhaps the greatest three-year run (1979-81) in NHL draft history, selecting the likes of Kevin Lowe, Mark Messier, Glenn Anderson, Paul Coffey, Jari Kurri, Andy Moog, Grant Fuhr and Steve Smith.
LOU JANKOWSKI
(June 27, 1931 — March 21, 2010)

Born in Regina, he moved with his family to Hamilton as a youngster. . . . Playing career got him to the NHL for 127 regular-season games split between the Detroit Red Wings and Chicago Black Hawks. A head injury with Chicago in 1954-55 cut short his NHL career. . . . Spent most of the rest of his playing career in the WHL. . . . As a junior, he won the OHL’s 1950-51 scoring title with the Oshawa Generals. . . . Turned to scouting in 1972 and worked with the St. Louis Blues, Washington Capitals, NHL Central Scouting and New York Rangers. After 15 seasons with the Rangers, he retired in 1993. . . . His son, Ryan, has worked as an NHL scout, while grandson Mark played in the NHL.
GERRY MELNYK
(Sept. 16, 1934 — June 14, 2001)

He retired as a player in 1968 and immediately signed on as a scout with the Philadelphia Flyers. He scouted for the Flyers until retiring in 1997. . . . The Flyers won two Stanley Cup titles (1974 and 1975) with Melnyk on their scouting staff. . . . A native of Edmonton, he played nine seasons in his hometown — four with the junior Oil Kings and five with the Flyers of the old WHL. . . . Split 269 regular-season NHL games between the Detroit Red Wings, Chicago Black Hawks and St. Louis Blues. Played in the Stanley Cup final with Detroit in 1956 and St. Louis in 1968. . . . The Blues traded him to the Flyers, but a heart condition forced him into retirement, so he turned to scouting.
