If you are a fan of the WHL, you may want to count the names with ties to the league among the newest additions to the Stanley Cup. . . . The Golden Knights are the first team to have the names engraved on Lord Stanleyâs mug before it goes on its annual summer tour.
Hey, was Thursday nightâs CFL game between the Edmonton Elks and Saskatchewan Roughriders in Regina great, or what? Letâs be honest . . . it couldnât have been any more Canadian than it was. And, hey, he who rouges last rouges best. Right? . . . It wasnât the most-exciting game you ever will have seen, but it left people talking, didnât it?
If you missed it â I really hope that you didnât and that you stuck around until the end â the Roughriders beat the Elks, 12-11, despite being out-rouged, 4-1.
The Roughriders now are 3-1; the Elks are â whoops! â 0-5.
Punter Jake Julien accounted for three of the Elksâ rouges, with the other coming off a missed field goal attempt by Dean Faithfull.
The Elks opened up a 3-0 lead on, yes, three rouges, and later led 11-3 with 70 seconds left in fourth quarter. Thatâs when Saskatchewan QB Trevor Harris hit receiver Mitch Picton with a five-yard touchdown pass. Harris then threw to Kendall Watson for the two-point convert and an 11-11 tie. (And is there a valid reason for Picton, a terrific route runner, not being in Saskatchewanâs starting lineup every game?)
There were 66 seconds left when Saskatchewanâs Brett Lauther drilled a 74-yard kickoff into the Edmonton end zone.
CJ Sims, the Elksâ returner, didnât run the ball out of the end zone and the gameâs final rouge, coming with the game just 62 seconds from OT, won it.
“He knows (he made a mistake),” Chris Jones, Edmontonâs general manager and head coach, said. “The moment was big and he’s a good little player. There will probably be more people talking about this than when he had a great game returning the other day.â
Just a thought, but perhaps Jones and/or Mike Scheper, the Elksâ special teams co-ordinator, forgot to give Sims pre-kickoff instructions?
As for Sims, he faced the music, telling reporters: âIt hurts, man. It hurts. I feel like I let the team down. It hurts. It was a boneheaded play by me, but Iâll learn from my mistakes, and itâll never happen again.â
Sims, a wide receiver and returner from Covington, La., attended New Mexico Highlands University. He had opened his CFL career on June 25 by returning six kickoffs for 181 yards and three punts for 101 yards in a 43-31 loss to the visiting Toronto Argonauts.
Simsâ faux pas in Regina helped take the spotlight off Jones, who was hit with a 10-yard penalty for obstructing an official. Jones was in his usual stance â hunched over, hands on knees â watching a play when one of the game officials, hustling down the sideline, came into contact with him.
Yes, it was one of those nights. . . .
Jeff DeDekker, who covers CFL games in Regina for The Canadian Press, has a story right here. . . .
Rob Vanstone, once a writer/columnist with the Regina Leader-Post, now is the Roughridersâ senior writer and historian. His game story is right here. . . .
Darrell Davis, who once covered the Roughriders for The Leader-Post, was at the game and wrote this piece right here for the newspaper.
JUNIOR JOTTINGS:
The Victoria Royals have brought in Joey Poljanowski as vice-president of hockey operations. He had been the manager of hockey operations with the NHLâs Arizona Coyotes since 2019. He also has worked with Hockey Canada, the Toronto Maple Leafs and the OHLâs London Knights. . . . According to a news release from the Royals, Poljanowskiâs signing means that âDan Price will shift his focus completely to his role as head coach,â which is how it was from 2017-20, before he added the general managerâs responsibilities to his role. . . .
The Royals have agreed to a three-year extension with The Zone, an FM station owned by Pattison Media Ltd., for play-by-play rights and a new website â RoyalsFan.ca â that, according to a news release, âwill bring fresh and behind-the-scenes content as well as exclusive contesting opportunities.â . . . The contract extension also means that Marlon Martens will be back as the teamâs radio voice. The Zone has been the rights holder since the franchise moved from Chilliwack to Victoria for the 2011-12 season, and Martens is the only play-by-play announcer the team has known. . . .
Three WHLers who were selected in the NHL draft last month signed three-year entry-level contracts on Thursday. . . . D Tanner Molendyk of the Saskatoon Blades, who was the 24th overall selection, signed with the Nashville Predators. . . . The Predators also signed F Kalan Lind of the Red Deer Rebels. They selected him in the second round, 46th overall, of the draft. . . . The Washington Capitals signed F Andrew Cristall of the Kelowna Rockets. He was taken in the second round, 40th overall, of the 2023 NHL draft. . . . All three are 18 years of age, meaning that each is required to play in the NHL or be returned to his WHL team for the 2023-24 season. . . .
F Sammy May, who spent last season with the Vancouver Giants, has cleared WHL waivers and is a 2003-born free agent. He had one goal and eight assists in 63 games with the Giants in 2022-23. . . .
Rob Mahon, the play-by-play voice of the Prince Albert Raiders for the past two seasons, has joined the Brandon Wheat Kings as their media relations and broadcast director. Yes, that means he will be their radio voice. . . . Mahon was born and raised in Winnipeg. . . . Before heading to Prince Albert, he called the play for the SJHLâs Estevan Bruins for four seasons. . . . In Brandon, Mahon will take over from Brandon Crowe, who left after six seasons for a communications job with Hockey Canada. . . .
The BCHLâs Salmon Arm Silverbacks have hired Zach Stewart of their play-by-play voice and communications manager. He spent last season with the Merritt Centennials.

THE COACHING GAME:
Ăric Veilleux is the new head coach of the QMJHLâs Quebec Remparts, who are the Memorial Cup champions. He takes over from Patrick Roy, who left the organization following the tournament in Kamloops. . . . Veilleux spent the past four seasons as an assistant coach with the Syracuse Crunch, the AHL affiliate of the NHLâs Tampa Bay Lightning.

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three major junior leagues (the OHL, QMJHL and WHL) and its teams. . . . That suit was filed in June 2020. . . .




who are in contact with players,â according to Karissa Donkin of CBC News. . . . The policy also will include members of billet families who are eligible to be vaccinated. . . . Karl Jahnke, the QMJHLâs chief marketing officer, told Donkin that players had been notified of the policy a few weeks ago, adding that should a player choose not to be vaccinated âobviously, itâs a personal decision but they wonât be able to play.â . . . Trevor Georgie, the president and general manager of the Saint John Sea Dogs, said his organization has had âone player (who) wonât be able to meet those guidelines. We have one billet family that wonât be able to meet the guidelines, and we have one staff member (who) may not be able to meet those guidelines.â . . . Donkinâs story is 

22? Or will he go back home to play? Or does he end up in the AHL? . . . Jim Matheson, the veteran hockey writer with Postmedia in Edmonton, tweeted Monday afternoon that he is âhearingâ that Wallstedt âmight be playing for Portland . . . rather than back with Lulea.â . . . Wallstedt and Sebastian Cossa of the Edmonton Oil Kings were the two best goaltenders available in last weekendâs NHL draft. Cossa was taken by the Detroit Red Wings in the first round; the Minnesota Wild took Wallstedt five picks later. . . . Of course, because Wallstedt, who is to turn 19 on Nov. 14, was drafted from a European team, the Wild could sign him and place him with its AHL affiliate, the Iowa Wild. . . . The Winterhawks acquired Wallstedtâs WHL rights from the Moose Jaw Warriors on July 6 for a sixth-round pick in the WHLâs 2023 draft. The Warriors had selected him in the 2019 CHL import draft.
department to contract extensions â general manager Jeff Chynoweth, head coach Steve Hamilton and assistant coaches Trent Cassan and Joel Otto. The length of the extensions wasnât revealed. Chynoweth is preparing for his fifth season with the Hitmen, while Hamilton has been head coach through three seasons. Otto is going into his 15th season, with Cassan entering his sixth.
contract. He was the fifth overall selection in the CHLâs 2021 import draft. . . . Bettahar, 17, played just three games in 2020-21, putting up one assist for the Jungadler Mannheim U-20 side. In 2019-20, he had two goals and 25 assists in 35 games for the programâs U-17. . . . He is the first German player to have been selected by the Broncos in the import draft. . . . Swift Current also selected Russian F Alexei Shanaurin in the June 30 draft. He signed a WHL contract on July 21. . . . The Broncos didnât have any imports on the roster with which they finished the 2021 development season.