Showing posts with label Colin Sinclair. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Colin Sinclair. Show all posts

Sunday, March 19, 2017

Sale of Ice will mark end of an era . . . Source: Robison wants it done by month's end


The Kootenay Ice dropped a 4-1 decision to the host Calgary Hitmen on Saturday night in a game that may have marked the end of an era.
If, as is being speculated, the Ice franchise is about to be sold that game may have been the last one played by a team that could boast of having the Chynoweth name on its masthead.
Should the sale occur, that game also will have signalled the end of the Chynoweth era in the WHL,
Jeff Chynoweth (left) and his father, Ed.
(Photo: chl.ca)
something that stretches back to 1970.
That is something that shouldn’t be ignored, because there hasn’t been a bigger name in WHL history and, indeed, in the history of junior hockey.
It all began with Ed Chynoweth, a native of Dodsland, Sask., who left a Saskatoon hotel and joined the Blades as assistant general manager in 1970.
By the 1972-73 season, Chynoweth was in the WHL office — it was the WCHL then — as assistant to the executive secretary, which is the title that Thomas K. Fisher carried.
Chynoweth was named the league’s president at its annual meeting in June 1973, an position in which he would continue through 1978-79. He spent 1979-80 as a part-owner and the general manager of the Calgary Wranglers. However, he returned to the WHL office after that season and ruled the roost through 1995-96.
At that point, he was granted an expansion franchise, the Edmonton Ice, that played two seasons in the Alberta capital before moving to Cranbrook, B.C., and morphing into the Kootenay Ice.
He was the Ice’s president and governor, and also served as the chairman of the WHL’s board of governors (1996-98, 2004-08). He was the chairman of the board when he died, at 66, on April 22, 2008.
Under Chynoweth, the Ice won the 2002 Memorial Cup, a trophy he had presented to his son, Dean, in
Ed Chynoweth got to present his son, Dean,
with the Memorial Cup.
(Photo: Hockey Hall of Fame)
1988, when Dean, a rugged defenceman, was the captain of the Medicine Hat Tigers.
Dean played three seasons (1985-88) with the Tigers and later would return to the WHL for four seasons (2000-04) has head coach of the Seattle Thunderbirds. He would on from there and work for five seasons (2004-09) as general manager and head coach of the Swift Current Broncos.
Jeff is the Ice’s governor, president and general manager. He has been part of the WHL since 1986 and also has worked with the Spokane Chiefs (1986-87), Medicine Hat Tigers (1987-88), Brandon Wheat Kings (1988-89), Lethbridge Hurricanes (1989-91) and Red Deer Rebels (1991-95), before moving into the Ice’s front office in October 1995.
And, of course, there is Linda, the matriarch, who was married to Ed for 45 years. She has been there for all of it, from the day Ed joined the Blades’ organization through what will have been the family’s final days with the Ice. You can bet she has been a sounding board for more WHL-related decisions than any person in junior hockey history.
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A source familiar with the Kootenay Ice situation has told Taking Note that Ron Robison, the WHL
commissioner, “is hoping to get things done with the Cranbrook group before the end of (March).”
That group, which includes former Ice F Colin Sinclair, made an offer to purchase the Ice in February. However, the group was informed that its offer wouldn’t be considered pending a March 11 referendum in Nanaimo, a Vancouver Island city in which the WHL badly wants to have a franchise. However, that referendum was soundly defeated, meaning the City isn’t able to borrow $80 million to build an events centre that was to include an arena.
Our source indicated that the Cranbrook group “pulled its previous offer earlier in the week after Nanaimo voters rejected building a new arena complex. That offer price-matched the Nanaimo offer, with the only difference being there would be no offer of a (general manager’s) job to the current owner/GM.”
That, of course, is in reference to Jeff Chynoweth, the Ice’s governor, president and general manager.
The source added that, with the referendum in the rearview mirror, the Cranbrook group now is “prepared to continue but at a different price point.”
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OHLThe OHL’s Erie Otters are the first team in Canadian Hockey League history to win at least 50 games in four consecutive seasons. On Saturday, the Otters beat the visiting Guelph Storm, 5-2, improving their record to 50-15-3. Starting in 2013-14, the Otters won 52, 50 52 and 50 regular-season games. . . . The Otters’ head coach in each of those seasons has been Kris Knoblauch, a native of Imperial, Sask., who played in the WHL with the Red Deer Rebels, Edmonton Ice, Kootenay Ice and Lethbridge Hurricanes (1995-99). . . . He also has coached with the Prince Albert Raiders (2006-07) and Kootenay (2007-12). He was the Ice’s head coach for two seasons (2010-12). . . . The WHL’s Kelowna Rockets (2012-15), Edmonton Oil Kings (2011-14) and Kamloops Blazers (1989-92), and the QMJHL’s Saint John Sea Dogs (2009-12) all had three-season runs. . . . The Otters have captured their third straight Midwest Division title with the victory and have clinched the Hamilton Spectator Trophy as the OHL’s regular-season champions for a second consecutive season.

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Sunday, March 25, 2012

Notes from Victoria vs. Kamloops

By GREGG DRINNAN
Daily News Sports Editor
MAREK HRBAS
When the Kamloops Blazers acquired defenceman Marek Hrbas from the Edmonton Oil Kings on June 27, they said they were getting him for his puck-moving abilities.
It turns out they got a whole lot more than that.
Hrbas, who had a goal and 24 assists in 67 regular-season games, has been a physical force through two games of a first-round WHL playoff series with the Victoria Royals.
By today’s standards, Hrbas isn’t big — at 5-foot-11 and 185 pounds — but he is proving to be the fire hydrant or the brick wall about which people sometimes talk.
“People told me to be more physical because I’m not a real tall guy,” Hrbas said after the Blazers had taken a 2-0 series lead with a 7-4 victory over the visiting Royals on Saturday night. “I have to show that i can be physical, too, and finish my checks. I love it . . . that’s my game.”
Hrbas, who is from Plzen, Czech Republic, turned 19 on March 4. After his freshman season with Edmonton, in which he had 17 points in 64 games, Hrbas said he had a hard offseason.
“I did a good job last summer,” he said. “I got bigger, put on some pounds, 10 pounds of muscle.”
Hrbas, who has a great sense of humour and a captivating smile,  laughed and added: “I hope it’s all muscle.”
It is. If you don’t believe that, just ask any number of the Royals who have felt his wrath.
“I have to be strong, win the battles on the boards . . . it’s good,” Hrbas said. “That’s my job.”
To this point, he has done it well.
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The Blazers gave up their 2011 first-round import draft pick, 18th overall, and a fifth-round pick in the 2012 bantam draft to get Hrbas and the 27th selection in the import draft.
The Oil Kings used that 18th pick on Slovakian Martin Gernat, who led all first-year defencemen with 55 points in 60 games.
With the 27th selection, the Blazers took left-winger Tim Bozon, who is the Western Conference’s rookie of the year.
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ENIO SACILOTTO
Victoria assistant coach Enio Sacilotto is a veteran of the hockey wars, having made stops everywhere from the BCHL to Europe.
While in Europe, he coached a professional team in Lugano, Switzerland, whose roster included Philippe Bozon, who would go on to play in the NHL, and Sandro Bertaggia.
Bozon is the father of Tim Bozon, while Bertaggia’s son Alessio is in his first season with the Brandon Wheat Kings.
Sacilotto remembers Tim, who turned 18 on Saturday, and Alessio, also 18, skating after practices in Lugano “when they were about this high,” he says, holding one hand about three feet above the floor.
Anyone who has watched Tim Bozon play this season with the Blazes has seen a  competitive streak. Sacilotto knows how Bozon got it.
“Phil was a real fierce competitor,” Sacilotto said.
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There was a time when Logan Nelson was the quarterback of his high school football team. That would be a big deal in a place like Rogers, Minn., a city of 8,500 people located just northwest of Minneapolis-St. Paul.
LOGAN NELSON
These days, however, Nelson is a hockey player.
“My dad was a little upset but I think he’ll live,” Nelson, a 6-foot-2, 180-pound winger with the Royals, said with a chuckle.
So . . . why hockey over football?
“Hockey gave me a place where I was myself and I didn’t have to play for somebody else,” Nelson explained. “It reminded me of myself growing up. It gave me a place to get away. If I was having a bad day, hockey was the only thing that could fix it.
“I knew it was hockey over football.”
The road to a serious hockey career began at a United States Hockey League camp. His appearance there resulted in his playing a season of midget hockey in Kansas City.
From there, he moved on to the USHL’s Des Moines Buccaneers. He had nine points, including six goals, in 41 games there.
“The USHL,” he said, is a more defensive league than (the WHL).”
While all of this was happening, Marc Habscheid had taken over as general manager and head coach of the then-Chilliwack Bruins and was trying to strengthen the club’s presence in areas of the U.S.
Habscheid contact a couple of people, one of them being Mark Scott, who played for the Habscheid-coached Kamloops Blazers in 1997-98 and who now runs hockey camps in various areas of Canada and the U.S.
One thing led to another and the Royals placed Nelson on their protected list. And they’re glad they did.
Nelson, 18, had a fine first season, putting up 62 points, including 23 goals, in 71 games. He also was only minus-2 on a team that allowed a WHL-leading 325 goals.
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Tom Gaglardi, the Blazers’ majority owner, was in Dallas watching his Stars score a 4-1 NHL victory over the Flames on Saturday night. His father, Bob, was in the owners’ box at Interior Savings Centre. . . . Victoria F Taylor Crunk scored the Royals’ last goal; it was his first WHL goal. He had two assists in 39 regular-season games. Crunk, who turned 17 on Jan. 20, is from San Jacinto, Calif. . . . Blazers F Colin Smith had a tough night, taking four minor penalties, two for goaltender interference. His minors were responsible for four of Victoria’s five power plays. . . . It was nine years ago yesterday when the Kootenay Ice beat the visiting Blazers 3-2 with a goal in the fourth OT period. F Colin Sinclair ended the longest game in WHL history with a goal at 16:56 of the fourth extra period. Kamloops G Davis Parley stopped 77 shots, nine more than Jeff Glass of the Ice.

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