Showing posts with label Kruise Reddick. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kruise Reddick. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Another player leaves the game

Max Adolph retired on Tuesday.
You can bet the news didn’t cause even a ripple in Shawinigan, Que., where major junior hockey is playing out its season at the Memorial Cup tournament.
Max Adolph?
He was a fourth-round selection by the Kelowna Rockets in the WHL’s 2007 bantam draft. Adolph’s WHL career ended after just 97 regular-season games, 36 of them in 2010-11, none of them this season. He leaves with 16 points and 52 penalty minutes to his credit.
In the summer of 2009, his parents sent him to Kelowna as a 17-year-old centre with big dreams. He returned to the family home in Saskatoon three years later, having experienced six concussions.
“After assessment from our doctors, we’re doing what is in the best interest of Max,” Bruce Hamilton, the Rockets’ president and general manager, said at the time. “Our medical team has advised Max to avoid body contact and shut his season down for now.”
Adolph, the son of U of Saskatchewan Huskies head coach Dave Adolph, never played again.
Concussion-related problems limited Max to 36 games in 2010-11. He suffered a concussion on Oct. 30, 2010, in Portland, returned in January and was knocked out of the lineup again with another head injury. He tried to return in February but was gone again after just two weeks.
Adolph attended training camp prior to this season but suffered yet another concussion in an exhibition game and was sent home.
“At the time,” Adolph, who turned 20 on April 1, told Regan Bartel, the veteran radio voice of the Rockets, “(going home) didn’t seem like the best decision. But now, (after) going to school and looking back at it, I think it was the better decision rather than risk more injuries and turning into a vegetable.”
It is inconceivable that a WHL player, a young man who has so much to live for, is even thinking about “turning into a vegetable.”
Yes, the time has come for the WHL to take its head out of the sand and get serious about head injuries.
You may recall almost a year ago that the WHL, with great fanfare, announced a seven-step plan aimed at addressing the issues of headshots and concussions.
“The WHL is fully committed to addressing head blows and concussions in a comprehensive manner,” WHL commissioner Ron Robison said in a news release.
The WHL, whose teams had experienced more than 100 concussions during the 2010-11 season, immediately stopped reporting specific injuries on its weekly injury report. Instead, every injury was either of the lower- or upper-body variety. You can bet, however, that concussions didn’t decrease this season in the WHL.
It is time, then, for the WHL to stop with the lip service and do something about the concussions. It is time to start walking the walk.
Any contact with an opponent’s head, no matter how incidental, should be greeted with at least a minor penalty. Referees need to stop erring on the side of caution — more major penalties and game misconducts need to be assessed for headshots.
Richard Doerksen, the WHL’s vice-president, hockey, handles discipline. He needs to stop with the one- and two-game suspensions; he needs to start with five and work up from there.
It also is time for the WHL to outlaw fighting. Granted, a small number of concussions are the result of fights, but even one is too many. A fighting major should be accompanied by a game misconduct. There also should be a sliding suspension scale for those inclined to fight on a regular or semi-regular basis.
And please don’t try feeding me the nonsense about how getting rid of fighting will lead to an increase in stickwork. There are referees on the ice who should be calling the penalties.
Remember, too, that as the Edmonton Oil Kings play through the aforementioned Memorial Cup, their roster is missing two players.
Veteran forward Colton Stephenson retired without playing even one game this season. Five concussions meant his career line ended with 17 points in 70 games. Stephenson will turn 20 on July 16.
Jesse Pearson, a defenceman who turned 21 on March 13, got into 18 games last season. He never played again after suffering a concussion in a fight on Dec. 17, 2010. Pearson now is an assistant coach with the Oil Kings.
The list of players who have retired due to concussion-related issues grows longer and longer. It includes Jesse Wallin, the Red Deer Rebels’ general manager and head coach, Kelowna assistant coach Ryan Cuthbert, former Tri-City Americans forward Taylor Procyshen and on and on.
That list now includes Max Adolph. It soon may include Joey Hishon.
Joey Hishon?
You may remember him from the 2011 Memorial Cup. It was May 21, 2011, when Hishon, a forward in his fourth season with the OHL’s Owen Sound Attack, was on the receiving end of an ugly elbow to the head from Kootenay Ice defenceman Brayden McNabb.
McNabb was suspended for one game. This season, he played 25 games with the NHL’s Buffalo Sabres, and another 45 with their AHL affiliate, the Rochester Americans.
Joey Hishon?
A first-round selection by the Colorado Avalanche in the 2010 NHL draft, Hishon hasn’t played since May 21, 2011.

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Wednesday, August 10, 2011

THE MacBETH REPORT:
Brothers D Logan (Tri-City, 2001-06) and F Shay (Red Deer, 2000-04) Stephenson have been released from their tryout contracts by Jesenice (Slovenia, Austria Erste Bank Liga).
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 JUST NOTES: The U of Alberta Golden Bears have added eight WHL products for the 2011-12 season. According to a U of A news release: “Forwards Levko Koper (Spokane 2006-11), Kruise Reddick (Tri-City 2006-11), Brett Ferguson (Red Deer 2008-11), Jordan Hickmott (Medicine Hat/Prince Albert/Edmonton 2005-11), James Dobrowolski (Prince Albert/Prince George 2007-11) and Travis Toomey (Saskatoon/Seattle 2005-11) will bolster the Golden Bears attack, while defencemen Jordan Rowley (Kamloops/Prince Albert 2005-11), Thomas Carr (Medicine Hat 2008-11), and Barron Smith (London/Peterborough 2008-2011) bulk up the blue-line.” . . . The Golden Bears, the defending Canada West champions, open camp on Sept. 1 under interim head coach Stan Marple. . . . The U of Regina Cougars have added three more former WHLers to their roster. G Lucas Gore (Chilliwack, 2008-11), D Joel Kot (Red Deer, 2007-09) and D Blaine Tendler (Prince Albert, 2006-09). . . . C C.J. Stretch, who holds the Kamloops Blazers’ career games played record (341), has signed on for a second season with the ECHL’s Ontario Reign. Stretch, who is from Irvine, Calif., had 21 points in 46 games last season.

gdrinnan@kamloopsnews.ca
     
gdrinnan.blogspot.com
     
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Monday, March 21, 2011

Sunday . . .

THE MacBETH REPORT:
F Tyler Beechey (Kootenay, Calgary, 1997-2002) and D Jason Holland (Kamloops, 1992-96) signed one-year contract extensions with DEG Metro Stars Dusseldorf (Germany, DEL). Beechey had 20 goals and 26 assists in 51 games and Holland had eight goals and 19 assists in 51 games this season for the Metro Stars.
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G Deven Dubyk of the Medicine Hat Tigers and G Mark Segal of the Vancouver Giants posted shutouts on Sunday, the final day of the WHL’s regular season.
That brought to 88 the number of blank jobs in the league this season, which equals last season’s total.
The WHL single-season record is 141 (2004-05), followed by 120 (2006-07). The last two seasons are the sixth-highest totals in WHL history.
Darcy Kuemper of the Red Deer Rebels led the WHL (and the CHL) with 13 shutouts, tying the WHL single-season record. He now shares it with Bryan Bridges (Seattle, 2004-05) and Kelly Guard (Kelowna (2003-04).
The Spokane Chiefs put up eight shutouts, second to Red Deer, with James Reid and Mac Engel each earning four.
The Swift Current Broncos, Prince George Cougars and Vancouver each put up six.
On the other side of the coin, the Everett Silvertips were blanked 10 times, while the Calgary Hitmen and Swift Current each was shut out nine times.
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JUST NOTES: F Garrett Mitchell of the Regina Pats will finish the season with the AHL’s Hershey Bears, as he did a year ago. Mitchell signed a contract with the parent Washington Capitals on Saturday. He was a sixth-round pick in the 2009 NHL draft. . . . Two OHL general managers lost their jobs Sunday, the final day of the season. The Sarnia Sting fired Dave MacQueen, while the Soo Greyhounds did the same with Dave Torrie. Neither team qualified for the playoffs.
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THE MATCHUPS:
Eastern Conference:
Saskatoon (1) vs. Prince Albert (8)
Red Deer (2) vs. Edmonton (7)
Medicine Hat (3) vs. Brandon (6)
Kootenay (4) vs. Moose Jaw (5)
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Western Conference:
Portland (1) vs. Everett (8)
Kelowna (2) vs. Prince George (7)
Spokane (3) vs. Chilliwack (6)
Tri-City (4) vs. Vancouver (5)
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In Calgary, G Deven Dubyk stopped 40 shots for his second straight shutout as the Medicine Hat Tigers dumped the Hitmen, 2-0. . . . Dubyk earned his first career shutout Saturday in a 1-0 victory over the visiting Hitmen. . . . The victory allowed the Tigers to finish with 100 points. . . . F Emerson Etem scored both goals in Sunday’s game, giving him 45. . . . F Linden Vey had one assist, giving him 116 points. That assist made all the difference because he won the WHL scoring title by one point over Spokane F Tyler Johnson. . . . The Tigers haven’t had a scoring champion since Tom Lysiak (154 points, 1972-73). . . . Johnson had a goal, his WHL-leading 53rd, and an assist in a 6-3 victory in Portland. . . .
In Vancouver, G Mark Segal stopped 28 shots as the Giants beat the Everett Silvertips, 5-0. . . . Segal put up six shutouts this season. . . . F Spencer Bennett scored twice, giving him 37 goals, and added an assist. . . . Everett was blanked 3-0 by G Lucas Gore and the host Chilliwack Bruins on Saturday night. . . . The Silvertips haven’t scored in more than 142 minutes. They have been shut out a WHL-high 10 times this season. . . . The victory allowed the Giants to move past the idle Chilliwack Bruins and into fifth place in the Western Conference. That puts Vancouver up against the Tri-City Americans in the first round. The Bruins will meet the Spokane Chiefs. . . .
In Kent, Wash., F Kruise Reddick scored his 20th goal of the season at 2:39 of OT to give the Tri-City Americans a 4-3 victory over the host Seattle Thunderbirds. . . . The loser point lifted the Thunderbirds into a ninth-place tie with the Kamloops Blazers. . . . The Americans, who have won three in a row, went 9-0-0 against Seattle this season. . . .
In Portland, the Spokane Chiefs scored the game’s last five goals and beat the Winterhawks, 6-3. . . . The Chiefs rested D Jared Cowen, their captain, and had the C on the chest of F Darren Kramer. . . . F Connor Chartier, a second-round pick in the 2009 bantam draft, scored his first goal for the Chiefs. . . . F Ryan Johansen scored the game’s first two goals for Portland, giving him 40 on the season. . . . The Chiefs draw the Chilliwack Bruins in the first round. The Chiefs have home-ice advantage by virtue of being the No. 3 seed, but their building isn’t available so the series will open in Chilliwack on Friday.
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SUNDAY’S CFB COUNT:
One minor:
Everett D Rasmus Rissanen

Thursday, November 4, 2010

An interesting scouting day . . .

I mentioned here yesterday a Monday game in the OHL — Kingston at Ottawa — that began at 10:30 a.m., and attracted 9,826 fans, many of whom were schoolchildren.
Well, it seems OHL’s Oshawa Generals played host to a day game on Tuesday, this one against the Mississauga IceDogs. It began at 11 a.m., and attendance was announced at 3,568.
It did result in something of an interesting day for Steve Bowman, who scouts for the NHL’s Washington Capitals.
Bowman sent me this note:
“The 11 a.m. start in Oshawa allowed me to complete what I think is a first in the scouting community: Mississauga at Oshawa at 11 a.m., and Spokane at Saskatoon at 7 p.m.
“It was a ‘Perfect Storm’ of scheduling. Happened to be starting a WHL swing this week, morning game near Toronto, direct flight to Saskatoon in the late afternoon, games with draft prospects, and proximity of the airport to the rink.”
Steve writes that he arrived in Saskatoon at 6:10 p.m., so had 50 minutes until game time.
What I'm wondering, Steve, is whether you saw the end of either of those games. LOL!
I’m also told that Mississauga has one of these games scheduled on Nov. 10 when the Niagara IceDogs are to visit the St. Michael’s Majors. That game is to start at 11 a.m.
An NHL scout could watch that game and perhaps get to Vancouver in time to watch the Giants play host to the Red Deer Rebels that night.
By the way, I was reminded that the Edmonton Oil Kings had a weekday promotion last season in which they played a day game. The poster noted there was a “decent crowd with 60 per cent-plus of school-aged variety.”
A look back shows that the Kootenay Ice beat the host Oil Kings 4-2 in front of 9,168 fans in a game with an 11:30 a.m. faceoff.
And a quick check of this season's schedule shows that the Kootenay Ice will meet the Oil Kings in Edmonton on Wednesday, Jan. 12, with faceoff set for 11:30 a.m.
So apologies to Bob Green and the gang with the Oil Kings.
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Elliott Pap of the Vancouver Sun reports that Vancouver Giants F Randy McNaught, who is out with a sprained ankle, “suffered a setback in practice this week and is again out indefinitely. He was on crutches Wednesday.” . . . Pap also writes that Giants head coach Don Hay is doing his best not to play up what certainly would appear to be a goaltending controversy. Brendan Jensen has started seven of the last 10 games and will get the call Friday against the visiting Kelowna Rockets. But Hay won’t go so far as to say Jensen is the club’s No. 1 goaltender. Pap’s piece is right here.
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F Kruise Reddick should be back in the Tri-City Americans’ lineup on Saturday when they play host to the Red Deer Rebels. He’s been out since Oct. 9 with a concussion. Reddick has missed eight games. . . . F Charles Inglis of the Prince George Cougars has been added to the Team WHL roster for the Subway Super Series game scheduled for Nov. 18. That game, against a touring Russian side, is to be played in Prince George. When the roster was announced, it only featured 11 players so this completes the roster. . . . Hello, Hockey Canada or WHL or CHL or Rogers Sportsnet or the Kremlin, or whomever it is who picks these teams. When does Kamloops Blazers F Brendan Ranford get named to the WHL team that will play the Russians in Kamloops on Nov. 17?
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WEDNESDAY’S HIGHLIGHTS:
SPOKANE 2 at PRINCE ALBERT 5: F Mark McNeill scored two goals and set up another for the Raiders (6-8-4) who snapped a seven-game losing streak. . . . The Raiders, who are 3-3-3 at home, had lost four straight there. . . . McNeill, who has seven goals, closed it out with an empty-netter. . . . F Justin Maylan and McNeill gave the Raiders a 2-0 lead before the game was five minutes old. . . . The Chiefs (7-8-0) tied it on goals by F Levko Koper, who has eight, and F Brady Brassart, who got his first, before the period ended. . . . F Todd Fiddler broke the tie, with his fourth, at 19:49. . . . Raiders freshman F Mike Winther added insurance with his fourth at 14:52 of the third. . . . The line of McNeill, Fiddler and Igor Revenko combined for six points. . . . Spokane is 2-2-0 on an East Division swing and had won two in a row. . . . D Jordan Rowley (broke wrist), who hadn’t played since opening night, was back in P.A.’s lineup. He is sporting a playing cast. . . . Raiders G Eric Williams stopped 34 shots, 11 more than Spokane’s Mac Engel. . . . Spokane was 0-for-4 on the PP; the Raiders were 0-for-1. . . . The Chiefs were without D Garrett Leedahl who was hurt Tuesday in Saskatoon. He likely won’t play on the duration of this swing. . . . Attendance was 1,978. . . . Checking-from-behind count: Zero.
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SASKATOON 5 at SWIFT CURRENT 4: The Blades (12-5-0) erased a 4-2 deficit with three third-period goals. . . . The last two came from F Josh Nicholls, his eighth and ninth, at 12:21 and 18:39 of the third period. . . . Nicholls broke the 4-4 tie just moments after the Blades had killed off a delay-of-game penalty to G Adam Morrison. . . . F Justin Dowling’s PP goal at 18:02 of the second gave the Broncos (9-9-0) a 4-2 lead. . . . F Chris Collins, acquired Monday for F Curt Gogol, had a goal and an assist for the Blades. . . . D Duncan Siemens added three assists for Saskatoon, while D Stefan Elliott added two. . . . Dowling, F Killian Hutt and F Brad Hoban each had a goal and assist for the Broncos, while F Cody Eakin had two assists. . . . Morrison made 19 saves. Mark Friesen stopped 22 for the Broncos. . . . Saskatoon was 1-for-4 on the PP; Swift Current was 3-for-6. . . . Attendance was 2,086. . . . Checking-from-behind count: Zero.
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KELOWNA 5 at KAMLOOPS 2: F Mitchell Callahan enjoyed his second four-point game in two nights to lead the Rockets (6-10-0). . . . Kelowna trailed 2-1 going into the third period when it scored three straight power-play goals. . . . The Blazers (8-8-1) had won four of five. . . . Callahan had two goals and two assists in a 6-2 victory over the visiting Prince George Cougars on Tuesday. . . . C Shane McColgan was in on each of those PP goals, scoring one and setting up two others. . . . Three players scored their first WHL goals in this game — F Chase Souto of the Blazers and F Colton Heffley and D Damon Severson of the Rockets. . . . The Rockets were 3-for-5 on the PP; the Blazers were 0-for-5. . . . Kelowna G Adam Brown, in his 100th WHL game, stopped 37 shots. . . . Kamloops G Jeff Bosch turned aside 27. . . . Bosch stopped F Evan Bloodoff on a third-period penalty shot. . . . Attendance was 3,746. . . . Checking-from-behind count: Zero, but only because Kamloops F Bernhard Keil was given an interference penalty for what clearly was a hit from behind on F Geordie Wudrick.
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LETHBRIDGE 0 at MEDICINE HAT 7: G Tyler Bunz stopped 17 shots for his first shutout of the season and the third of his career. . . . The Tigers (9-5-0) have won three straight. . . . F Wacey Hamilton scored twice for Medicine Hat. He has seven on the season. . . . He also had an assist and was plus-4. . . . F Hunter Shinkaruk, F Ryan Harrison and F Kale Kessy each had a goal and an assist. . . . Lethbridge starter Brandon Anderson stopped 10 of 14 shots before giving way to Dylan Tait, who turned aside 11 of 14. . . . Lethbridge (6-6-3) was 0-for-4 on the PP and now is 6-for-67 on the season. . . . The Tigers were 1-for-6. . . . Attendance was 4,006. . . . Checking-from-behind count: Zero.

gdrinnan@kamloopsnews.ca
gdrinnan.blogspot.com
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