Showing posts with label Tyson McLellan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tyson McLellan. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

THE MacBETH REPORT:
Czech-ELHF Rudolf Cerveny (Regina, 2007-09) and F Martin Podlesak (Tri-City, Lethbridge, 2000-02) signed one-year plus option contract extensions with Ceske Budejovice (Czech Republic, Extraliga). . . . Cerveny had three goals and two assists in 33 games with Ceske Budejovice and four assists in 11 games on loan to Mlada Boleslav (Czech Republic, 1. Liga). . . . Podlesak had five goals and two assists in 32 games with Ceske Budejovice this season. . . .

D Michael Busto (Moose Jaw, Swift Current, Kootenay, 2001-07) signed a two-year contract extension with Angers (France, Ligue Magnus). He had three goals and 11 assists in 26 games this season. Angers finished the regular season in first place and lost to Rouen in Game 7 of the final, 4-3 in overtime. . . .

F Alex Leavitt (Swift Current, Everett, 2003-06) signed a one-year contract with Oskarshamn (Sweden, Allsvenskan). He had one goal and four assists in 13 games with Medvescak Zagreb (Croatia, Austria Erste Bank Liga) and 13 goals and 35 assists in 32 games with Schwenninger Wild Wings (Germany, 2. Bundesliga) this season. . . .

F Petr Dvorak (Regina, 2002-03) signed a one-year contract extension with Cracovia Krakow (Poland, Ekstraliga). He had 15 goals and 13 assists in 32 games this season for the Polish champions. . . .

F Curtis Huppe (Medicine Hat, Lethbridge, Tri-City, 1995-2000) signed a one-year contract extension with the Guilford Flames (England Premier). He had 50 goals and 31 assists in 50 games with the English Premier champions this season.
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AHLThe USHL held Phase II of its draft last night. If you’re a fan of drafts, you have to love the USHL round-by-round. It’s right here, and if you click on a player’s name you will get his stats. Great stuff!
ushl.rinknetcloud.com/draft27.htm
Some names that caught my eye . . .

USHLF Chris Wilkie was the second overall selection, going to the Tri-City Storm, in the the USHL draft on Tuesday evening. Wilkie, who turns 17 on July 10, has committed to North Dakota and has said he is leaving the U.S. National Team Development Program. . . . His WHL rights belong to the Victoria Royals, who selected him in the fourth round of the 2011 bantam draft. . . . The Storm plays out of Kearney, Nebraska. Wilkie is from Omaha and would become the first Nebraska native to play for the Storm should he, as expected, sign with there.

USHLStill with the USHL draft, F Tyson McClellan, the son of San Jose Sharks head coach Todd McClellan, was picked by the Waterloo Black Hawks in the sixth round, 84th overall. Tyson, 17, has twice been in training camp with the Kamloops Blazers. . . .
Waterloo selected F Tanner MacMaster of Calgary in the fourth round, 57th overall. The Spokane Chiefs selected him in the first round, 19th overall, of the WHL’s 2011 bantam draft. He played this season with t he AJHL’s Camrose Kodiaks and has committed to Boston College. . . .

AHLF Ryan Gropp of Kamloops was taken in the eighth round, 108th overall, by the Des Moines Buccaneers in the USHL’s draft on Tuesday evening. Gropp, who turns 17 on Sept. 16, played this season with the BCHL’s Penticton Vees. His WHL rights belong to the Seattle Thunderbirds, who selected him sixth overall in the WHL’s 2011 draft. The 6-foot-2, 180-pounder has yet to publicly declare whether he will play in the WHL or take the NCAA route.

USHLG Dawson MacAuley, whose WHL rights were acquired Thursday by the Regina Pats, was taken by the Lincoln Stars in the 22nd round, 326th overall. . . . MacAuley, who turns 19 on June 14, is from Prince Albert. He has some WHL experience with t he Medicine Hat Tigers, but played most of this season with the SJHL-champion Yorkton Terriers. The Pats acquired MacAuley from the Calgary Hitmen for a fourth-round pick in the 2013 bantam draft.

USHL
The Dubuque Fighting Saints selected D David Quenneville of Edmonton with the last pick of the 27th round. He was selected 10th overall by the Medicine Hat Tigers in the WHL bantam draft on Thursday.
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THE COACHING GAME:
The BCHL’s Langley Rivermen have signed Jon Calvano as assistant general manager and associate coach. Calvano spent the past three years as head coach of the BCHL’s Coquitlam Express, going 92-87-3-4. . . . With the Rivermen, Calvano will work alongside GM/head coach Bobby Henderson.
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QMJHL

In the QMJHL, the host Baie-Comeau Drakkar scored a 3-1 victory over the Halifax Mooseheads. . . . Halifax, which now is 14-1 in these playoffs, holds a 2-1 lead with Game 4 in Baie-Comeau tonight.
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The WHL’s playoff situation:
CHAMPIONSHIP FINAL
Portland vs. Edmonton
(Portland leads, 2-1)
(All times local)
Game 1: Friday — Edmonton 4 at Portland 1 (10,097)
Game 2: Saturday — Edmonton 0 at Portland 3 (10,947)
Game 3: Tuesday — Portland 3 at Edmonton 1 (8,513)
Game 4: Today, May 8, at Edmonton, 7 p.m.
Game 5: Friday, at Portland (Rose Garden), 7 p.m.
x-Game 6: Sunday, at Edmonton, 4 p.m.
x-Game 7: Monday, May 13, at Portland (Rose Garden), 7 p.m.
x – if necessary.

WHL on Shaw
All games are being televised by Shaw in Canada. They also will be televised in Portland, with Games 4, 5 and 6 on Comcast SportsNet, and Game 7 on Root Sports.
Comcast and Roots will pick up the Shaw telecast that feature play-by-play man Dan Russell, along with Bill Wilms, Peter Loubardias and Andy Neal.
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TUESDAY’S GAME:
In Edmonton, F Ty Rattie tied the WHL record for career playoff goals as the Portland Winterhawks beat the Oil Kings, 3-1. . . . Rattie scored his WHL-leading 17th goal to give Portland a 2-0 lead in the first period. That was his 47th career playoff goal, tying him with F Mark Pederson (Medicine Hat, 1983-88). . . . Rattie has played in 73 career playoff games; Pederson played in 71. . . . Rattie also leads the WHL with 33 points, in 18 games. Last season, he put up 33 points in 21 games, finishing one point behind then-teammate F Sven Baertschi. . . . The Winterhawks dominated the first period, getting goals from F Taylor Leier (8:39), Rattie (8:14) and F Oliver Bjorkstrand (15:48). . . . Portland G Mac Carruth, who lost his shutout bid when F Michael St. Croix scored at 9:13 of the second, stopped 38 shots. . . . Edmonton G Laurent Brossoit turned saide 24. . . . The Oil Kings remain without F Trevor Cheek, who has an undisclosed injury and may not play at all in the series, and D Griffin Reinhart, whose season was ended by a skate cut to a foot that required surgery.
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The Winterhawks gained at least a measure of revenge with last night’s victory, writes Evan Daum, who is covering the games in Edmonton for The Oregonian. That story is right here.
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“Maybe they had no ‘puck luck’, but the Edmonton Oil Kings fell 3-1 in Game 3 of the WHL finals at Rexall Place — and 2-1 in the series — to the Portland Winterhawks at Rexall Place on Tuesday night,” writes Dave (Crash) Cameron of the Edmonton Sun. His story is right here.
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Veteran Edmonton Sun columnist Terry Jones figures the Winterhawks “are going to be hard to stop now.” His column from Game 3 is right here.
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The Oil Kings, writes Chris O’Leary of the Edmonton Journal, “have started each game of the series progressively slower, with the results becoming increasingly predicable.” His game story is right here.
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Columnist John MacKinnon of the Edmonton Journal writes that the Oil Kings know what they want to do, but “it’s putting the plan into action that’s hanging them up.” His piece is right here.
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CHECKING-FROM-BEHIND COUNT (21):
None

CHECKING-TO-THE-HEAD COUNT (7):
None
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TWEET OF THE DAY:
From the USHL’s Chicago Steel (@ChicagoSteel): “With (its) final pick the Steel draft Jack Jablonski. Congrats @Jabs_13 on becoming a member of the Steel!”
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From Jack Jablonski (@Jabs_13): “Best night ever. #steel”

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Saturday, August 25, 2012

By GREGG DRINNAN
Daily News Sports Editor
Jayden Halbgewachs was able to chuckle about it after the fact.
But he really doesn’t want to get caught with his head down too often.
Halbgewachs, the Kamloops Blazers’ first selection in the 2012 WHL bantam draft, got caught looking in his feet for the puck in the third period of a rookie scrimmage Friday night and got trampled by defenceman Connor Clouston.
It was Day 1 of the Blazers’ training camp at McArthur Island Sport and Event Centre, and Halbgewachs could feel good because he scored the winner as Team Recchi skated to a 3-2 victory over Team Iginla.
Halbgewachs (it’s pronounced HALLB-ge-walks) took a nifty pass from winger Mitch Friesen off a 2-on-1 break and quickly fired a shot over goaltender Cole Kehler’s glove hand.
But in this game, when you’re 5-foot-7 and 142 pounds, you’re supposed to score; you’re not supposed to get caught in the trolley tracks.
“I’m not sure who it was,” offered a smiling Halbgewachs. “I had my head down and he got me in the head, I guess.”
Halbgewachs, the 19th overall selection in the draft, has been smallish at virtually every level. Last season, he put up 89 points, including 55 goals, in 24 games for the bantam AA Prairie Storm.
“You have to fight through it,” he said of his lack of size. “You have to do what you can do and keep your head up and watch out for guys coming afer you. Get out of the way or take the hit, once in a while.
“As long as I keep my head up . . . I had my head down there looking for the puck.”
Other than that one instance, Halbgewachs showed that he is a terrific skater with a wonderful skill set and a busy stick. On one shift, he got hemmed in a corner by Team Iginla’s Evan Bowden and Ezra Hall, but after some dazzling moves still came out with the puck.
“He’s a pretty skillful young player,” offered Blazers head coach Guy Charron. “He’s not big in size but certainly has tremendous skills.
“The attribute I really like in a player is the ability to skate and he certainly has that.”
Halbgewachs knows that he will be held over for main camp, which begins Sunday, and expects to play in the Blue-White game on Tuesday and against the visiting Victoria Royals on Thursday at Interior Savings Centre. He is eager but admits there are butterflies at the thought of moving up to play with the big boys.
“I’m really looking forward to that but I’m a little bit nervous, with their size and stuff and knowing that most of them are veterans and have played on the team,” he said. “But it should be good.”
He also knows that playing with better players can only help his game.
“Hopefully they know where they’re going and I know where I should be going,” he said.
Halbgewachs is from Emerald Park, a community located just east of Regina on the Trans-Canada Highway. His father, Jamie, owns Glacier Glass in Regina.
There are two other brothers — Taylor, 12, is a goalie, while Brandon, 18, is going to camp with Victoria. If he doesn’t stick with the Royals, Brandon, a forward, will play with the SJHL’s Estevan Bruins.
To say that Jayden has had a busy summer would be something of an understatement, but such is life for our best young hockey players these days.
For starters, he said that he tried to work out five days a week; he also played stick-and puck — players wear helmets and skates and work with a stick and pucks — after school following last season’s conclusion.
He spent a week at the Allstate All-Canadians Mentorship Camp in Toronto, a week-long endeavour that is by invitation only. There also was a Sask First camp on the campus of Notre Dame College in Wilcox, Sask. And, oh yes, let’s not forget the two weeks of power skating in Regina.
Before journeying to Kamloops, he was in camp with the midget AAA Regina Pat Canadians for whom he will play this season.
So . . . is he tired?
“No. . . . I’m ready to go,” he said.
JUST NOTES: F Dallas Calvin, who signed with the Blazers on March 16, 2011, isn’t in camp. Calvin, who put up 77 points in 41 games with the junior B Beaver Valley NiteHawks last season, apparently has told the Blazers that he wants to concentrate on playing baseball. He remains on Kamloops’ 50-player list. . . . D Calen Whitworth (hip) of Surrey is listed as day-to-day. . . . F D.J. Crane of Fort Qu’Appelle, Sask., didn’t show up, so F Mitch Lipon was moved to Team Iginla and is wearing No. 11. Lipon, 16, is the younger brother of Blazers F J.C. Lipon. . . . Scrimmages today are at 9 a.m., noon, 5:30 p.m., and 7:30 p.m. . . . On Sunday, main camp games are at 9 and 10:30 a.m., and noon. . . . Camp moves to Interior Savings Centre on Monday. . . . In Friday’s rookie scrimmages, Team Recchi beat Team Iginla 2-1 and Team Doan got past Team Sydor, 5-1. Drew Bish also scored for Team Recchi, with Jeran Knorr replying for Team Iginla. Team Sydor got goals from Spencer Bast, Jordan Thomson, Sean Pilet, Tyler Olson and Bruce Sharp. Nick Chyzowski scored for Team Sydor.
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Tim O’Donovan, the Blazers’ media co-ordinator, was kind enough to put together a release showing the hockey bloodlines in Kamloops’ training camp.
Here’s a look . . .
F Nick Chyzowski, who was selected by the Blazers in the second round of the 2012 WHL bantam draft, is following in his father’s footsteps. Chyzowski’s father Dave played three seasons with the Blazers before playing 126 games in the NHL. . . .
D Connor Clouston, selected by the Blazers in the third round of the 2011 draft, is the son of Medicine Hat Tigers general manager/head coach Shaun Clouston. The elder Clouston also played four seasons with the Portland Winterhawks in the late 1980s. . . .
D Jaiden Focht is the son of former NHL/WHL D Dan Focht. The elder Focht played two seasons in the WHL with Tri-City and Regina before playing 82 games in the NHL from 2001-04 with Phoenix and Pittsburgh. . . .
D Nolan Gallagher is the younger brother of Vancouver Giants star F Brendan Gallagher. Brendan, 20, put up 280 points over the past four seasons with the Giants and is expected to play in the Montreal Canadiens’ system this season. . . .
F Charlie Gawlicki was selected by the Blazers in the sixth round of the 2012 draft. His father Jeff was selected by the Los Angeles Kings in the ninthth round of the 1987 NHL draft. Jeff played four seasons at Northern Michigan U. . . .
F Nathan Gelsinger has joined his older brother Brayden at training camp. Brayden finished last season with the Blazers, suiting up for two playoff games. Brayden, 17, will be in main camp; Nathan, 15, is in the rookie camp as a free agent invite. . . .
D Connor Hamonic is the younger brother of Tri-City Americans D Justin Hamonic. Connor was selected by the Blazers in the seventh round of the 2011 WHL bantam draft. . . .
Veteran F J.C. Lipon is joined in camp by his younger brother Mitchell, who plays for the midget AAA Regina Pat Canadians. . . .
F Tyson McLellan is the son of former Swift Current Broncos GM/head coach Todd McLellan, who now is the head coach of the NHL’s San Jose Sharks. Tyson was listed by the Blazers at the conclusion of last season’s training camp. . . .
D Cameron Trott is the brother of Portland Winterhawks F Jason Trott. Cameron is a free agent invite. . . .
D MacKenzie Ferner is attending his third Blazers training camp. Ferner was selected by the Blazers in the eighth round of the 2010 draft. He is the son of Mark Ferner, a former Blazers defenceman who is heading into his second season as head coach of the Everett Silvertips.

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