Wednesday, August 31, 2011

THE MacBETH REPORT:
F Petr Kalus (Regina, 2005-06) was released by Jokerit Helsinki (Finland, SM-Liiga) at the end of his tryout contract. He had one
goal in three exhibition games for Jokerit this month. . . .
F Shay (Red Deer, 2000-04) and D Logan (Tri-City, 2001-06)
Stephenson each signed one-year contracts with Vålerenga Oslo (Norway, GET-Ligaen). Logan had two goals and three assists in 43 games for the Adirondack Phantoms (AHL) last season, while older brother Shay didn’t play. Two seasons ago, Shay had six goals and 13 assists in 36 games with the Las Vegas Wranglers (ECHL) and four goals and two assists in seven games with Vålerenga. . . .
F Josh Bonar (Kamloops, Vancouver, Regina, 2000-03) signed a one-year contract extension with Miskolci Jegesmedve JSE (Hungary, Interliga). He had 29 goals and 30 assists in 31 games for Miskolc during MOL Liga play last season, leading the league in goals and scoring. In Hungarian league play (OB I. Bajnoksag), Bonar had 10 goals and 10 assists in 14 games. The MOL Liga, comprising teams from Hungary and Romania, was renamed Interliga this summer.
———
JUST NOTES: The Regina Pats and Evraz Place announced Tuesday that they have agreed on a five-year lease for the Brandt Centre. If you have followed this story, you know that this is like The Rock and Stone Cold reaching a truce back in the day. . . . "We are pleased that we are able to announce a longer term lease agreement with Evraz Place. The process has been long and at times frustrating for both parties but with the help of our legal counsel Neil Tulloch and the co-operation of Neil Donnelly from Evraz we were able to find some common ground," Pats president Brent Parker said in a news release. . . . The previous deal expired on May 31. . . . Greg Harder of the Regina Leader-Post has more right here. . . .
The staff at the Okanagan Hockey Academy in Penticton includes some names that will be familiar to WHL fans. Blake Wesley, a former Portland Winterhawks defenceman is the director of hockey operations. . . . Robert Dirk, a former Regina Pats defenceman, is the GM and head coach of the junior B team, the Penticton Lakers. . . . Brian Pellerin, who played with the Prince Albert Raiders and has worked as an assistant coach with Portland, is the prep team head coach. . . . Tim Hunter, who played in the WHL with the Seattle Breakers, is the head coach of the varsity Red team. . . . Mike Needham, who was a sniper with the Kamloops Blazers and is on their staff as skills coach, is head coach of the OHA’s bantam Tier 1 team. . . . Former Blazers head coach Barry Smith is head coach of the bantam Tier 2 team. . . .
———
The Saskatoon Blades will travel to Prince Albert for an exhibition game against the Raiders tonight. Drew Wilson has all the action on CKBI and you can find it on the Internet.
———
A tip of the hat to general manager/head coach Jesse Wallin and the Red Deer Rebels.
D Matt Dumba has yet to skate in the Rebels’ training camp, which is exactly what happened a year ago with F Ryan Nugent-Hopkins.
“Like Ryan, Mathew played hockey all of August,” Wallin told Greg Meachem, the Red Deer Advocate’s sports editor. “After returning from overseas (with the Canadian national under-18 team), he flew to Toronto (for an NHL developmental/orientation camp). We’ll give him a week off to catch his breath and get him skating Friday.”
With the amount of time young players are spending in the gym and on skates during the summer months, more teams should be providing some of these players with more time off.
———
Curtis Lazar, the second overall pick in the 2010 bantam draft, is working to make a name for himself with the Edmonton Oil Kings. Jim Matheson of the Edmonton Journal has more right here on the player they call The Czar.
———
For today's good read, we send you to the Sporting News, where Craig Custance has written an entertaining read that carries the headline: NHL watches as colleges wage war with Canadian junior hockey. . . . This is as entertaining a look at the 'war' as I have read. It's right here.

gdrinnan@kamloopsnews.ca
     
gdrinnan.blogspot.com
     
Taking Note on Twitter

Blazers trim roster to 29

Following their intrasquad game on Tuesday night, the Kamloops Blazers trimmed 17 players from their roster.
D MacKenzie Ferner (Vernon, B.C.), F Mitch Friesen (Surrey, B.C.), F Brayden Gelsinger (Regina), F Eric Krienke (Calgary), G Braden Krogfoss (Cloverdale, B.C.), G Scott Lapp (Surrey, B.C.), F Matt McLeod (Saskatoon), F Kyler Nachtigall (Calgary), F Tre Potskin (Prince George) and F Evan Tordiff (Fort Smith, N.W.T.) are expected to play for midget AAA teams this season.
D Tyson Harvey (Nanaimo, B.C.) and F Diego Cuglietta (Kamloops) will play for the junior B Kamloops Storm of the Kootenay International junior league, with F Jared Marchi (Kimberley, B.C.) joining his hometown Dynamiters, who play in the KIJHL.
D Braden Pears (Duncan, B.C.), D Ryan Rehill (Edmonton), F Cam Rowat (Souris, Man.) and G Troy Trombley (Sherwood Park, Alta.) will be joining junior A teams.
With those players having been assigned, the Blazers’ roster is down to 29 players — 16 forwards, 10 defencemen and three goaltenders.
It is fair to say that there haven’t been any surprises in the Blazers’ camp, which wrapped up with the intrasquad game.
The three goaltenders still standing are Cam Lanigan, 19, who has played in 90 regular-season WHL games with the Edmonton Oil Kings and the Blazers but who has a lot to prove after a horrible finish to last season; G Cole Cheveldave, the AJHL’s rookie of the year with the Drumheller Dragons last season; and, Taran Kozun, who starred with the midget AAA Prince Albert Mintos. Cheveldave is 18; Kozun is 17.
The Blazers will open the exhibition season on Friday against the visiting Victoria Royals. The six exhibition games will determine the pecking order for the goaltenders come the regular-season opener on Sept. 24 when the Prince George Cougars come calling.
One of the remaining 10 defencemen, Jordan Thomson, is the only 15-year-old still on the roster. The fourth overall pick in the 2011 bantam draft, he will be heading home to Wawanesa, Man., sometime during the long weekend.
The Blazers are carrying six veteran defencemen, with three rookies looking for spots — Tyler Bell of Regina and Landon Cross of Regina both are 17, while Josh Connolly of Prince George is 16. Connolly is the younger brother of Prince George Cougars star Brett Connolly.
The Blazers will have two defencemen — Josh Caron (Minnesota) and Austin Madaisky (Columbus) — going to pro camp, so they may carry Bell, Cross and Connolly for a while.
Of the 16 remaining forwards, 10 are veterans, while Matt Needham (13 games) and Aspen Sterzer (10) got a taste of the WHL with the Blazers last season.
Swiss F Tim Bozon, Dallas Calvin of Trail, B.C., Devin Oakes of Prince Rupert, B.C., and Cole Ully of Calgary are the other newcomers still on the roster.
Needham (elbow) and veteran F Jordan DePape (hip flexor) didn’t play in the intrasquad game, while veteran F J.C. Lipon left in the third period with an injury to his left leg.

gdrinnan@kamloopsnews.ca
     
gdrinnan.blogspot.com
     
Taking Note on Twitter

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Defenceman Marek Hrbas works to chase down winger J.T. Barnett
in front of referee Dexter Rasmussen during the Kamloops Blazers'
intrasquad game Tuesday night.

(Photo by Hugo Yuen/Kamloops Daily News)

By GREGG DRINNAN
Daily News Sports Editor
As intrasquad games go it was a good game of shinny.
Team White took over play in the second period and skated to a 4-2 victory over Team Blue in the Kamloops Blazers' annual intrasquad game before an estimated 500 fans at Interior Savings Centre
Following the game, the Blazers reassigned 17 players, taking their roster down to 29 - three goaltenders, 10 defencemen and 16 forwards.
There was a lot of skating in this game, but not much physical contact and nothing even close to a fight. Head coach Guy Charron and associate coach Dave Hunchak took it all in from the press box and likely didn't see anything that made the decision-making process any easier.
Six goaltenders saw action and all played well. Team White got 24 saves from Cole Cheveldave (11/12), Troy Trombley (5/5) and Scott Lapp (8/9), while Team Blue received 30 saves from Cam Lanigan (12/13), Taran Kozun (10/12) and Braden Krogfoss (8-8).
Later, Trombley, Lapp and Krogfoss were among the assignees. That means there weren't any goaltending surprises in camp, with, as expected, Cheveldave, Kozun and Lanigan left to scrap for playing time through the exhibition season.
Team White got its four goals from centres Matt McLeod, a 16-year-old from Saskatoon who returned home after the game, sophomore Logan McVeigh, and veterans Dylan Willick and Colin Smith, the latter into an empty net at 18:32 of the third period.
Veteran winger J.T. Barnett and centre Aspen Sterzer replied for Team Blue. Sterzer, who turns 17 on Sept. 9, is from Canal Flats; he got into 10 games with the Blazers last season.
Team Blue actually took a 1-0 lead midway in the first period on a big-league snap shot by Barnett that beat Cheveldave under the crossbar.
Barnett, a left-hand shot, scored 21 goals for the Vancouver Giants while patrolling right wing two seasons ago. Last season, with the Blazers, Barnett counted just 13 times as he spent most of his time on the left side.
Last night, he was back on the right side, as he has been through most of camp, and he was flying.
“I went in and told Guy that this year I'm not even going to worry about it,” said Barnett, 19. “If they want me to play left (wing), I'll figure out a way to play left. I'm not going to complain about that.
“I do feel more comfortable on right wing . . . but if they put me on left wing I'll deal with it.”
This summer, Barnett attended the New Jersey Devils' prospects camp. While there, he took a slapshot to his right cheek and ended up with fractures to the cheek and jaw.
“There were fractured bones,” he said, “but not displaced fractures. They were all just cracked but not separated. It's all good now.”
Barnett, an undrafted free agent, showed enough that he was invited to the Devils' main camp. And then it'll be back to Kamloops.
“I think we'll have a really good team,” he said. “Guys are coming together and feel really, really excited about the upcoming season.”
McLeod tied the score in the first period, and Team White added two second-period goals, from McVeigh and Willick, as it took control. Willick counted on a 5-on-3 power play as Team Blue ran into penalty trouble.
Willick brought a game-ending roar of laughter from the crowd when he fired a shot just over an empty net at the buzzer.
“Smith was having a really good time with his empty net goal,” a laughing Willick said, “and I didn't want to upstage him.
“There wasn't enough time left for (Team Blue) to do anything. . . . In the regular season that just isn't going to happen.”
Like Barnett, Willick, who will turn 19 on Oct. 19, likes what he saw in this training camp.
“It's been great,” he said. “There are a lot of good young kids coming up, really impressing the players and coaching staff. It's great to see.”
He also has noticed a change from the coaching staff.
“They're not accepting anything less than the best and . . . the guys are buying into it,” Willick said. “There aren't any passengers this year. Everybody's pushing in the same direction.”
JUST NOTES: Veteran F J.C. Lipon, playing for Blue, left in the third period favouring his left leg after a neutral zone collision. Trainer Colin Robinson said Lipon “will be fine.” . . . Goaltending coach Dan De Palma was behind Team White's bench, while Team Blue was under the watchful eyes of assistant coach Ed Patterson and Barry Dewar, the owner and GM of the junior B Kamloops Storm. Patterson, of course, spent a couple of seasons as the Storm's head coach. . . . F Matt Needham (elbow) and F Jordan DePape (hip) were scratched with injuries, while D Josh Caron and D Bronson Maschmeyer, both 20-year-olds, also sat out. . . . The Blazers are at home to the Victoria Royals on Friday in the first exhibition game of the new season. Starting time at McArthur Island Sport and Event Centre will be 7 p.m. . . . Former Blazers F Mark Hall, who played last season with the BCHL's Penticton Vees, is off to the U of Lethbridge where he'll play for the Pronghorns. 
gdrinnan@kamloopsnews.ca
     
gdrinnan.blogspot.com
     
Taking Note on Twitter
Whether you care to admit it, fighting in major junior hockey is on its last legs.
Sooner, rather than later, junior hockey operators are going to realize that the evidence showing the destructiveness that can be caused by blows to the head continues to mount, and that they are going to have to act to get pugilism out of the game.
It has been noted many times that boxers aren’t allowed to punch each other in the groins, but punches to the head are acceptable.
In hockey, the powers-that-be are working to get checks to the head out of the game but, at the same time, if you are playing major junior or above in North America, you are allowed to punch an opponent in the head during a fight.
It just doesn’t make sense.
Perhaps Neate Sager of Yahoo! Sports summed it up best on Monday when he wrote: “. . . one wonders how much longer fighting can exist in the Canadian Hockey League when the medical evidence and wider public awareness of a disease such as CTE each continue to mount. There is a chicken-and-egg element to it, wondering if it would take the NHL to act first before its longest-standing feeder system takes decisive action. But saying the NHL permits fighting is not enough of a reason to justify having it in the CHL.”
It is one thing for the NHL to allow fighting. After all, the combatants in that league are, for the most part, adults who are presumed capable of making their own informed decisions.
But it’s an entirely different story in the CHL where oftentimes there are physically immature and physically mature players on the ice at the same time, and where players often fight purely because of peer pressure.
At some point in time, someone is going to have to make a decision to protect these young people from themselves.
———
One also hopes that major junior owners and operators are paying attention to developments south of the 49th parallel where three lawsuits have been filed by former players against the National Football League, all of them dealing with concussions.
The most recent filing occurred Monday in Los Angeles Superior Court with 18 former players involved. According to an Associated Press report, “The suit claims the NFL, Riddell Sports Group and its parent company, Easton-Bell Sports, knew the long-term effects of brain injury from trauma suffered by the players and purposefully hid it from them.”
The AP story adds that “more than 75 current and former NFL players filed a similar suit in Los Angeles in July and another group did so earlier this month in Philadelphia.”
———
Steve Ewen of the Vancouver Province reports on goaltending, imports and 20-year-olds as they concern the Vancouver Giants. How close did the Giants come to landing G Eric Comrie and/or G Drew Owsley? Check it out right here.
———
As well, if you haven’t seen Ewen’s latest blog entry at Crush the Tumour with Humour, it’s right here.
———
The Moose Jaw Warriors have signed three of their 2011 bantam draft picks. F Brayden Point, the 12th overall selection, Miles Warkentine, who was taken 14th overall, and Josh Uhrich, the 33rd pick, signed WHL contracts on Monday. All three are expected to play tonight as the Warriors’ rookie take on the host Swift Current Broncos’ rookies. . . . Point put up 102 points for the Calgary Bisons to lead the Alberta Bantam Hockey League scoring race last season. Warkentine played for the bantam AA Prince Albert Pirates, picking up 70 points in 21 games. Uhrich, who had 48 points in 23 games with the bantam AA Notre Dame Hounds, expects to play this season with the midget AAA Saskatoon Contacts. . . .
The Portland Winterhawks are in camp without forwards Ryan Johansen and Nino Niederreiter, who are waiting for the Columbus Blue Jackets and New York Islanders, respectively, to open camps. All told, the Winterhawks will have 15 players off last season’s roster going to NHL training camps. Also headed that way will be D Taylor Aronson (Nashville), F Sven Bartschi (Calgary), F Riley Boychuk (Boychuk), G Mac Carruth (Chicago), G Oliver Gabriel (Columbus), D Joe Morrow (Pittsburgh), F Taylor Peters (Minnesota), D Brett Ponich (St. Louis), F Ty Rattie (St. Louis), F Brad Ross (Toronto), D Troy Rutkowski (Colorado), D Tyler Wotherspoon (Calgary) and D William Wrenn (San Jose). . . . You have to think some young Portland prospects are going to get a good look this exhibition season. . . .
The Calgary Hitmen opened camp with 81 players on hand. However, two goaltenders — Chris Driedger (ankle) and Michael Snider (wisdom teeth) — will watch for a few days and may not get on the ice until after the long weekend. . . . The Hitmen do have both their 2011 import draft picks on hand — Russian F Alex Gogolev and Swedish F Victor Rask. Rask was a second-round selection of the NHL’s Carolina Hurricanes and could be an impact player in the WHL. However, because he was drafted out of Europe, he could sign with the Hurricanes and play in the NHL or elsewhere in their organization.
———
A couple of items that showed up Monday provide a bit of insight into the business of major junior hockey.
Drew Wilson, the radio voice of the Prince Albert Raiders, wrote on his blog about how the team’s board of directors “has determined they will need 2,100 season-ticket subscribers in the next few years to remain a financially viable franchise.”
Wilson pointed out that this “is not being laid out as a scare tactic.”
Bruce Vance, the Raiders’ business manager, told Wilson that the goal of 2,100 season tickets “isn’t just a goal; it’s a must.”
Wilson reported that the Raiders’ budget for this season is “a little more than $2 million.”
According to Wilson, the Raiders, who have lost $300,000 over the last four seasons, have sold about 1,450 season tickets, an increase of 200 over last season.
Wilson’s complete blog entry is right here.
Meanwhile, in the OHL, the Kitchener Rangers showed a profit of $341,871 for 2010-11 — the 16th straight year in which the team has made money.
Josh Brown of the Kitchener Record reported that the subscriber-rn Rangers’ profit was up from the profit of $324,152 from the previous season.
According to Brown, revenues were $5.38 million; in 2009-10, revenues were $4.9 million.
Brown’s complete story is right here.

gdrinnan@kamloopsnews.ca     
gdrinnan.blogspot.com
     
Taking Note on Twitter

Monday, August 29, 2011

Blazers ready for intrasquad game

By GREGG DRINNAN
Daily News Sports Editor
The Kamloops Blazers will take another step tonight in what the WHL team’s braintrust hopes is the evolution of a non-playoff team into at least a quasi-contender as it holds its Blue-White intrasquad game at Interior Savings Centre.
The game, which is to begin at 7 p.m., will mark the end of training camp.
There were three scrimmages in main camp on Monday, after which nine more players were reassigned. That left the club with 46 players in camp — 26 forwards, 14 defencemen and six goaltenders.
There almost certainly will be more players reassigned following tonight’s game. The regular season is to open on Sept. 24, around which time the coaching staff hopes to be down to around 25 players.
Head coach Guy Charron said Monday that training camp, which opened Friday, has “been good.”
He especially has been excited with the addition of Dave Hunchak, a veteran of seven seasons in the WHL, as associate coach. This has meant an influx of new ideas.
“These are things we feel will help our team,” Charron said.
With that in mind, the coaching staff is spending a lot of time working with getting the puck out of its zone. The Blazers surrendered more goals than any of the other Western Conference teams. To have success, they know they have to show drastic improvement in that area, which is the main reason they acquired Czech defenceman Marek Hrbas, 18, from the Edmonton Oil Kings in June. Hrbas, who spent one season with the USHL’s Fargo Force and two with Edmonton, has the reputation as a puck-moving defenceman.
“We have a certain talent that we’d like to put to good use,” Charron said. “We feel confident in the back end that we can execute that kind of transiton to our game.”
Tonight, then, the coaching staff will be watching to see what kind of grasp the players have on the things to which they have been introduced.
“Any time you try something new it’s always exciting,” Charron stated. “Dave and I really talk a lot. We share everything. We exchange ideas and come up with what we feel is best for our team. I’m excited about it. Based on what we’ve done within the scrimmages . . . I’m all in favour of other ideas to help our transition (game) be better, for sure.”
Understand that it isn’t as though the 2010-11 Blazers didn’t work on getting out of their zone; it’s just that whatever they were doing didn’t work. This season, it will be a matter of attempting to get out of trouble as quickly as possible.
“If we can get a first pass or use our forwards in a more effective way, that’ll help our transition and we’ll spend less time in our zone,” Charron said.
The coaching staff also will use tonight’s game to evaluate the remaining prospects all of whom, Charron said, have earned the opportunity to play in the game.
“We will see how well the team responds to what we’re trying to do,” Charron said, “and evaluate some of the kids under a more competitive environment. We’ve had good scrimmages the last few days but they maybe don’t hold the same importance.”
————
The Blazers go into tonight’s game with six goaltenders on the roster, all of whom are eligible to play this season.
Cam Lanigan (19), Cole Cheveldave (18), Taran Kozun, who turned 17 yesterday, Troy Tremblay (17), Braden Krogfoss (16) and Scott Lapp (16) remain, although that number is expected to be trimmed late tonight.
“I’m not going to get overly excited (about goaltending) as I have in the past,” Charron said. “Last year, I didn’t get excited about our goaltending because through the scrimmages and our Blue-White game it was pretty obvious we had concerns.
“This year, I would say everyone in camp . . . has performed in a more than adequate way.”
———
At least two forwards with WHL experience won’t take part in tonight’s game.
Matt Needham, 16, is out with an elbow injury suffered while he was riding an all-terrain vehicle before camp.
While Needham’s father, Mike, who is the Blazers’ skills coach, reportedly wasn’t at all pleased, Charron chose to write it off as boys being boys.
“Let’s face it . . . they are kids,” he said. “These are the kinds of things you would like to avoid. Looking back, he shouldn’t have . . . but on the other hand it was a way for him with a friend to escape. Perhaps now he realizes how dangers these things can be at times if not done properly.”
Meanwhile, Jordan DePape, 19, is sidelined with a hip flexor.
“It’s the kind of thing unless you rest it properly and heal it properly there could be a reoccurrence,” Charron said. “We have enough bodies right now and this gives us a chance to evaluate a younger player in that spot.”
JUST NOTES: Tickets for tonight’s game are available, at $5 each, at the ISC box office. . . . The Blazers open their exhibition schedule on Friday against the Victoria Royals. Game time, at McArthur Island Sport and Event Centre, is 7 p.m. . . . The Blazers then will meet the Vancouver Giants in Ladner on Saturday. . . . Veteran forwards Chase Schaber and Chase Souto each had two goals and two assists in yesterday’s scrimmages.
gdrinnan@kamloopsnews.ca
     
gdrinnan.blogspot.com
     
Taking Note on Twitter





This year, we welcome five talented college journalists into the family of "Murray Scholars." This week we introduce you to the Murray Scholar from St. Bonaventure University, Tyler Diedrich.

Tyler Diedrich was born on June 30, 1990 in Rochester, N.Y. He lives in Hilton, a suburb of Rochester, and graduated from Hilton High School in 2008. Tyler's parents are Jeff and Laurie Diedrich, and he has a brother, Jacob (18), and a sister, Molly (16).
Tyler is a senior journalism and mass communication student at St. Bonaventure University with a 3.73 cumulative GPA. He is the managing editor of The Bona Venture, and a reporter for SBU-TV.  Diedrich is a member of Kappa Tau Alpha, the national honor society for journalism and mass communication students, and Phi Eta Sigma, a national freshman honor society.
His interests include watching football (Miami Dolphins and Notre Dame) and NASCAR, playing basketball, church, the media, food, travel and Christmas. After graduation in May, he hopes to pursue a career as a broadcast or print journalist. You may follow Tyler on Twitter @TylerDiedRich.
 Tyler wrote his essay on Paul Weiland, a professor at St. Bonaventure and former public relations director for the Buffalo Sabres.
———
Tyler's Winning Essay:
   If you're fortunate enough to converse with Paul Wieland for five minutes, you will quickly realize you're going to need 20 or 30 more.
   Asking Wieland, a lecturer at St. Bonaventure University, one question routinely elicits a response marked by blatant honesty and an amusing anecdote or two.
   In a faculty at St. Bonaventure's Russell J. Jandoli School of Journalism and Mass Communication that features a former federal prosecutor, a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative reporter, a Franciscan friar and a college geology major turned newspaper reporter, Wieland is perhaps the most intriguing character.
   As the Buffalo Sabres' public relations director for 25 years, beginning in their inaugural 1970-71 season, Wieland gained notoriety for his annual April Fools' Day shenanigans.
   Each year, Wieland performed some sort of hoax — whether it be a press release or an on-air gag — that consistently fooled audiences into believing farfetched innovations.
   An April 1, 1977, press release concocted by Wieland announced the Sabres would be installing plastic "Sliderex" ice, the first of its kind in the NHL, in Buffalo's Memorial Auditorium.
   WGR-TV sports director Ed Kilgore not only fell for the hoax but also made it the lead story on his sportscast the night before the announcement was supposed to be made.
   "He made a complete ass of himself," Wieland said, "which I thought was pretty funny, especially when I called him up on his private line after the telecast and complained that he broke my release date."
   In the early '80s, another April 1 press release got Wieland in hot water with the federal government after he used White House stationery, including a fake signature from President Ronald Reagan, to print fake TIME magazine covers and 200,000 decals declaring the Sabres "America's Hockey Team."
   "I didn't expect to fool anybody. I was just having fun," Wieland said. "So then I get a call from the AP in Washington telling me that I committed a federal crime. (The government was) considering prosecuting me because you're not allowed to use the president's signature on anything as a gag or (use) White House stationery. I had broken two federal laws. I didn't get arrested, though. They didn't want to make me a celeb, I guess."
   Perhaps Wieland's most memorable prank occurred during the phone-in 1974 NHL Amateur Draft.
   "We decided to drive (NHL president Clarence) Campbell crazy," Wieland said. "I came up with the idea, 'Let's draft a Japanese hockey player.'"
   Wieland and general manager Punch Imlach created Taro Tsujimoto from the fictitious Tokyo Katanas (Japanese for "Sabres"). Buffalo drafted Tsujimoto in the 12th round, prompting Campbell to repeat the selection to each NHL team over the phone before each made its picks.
   "All these people in the NHL are going crazy, (asking), 'Who the freak is drafting a Japanese player?'" Wieland said. "(Tsujimoto) was in, until two years ago, the NHL record book. To this day, you can go online and buy Taro Tsujimoto hockey shirts and T-shirts. If you go to a Sabres game in Buffalo and walk around that arena, I'll bet you a nickel that you'll find someone wearing a Taro Tsujimoto shirt. It just became a legend in the NHL. That will probably be in my obit."
   Lee Coppola, dean of the Jandoli school, was the Sabres' press box manager under Wieland from 1970-78. He said most people in the Sabres organization found Wieland's antics strange.
   "They just could not understand why he was doing some of the things he did," Coppola said. "Of course, I thought he was hilarious, but (he was) really pushing the envelope on a lot of the things he did. He just has this wacky sense of humor. He has to do these quirky things that no one would think of anybody doing."
   Wieland, a 1959 St. Bonaventure graduate, heads his alma mater's TV station, SBU-TV. The station features weekly newscasts and owns a remote production truck used to televise live sporting events.
   St. Bonaventure senior Erin Lowry, a student in both courses, said Wieland's personality endears him to his students despite a large generation gap.
   "In his many years, like a well-aged wine, Paul has still kept his sense of humor," Lowry said. "I like that his antics make him like a small schoolboy putting a thumbtack on a teacher's seat before she sits down. I like that he's proud of the goofball things that he does."
   Lowry said she appreciates Wieland's candid honesty.
   "The first story I ever did, he basically told me it was crap," Lowry said. "Just having that from the get-go, it motivated me to go out and find the best possible angle of stories and the right people to interview. He really does a good job of bringing out the best in people and pushing people to find the best stories they can."
   Lowry's classmate Jake Sonner said Wieland's presence inside the production truck during basketball games both entertains and informs.
   "Watching how his mind works around a live television broadcast is really quite interesting. You think it would be a stressful situation, (but) with him directing it was not stressful at all," Sonner said. "The guy knows the ins and outs of just about everything in that truck, so I think he's one of the most knowledgeable — in one particular field — of any professor I've ever had."
   Coppola, a 1964 St. Bonaventure graduate, said Wieland is a much more intelligent man than his childlike psyche suggests.
   "I think the trouble with his intelligence is it's so high that he's got to exhibit it in these strange and quirky, humorous ways," Coppola said. "He's a very competent sports person . . . competent PR guy, competent faculty member, competent in basically everything he's ever done."
   Just how valuable is Wieland to the Jandoli school?"
   On a scale of one to 10 . . . 12," Coppola chuckled. "He's just a talented individual."
———

Now . . . please enjoy Jim Murray's column from July 22, 1975 . . . titled "Canadian Sunset." 

TUESDAY, JULY 22, 1975 SPORTS
Copyright 1975/THE TIMES MIRROR COMPANY

 JIM MURRAY

 Canadian Sunset

   Perhaps you noticed in the papers the other day where the U.S. Department of Labor is on the scent of a major investigation to combat unemployment. They are seeking to find out why there are so many Canadians in professional hockey.
   When they finish that one, I have a few other similar inquiries they might make. They might spend the taxpayers' money to find out why:
   1 — There are so many Catholics in the Vatican.
   2 — There are so many fish in the ocean.
   3 — The Indianapolis 500 has so many cars in it.
   4 — There are so many cows in Texas.
   5 — The Antarctic is full of penguins.
   6 — Zebras have stripes.
   7 — There is so much music in opera.
   8 — There are so many blondes in Sweden.
   9 — There aren't more blue eyes in Japan.
 10 — There's so much sand in the Sahara.
 11 — Trout are fish.
 12 — There are bears in the woods.
 13 — There are so many chickens in Rhode Island.
 14 — There's so much salt in the Pacific.
  15 — Parisians speak French.
  16 — Sharks bite.
  Canadians are good at hockey for the same reason Italians are good at singing, Germans at shooting and the English at acting. They skate before they walk. They can skate backwards faster than Americans can forward. They grow up on ice.
   The Labor Department won't cure unemployment by banning Canadians, they'll increase it. Because, without Canada as a supplier, the National Hockey League will become a series of roller-skating rinks.
   Unless the glaciers come back, you aren't gonna get any Bobby Hulls out of Alabama or Gordie Howes out of San Diego.
   Still, the Immigration and Naturalization Service officials are going to try. They gave the Philadelphia Flyers' Stanley Cup winners four days to get out of the country after their recent NHL championship. They have withdrawn the blanket visa which used to cover hockey players. In a country in which a million or more illegal aliens cross the border every year, they're gonna plug this leak which lets several dozen enter to create jobs for program sellers, ticket takers, ice scrapers, hotdog vendors, taxi drivers, net makers and parking-lot attendants.
   Of course, they can pass a ruling that every hockey team has to hire at least one player born and raised on or near the equator, and make it mandatory that at least one wingman be hired who can't skate on anything but double-runners, and, under no circumstances, can anyone who says "oot" for "out" or "aboot" for "about" be employed.
   Of course, with unemployment running at 9 per cent, it's good to see vigorous, aggressive action like this taken — like sending a pail to fight a flood.
 
Reprinted with permission by the Los Angeles Times.

Jim Murray Memorial Foundation | P.O. Box 995 | La Quinta | CA | 92247
Dr. Robert Cantu has explained, perhaps clearer than anything else I have read, the relationship between young athletes and concussions.
In his weekly hockey notes, Fluto Shinzawa of the Boston Globe leads with hockey and concussions.
As Shinzawa writes, Dr. Cantu, a co-director of Boston University’s Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalopathy, says that younger brains are not as myelinated, meaning they have less insulation than brains of adults. Also, boys’ necks are weaker than those of adults. Their heads are disproportionately large for their bodies.
“That sets up a younger person to have injuries to the brain that are greater than those sustained at a later age from the same force,’’ Dr. Cantu said. “It takes more force later on to produce the same injury.
“It’s important not to have a head injury at any age. It’s particularly important not to have it at a young age. Fighting is certainly to be discouraged, especially at young ages, for those reasons.’’
This really is serious stuff, and don’t think for a moment that signs are pointing away from fighting as being problematic.
“Presumably,” Dr. Cantu told Shinzawa, “those people were asymptomatic when they died. Presumably, had they lived into adulthood, the early-onset CTE would have progressed. At some point in life, they would have been symptomatic.
“For those with CTE early in life that can cause symptoms later in life, we have no idea of the prevalence of that right now. It’s beginning to be studied.’’
Dr. Cantu pulled no punches in stating that “no head trauma is good head trauma.”
“Avoid all head trauma that you can avoid,” he added. “If that means practising less, practise less. Don’t go out seeking fights. It’s not good to get hit in the head.
“Secondly, if you’re going to play a sport that’s at high risk for head injury like the collision sports — hockey, football, lacrosse — you better have a passion for that sport. Or I would recommend you not play it.’’
Shinzawa’s complete notebook is right here.
———
A big story in Canada today will deal with the Canadian Paediatric Society and American Academy of Pediatrics recommending that children and teenagers not be allowed to take part in boxing.
While today’s story centres on boxing, Dr. Claire LeBlanc, one of the authors of a statement that will get considerable play today, says that the CPS “will be making a statement” on youth hockey in the future.
For more, check out this story right here.
———
THE MacBETH REPORT:
F Wacey Rabbit (Saskatoon, Vancouver, 2001-07) was released by Jesenice (Slovenia, Austria Erste Bank Liga).
———
JUST NOTES: The Tri-City Americans have signed F Justin Gutierrez. The 6-foot-3, 175-pounder will turn 16 in December. He is from Anchorage, Alaska, and is the younger brother of Moises Gutierrez (Kamloops, Everett, 2002-07). . . . The Swift Current Broncos released G Derek Tendler, 19, on Sunday. The Regina native had brief stints with the Regina Pats and Vancouver Giants, as well as the Broncos. Swift Current dealt a 2011 sixth-round bantam draft pick to Vancouver for Tendler in October 2010. Since 2008, he has appeared in only 22 WHL games. . . . According to Nick Patterson of the Everett Herald, F Manraj Hayer, 19, of the Everett Silvertips has a broken fibula so will be out for a couple of months. He had 12 points in 61 games as a freshman last season. . . .
The Spokane Chiefs had 2,787 fans watch their intrasquad game Sunday, with Team Red beating Team White, 4-3. . . . Spokane head coach Don Nachbaur told Dave Trimmer of the Spokane Spokesman-Review that sophomore F Darren Kramer is “having a hell of a camp.” Kramer, who led the WHL in fights last season, was selected by the Ottawa Senators in the NHL’s 2011 draft. “He’s played hard since the start of camp,” Nachbaur continued. “His passion shows every time he steps on the ice. He scored five goals in one game. I think he scored in every scrimmage. . . . He came in great shape with a great attitude and he portrayed that every time he stepped on the ice. That’s not to say the other guys didn’t but he stood out, he stood out like a sore thumb.”
———
The Red Deer Rebels are hoping that Czech G Patrik Bartosak, who was selected in the 2011 CHL import draft, will be their starter this season. The 18-year-old Bartosak hopes so, too.
“The WHL is very good league and in Czech Republic there was no future,” Bartosak told Greg Meachem, the Red Deer Advocate’s sports editor, on Sunday.
Despite being passed over in the NHL’s 2011 draft, Bartosak has his sights set on an NHL career.
“The NHL is my dream from the start. I want to be picked in the NHL draft,” he told Meachem.
And what does he think of the hockey he witnessed early in the Rebels’ camp?
“The hockey is really fast, faster than in Czech Republic,” he said. “The rink is smaller so everything is fast and the players shoot from every angle.”
Check out the Advocate’s Rebels Central page right here.
———
G Tyler Bunz of the Medicine Hat Tigers is blogging, at least through training camp, and it's worth a look. You are able to follow him right here.

gdrinnan@kamloopsnews.ca
     
gdrinnan.blogspot.com
     
Taking Note on Twitter

Sunday, August 28, 2011

No summertime blues for Blazers prospect

Jordan Thomson (centre, white), the Kamloops Blazers' first pick
in the 2011 WHL bantam draft, will pick his spots and rush the puck.
(Photo by Murray Mitchell/Kamloops Daily News)
By GREGG DRINNAN
Daily News Sports Editor
Jordan Thomson sounds like he wants to stay in Kamloops for a year or three.
“It’s not at all like home, but I like it,” the 15-year-old defenceman said Saturday after his Team White had dropped a 3-2 decision to the Orange guys in a scrimmage at the WHL team’s rookie camp at Interior Savings Centre.
As for the heat, he had a one-word answer: “Beautiful.”
Of course, he was standing in the coolness of the arena, while it was about 32 C outside.
Thomson is from Wawanesa, a small community nestled in a valley on the banks of the Souris River about 30 kilometres southeast of Brandon. The Blazers, making their earliest selection in franchise history, took Thomson with the fourth pick of the 2011 bantam draft.
And, he admitted, that was the day his life changed forever.
“Right after the draft,” he said, “I knew it was time to get going, to hit the gym and all that kind of stuff. The hard work starts now, for sure.”
That also was the start of a busy summer, one that has included stints at the NHLPA-sanctioned Allstate All-Canadians Mentorship Program, Aug. 2-6, in Mississauga, Ont., and at Hockey Manitoba’s under-16 camp in Winnipeg, Aug. 11-14.
Thomson, 5-foot-11 and 170 pounds, said the Allstate camp, which was led by former NHLer Gary Roberts, who is a fitness fanatic, was a real eye-opener.
“That was a great camp, a great experience,” Thomson said. “Gary Roberts had lots of information to share with all of us.”
The camp, to which 42 of the top bantam-aged players in Canada were invited, included emphasis on such things as nutrition, fitness and mental conditioning. Players also had four on-ice sessions and, of course, workouts in a gym.
“It was a great camp and I came out more mature, definitely,” Thomson said. “It was my first time going to something like that. I was a little nervous at first but I got there and got to know a couple of the guys and it was good from there.
“It’s something I won’t ever forget.”
Thomson went from there to the camp in Winnipeg where he is on the 28-player list from which Hockey Manitoba will choose its team for the U-16 Challenge Cup in Moose Jaw, Oct. 27-30.
Last season, Thomson played for the midget AAA Southwest Cougars, who play out of Souris, Man., putting up 16 points and 42 penalty minutes in 40 games. He was the only 14-year-old in the league, which includes teams from southern Manitoba, including Winnipeg.
Also on that team was forward Cameron Rowat, 17, who is in the Blazers’ main camp. “He was a big part of our team,” Thomson said.
Thomson has been in Kamloops since Tuesday, and twice skated with veteran players last week. Obviously, he is used to playing with players who are older and bigger than he is, but this was something different.
“It was lots of fun,” he said, adding that he learned he still has “lots to work on. I asked a couple of guys later on how to do some things and get better. Some of them have been in the (WHL) for three years and have lots of experience, so if I talk to them I’ll get pointers from them.”
The important thing, he said, is to work on getting quicker feet.
“All these guys have lots of speed,” Thomson said.
Thomson will stick around through main camp and hopes to play in Tuesday’s Blue-White game. Then, sometime on the weekend, he’ll begin the trek home. He is really looking forward to another season with the Cougars, though, because they will be the host team for a 2012 Telus Cup regional tournament.
“Hopefully, we get the best team we can,” he said, looking ahead to a run at the Telus Cup. “We’ve got a great coach (Troy Leslie) out there.”
For now, though, he’s focussed on the Blazers.
“It’s been good,” he said of the camp. “I just wanted to go out there have lots of fun and show them what I can do.”
As for being the earliest draft pick in franchise history, Thomson said that has made him want to “be a leader out there and show the guys some of the stuff.”
However, the most important thing, he said, is to “make sure I’m out there having fun and not being a downer, no matter what the score is.”
JUST NOTES: Czech D Marek Hrbas, 18, arrived in Kamloops on Friday evening and skated with his new teammates for the first time on Saturday afternoon. He was acquired from the Edmonton Oil Kings in June and will be one of the Blazers’ two import players. . . . F Matt Needham, 16, isn’t expected on the ice until sometime later in the week. He has an elbow injury that is likely to keep him out of Tuesday’s Blue-White game. . . . Veteran F Jordan DePape (hip) also is day-to-day. . . . D Connor Clouston (elbow) of Medicine Hat and F Dylan Frey (knee) of Weyburn, Sask., missed some action Saturday and then were among the younger players who were reassigned later that day. . . . By the time weekend reassignments were finished, the Blazers were down to 55 players — 31 forwards, 18 defencemen and six Following the end of rookie camp on Saturday, the Blazers were left with 63 players in main camp — 35 forwards, 19 defencemen and six goaltenders. . . . More players are likely to be released this afternoon, after the third of three scrimmages finishes at 1 p.m.

gdrinnan@kamloopsnews.ca
     
gdrinnan.blogspot.com
     
Taking Note on Twitter
THE MacBETH REPORT:
D Giffen Nyren (Moose Jaw, Kamloops, Calgary, 2006-10) was released by Red Bull Salzburg (Austria, Erste Bank Liga) at the end of his tryout contract. . . .
D Ross Lupaschuk (Lethbridge, Prince Albert, Red Deer, 1996-2001)
signed a tryout contract with the Vienna Capitals (Austria, Erste Bank Liga). He had two goals and one assist in 15 games with Cologne (Germany, DEL) last season. . . .
F Clarke Breitkruez (Regina, Prince George, 2008-10) signed a one-year contract with Duisburg (Germany, Oberliga). He had 31 goals and 37 assists in 51 games for the Yorkton Terriers (SJHL) last season.
———
The Everett Silvertips got down to three 20-year-olds on Saturday when F Scott MacDonald was one of the players released from training camp. MacDonald, from Surrey, B.C., has played three WHL seasons, one with the Chilliwack Bruins and two with the Silvertips. Last season, he had 22 points and 40 penalty minutes in 69 games with Everett. . . . His departure leaves Everett with F Josh Birkholz, F Tyler Maxwell and D Brennan Yadlowski as its 20-year-olds.
———
The Regina Pats have acquired F Campbell Elynuik, who will turn 19 on Dec. 25, from the Everett Silvertips in exchange for a sixth-round pick in the 2012 bantam draft. A seventh-round pick by Everett in the 2007 draft, Elynuik had five points and 54 penalty minutes in 28 games last season, which was shortened by injury. In 76 games with the Silvertips, he had eight points and 135 penalty minutes. Undrafted, he attended the Philadelphia Flyers’ development camp earlier this summer and will attend their training camp next month. His father, Pat, played in the WHL with the Prince Albert Raiders (1984-87) and also split 506 NHL games between the Winnipeg Jets, Washington Capitals, Tampa Bay Lightning and Ottawa Senators.
———
The Victoria Royals have signed F Logan Nelson, an 18-year-old product of Rogers, Minn. He’s a 6-foot-1, 187-pounder who had 15 points and 69 penalty minutes in 43 games with the USHL’s Des Moines Buccaneers last season.
———
If you haven’t yet heard about a concussion-related experiment in which the Saskatoon Blades are involved, check out this story by Kevin Mitchell of the Saskatoon StarPhoenix.
———
The Thunderbird Community Sports Foundation, which is supported by fans of the Seattle Thunderbirds, has made a lot of people happy by handing out almost US$65,000 in grants. Steve Hunter of the Kent Reporter has that story right here.
———
THE COACHING GAME:
Brent Hughes is out as head coach of the NAHL’s Corpus Christi IceRays. The club announced Saturday that it “has decided not to retain” his services. Assistant coach Justin Quenneville has been named the interim head coach. . . . Hughes, a former NHL player, had been the IceRays’ head coach since February 2009. . . . Quenneville, who played four seasons in Corpus Christi, spent last season as director of hockey operations and assistant coach.
The Prince George Cougars have hired Phil Guenter as their goaltending coach. Guenter, 31, is based in Lethbridge and has been coaching goaltenders for 12 years. In 10 of those years, he has worked with Prince George G Drew Owsley, 20, who was acquired this summer from the Tri-City Americans. . . . “We want to make Drew's transition to Prince George as easy as possible and Phil has been his goalie coach for a long time, and this will help make things easier,” Cougars head coach Dean Clark said in a news release. "We look forward to also having Phil work with our younger guys." . . .
The WHL-champion Kootenay Ice has picked up the option years on the contracts for Garnet Kaziuk, the director of scouting, head coach Kris Knoblauch and assistant coaches Todd Johnson and Jerry Bancks. All four now are signed through 2012-13. . . . “The success we have maintained over the past 13 years both on and off the ice can partially be attributed to having good people in key positions,” Jeff Chynoweth, the franchise’s president and general manager, said in a news release. “Stability and continuity are the keys to any successful organization and these four gentlemen are a big part of what we are all trying to achieve.” . . . Kazuik has been with the Ice through four seasons. Knoblauch joined the Ice as an assistant coach four years ago and is coming of his first season as head coach, having led the team to its third titlein 11 WHL seasons. Johnson and Bancks both signed on to the coaching staff a year ago.
gdrinnan@kamloopsnews.ca
     
gdrinnan.blogspot.com
     
Taking Note on Twitter

Blazers have more questions than answers as camp opens

By GREGG DRINNAN
Daily News Sports Editor
One of the longest offseasons in the history of the Kamloops Blazers came to an end Friday as the local WHL team opened training camp at Interior Savings Centre.
The Blazers are coming off a season in which they finished 29-37-6 and didn’t qualify for the playoffs for only the second time in the franchise’s 30-year history in this city.
The last time that happened was 2005-06. With Dean Clark as the general manager and head coach, the Blazers bounced back with a 40-26-6 regular season before being swept from a first-round playoff series.
That summer the franchise was sold to private owners.
Today, the Blazers are preparing for their fifth season under private ownership — Vancouver-based businessman Tom Gaglardi owns 51 per cent, with ex-Blazers Shane Doan, Jarome Iginla, Mark Recchi and Darryl Sydor sharing the rest.
The Blazers have played an even 300 regular-season and playoff games under this ownership group. They have won 121 of those games. The winning percentage of .403 is less than mediocre.
The bloom that was on a franchise that once won three Memorial Cup championships in four years has long since wilted. The rose looks more like a dandelion.
The result is that the Blazers go into this training camp facing far more questions than there are answers.
——————
GOALTENDING
Going into training camps, coaches often can be heard saying that the goaltending position is wide open. Those coaches, for the most part, are talking through their hats.
Not Guy Charron, the head coach of the Blazers.
“There’s going to be a competition to see who rises to the occasion,” Charron says.
Over the last few seasons, the club has relied on veterans like Justin Leclerc, Kurtis Mucha and Jeff Bosch. Not this season.
There would appear to be four candidates for what should become two positions, but trying to handicap them at this stage is a mug’s game.
Cam Lanigan, 19, has WHL experience, but his numbers (3-9-0, 5.59, .843) were woeful after coming over from the Edmonton Oil Kings last season. Granted, he was playing behind Bosch, but the 6-foot-2, 200-pound Lanigan, who has appeared in 90 regular-season games, didn’t show much when given the opportunity, so has a lot to prove.
Taran Kozun, who turns 17 on Aug. 29, and Cole Cheveldave, 18, are the two other main combatants for the two spots.
Kozun, 5-foot-11 and 180 pounds, had a big season with the midget AAA Prince Albert Mintos, going 17-4-2, 2.22, .914.
The 5-foot-11, 175-pound Cheveldave, 18, was named the AJHL’s rookie of the year after going 16-20-6, 2.90, .917 with the Drumheller Dragons.
But don’t count out 6-foot-6, 185-pound Troy Trombley, 17, who played midget AAA and was the playoff MVP with the Fort Saskatchewan Rangers.
Charron indicates that, depending on how the exhibition season goes, he may open the season carrying three goaltenders.
“Does it mean we have three guys for a while? Does it mean someone takes the ball and runs with it . . . obviously we are going to need goaltending and that’s where it’s at,” the head coach says.
This will be the most interesting battle in camp.
——————
DEFENCE
It is no secret that the Blazers have a deep and veteran defence corps.
However, let’s not forget that this team had the WHL’s third-poorest defensive record last season. That translated to the poorest defensive record in the 10-team Western Conference.
Granted, hard-nosed Josh Caron missed a lot of the season with collarbone problems and Austin Madaisky had his season ended prematurely by a broken neck.
The Blazers likely will use two of their three 20-year-old slots on Caron and Bronson Maschmeyer, with the 19-year-old Madaisky expected to return to his minute-eating role now that he is healthy again.
Associate coach Dave Hunchak is especially high on puck-moving Czech Marek Hrbas, 18, who was acquired from the Edmonton Oil Kings in June.
Charron wants his team to spend far less time in its zone, thus the acquisition of Hrbas, which resulted in the trading of Brandon Underwood, 19, to the Regina Pats.
“We need people to help get the puck out quicker so that we’re not spending more time than we have to in our zone,” Charron says. “We have reason to think (Hrbas) will be a plus in that department.
“And that’s an area we have to be better at.”
When you spend as much time in your zone as the Blazers did last season, it causes problems. It’s more tiring to play defence than it is to skate with the puck. When you’re on defence a lot, you get tired, you stop moving your feet and you take penalties. And with the rules changing in an attempt to increase offence — a team icing the puck from its zone can’t change personnel, for example — defencemen who can make the first pass are becoming more valuable.
“That’s where the game has evolved — speed and execution,” Charron says. “Size is important but you need that element to get out of trouble.”
With the injuries to Caron and Madaisky, Brady Gaudet got plenty of playing time as a 16-year-old and the Blazers should benefit from that this winter. Gaudet, the 10th overall pick in the 2009 bantam draft, had really improved by season’s end. Don’t be surprised if he is quarterbacking the power play before the season is too old.
With Tyler Hansen, going into his third season at 18, rounding out the top six, freshmen Landon Cross, from Brandon, and Tyler Bell, from Regina, will be hard-pressed to earn playing time. Both are 17.
Or perhaps Josh Connolly, a 16-year-old who was taken in the third round of the 2010 draft, will show enough flash and dance that the Blazers have to keep him. From Prince George, he is the younger brother of Cougars captain Brett Connolly, who was picked sixth overall by the Tampa Bay Lightning in the NHL’s 2010 draft.
——————
FORWARDS
The first thing that must be solved is the enigma that is left-winger Brendan Ranford.
At Christmas, he looked as though he might take a run at leading the WHL in goals and points. But it all came apart like a cardboard box in the rain.
Ranford finished with 86 points, including 33 goals, in 68 games, but scored only three times, and added 21 assists, in his last 29 games.
And it all boiled over on March 11 when he cross-checked a linesman, a move that ultimately drew a six-game suspension. He will miss the season’s first three games as he completes that sentence.
According to Ranford, he lost his conditioning after Christmas and that was a big factor in his play.
"Hey, I'm not going to make any excuses, but I live with an Italian family in Kamloops, and they feed me a lot of pasta," Ranford told Frank Seravalli of the Philadelphia News earlier this summer.
"The biggest thing I learned is that I've got to stay in good condition through the whole year. I got a really fast start. Everything was going in for me. I started the season in really good shape. Then, probably halfway through the (season), I just got out of condition, and it caught up to me."
Ranford spent time at the Philadelphia Flyers’ development camp where veteran NHLer Ian Laperriere took him under his wing.
Of course, Ranford was not alone in bottoming out in last season’s second half.
“From my conversations with (the players), I believe that most, if not all of them, have come to realize that we can’t put ourselves in a position like that any more,” Charron says.
One of his messages to the players, he says, has been: “Is that what this franchise is about?”
With 10 returning forwards, the Blazers are going to need the likes of Colin Smith, Jordan DePape, J.T. Barnett, Logan McVeigh and Ryan Hanes to find more offence in their games while also improving on the defensive side of the puck.
Charron hopes that with another year under their belts, the forwards show a new level of maturity. With experience, he says, comes better leadership.
“We have to teach them that and each guy has to learn,” Charron says. “I have had discussions with some of those older players and it appears to me that they’ve grasped it, that whatever we did wasn’t good enough.”
The Blazers will get a full season out of freshman Matt Needham, the eighth overall selection in the 2010 bantam draft, who had seven points in 13 games last season. However, he’s only 16 and players of that age rarely have huge impacts in a league in which goals have become tougher to come by.
Aspen Sterzer, from Canal Flats, Dallas Calvin of Trail and Calgarian Cole Ully should get decent looks. Sterzer, 17, was pointless in 10 games last season, while the 6-foot-3, 205-pound Calvin, 17, had 40 points in 40 games with the KIJHL’s Beaver Valley Nitehawks, before adding 17 points in 12 playoff games. Ully was a second-round pick in the 2010 bantam draft.
——————
COACHING
Charron readily admits that it has taken him longer to adapt to junior hockey than he thought it would. Before joining the Blazers on Nov. 23, 2009, Charron had spent more than 20 seasons coaching in the professional ranks.
Now, though, he is adamant that he will be more involved in all aspects of this team than he has been to this point. He will, he says, be holding players more accountable than has been the case.
He also says he is looking forward to working with Hunchak, who brings seven years of WHL coaching experience to the Blazers. He spent the last four as head coach of the Moose Jaw Warriors, who didn’t renew his contract after last season when they won 40 games.
“I’ve got an experienced guy with me,” Charron says. “I’ve got players I’ve coached in the past . . . I know them, they know me. I’m excited about it. But there is going to be an onus on the players . . . let’s see how they react.”
Charron is into the last year of his contract, with no extension in sight. The Blazers didn’t announce the length of Hunchak’s deal when he signed, but it’s safe to assume it is longer than one season.
Charron says none of that matters, that he is most comfortable with Hunchak.
“Very much so . . . very much so,” Charron says. “He’s got that experience. He’s been in the league for seven years. He’s coached a team to some success. In most cases, guys don’t get fired when they have that kind of success with a team. I do have a good rapport with him. We’ve had numerous conversations. We are becoming familiar with each other.
“His experience at this level is going to help me be a better coach.”

gdrinnan@kamloopsnews.ca
     
gdrinnan.blogspot.com
     
Taking Note on Twitter

Thursday, August 25, 2011

THE MacBETH REPORT:
F Zdenek Blatny (Seattle, Kootenay, 1998-2001) signed a one-year contract with the Graz 99ers (Austria, Erste Bank Liga) after a successful tryout. He had two goals nad four assists in six games with the Hannover Indians (Germany 2.Bundesliga) and one goal and 10 assists n 16 games with Kosice and Dukla Trencin (both Slovakia, Extraliga) last season.
———
JUST NOTES: G Brendan Jensen of the Vancouver Giants will attend rookie camp with the NHL’s Vancouver Canucks. Jensen, an 18-year-old from El Granada, Calif., will go into Giants’ camp as the favourite to emerge as the club’s starter. . . . The Giants have been hoping to have Finnish G Jonathan Iilahti as their starter. However, Iilahti, a sixth-round draft pick by the Canucks in 2010, will play in Finland again this season. . . .  Mark Segal, who split time with Jensen last season with the Giants, won’t be back for his 20-year-old season. He plans on attending McGill U in Montreal and playing for the Redmen. . . . The Swift Current Broncos have signed D Brycen Martin, the second overall selection in the 2011 bantam draft. From Calgary, Martin played for the Calgary Bisons of the Alberta major bantam league last season, putting up 42 points in 31 games. The Broncos have signed their first four selections from the 2011 draft. . . . The Regina Pats have signed their first two selections from the 2011 bantam draft. F Adam Brooks of Winnipeg was taken 25th overall, while F Dane Schioler, also from Winnipeg, was taken with the 36th pick. Brooks had 111 points in 40 games with the bantam AAA Winnipeg Hawks. Schioler, whose father Dave played for the Winnipeg Monarchs (1976-77), played on a line with Brooks and put up 77 points. . . .
Cory Cameron is the Kootenay Ice’s new athletic therapist. Cameron, from Revelstoke, B.C., has spent six years as a rehabilitation consultant with Crash Conditioning in Calgary. He has WHL experience with the Vancouver Giants (trainer, 2006-09) and Calgary Hitmen (assistant trainer, 2004-06). . . . Don Clark is the new president of the Lethbridge Hurricanes’ board of directors. Clark was elected Tuesday as the new board held its first meeting. He replaces Brian MmcNaughton, who wasn’t re-elected at last week’s annual general meeting. Also on the new board are Brian Wichers (vice-president), Adele Barrington, Herb Beswick, Rick Braden, Brad Cook, Auke Elzinga, Dick Gibson, Randy Joevenazzo, John Koliaska, George McCrea, Dave Olson, Duane Ptycia, Kelly Shigehiro, Pat Shimbashi and Jim Whittaker. . . . The U of Calgary Dinos announced Wednesday that they have received commitments from three former WHL players. G Jacob DeSerres (Seattle, Brandon, 2007-10) is from Calgary. He played last season for the QMJHL’s Saint John Sea Dogs, who won the Memorial Cup. He will compete for playing time with two other ex-WHLers, Dustin Butler and Kris Lazaruk. Also attending the U of Calgary will be F Dylan Hood (Kelowna, Moose Jaw, 2006-11), who had 83 points in 71 games with Moose Jaw last season, and F Thomas Frazee (Portland, Medicine Hat, Moose Jaw, Regina, Kamloops), who had 71 points in 70 games split between Regina and Kamloops.
Sophomore F Brayden Cuthbert is in camp with the Moose Jaw Warriors and will skate but won’t take part in scrimmages. He hasn’t yet received medical clearance as he recovers from a concussion suffered on Jan. 22. . . . Matthew Gourlie of the Moose Jaw Times-Herald also reports that the Warriors are looking at F Markus McCrea, 19, who played the last three seasons with the Everett Silvertips and F Sean Aschim, 19, who played with the Prince Albert Raiders and Kelowna Rockets in 2009-10 and with the SJHL’s Melfort Mustangs last season. . . . Slovakian D Filip Vasko has arrived in Kelowna and will be in camp with the Rockets. Vasko, 17, was selected by the Rockets in the 2011 CHL import draft. He will be one of 160 players in the Rockets’ rookie camp. . . . Stu Ballantyne, who resigned earlier this month as the Vancouver Giants’ chief operating officer, now is the chief executive officer of the 2015 Canada Winter Games, which are to be held in Prince George. The Games are scheduled for Feb. 12 through March 1. . . . The Everett Silvertips have their two new imports — Slovakian F Vladimir Dolnik and German D Dominik Bittner — are in town and ready for camp. . . . The Red Deer Rebels have welcomed Czech G Patrik Bartosak to town. He was picked in the 2011 import draft. It turns out he is a nephew of former NHLer Radek Bonk.
———
THE COACHING GAME:
Former NHL D Mark Hardy, 52, has joined the ECHL’s Ontario Reign as an assistant coach. He’ll work with head coach Jason Christie, who left the Central league’s Bloomington Blaze earlier in the week to sign with the Reign.
———
Jane Sims of the London Free Press was in court on Wednesday where she witnessed the sentencing of a former hockey player with a long history of mental illness. Her story is right here.

gdrinnan@kamloopsnews.ca
     
gdrinnan.blogspot.com
     
Taking Note on Twitter

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Veteran wanting more work ethic from Blazers

By GREGG DRINNAN
Daily News Sports Editor
Work ethic.
In a pre-training camp conversation, veteran defenceman Bronson Maschmeyer of the WHL’s Kamloops Blazers repeatedly refers to those two words.
Work ethic.
It is something he says the Blazers didn’t have on a consistent basis last season when they lost their last eight games, finished 29-37-6, and missed the playoffs by three points.
“Work ethic . . . that is a team effort,” Maschmeyer, 20, says. “Work ethic always prevails. Going through practices, going through games . . . it has to start right at the very beginning.”
The beginning for the 2011-12 edition of the Blazers is today.
Players will register for training camp today at Interior Savings Centre, with rookie camp running Friday and Saturday. Main camp attendees will skate both days as well; main camp gets really serious Sunday and runs through Tuesday.
It all ends with the annual intrasquad game on Tuesday, 7 p.m., at ISC.
As the season approaches, Maschmeyer, who is from Bruderheim, Alta., says the Blazers badly need to change how they approach practices.
“Work ethic going into practices should be harder than the games,” he reasons. “When we get to the games, they should be easier because we’re working so hard.
“We should be practising like that every day.”
As he looks back at last season, Maschmeyer feels the Blazers “were a team that could have done more than what we did. We underachieved for what I thought we could have done with the people we had. It’s not like we didn’t try . . . but there was something missing. Not something skillwise, but something mentally . . . we didn’t all click.”
A look at the Blazers’ depth chart reveals 16 of the players off that roster are expected in camp.
“We have an older group of guys,” Maschmeyer continues, “but somewhere along the line it has to change here and it has to click together as a team and as individuals.
“But work ethic will prevail and we have to do that every night, not just every once in a while.”
Maschmeyer pointed to games with the Tri-City Americans and Spokane Chiefs as evidence of last season’s inconsistencies.
In Kamloops, the Blazers split 4-3 shootout decisions with the Chiefs; on the road, the Blazers were beaten, 10-1 and 10-5. The Blazers beat the Americans 3-2 in a shootout and lost 5-4 here, but dropped 7-3 and 5-0 decisions in Kennewick, Wash.
“We played them hard at home and then go there and lose like that,” Maschmeyer says. “It just didn’t make sense.”
Head coach Guy Charron agrees with his veteran defenceman.
“Absolutely,” Charron says. “I don’t mind exposing some of the areas that need to be better.”
It is something he badly wants to change as he heads into his final WHL season.
Maschmeyer played 48 games with the Vancouver Giants in 2008-09 before being dealt to the Blazers prior to the start of the 2009-10 season. Despite being undersized at 5-foot-10 and 180 pounds, he has proved durable, playing all 72 games in each of his two seasons here. He also has put up 73 points in those 144 games.
But he fully understands this will be his last season in the WHL and he doesn’t want it to end like the previous two — the Blazers were swept from a first-round series by the Giants in the spring of 2010.
“Each year as you go along, you realize you’re getting closer and closer to the end . . . not to the end of your hockey career but you kind of feel as if this is your last go at it,” he says. “Personally, you want to do well. Guy has often said that a successful team does more for personal goals . . . if you win as a team you’re going to win as a player.”
Maschmeyer hasn’t been treated to so much as a professional tryout during his WHL career, so he and his agent, Gerry Johannson, will explore all options for next season. That will include going to school — Maschmeyer will be owed five years books and tuition when his WHL career ends — and opportunities in Europe.
“I want to continue my hockey career,” he says. “I love the game. I love being around the guys, love being around the sport.”
First, he says “I want to do something good here.”
He got a taste of the work ethic of which he speaks with the Giants under head coach Don Hay. So, Maschmeyer says, he knows what it’s like.
“I didn’t always get along with Don Hay but I really admire the guy,” Maschmeyer recalls. “As a cocach, he was a tough coach. But he had his practices really, really hard.”
The result was that “when it came to games, we were excited . . . at that time of my career I wasn’t playing a whole lot but games were fun times.
“Practices . . . we knew we were going to get worked.”
The Giants went 57-10-5 that season and reached the Western Conference final.
“We knew coming into games that we were going to win,” he says.
A lot of that feeling was due to the work put in during practices.
“It does go a long ways,” Maschmeyer says. “Everybody says it but it’s hard to do.”
JUST NOTES: Maschmeyer will be one of three 20-year-olds on the Blazers’ roster as camp opens, the others being C Chase Schaber and D Josh Caron. . . . Maschmeyer says he doesn’t feel old until he sees the 15-, 16- and 17-year-olds arriving for camp. “Then you think, ‘Oh my gawd, I’m getting old.’ ” Then, with a laugh, he adds that Charron “told me to shave so I could look younger.” . . . Maschmeyer’s brother Brock, 19, is with the AJHL’s Fort McMurray Oil Barons, who left Tuesday for Moscow where they will play in the World Junior Club Cup. Brock played two seasons with the Lloydminster Bobcats, before spending last season in Fort McMurray. . . . The Blazers will play the Victoria Royals in an exhibition game at the McArthur Island Sport and Event Centre on Sept. 2. Game time will be 7 p.m.
———
CAMP NOTES: Players attending the rookie and main camps will register today, 5 p.m., at the Sports Action Lounge in the Interior Savings Centre. . . . The first rookie camp practice hits the ice Friday, 9 a.m., with others to follow at 10:15 and 11:30 a.m., and 12:45 p.m. Main campers will practice at 2:15 and 3:45 p.m., with rookie games set for 5:30 and 7:30 p.m. . . . The Blazers expect 71 players for rookie camp. That doesn’t include F Rylan Freed of Melfort, Sask., and D Riley Hummitsch of Chino Hills, Calif., both of whom are out with injuries. Both were 2011 bantam draft picks. . . . The Blazers anticipate having all nine of their 2010 bantam picks and nine of the 2011 selections in camp. . . . As well, five of the 10 players selected in 2009 are on the main camp roster. . . . F Tyson McLellan of San Jose is expected at rookie camp. McLellan, 15, is the son of Todd McLellan, the head coach of the NHL’s San Jose Sharks. . . . Six local products are on the rookie camp roster — F Diego Cuglietta, F Nick Fidanza, G Ty Hamer-Jackson, D Wes Matsuda, G Austin Piquette and G Liam McLeod. McLeod was a ninth-round pick in the 2011 bantam draft. . . . Fidanza, Matsuda and McLeod played for the bantam tier 1 Jardine’s Blazers. . . . Piquette spent the season with the Pursuit of Excellence in Kelowna. . . . D Connor Clouston, a third-round selection in 2011, is the son of Medicine Hat Tigers head coach Shaun Clouston. . . . D Josh Connolly, a third-round pick in 2010, is the younger brother of Prince George Cougars F Brett Connolly. . . . D Mackenzie Ferner, an eighth-round pick in 2010, missed much of last season with an injury. His father, Mark, is a former Kamloops Jr. Oilers defenceman who once coached the Blazers and now is the head coach of the Everett Silvertips. . . . F Cooper Holick of Cranbrook is the son of former Kootenay Ice head coach Mark Holick, who now is head coach of the AHL’s Syracuse Crunch. . . . F Cole Souto, who won’t turn 16 until Dec. 27, is on the rookie camp roster. His brother Chase is heading into his second season with the Blazers. They are from Yorba Linda, Calif. . . . The training camp rosters are available at www.blazerhockey.com.

gdrinnan@kamloopsnews.ca
     
gdrinnan.blogspot.com
     
Taking Note on Twitter
THE MacBETH REPORT:
F Tomas Hricina (Regina, 2008-10) signed a two-year (plus option) contract with Banska Bystrica (Slovakia, Extraliga) after a successful tryout. He had three assists in 19 games with Kosice (Slovakia, Extraliga) and five goals and 10 assists in 23 games on loan to Bardejov (Slovakia, 1.Liga) last season.
———
JUST NOTES: G Jonny Hogue of Lethbridge will experience something of a dream come true when he skates onto the ice at the Hurricanes’ camp. Hogue, an eighth-round pick in the 2011 bantam draft, is a former Hurricanes’ stick boy. . . . D Ryan Aasman is coming home. Aasman, 19, who has played with the Prince Albert Raiders, Seattle Thunderbirds and Swift Current Broncos, is going to camp with his hometown Medicine Hat Tigers. Aasman was selected by the Raiders with the eighth overall pick of the 2007 bantam draft. He was dropped by the Broncos after last season. . . . D Justin Slobozian, 19, who spent part of three seasons (2007-10) with the Regina Pats, has been acquired by the MJHL’s Portage Terriers from the Thunder Bay North Stars of the Superior International junior league. Slobozian split last season between the MJHL’s Neepawa Natives and the North Stars. . . . The 2011 Western Canada U-16 Challenge Cup will be played at Mosaic Place in Moose Jaw, Oct. 27-30.  This tournament features the highest-rated U-16 players in the four western provinces. . . . Don Nachbaur, the head coach of the Spokane Chiefs, will go into this regular season with 479 regular-season coaching victories. . . . F Brody Luhning, 19, who has played with the Swift Current Broncos and Calgary Hitmen, will go to camp with the Regina Pats. He spent most of last season with the SJHL’s Battlefords North Stars. He is from Lumsden, Sask., which is a couple of slapshots north of Regina. . . . Greg Harder of the Regina Leader-Post reports that “The Pats are believed to be close to signing their top two picks from the 2011 WHL bantam draft: C Adam Brooks (second round, 25th overall) and RW Dane Schioler (second round, 36th overall). An announcement could come as early as today.” . . . Latvian D Kristaps Bazevics and Norwegian F Jonas Knutsen, the Prince Albert Raiders’ two selections in the 2011 import draft, have arrived and will take part in training camp. . . . A couple of notes from Jeff Bromley, whose blog, Ice Chips, is linked to over there on the right. He notes that the Kootenay Ice, the WHL’s defending champion, has sold more than 2,100 season tickets. “We sold 328 new season tickets, by far the most in the last number of years,” Ice president/GM Jeff Chynoweth told him. “It’s a great base and it’s going to help get the average attendance up.” . . . Bromley also reports that Kootenay F Brock Montgomery had sports hernia surgery earlier this month and won’t be back on the ice until some time in October. . . . It’s interesting that F Daniel Nachbaur, 16, will be in rookie camp with the Tri-City Americans. Daniel, who played last season in the EDGE program in Calgary, is the son of former Americans head coach Don Nachbaur, who now is the head coach of the Spokane Chiefs. . . . It’s also interesting that Tri-City’s rookie camp roster includes 19 players who are from the U.S.
———
THE COACHING GAME:
Jason Christie (Saskatoon, 1986-90) has signed on as head coach of the ECHL’s Ontario Reign. That means the Central league’s Bloomington Blaze is in the market for a new head coach. Christie was the Central league’s coach of the year last season with the Bloomington PrairieThunder. He signed with the Blaze as July 13. . . .
The OHL’s Mississauga St. Michael’s Majors have added Kelly Harper to their staff as assistant GM/assistant coach, while former NHLer Brad May has signed on as an assistant coach. They will work alongside GM/head coach James Boyd, who took over from Dave Cameron when the latter joined the NHL’s Ottawa Senators as an assistant coach. Harper had been on the coaching staff of the Brampton Battalion since 2003. . . .
Former Seattle Thunderbirds assistant coach Turner Stevenson has joined the NAHL’s Wenatchee Wild as an assistant coach. He will work with head coach John Becanic, who spent a season on Seattle’s staff. Becanic is into his first full season as the Wild’s head coach. He took midway through last season.
———
A WHL player has pleaded guilty to a charge of dangerous driving causing death. He pleaded guilty through his lawyer on Tuesday in provincial court in Cochane, Alta. Sentencing arguments will be held on Nov. 17. There is more right here.
———
It’s called BioSteel and you’re going to be hearing a lot about it in the immediate future. What is BioSteel? It is the latest, and some hockey players say the best, in high-performance energy drinks. James Mirtle of The Globe and Mail has more right here.
———
TWEET OF THE DAY . . .
From Regan Bartel, the radio voice of the Kelowna Rockets: “Is this a sign of tough economic times? 350 Rockets season tickets have been released to the public. Wow. This hasn't happened in years.”

gdrinnan@kamloopsnews.ca
     
gdrinnan.blogspot.com
     
Taking Note on Twitter

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

THE MacBETH REPORT:
F Ryan Stone (Brandon, 2001-05) signed a one-year contract with TPS Turku (Finland, SM-Liiga). He had 11 goals and 14 assists in 51 games with the Abbotsford Heat (AHL) last season. . . .
F Jamie Lundmark (Moose Jaw, Seattle, 1998-2001) signed a one-year contract with Dinamo Riga (Latvia, KHL). He had six goals and 12 assists n 34 games with the Milwaukee Admirals (AHL) and three goals and seven assists in 18 games with Timrå (Sweden, Elitserien) last season. . . .
F Jordan Knackstedt (Red Deer, Moose Jaw, 2004-08) signed a one-year contract with Bolzano (Italy, Serie A). He had 12 goals and 14 assists in 66 games with the Providence Bruins and Rochester Americans (both AHL) last season.
———
Post-concussion syndrome has halted the career of yet another hockey player. Dave Scatchard (Portland, 1993-96) revealed Monday via Twitter that his career is over.
Randy Starkman of the Toronto Star talked with Scatchard and began his story like this:
Hockey journeyman Dave Scatchard can’t push his three young kids on the swing because of post-concussion symptoms.
He can’t remember anything from his final hockey game in April, when he was knocked unconscious for five minutes by a late hit while playing for the AHL’s Peoria Rivermen and woke up frightened in an ambulance because he didn’t know where he was.
Starkman’s complete story is right here.
Scatchard offers up some interesting thoughts on the late Rick Rypien and on concussions in hockey. But it is the last paragraph of Starkman’s piece that is the most haunting.
He quotes Scatchard, whose decision was made while at the Mayo Clinic, as saying:
“That’s something that the doctors at the Mayo Clinic are going to try to work with me on to see if we can get some of the symptoms to go away. I don’t know the treatment yet, but he promised me that he’d try to figure out something that could help me with that.”
———
JUST NOTES: The Edmonton Oilers have added Duane Sutter to their staff of pro scouts. Sutter (Lethbridge, 1976-80) had been the Calgary Flames director of player personnel (2008-11). He was relieved of his duties following last season. He is the father of F Brody Sutter of the Lethbridge Hurricanes. . . . The Brandon Wheat Kings announced Monday that they have received transfers for their two selections in the 2011 CHL import draft. Swiss F Alessio Bertaggia and Slovkian F Bruno Mraz are expected to arrive in Brandon this week and should be on the ice when training camp begins next week.
———
THE COACHING GAME:
J.P. Hoornstra of the San Bernardino Sun reports that the ECHL’s Ontario Reign was “set to extend an offer to Jason Christie to become the team's next head coach Monday, according to sources with knowledge of the discussions.” . . . Christie (Saskatoon, 1986-90) was the Central league’s coach of the year last season while with the Bloomington Prairie Thunder. . . . The Reign is looking to replace Karl Taylor, who now is an assistant coach with the AHL’s Chicago Wolves. . . . Hoornstra’s story is right here.
———
And now for something completely different. . . .
If you haven’t yet heard about what happened to outfielder Matt Holliday of the St. Louis Cardinals on Monday night, check it out right here.

gdrinnan@kamloopsnews.ca
     
gdrinnan.blogspot.com
     
Taking Note on Twitter

Monday, August 22, 2011





Murray Scholar Special Edition

Introducing Penn State Murray Scholar
Shane McGregor

This year we welcome five new talented college journalist into the family of Murray Scholars. Over the next five weeks "Mondays With Murray" will introduce you to them, along with a classic Jim Murray column.
This week we're pleased to introduce you to Shane McGregor of Penn State University. He is not only an English and Journalism student at PSU with a GPA of 3.89 but he's also Penn State's third-string quarterback. 
McGregor, who will turn 22 on Sept. 14, is the son of Beth and Bernie McGregor and has one sister, Maura. His mother is a Penn State graduate. His father played baseball at Harvard, and a cousin, Pat Fisher, was a punter at LSU.
In his spare time, McGregor enjoys writing, sailing, playing tennis and hanging out with friends. He has a double major in English and journalism and owned a superlative 3.89 cumulative grade-point average after the 2011 spring semester.
McGregor is the winner of the Jim Murray Memorial Foundation "Judges Scholarship" which is funded by donations from previous essay contest judges, including major contributors Rick Reilly of ESPN and Woody Paige of the Denver Post.
MacGregor’s winning essay was about his football coach and Penn State icon, Joe Paterno.

MAY 8, 1997, SPORTS
Copyright 1997/THE TIMES MIRROR COMPANY

JIM MURRAY

He Thinks, Therefore He Wins

   Only a few football coaches achieve the status of legend in their lifetimes. Knute Rockne, Howard Jones, Fielding Yost, Amos Alonzo Stagg, Bear Bryant, Vince Lombardi. And, of course, Joe Paterno.
   In another era, all of them would doubtless be generals. If they had one thing in common, it was their ability to motivate and inspire the troops, to get them to sublimate their welfare to the good of the cause.
   They were all different. Though Norwegian-born, Rockne had the wisecracking presence of the Irish. Yost was cerebral, Bear Bryant a grizzly of a man who rumbled when he talked and convinced his forces it was us-against-the-world. Jones was aloof, seigneurial and made it clear he expected nothing less than your best.
   Paterno may be the best of them. He came along in an era when you could no longer simply suit up the graduating class or get your line out of the chem lab and play some other coach similarly circumspect. After all, the "Four Horsemen" produced three coaches and a federal judge. Today's backfields sometimes seem to produce more defendants than judges.
   On the other hand, Rockne's Old Gipper was ahead of his time, was more what used to be called a "tramp athlete" available to the highest bidder or the school where he could make the most out of the pool hall. George Gipp was a great football player, but a greater poker player.
   Still, Paterno is a throwback. His football players do not star in court cases a decade from their prime. His teams graduate — 87 percent one year (compared to a national average of 54 percent). In the Big Ten, only Northwestern matches Paterno's Penn State record of 80 percent graduation rate.
   He looks more like a nuclear spy than a football coach. Paterno gazes at the world through these thick-lensed glasses with the perpetually perplexed look of a guy who's trying to remember what he did with his keys. He looks lost. He doesn't look threatening at all. Lombardi could terrify you with a growl, Bryant could make you reach to check your wallet, Rockne could make you cry. Paterno looks like a guy waiting for a bus.
   The looks are deceiving. Nobody ever was more sure of where he was going and what he was doing than Joe Paterno. There are few secrets in coaching, but what there are, he has.
   He speaks in a laryngitic rasp that makes you pay close attention to get what he's saying. But it's worth it. They call him "Joe Pa" back at University Park, Pa., which if you're looking for it, first get a dog. And turn right at Altoona.
   The only reason football players go there is because Joe Paterno is there. The only reason the Big Ten let a non-Midwestern school in its conference is Joe Paterno.
   I tell you all you have to know about Paterno when I tell you the building named after him on campus is a library. Most coaches when they achieve fame get a field house, a stadium, practice field or arena named after them.
   He was a literature major, not P.E., at his alma mater, Brown University. He wasn't going to be a coach but a lawyer. But law schools cost money, and he took a job on the coaching staff at Penn State to raise tuition. That was 48 years ago.
   A Paterno team is, like its coach, a conservative bunch, calm, unhurried, unstoppable and everything you try they've been briefed on. Paterno just stands on the sideline blinking and clapping his hands. He takes the field with his pants legs rolled up so high, writer Rick Reilly once snickered he looked as if he were expecting a recurrence of the Johnstown flood any moment. If you didn't know, you'd think he was the trainer.
   His team's uniforms, like him, are not flashy. Just dark blue with white helmets. It's like getting beat by the 1908 Frank Merriwell Yales.
   Joe Pa was in our midst early this week. Looking for 9.3 sprinters, 300-pound pancake linemen, rubber-armed passers, safeties who can jump seven feet straight up? Naw. Paterno was here to participate in the 1997 GTE Academic All-America Teams program. This honors athletes who led their classes not only on the field but in the classroom.
   Paterno presented the award to his former quarterback, Todd Blackledge, who not only led his school to its first national championship in 1982 but made Phi Beta Kappa (as well as the Kansas City Chiefs) along the way.
   In his 32 years as head coach (with 298 victories and 28 bowl games), Paterno has had many chances to go pro, but didn't, largely because he preferred remaining a pedagogue to being a CEO.
   "College coaching today is difficult enough. Before you get down to game plans, you have to call the squad together to meet with agents and lawyers. You have to discuss drugs and alcohol, date rape, sexual harassment, things that have nothing to do with football. Or maybe everything to do.
   "Girls are more aggressive today. So are agents. They all see that pot of gold, the professional contract, in the distance.
   "It's hard to keep your feet. You have all these things to get out of the way before you can teach a line about football. I make more money than I should, but it's the future of the game I worry about. "
   Would he ever join what I call the "Yeah but" coaches, as in "But, coach, he raped four nurses!" "Yeah but he runs the 40 in 4.3!"
   Would Joe Pa sign up a known rogue because his skills could lead the team to the Rose Bowl?
   Joe Pa shakes his head. "You know it's going to be trouble down the line. You don't need that. "
   Trouble runs a 4.3 40, too, Joe knows.

* Reprinted with permission by the Los Angeles Times

Follow the Jim Murray Memorial Foundation on Facebook and find event photos, upcoming events and past Mondays With Murray posts.

Jim Murray Memorial Foundation | P.O. Box 995 | La Quinta | CA | 92247

Sunday, August 21, 2011





If you are a fan of the movie Field of Dreams, and a lot of people are, you should know that the field, all 193 acres of it in eastern Iowa, is for sale. It’ll set you back US$5.4 million. According to the Dubuque Telegraph Herald, there hasn’t been a lot of interest expressed so there’s still time. . . . Gotta love Dennis Rodman. In his Basketball Hall of Fame acceptance speech, he thanked shock jock Howard Stern but never mentioned David Stern, the NBA commissioner. . . . According to TV host Jimmy Fallon, “A new study says eating healthy adds $380 to your grocery costs yearly. Or, as Americans put it, 'Cool, I saved $380 this year!' " . . .
After the Chicago Cubs signed first baseman Trevor Gretzky, Janet and Wayne’s 18-year-old son, last week, Dwight Perry of the Seattle Times noted “protecting him in the lineup shouldn't be a problem. He'll reportedly bat between two fellow signees named McSorley and Semenko.” . . . One more from Perry: “A hiker's dog had to be airlifted out of Angeles National Forest when it got too sore and tired to continue. No truth to the rumor they've already renamed it ‘Haynesworth.’ ” . . . The Little League World Series is on the go in South Williamsport, Pa. Did you know that game tickets and parking are free? . . .
Dave Deibert, in the Saskatoon StarPhoenix: “There's plenty of controversy . . . around The Longhorn Network, a TV channel owned by ESPN and devoting around-the-clock coverage to the University of Texas. In Canada, we're already used to such a thing. TSN has been operating as the Toronto Sports Network for as long as anyone can remember.” . . . There are people who follow track and field who feel that Kamloops shot putter Dylan Armstrong is Canada’s best — some say only — hope for a medal at the World Championships in Athletics that open Aug. 27 in Daegu, South Korea. . . . The aptly named Armstrong has had an incredible season and could put quite a top on it with podium finishes in Daegu and at the Diamond League Finals in Brussels next month. . . .
Rob Ryan, the Dallas Cowboys’ rather recognizable defensive co-ordinator, has a bit of a different goal this season: “I just want to be able to go get groceries all year long,” he told Brandon George of the Dallas Morning News. “I don't want to have one of those games where I'm scared to get outside. I want to be good." . . . During Sunday’s final round of the PGA Championship, legendary writer Dan Jenkins tweeted: “A word about the CBS PGA telecast: I’ve never seen so many promos for shows I don’t care to see this fall.” . . . Ain’t that the truth! . . . Prior to the third round of the PGA, Jenkins tweeted: “Scores of fans are streaming in today. They must not have gotten memo about Tiger.” . . . During the second round, Jenkins came out with: “Last cut Tiger missed in a major was Turnberry in '09, when they say he took it out on his rental house. Hope they put away the good china.”
“Somebody in the (Toronto Blue) Jays’ marketing department should book a pre-game concert with the Five Man Electrical Band,” writes Steve Simmons of the Toronto Sun. “Just so they can play: ‘Sign, sign, everywhere a sign . . . Do this, don’t do that, can’t you read the sign?’ ” . . . Here’s Simmons again: “I hate when this happens: Bill Parcells absolutely ignores media members and treats them with disdain when he works in football. But the minute he’s out of a job, guess what he does? He becomes a media guy.” . . . Phil Mushnick, in the New York Post: “Bill Parcells, who had done time in NBC's, MSG's and ESPN's studios, is back with ESPN as a studio analyst. Perhaps this time he'll say something worth knowing. ESPN also has added Jerry Rice, the cast of Disney on Ice and the woodwind section from the Cleveland Symphony Orchestra.” . . .
Headline at SportsPickle.com: London 2012 adds demonstrating as a demonstration sport. . . . First baseman Prince Fielder will be a free agent after this season. His agent is Scott Boras. The prince is soon to be paid a king’s ransom. . . . Ron Judd, in the Seattle Times: “Gov. Rick Perry, R-Electric Chair, is jumping into the race for president. Perfect timing. We were just saying the other day that what this country really needs is another God-fearin', shallow-thinkin' former governor of Texas at the helm.” . . . Is New England Patriots head coach Bill Belichick into social media? Here’s what he told the Boston Herald: “I don't Twitter, I don't MyFace, I don't use Yearbook. I don't do any of that stuff." . . . It’s true. An Argentine sports writer and his wife have named twin daughters Mara and Dona. Yes, in honour of Diego Maradona. . . . A spy tells me that Costco in Kamloops has had Christmas gear out since early this week. Seriously. . . . Jingle Bells. . . . Jingle Bells. . . .

gdrinnan@kamloopsnews.ca
     
gdrinnan.blogspot.com
     
Taking Note on Twitter

  © Design byThirteen Letter

Back to TOP