Showing posts with label MacBeth Report. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MacBeth Report. Show all posts

Monday, December 5, 2016

MacBeth Report: What happened to prompt 871 penalty minutes in one game?


There was a time when a newspaper reporter at a WHL game would pick up a telephone during each intermission and call The Canadian Press with a summary, including goals and penalties. Your biggest nightmare was a bench-clearing brawl, especially one at game’s end that might cause havoc with your newspaper’s deadlines.
Well, there was a game in a Swedish U-18 league on Saturday that featured 871 — yes, 871 — penalty minutes.
Flemingsberg IK beat Åker/Strängnäs HC, 5-0, before 67 spectators. Almost all of the penalties were handed out at game’s end
If you are interested in a summary, there is one right here.
However, The MacBeth Report, who knows his way around European newspapers, found some information in Aftonbladet. I am providing an edited version here.

From The MacBeth Report:
A couple of things stand out. Both coaches and the officials association say that it was not as bad as it looks on the scoresheet and that all concerned say the referee had no choice but to issue game misconducts to every player on the ice.
One should note that in Swedish (and Finnish, and IIHF) hockey, a game misconduct counts as 20 PIM. In North America, it counts as 10 PIM, except in the WHL, where is counts as . . . zero PIM. There were 46 PIM (18 minors, one misconduct) until the handshake line.
(Editor’s note: The WHL doesn’t include misconducts or game misconducts in its penalty totals, which is why you rarely see penalty totals mentioned on this blog. The WHL’s penalty minutes aren’t accurate and can’t be used as reference points with the past or with other leagues.)
So, in Sweden we have 871 PIM. In the NHL, we would have 541 PIM (871 minus 330 for the 10-minute reduction on the 33 game misconducts) and in the WHL, there would be 211 PIM . . . 33 players got five and a game (or five and a match) after the game. Over here, I doubt all 33 players on the ice would have gotten five and a game.
Anyway . . . 871 penalty minutes. Records for Swedish hockey?
With help from Google Translator . . . 
It was not so bad. Most small stuff, says Flemingberg's coach Fredrik Strandfeldt.
He is absolutely right. It's not as bad as it looks, says Robert Sjöström, chairman of Södermanland Officials Association. When Åker/Strängnäs went to thank Flemingsberg after the game that all ended up in the tussle with each other.
More from Sjöström: And the head referee saw no alternative but to hand out a game misconduct to all on the ice, in addition to the two other goalkeepers.
More from Strandfeldt: I and our equipment manager jumped onto the ice and told the boys to separate themselves. It started with a tap at the start and then little nudges and pushes. Do not think it was so serious and no one was hurt. Fuss ended rather quickly in Åker's Ice rink.
The match was won by Flemingberg's J18 5-0. But it will probably not be remembered because of the second event.
It may be a Swedish record where all on the ice, but two goalkeepers, were expelled.
More from Standfeldt: Both I and Åker's coach spoke with the referee after the game. He said he wanted to highlight this. But, again, I do not think it was as bad as the scoresheet says.
Åker's coach Jimmy Albin agreed that it was not fully a brawl but offers a slightly worse picture than his colleague from Flemingsberg.
Here’s Albin: It is a disaster and not good. Certainly, no damage, but it does not look good and it was trash talk that started it all and we have some guys who are hot. So this should not happen in a game. We will talk about this in the team.
Sportbladet spoke with Sjöström, who is chairman of the Södermanlands Officials Committee, which is responsible for the referees.
It is tragic. If one is to strictly follow the rulebook, then the things after the final whistle are punished harder than what takes place during the game. This poor referee does not have much else to do here. There are promising young players in this series and they are judged by promising young hockey referees. Both do what they're told.
This referee did exactly right when he noted everything that happened. Then — before he wrote down everything — he contacted the association. They said he should follow the rulebook and highlight that it was not right, there are five plus a game misconduct for all involved. There are two players with Åker/Strängnäs and one with Flemingsberg highlighted and can be further punished. It is the Disciplinary Committee in the Eastern Region that decides what will happen.
Sportbladet asked: Was it right to do all this?
Sjostrom replied: Yes. If you follow the rule book — that these officials do — then it is right. Had this happened in the Division, Hockey Allsvenskan or SHL, it had never been these proportions. Where do they do it a little differently, you have professional experience.
Sportbladet asked: The coaches do not think it was so serious. Do you agree with them?
Sjöström replied: It's not as bad as it looks. So they are absolutely right. Those involved have taken responsibility 100 percent. There is no field ambulance or the like. It was just too damn big proportion.
Åker/Strängnäs and Flemingsberg should not be hung out like two groups that advocate mass murder. Coaches and leaders — the whole organizations — have been so hard on themselves. They have stood up for the referees and taken hold of their problems. "Shit happens.” But all adults involved have taken responsibility.
Sportbladet asked: What do you do for it not to happen again?

Sjöström replied: This depends on our associations in Sweden which must be active to train hockey referees. Swedish hockey must realize that our clubs have to put a greater commitment to train referees. It is equally important to have good hockey referees with good hockey players. Some clubs are extremely good, some worse. Without shame on anyone.

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Wednesday, December 29, 2010

THE MacBETH REPORT:
F Zdenek Blatny (Seattle, Kootenay, 1998-2001) was released at his request for personal reasons by Hannover Indians (Germany 2.Bundesliga). He had two goals and four assists in five games for the Indians. . . .
F Quinn Hancock (Tacoma/Kelowna, Calgary, Prince George, 1994-98) signed a contract for the rest of the season with the Graz 99ers (Austria Erste Bank Liga). He had 13 goals and 21 assists in 53 games for Iserlohn Roosters (Germany DEL) last season. . . .
F Chris St. Jacques (Medicine Hat, 1999-2004) was released by the Edinburgh Capitals (UK Elite) so he could sign a contract for the rest of the season with Bietigheim-Bissingen (Germany 2.Bundesliga). He had 18 goals and 31 assists in 29 games for the Capitals this season. The Edinburgh newspaper The Scotsman reports that the "cash-strapped" Capitals have converted all player contracts to week-to-week and players are free to leave should they find another team to play for. . . .
D Michael Busto (Moose Jaw, Swift Current, Kootenay, 2001-07) signed a contract with Bolzano (Italy Serie A) for the rest of this season. He had one goal and three assists in 11 games with the Dayton Gems and Elmira Jackals (both ECHL) last season. . . .
F Riley Armstrong (Kootenay, Everett, 2002-04) signed a contract for the rest of the season with the Augsburger Panther (Germany DEL). Armstrong started the season with the Utah Grizzlies (ECHL), getting two assists in two games, before signing with Barys Astana (Kazakhstan KHL), where he had one goal in nine games.
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Two former WHLers have been named to the lineup for the 2011 ECHL All-Star Classic that will be played in Bakersfield, Calif., on Jan. 26. . . . F Mitch Fadden (Seattle, Lethbridge, Tri-City, 2003-09) of the Florida Everblades and F Mark Derlago (Brandon, 2003-06) of the Idaho Steelheads will be in the starting lineup in a game that will feature the all-star team against the Bakersfield Condors. . . . Fadden leads the ECHL in assists (32) and points (47). . . . Derlago is tied for second in goals (15) and fifth in points (31). . . . The all-star team was selected through voting by ECHL coaches, team captains, media directors, broadcasters and media members.
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Things are tightening up at the top of the Western Conference.
The Tri-City Americans dumped the visiting Portland Winterhawks 5-1 on Wednesday, completing a sweep of a two-game series. The Americans had put up a 5-1 victory in Portland on Tuesday.
The two results leave the Winterhawks in first place, at 25-11-3, with the Americans closing, at 21-11-2.
And let’s not forget the Spokane Chiefs, the WHL’s highest-scoring team, who put eight more on the board in beating the visiting Seattle Thunderbirds, 8-2.
The Chiefs had beaten the Thunderbirds 2-0 in Kent, Wash., on Tuesday night.
Spokane C Tyler Johnson scored three times last night, giving him 102 goals in his career with the Chiefs. That moved him into 13th on the franchise’s all-time list, ahead of Brandin Cote (1996-2002).
The Chiefs, having gone 9-1-1 in their last 11, are 21-10-5.
Portland leads the Western Conference, with 53 points, just six ahead of the Chiefs, who hold three games in hand. The Americans are third, with 44 points, but hold two games in hand on the Chiefs and five on the Winterhawks.
The Prince George Cougars, who beat the visiting Chilliwack Bruins 5-0 last night with G James Priestner stopping 22 shots, are the conference’s No. 2 seed as they are the top club in the B.C. Division. But the Cougars are just one point ahead of the Kelowna Rockets, who hold two games in hand.
It’s also worth noting that the Winterhawks no longer lead the WHL in points. That honour belongs to the Saskatoon Blades (27-8-1), who lead the Eastern Conference, with 55 points, after beting the host Prince Albert Raiders 4-3 last night.
F Linden Vey of the Medicine Hat Tigers had a goal and two assists in a 3-2 victory over the Kootenay Ice and moved into a tie for the scoring lead with F Brendan Ranford of the Kamloops Blazers. Each has 58 points, at least for now.
Because it seems that Ranford may have 59 points.
While the online scoresheet of Kamloops’ 6-1 victory over the visiting Vancouver Giants on Tuesday night shows Ranford with three assists, he may have been given another helper sometime after the game.
Early Wednesday, a tweet from the WHL office read: “Top point getter last night and STILL #WHL leading scorer @blazerhockey Ranford with 4 assists in 6-1 win over @WHLGiants.”
If Ranford, indeed, had four assists, he will hold a one-point lead over Vey going into tonight’s games. While the Tigers are off, the Blazers travel to Kelowna.

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

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Shinnimin places a phone call

THE MacBETH REPORT:
F Jesse Schultz (Tri-City, Prince Albert, Kelowna, 1999-2003) signed a one-year contract with Cortina (Italy Serie A). He had seven goals and nine assists in 21 games for Björklöven Umeå (Sweden Allsvenskan) and four goals and eight assists in 21 games for Nuremburg (Germany DEL) last season. . . .
D Jason Beckett (Seattle, 1997-2000) signed a try-out contract with Jesenice (Slovenia, plays in Austria Erste Bank Liga). He had six goals and 33 assists with Red Bull Salzburg II (Austria Nationalliga) last season.
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By now, you will have heard that the WHL has suspended Tri-City Americans F Brendan Shinnimin for 12 games for his hit on Saskatoon Blades F Josh Nicholls on Oct. 6. John MacNeil of the Prince Albert Daily Herald spoke with Shinnimin and Nicholls. That story is right here. And, yes, Shinnimin has called Nicholls and offered an apology.
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One day after giving up eight goals and losing 8-7 in overtime to the host Edmonton Oil Kings, the Prince George Cougars have added a goaltender to their roster. Chase Martin, 18, from Medicine Hat, is scheduled to practice with the Cougars today. Martin was a fifth-round pick by the Spokane Chiefs in the 2007 WHL entry draft. . . . He played last season with the AJHL’s Calgary Canucks, going 9-8-2, 3.33, .896 in 23 games. . . . Martin joins James Priestner, 19, and Tyler Santos, 16, as the goaltenders on the Cougars’ roster.
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The Prince Albert Raiders meet the Giants in Vancouver tonight, which means G Jamie Tucker gets to play against his old team. Tucker was with the Giants last season before asking to be moved. Elliott Pap of the Vancouver Sun has that story right here.
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F Matt Bellerive of the Vancouver Giants won’t play against the visiting Prince Albert Raiders tonight. He received a two-game suspension for a boarding major he incurred Monday for a hit on F Chase Schaber of the Kamloops Blazers. . . . Vancouver F Randy McNaught suffered an ankle injury in that Monday game in Kamloops. Vancouver head coach Don Hay told Elliott Pap of the Vancouver Sun that McNaught is out “week-to-week.“ . . . In a trade with a bit of a difference, the SJHL’s Weyburn Red Wings swapped one brother act (F Daniel Adams and D Dmitry Adams) to the MJHL’s Neepawa Natives for another brother act (F Blake Kirkham and F Scott Kirkham). Weyburn GM Ron Rumball told the Saskatoon StarPhoenix he hadn’t seen such a trade in his 45 years around the SJHL. . . . And if he hasn’t seen it, that’s good enough for me. If you didn‘t know, Rumball and Weyburn head coach Dwight McMillan have been around so long they boarded Noah’s boat together. . . . F D.Jay McGrath, an 18-year-old from Kindersley, Sask., has joined his hometown SJHL team, the Klippers, after being released by the Everett Silvertips. He was pointless in five games this season after picking up five points in 52 games with Everett last season. He was a third-round pick in the 2007 bantam draft. . . . Matthew Gourlie of the Moose Jaw Times-Herald reports that G Brandon Stone will make his first WHL start tonight against the visiting Kootenay Ice. . . . Moose Jaw D Dallas Ehrhardt (knee) is skating but isn’t quite ready. Gourlie also writes that F Brendan Rowinski, 20, who had offseason knee surgery, is to arrive in Moose Jaw today from his home in Winnipeg. He is to be evaluated in Moose Jaw and is expected to be on skates soon. . . . If you’ve been following the Mandi Schwartz story, Joe Couture of the Regina Leader-Post has the lastest right here.
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D Dave Van Drunen (Prince Albert, 1993-94) was badly injured during a brawl in a Central league game Sunday in Loveland, Colo. Van Drunen was with the Odessa Jackalopes when things got ugly in a game with the Colorado Eagles. There’s more -- a whole lot more -- right here.
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TUESDAY’S HIGHLIGHTS:
KOOTENAY 2 at REGINA 0: G Nathan Lieuwen stopped 14 shots to earn his second shutout of the season. There have been nine shutouts in the league this season, with Lieuwen and Mark Friesen of the Swift Current Broncos each owning two. . . . F Drew Czerwonka, with his fourth, at 12:10 of the second period, and F Christian Magnus, with his second, at 11:45 of the third, had the goals. . . . The Ice was bound to win, considering that it won its first game of the season and had alternated wins and losses through its first six games.. . . The Ice is 4-2-0-1 and has three shutouts, including a 1-0 shootout loss in Swift Current on Monday. . . . Regina slipped to 1-6-1-0. . . . The Pats have lost five straight and allowed 27 goals in the process. . . . Regina G Matt Hewitt stopped 34 shots. . . . Each team was 0-for-5 on the PP. . . . Attendance was 3,216. . . . Checking-from-behind count: Zero. . . . The Ice was without D Brayden McNabb, who is out with what is believed to be a shoulder injury. . . . Regina lost F Dane Muench in the first period with a leg injury. . . . The Ice didn’t have G Todd Mathews in the lineup. He is one of four 20-year-olds and Kootenay chose to go with forwards Steele Boomer, Matt Fraser and Kevin King. . . . Each of the WHL’s 22 teams will have to declare a maximum of three 20-year-olds by Thursday.
gdrinnan@kamloopsnews.ca
gdrinnan.blogspot.com
Taking Note on Twitter

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Wednesday . . .

THE MacBETH REPORT: D Steve McCarthy (Edmonton/Kootenay, 1996-2000) signed a one-year contract with TPS Turku (Finland SM-Liiga). He had two goals and five assists in 25 games for Chicago Wolves (AHL) last season.
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Hope everyone enjoyed the entertainment provided by the comments, most of which were entirely predictable, here yesterday. If you’re interested, John MacNeil, who did such a tremendous job of reporting the Marc Mackenzie story from start to trade, continues to ply his trade with the Prince Albert Daily Herald. In fact, he has a fine story today on Kelowna D Brendon Wall, who was acquired from the Raiders over the summer. The Raiders will play in Kelowna on Saturday. MacNeil’s story is right here. . . . F David Killip, the captain of the BCHL’s Salmon Arm SilverBacks, has committed to attend Western Michigan for 2011-12. Killip, 19, is from Kelowna and was selected by the Kelowna Rockets in the ninth round of the 2006 bantam draft. . . . D Art Bidlevskii, who was traded by the Prince George Cougars to the Regina Pats on Wednesday, has yet to play this season. He fractured a thumb in a preseason fight and is wearing a cast. He told Greg Harder of the Regina Leader-Post that the cast should be removed on Oct. 17 and he hopes to play shortly thereafter.
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WEDNESDAY’S HIGHLIGHTS:
SWIFT CURRENT 2 at MOOSE JAW 4: Moose Jaw F Dylan Hood broke a 2-2 tie at 10:21 of the second period. . . . Moose Jaw F Nathan MacMaster, who had a goal and two assists, added insurance at 1:01 of the third. . . . The Warriors (2-4-0-0) had lost three in a row. . . . The Broncos (1-5-0-0) have lost five straight. . . . Moose Jaw G Thomas Heemskerk stopped 21 shots, five fewer than Swift Current’s Mark Friesen. . . . Moose Jaw D Connor Cox didn’t earn a point but was plus-3. . . . F Justin Dowling had two assists for the Broncos, while F Stepan Novotny had a goal, his sixth, and an assist. . . . Swift Current F Cody Eakin scored his first goal of the season. . . . The Broncos were 1-for-6 on the PP; the Warriors were 1-for-2. . . . Attendance was 2,505.
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RED DEER 6 at REGINA 5 (OT): The Rebels scored the game’s last four goals, three of them in the third period and one in the overtime. . . . F Adam Kambeitz got the winner, 1:52 into extra time. . . . F Thomas Frazee scored his first three goals of the season for Regina (1-4-1-0), the third one giving the home team a 5-2 lead at 9:53 of the second period. . . . Frazee also had an assist. . . . F Byron Froese started Red Deer’s comeback with his second goal of the game, at 7:12 of the third period. . . . F Andrej Kudrna, with his seventh of the season, scored at 13:54, on the PP, and D Alex Petrovic forced OT with a goal at 16:24. . . . Petrovic also had two assists, as did D Colin Archer. . . . Red Deer F Ryan Nugent-Hopkins drew three assists for the second straight game. He has 13 points and is tied for the league points lead with F Brendan Shinnimin of the Tri-City Americans. . . . The Rebels now are 5-2-0-0. . . . G Darcy Kuemper came on in relief of Bolton Pouliot with Regina leading 4-2. Kuemper stopped 14 of 15 shots to get the victory. . . . Regina G Dawson Guhle stopped 28 shots. . . . The Pats were 2-for-7 on the PP, and now are 2-for-28 on the season. . . . Red Deer was 2-for-8. . . . Attendance was 3,458.
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TRI-CITY 3 at SASKATOON 5: The Blades scored the game’s first two goals, in the first nine minutes of the first period, and then alternated scores after that. . . . Saskatoon (5-1-0-0) is 4-0 at home. . . . The Americans (4-2-1-0) have lost three in a row, two of them in the East Division. . . . The Blades got two goals from each of FJosh Nicholls, who has five, and F Darian Dziurzynski, who has four. . . . F Marek Viedensky got his fifth for the Blades. . . . F Brent Benson and F Curtis Hamilton each had two assists for the Blades. . . . The Americans got two goals from D Tyler Schmidt, while F Adam Hughesman had two assists. . . . Tri-City G Drew Owsley made 42 saves, while Saskatoon’s Adam Morrision stopped 24 shots. . . . Tri-City was 2-for-5 on the PP; Saskatoon was 1-for-5. . . . Attendance was 3,026. . . . Tri-City F Brendan Shinnimin was ejected with a boarding major at 18:04 of the third period. He is tied for the WHL scoring lead with F Ryan Nugent-Hopkins of the Red Deer Rebels. . . . In their history, the Americans are 1-13-1-0 (with two ties) in Saskatoon.
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MEDICINE HAT 2 at CALGARY 5: F Jimmy Bubnick had two goals and an assist, and finished plus-4, to lead the Hitmen (2-2-0-0). . . . The Tigers (2-1-0-0) had won two in a row. . . . Calgary D Matt MacKenzie was plus-5. . . . Medicine Hat got two goals from F Emerson Etem, both via the PP. . . . Etem scored the game’s first and fifth goals. . . . Tigers D Jace Coyle had two assists but wound up minus-4. . . . Medicine Hat was 2-for-5 on the PP; the Hitmen were 0-for-4. . . . Calgary went in having scored six of its nine goals on the power play. . . . Medicine Hat G Tyler Bunz stopped 25 shots, as did Calgary G Michael Snider. . . . Attendance was 6,894.
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PRINCE GEORGE 6 at KOOTENAY 3: F Brett Connolly set up three goals for the Cougars, who scored the game’s last three goals. . . . The Cougars (2-3-0-0) scored the game’s first two goals, with F Spencer Asuchak and F Charles Inglish each scoring one and drawing an assist. . . . The Ice (2-2-0-0) tied it in the second period, with F Drew Czerwonka and F Joe Antilla getting the goals. . . . F Troy Bourke gave the visitors a 3-2 lead at 17:22, only to have F Max Reinhart tie it just 15 seconds later. . . . F Taylor Makin got the eventual winner at 8:35 of the third, on the PP. . . . The Cougars, with five 20-year-olds on the their roster,didn't dress F Parker Stanfield or G Morgan Clark. Last night, they played F Taylor Stefishen, F James Dobrowolski and D Sena Acolatse. . . . Stefishen, who joined the Cougars this week from Ohio State, had an empty-net goal and an assist. . . . Prince George G James Priestner stopped 17 shots. . . . Tyler Santos, 16, backed up Priestner. Santos, from Sherwood Park, Alta., was a second-round pick by the Saskatoon Blades in the WHL’s 2009 bantam draft. He came over in the January deal in which F Marek Viedensky was sent to the Blades. . . . Ice G Brett Teskey stopped 24 shots in his WHL debut. . . . Each team was 1-for-5 on the power play. . . . The Ice now is 1-for-20 on the PP in four games. . . . Attendance was 2,281, the smallest crowd ever to see a regular-season game at the RecPlex which opened prior to the 2000-01 season.
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PORTLAND 5 at EVERETT 3: The Winterhawks erased a 3-2 deficit in the third period to hand the Silvertips (4-1-0-0) their first loss. . . . Everett is five games into an eight-game season-opening homestand. . . . The Winterhawks (4-1-0-1) scored three times in the third period, with F Ryan Johansen in on all three goals. He scored his first of the season at 8:44 and assist on F Spencer Bennett’s fourth at 12:36 and F Brad Ross’s sixth at 18:13. . . . Johansen’s goal came as he stepped out of the penalty box and fired a shot that caused the net to move, but play continued for four minutes. When play finally stopped, a video review awarded the goal to Johansen and the Winterhawks. . . . F Gabriel Oliver had a goal and two assists for Portland, while D Brett Ponich had two assists. . . . D Brennan Yadlowski, in his first game with Everett since being acquired from the Lethbridge Hurricanes, had a goal. His score, at 19:59 of the first period, gave the home team a 2-0 lead. . . . Everett F Scott McDonald celebrated his 19th birthday with two assists. . . . Portland G Keith Hamilton stopped 32 shots, 11 more than Everett’s Kent Simpson. . . . Portland was 1-for-2 on the PP, while Everett was 1-for-9. . . . Attendance was 3,977. Must be a lot of baseball fans in the area.
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SPOKANE 4 at KAMLOOPS 3 (SO): F Mitch Holmberg scored the only goal of the shootout. . . . It was his goal in overtime that gave Spokane (2-3-0-0) a 6-5 victory over the visiting Tri-City Americans on Saturday. . . . Holmberg, the Chiefs’ first pick in the 2008 draft, also had two assists. . . . Kamloops (1-3-1-0) has lost four straight games. . . . The Blazers were 0-for-5 on the PP and now are 2-for-30 on the season. . . . F Darren Kramer, who joined the Chiefs from the AJHL’s Grande Prairie Storm, scored in his first WHL game. He turns 19 on Nov. 19. He had 311 penalty minutes, along with 19 goals, in 58 games with the Storm last season. . . . Kramer’s goal at 11:41 of the third period forced OT. . . . The Blazers had come back from a 2-0 deficit to take a 3-2 lead on F Brendan Ranford’s fourth goal at 5:11 of the third. . . . Spokane was 0-for-5 on the PP. . . . Spokane G James Reid stopped 43 shots, including seven in OT. . . . Kamloops G Jon Groenheyde stopped 29. . . . Attendance was 3,656, the eighth-smallest crowd in the historyof Interior Savings Centre. The facility opened for the 1992-93 season.
gdrinnan@kamloopsnews.ca
     
gdrinnan.blogspot.com
     
Taking Note on Twitter

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Tuesday . . .

THE MacBETH REPORT:
F Pavel Brendl (Calgary, 1998-2001) signed a contract with KalPa Kuopio (Finland SM-Liiga) through Nov. 6, when SM-Liiga takes a 10-day break for national team games. Kimmo Kapanen, KalPa's general manager, said that it is unlikely that the club can afford to keep Brendl longer than this. "This time period is really affordable for us, but for the whole season, it would be a million dollar investment for us and we can't afford it," Kapanen said to the Kuopio newspaper Savon Sanomat. Brendl had 27 goals and 10 assists in 51 games for Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod (Russia KHL) last season. One of the minority owners of KalPa is former Prince Albert F Scott Hartnell.
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As mentioned here earlier today, RW Luke Walker, 20, signed a three-year NHL deal with the Colorado Avalanche and has been assigned to the AHL’s Lake Erie Monsters. . . . According to CapGeek.com, his AHL salary will be US$50,000, $50,000 and $55,000, with the NHL salary at $540,000, $575,000 and $575,000. . . . His $140,000 signing bonus is payable in $40,000, $50,000 and $50,000 increments. . . . Forgot to mention earlier that, in case you forgot, Walker was a member of the U.S. team that won the world junior championship in January. He played for the U.S. after suffering a horrible facial injury during a WHL game in early December.
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The Red Deer Rebels have placed G Kraymer Barnstable, 20, on waivers and it would appear he will end up with a junior A team. He became expendable with the return of G Darcy Kuemper, 20, from the camp of the NHL’s Minnestoa Wild. . . . Red Deer will go with Bolton Pouliot, 16, to back up Kuemper. . . . Barnstable is the second 20-year-old goaltender to leave a team this week. The Brandon Wheat Kings have dropped Andrew Hayes, who spent the last three seasons with them.
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Red Deer now is carrying four 20-year-olds — Kuemper, D Colin Archer, F Brett Ferguson and F Brad Haber. . . . Brandon is carrying five 20-year-olds — G Jacob DeSerres, D Darren Bestland, D Mark Schneider, F David Toews and F Shayne Wiebe, who is the team captain. . . . Each WHL team has to get down to a maximum of three 20-year-old players by Oct. 14.
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D Mark Pysyk, 18, has been named captain of the Edmonton Oil Kings. He returned from the camp of the NHL’s Buffalo Sabres on Monday — they selected him 23rd overall in the NHL’s 2010 draft. . . . Pysyk was the third overall pick in the 2007 bantam draft; he was Edmonton’s first-ever selection. . . . F Rhett Rachinski will be an alternate captain, while D Adrian Van de Mosselaer and F Jordan Hickmott each will wear an ‘A’ at home and F Mike Piluso and F Travis Ewanyk will be alternates on the road.
gdrinnan@kamloopsnews.ca
gdrinnan.blogspot.com
Taking Note on Twitter

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Sunday . . .

THE MacBETH REPORT:
F Ivan Dornic (Portland, 2003-05) signed a one-year contract with Königsborn (Germany Oberliga). He had 12 goals and 12 assists in 45 games for MHC Martin (Slovakia Extraliga) last season. . . .
F Martin Cibak (Medicine Hat, 1998-2000) was traded by Spartak Moscow (Russia KHL) to Severstal Cherepovets (Russia KHL). He is pointless in four games with Spartak this season. Last season, Cibak had 17 goals and 15 assists in 50 games for Spartak.
F Marek Svatos (Kootenay, 2000-02) signed a one-year contract with Avangard Omsk (Russia KHL). He had seven goals and four assists in 54 games with Colorado Avalanche (NHL) last season.
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It was Sept. 16 when F Marc Mackenzie intercepted a would-be burglar in his billet home in Prince Albert and became physically involved with him. Today, Mackenzie, who turns 17 on Nov. 5, is at home in Kelowna from where he told John MacNeil of the Prince Albert Daily Herald: “I just couldn’t handle it there anymore. It’s not the right place for me. . . . They won’t give me my release . .. . so hockey is probably over for me. I’m not going to play junior A to become an 18-year-old in the Dub next year, when I’ll just be put on the fourth line. It’s not worth it. They don’t want to give my rights up, so they can keep them. I’m not playing.”
Chris Turnbull, Mackenzie’s agent, told MacNeil: “There were promises made to Marc that I guess there was never any intention of keeping. His dad just got upset and said, ‘That’s it. If you’re not going to keep your word, we’re out of here.’ So, basically, that’s where it sits.”
Mackenzie played in Friday’s 3-2 loss to the Blades in Saskatoon, but was scratched from Saturday’s rematch, which the Raiders lost, 6-5.
“We think, rightfully so, that Marc is a pretty special hockey player,” Turnbull told MacNeil. “He’s got a lot of talent.
“Bruno made promises of where he would play and how many games he would have to sit, which is none.
“He only had four or five shifts the first night and then got sat (Saturday) night. His dad wasn’t very happy.”
Bruno Campese, the Raiders’ GM/head coach, didn’t return a phone message left by MacNeil on Sunday.
MacNeil’s complete story should be right here on the Daily Herald’s website on Monday.
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The best lead of the weekend was this, from a Tri-City Americans’ news release following Saturday’s 6-3 victory over the visiting Spokane Chiefs:
“There was a lot of red in the Toyota Center on Saturday night. First it was the pre-game pyrotechnics . . . then, it was the Americans' new third jerseys . . . then it was the goal light.”
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The Prince Albert Raiders were without veteran D Jordan Rowley, 20, when they dropped a 6-5 decision to the visiting Saskatoon Blades on Saturday night. . . . John MacNeil of the Prince Albert Daily News reports that Rowley has an “apparent injury.” On Friday, during the Raiders’ 3-2 loss in Saskatoon, Rowley scrapped with Saskatoon F Curt Gogol.
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On their way back from the NHL are: D Jace Coyle, to Medicine Hat, from Dallas; F Scott Glennie, to Brandon, from Dallas; F Brad Ross, to Portland, from Toronto; D Brett Ponich, to Portland, from St. Louis; D Cory Fienhage, to Kamloops, from Buffalo; D Brandon Manning, to Chilliwack, from N.Y. Rangers; F Kevin Sundher, to Chilliwack, from Buffalo; D Stefan Elliott, to Saskatoon, from Colorado.
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SUNDAY’S HIGHLIGHTS:
BRANDON 3 AT REGINA 1: The Wheat Kings swept a season-opening doubleheader from the Pats. Brandon won 5-4 at home on Friday. . . . F Mark Stone and F Brenden Walker each had a goal and an assist for Brandon on Sunday. . . . Attendance was 4,219.
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SEATTLE 1 AT TRI-CITY 4: F Jordan Messier scored twice to lead the Americans, while F Kruise Reddick added a goal and two helpers. . . . G Alex Pechurskiy made 15 saves for Tri-City (2-0-0-0). . . . G Calvin Pickard stopped 32 shots for Seattle (1-2-0-0). . . . The Americans now have beaten Seattle 13 straight times in the Toyota Center. . . . Tri-City has opened the season 2-0-0-0 for the fourth straight season. . . . Attendance was 4,373.
gdrinnan@kamloopsnews.ca
     
gdrinnan.blogspot.com
     
Taking Note on Twitter

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Monday . . .

A veritable potpourri for you to enjoy with your morning coffee . . .

THE MacBETH REPORT:

D Ryan Jorde (Tri-City, Lethbridge, Moose Jaw, 1997-2002) signed a one-year contract with Gap (France Ligue Magnus). He had no goals and four assists in 20 games with the Hull Stingrays and Newcastle Vipers (both UK Elite) last season.
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It’s true.
Penn State, the home of Joe Paterno and the Nittany Lions, is going to have an NCAA Division 1 hockey team.
And it’s primarily because of a man named Terry Pegula, who has given US$88 million to the university, which is located in State College, Pa., to fund the construction of a new arena.
Ray Parrillo of the Philadelphia has that story and lots of Pegula right here. It turns out he fell in love with hockey because of the Broad Street Bullies.
And there’s more on that story right here, including speculation on possible conference realignment down the road.
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The Spokane Chiefs have gotten D Brenden Kichton, 18, back from the camp of the Detroit Red Wings. But he’ll miss up to six weeks with a broken finger. He was injured while playing for the Detroit team at the prospects tournament in Traverse City, Mich. . . . Earlier on the weekend, the Chiefs got veteran F Levko Koper, 20, back from the camp of the Atlanta Thrashers. He is preparing for a fifth season with the Chiefs. . . . Spokane also has reassigned F Connor Chartier, 16, to the midget AAA ranks in Alberta. He was a second-round pick in the 2009 bantam draft. . . . The Chiefs are down to 25 players, including three goaltenders and 14 forwards.
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When writing earlier about Swiss F Roman Wick, I noted that he had played with the Red Deer Rebels. It turns out he also played in Lethbridge. As noted by Ryan Ohashi, the Hurricanes’ efficient director of communications:
“Roman Wick actually spent two seasons in the WHL and the better part of the second one he played here in Lethbridge.
“The interesting side note to that is that years later when we drafted a then-little known Swiss D-man named Luca Sbisa, Wick ran into him in Switzerland and told him all about what a great experience he had here and in the WHL. Luca was sold and came over unranked then went in the first round of the (NHL) draft that year.
“The extra side note is that the same family that billeted Roman also billeted Luca -- we have decided it has to be something in the food.”
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The Edmonton Oilers trimmed 20 players from their training camp roster on Monday. Among the players assigned to junior teams are G Tyler Bunz (Medicine Hat), F Drew Czerwonka (Kootenay), D Brandon Davidson (Regina), F Curtis Hamilton (Saskatoon), D Martin Marincin (Prince George) and F Kristians Pelss (Edmonton). . . . D Dallas Ehrhardt (Moose Jaw) and F Chase Schaber (Kamloops) were released from tryout agreements and are headed back to the WHL. Ehrhardt didn’t see much ice time with the Oilers as he suffered a knee injury while the prospects were in Penticton, B.C. World from the Warriors camp is that he will be out for up to six weeks with a strained MCL in his right knee. A torn MCL in that same knee cost him almost two months of last season.
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The Phoenix Coyotes have returned F Evan Bloodoff, 20, to the Kelowna Rockets, and D Justin Weller, 19, to the Red Deer Rebels.
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The San Jose Sharks have signed D Curt Gogol, who turns 19 today (Sept. 21), to a three-year NHL contract. The Saskatoon Blades acquired Gogol last season from the Kelowna Rockets. The website CapGeek.com reports that the deal is worth US$530,000, $555,000 and $555,000 in the NHL, and $50,000, $55,000 and $60,000 in the AHL. The contract carries with it an annual $30,000 signing bonus. . . . Gogol had six assists and 120 penalty minutes in 35 games with Kelowna and one goal and 29 penalty minutes in eight games with the Blades last season. In 2008-09, he had five points and 144 penalty minutes in 63 games with the Rockets. . . . He wasn’t selected in the NHL draft.
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The Detroit Red Wings have returned F Mitchell Callahan (Kelowna), F Landon Ferraro (Everett), F Antonin Honejsek (Moose Jaw) and F Brooks Macek (Tri-City).
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The Kootenay Ice is down to 26 players after assigning five 16-year-old players -- F Levi Cable (midget AAA Yorkton Harvest); F Colby Cave (midget AAA Battlefords Stars); D Jeff Hubic (midget AAA Tisdale Trojans), F Jared Iron (midget AAA Beardy’s Blackhawks) and D Mike Simpson (junior B Delta Ice Hawks). . . . Cave was the 13th overall pick in the 2009 bantam draft, while Hubic was taken in the fourth round, Simpson in the sixth and Iron in the eighth. . . . The Ice still has two players in NHL camps -- D Brayden McNabb (Buffalo) and F Steele Boomer (Chicago).
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The Chilliwack Bruins got down to 26 players on their roster by assigning F Zane Jones, 16, and D Brett Cote, 16, to undisclosed destinations. Cote was a third-round pick in the 2009 bantam draft; Jones was taken in the fifth round. . . . The Bruins are carrying three goaltenders, eight defencemen and 15 forwards. . . . They also have three players in NHL camps -- D Roman Horak and D Brandon Manning (both New York Rangers) and F Kevin Sundher (Buffalo).
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Greg Harder of the Regina Leader-Post has penned a three-part series on the Parker family’s ownership of the Regina Pats. Part 1 is right here.
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The Montreal Canadiens have returned F Brendan Gallagher to the Vancouver Giants. He was a fifth-round pick in the 2010 NHL draft.
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The Brandon Wheat Kings are down to 32 players after returning F Daniel Asham to the midget AAA Winnipeg Wild and D Dylan Kuczek to the midget AAA Winnipeg Thrashers. Kuczek was a second-round pick in the 2009 draft, while Brandon took Asham in the eighth round. . . . As well, D Josh Elmes, 17, is off to join the MJHL’s OCN Blizzard. He was an eighth-round pick in 2008.
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The Wheat Kings continue to prepare for the opening of the season with five goaltenders among the 32 players still on their roster. GM/head coach Kelly McCrimmon was believed to be planning on opening with one of two 20-year-olds -- Andrew Hayes or Jacob DeSerres -- and Liam Liston, 17. . . . However, he hasn’t been able to move either of the veterans -- there are a number of 20-year-old goaltenders in the league and two of them (Morgan Clark, from Swift Current to Prince George, and Jeff Bosch, from Moose Jaw to Kamloops) already have been on the move. . . . But McCrimmon also has Ty Rimmer, 18, and Corbin Boes, 17, on his roster. Ironically, Rimmer made the roster a year ago as Hayes’ backup, but was sent to junior A after DeSerres was acquired from the Seattle Thunderbirds. . . . Brandon opens at home to the Regina Pats on Friday. . . . Rob Henderson of the Brandon Sun also reports that Brandon still has three players -- F Scott Glennie (Dallas), F Brayden Schenn (Los Angeles) and F Mark Stone (Ottawa) -- in NHL camps. As well, F Jens Meilleur, 17, suffered a broken hand in an exhibition game Saturday so is out for a while. . . . Brandon did get F David Toews (New York Islanders) and F Michael Ferland (Calgary Flames) back from NHL camps. Both players practised in Brandon on Monday, although neither skated with their NHL teams because of injuries. Henderson reports that Toews, 20, was diagnosed with a torn labrum in one shoulder, but later was found not to be badly injured. “It was really, really frustrating not to be able to get to play out there,” Toews told Henderson. “I was being pretty negative on myself for a few days there but I was lucky enough to get a second look at it and get a couple doctors opinions and I’m lucky that it’s not as severe as we thought it was at first. So that’s a good thing and I’m taking the positive out of the fact that I don’t need to get surgery and that I can keep playing here is huge for me.” . . . Ferland, 18, has been out for two weeks with a twisted knee. He didn’t take part in contact drills on Monday.
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The Prince Albert Raiders are down to 25 players after releasing C Troy Gasper, 18. He plans on returning to the SJHL’s Humboldt Broncos. . . . The Raiders, who open Friday in Saskatoon, are carrying two goaltenders, nine defencemen and 14 forwards. . . . The Blades visit Prince Albert on Saturday. . . . D Ryan Button, 19, is in camp with the Boston Bruins. . . . John MacNeil of the Prince Albert Daily Herald reports that four players are injured -- D Mathew Berry-Lamontagna (wrist), F Shane Danyluk (ankle), F Tyler Paslawski (head) and F Igor Revenko (leg). Danyluk, who was injured Aug. 28, won’t play for a while, while Revenko, who was hurt Saturday, may be back on the ice Tuesday.
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A note from Howie Stalwick, a veteran WHL observer, from the Kitsap Sun of Bermerton, Wash. . . .
Top 10: All-time best NHL players developed in the major junior WHL — 10. Jarome Iginla, RW (Kamloops). 9. Cam Neely, RW (Portland). 8. Clark Gillies, LW (Regina). 7. Grant Fuhr, G (Victoria). 6. Mike Modano, C (Prince Albert). 5. Mark Recchi, RW (Kamloops). 4. Scott Niedermayer, D (Kamloops). 3. Joe Sakic, C (Swift Current). 2. Bryan Trottier, C (Swift Current-Lethbridge). 1. Bobby Clarke, C (Flin Flon). Note: Players who made token appearances in the WHL, like Hall of Fame C Mark Messier (Portland), were not considered.
gdrinnan@kamloopsnews.ca
gdrinnan.blogspot.com
Taking Note on Twitter

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Wednesday . . .

THE MacBETH REPORT:
F Jaroslav Kristek (Tri-City, 1998-2000) signed a one-year contract with Kosice (Slovakia Extraliga). He had 10 goals and 14 assists in 52 games with Karlovy Vary and Zlin (both Czech Republic Extraliga) last season.
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Cory Wolfe of the Saskatoon StarPhoenix sat down with the Saskatoon Blades and watched some hockey this week . . . some of EA Sports NHL11, that is.The game includes all WHL teams this time around, part of a new four-year deal between EA Sports and the CHL. . . . In the Blades' room, it was G Adam Morrison against F Jeremy Boyer. That story is right here.
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F Shane McColgan has left the Kelowna Rockets and gone home to Manhattan Beach, Calif. McColgan, 17, left Wednesday and is to visit an ear, nose and throat specialist as soon as possible. McColgan, who put up 69 points last season as a 16-year-old freshman, “hasn’t been feeling well, and he has some tonsil issues that have to be dealt with,” Bruce Hamilton, the Rockets’ president and GM, told Doyle Potenteau of the Kelowna Daily Courier. . . . At this point, it is projected that McColgan will miss at least two weeks.
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D Tyson Barrie of the Kelowna Rockets won’t be going to NHL training camp with the Colorado Avalanche‘s top prospects. The 19-year-old Barrie, who was named the WHL’s top defenceman last season, has a partially torn right hamstring and will be out for up to six weeks. He is hoping he‘s a quick healer so that he can be ready for the Avalanche‘s main camp. . . . Barrie, a third-round pick by Colorado in the 2009 NHL draft, suffered the injury late last week during a training camp scrimmage. . . . “Somebody kind of leaned on me and I guess my leg was just over-stretched and I just felt a pop, so I knew right there it wasn’t good,” Barrie told Warren Henderson of the Capital News. . . . Barrie led the Rockets with 72 points last season.
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F Brayden Schenn of the Brandon Wheat Kings is in Los Angeles, where the Kings’ medical staff will take a look at a knee that he hurt during a Tuesday practice. Schenn, the fifth overall pick in the 2009 NHL draft, is to have an MRI on Thursday afternoon. The Wheat Kings say that Schenn tweaked a knee. He didn’t practice Wednesday. Schenn, 19, had 99 points in 59 games with Brandon last season. If healthy, he’ll take part in the Kings’ rookie camp that is to open Saturday.
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The Moose Jaw Warriors are heading into their final season in the Civic Centre (aka the Crushed Can). They are to move into a new multiplex next season. For now, they and the city are trying to hammer out a lease. And it sounds like there will be some hammering going on before this is done. Part of the Moose Jaw Times-Herald story is right here.
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The Prince George Cougars have signed F Chase Witala and D Raymond Grewal, both of whom are from Prince George and 2010 bantam draft picks. . . . Witala, a fifth-round pick, had 110 points in 47 games with the bantam AAA Cougars last season. He will play for the Cougars against the visiting Edmonton Oil Kings on Saturday. . . . Grewal, an eight-round pick, had 33 points in 47 games with the bantam AAA Cougars. He is scheduled to play Friday against the visiting Oil Kings.
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Mike Heika of the Dallas Morning News reports on the impending sale of the NHL’s Dallas Stars. It seems that Tom Gaglardi, the majority owner of the Kamloops Blazers, and Bill Gallacher, who owns the Portland Winterhawks, remain in the bidding. But the group trying to sell the NHL team is trying/hoping to drum up more interest. . . . Heika’s latest report is right here.
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Hey, Mudbugs fans, are you ready for some LOVE? . . . The Central league’s Bossier-Shreveport Mudbugs have signed D Mitch Love (Moose Jaw, Swift Current, Everett, 1999-2005). Love, one of the most popular players in Everett history, has played the last five seasons in the AHL. A rugged defenceman, he has had 51 fighting majors over the last two seasons. He has put up 824 penalty minutes in his five AHL seasons. Last season, with the Peoria Rivermen, he had four points and 129 PiMs in 60 games.
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Also on Wednesday, the Central league’s Wichita Thunder acquired D Jason Goulet (Saskatoon, Prince George, 2000-03). The 6-foot-5, 245-pound Goulet, who came over from Quad City, had 212 penalty minutes, including 22 fighting majors, with the Mallards last season. . . . Wichita dealt F Jason Reese (Vancouver, Moose Jaw, Tri-City, 2003-09) to Quad City as part of the trade. He had 13 points in 31 games with the Thunder after coming over in a midseason trade last season.
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The CHL announced Wednesday that the 2011 Home Hardware CHL/NHL Top Prospects Game will be played Jan. 19 at the Air Canada Centre in Toronto.
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You will recall that a few weeks ago, at the World Hockey Summit in Toronto, when Slavomir Lener, a Czech hockey coach, complained that his country was losing too much of its talent to CHL teams. Well, what do the players think? Bob Duff of the Windsor Star has that story right here.
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There were two aces at the Prince Albert Raiders golf tournament Wednesday. Jerrod Pidborchynski scored a hole-in-one on the fourth hole at Cooke Municipal. The hole was sponsored -- Affinity Insurance Services -- so he went home with 10 grand. . . . Meanwhile, Raiders D Austin Bourhis, 18, aced the 17th hold. That’s the good news. The bad news it wasn’t a sponsored hole. So no moolah. . . . Still, a good time was had by all. . . . Last year, Andrea Ring scored a hole-in-one and won $10,000.
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Are you ready for Sept. 13?
Hey . . . just asking!

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Tuesday . . .

THE MacBETH REPORT:

D Shaun Heshka (Everett, 2003-06) signed a one-year contract with Red Bull Salzburg (Austria Erste Bank Liga). He had two assists in eight games with the Phoenix Coyotes (NHL) and seven goals and 26 assists in 73 games with the San Antonio Rampage (AHL) last season. . . .
F Richard Rapac (Moose Jaw, Prince George, 2006-07) signed a one-year contract with SKP Poprad (Slovakia Extraliga). He had one goal and eight assists in 18 games with Hradec Kralove (Czech Republic 1.Liga) last season. . . .
D Jason Beckett (Seattle, 1997-2000) signed a six-month artist’s contract with Västervik (Sweden Division 1). He had six goals and 33 assists in 32 games for Red Bull Salzburg II (Austria Nationalliga) last season. Beckett will report to Västervik on Oct. 1. . . .
F Mikhail Yakubov (Red Deer, 2001-02) was released by Spartak Moscow (Russia KHL). He had one goal and nine assists in 44 games with Severstal Cherepovets (Russia KHL) and Spartak last season. . . .
D Filip Novak (Regina, 1999-2002) signed a one-year contract extension with OHK Dynamo Moscow (Russia KHL). The extension keeps Novak under contract with Dynamo through next season. He had two goals and 22 assists in 52 games for HC MVD Balashikha (Russia KHL) last season. MVD and Dynamo merged after last season. . . .
The opening regular season games in the various European leagues:
Germany DEL – Sept. 3
United Kingdom Elite – Sept. 4
Russia KHL – Sept. 8
Austria Erste Bank Liga – Sept. 10
Switzerland NL A – Sept. 10
Switzerland NL B – Sept. 10
Sweden Allsvenskan – Sept. 14
Finland Mestis – Sept. 15
Sweden Elitserien – Sept. 15
Finland SM-Liiga – Sept. 16
Denmark AL-Bank Liga – Sept. 17
Germany 2.Bundesliga – Sept. 17
France Ligue Magnus – Sept. 18
Norway GET-Ligaen – Sept. 18
Italy Serie A – Sept. 23
Germany Oberliga – Sept. 24
Italy Serie A2 – Oct. 2
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The Everett Silvertips are preparing to welcome F Josh Winquist, 17, back from the injury list. He had offseason shoulder surgery and should be back on the ice at some point next week. He had seven points in 50 games last season but is expected to do a whole lot better in his draft season.
Meanwhile, GM Doug Soetaert says, recently acquired Landon Ferraro “has been just fantastic. He’s electrifying.”
Ferraro was acquired from the Red Deer Rebels for Byron Froese in what was a swap of 19-year-old forwards.
Soetaert also said that F Scott MacDonald, 19, “has come a long way.”
MacDonald spent 2008-09 with the Chilliwack Bruins. Last season, with the Silvertips, he had 32 points in 60 games. More impressively, he finished plus-25.
As well, Kellan Tochkin, one of Everett’s top forwards, has lost 12 pounds “and is just flying,” according to Soetaert. Tochkin, 19, had 68 points, including 28 goals, in 72 games last season.
Soetaert also said that he has been most impressed with his club’s fitness level.
“Our guys have come back . . .we’re a month ahead in conditioning,” he said.
One player not expected to return is Czech D Radko Gudas, 20. He was selected by the Tampa Bay Lightning in the third round of the 2010 NHL draft and has signed, so he is eligible to play in the pro team’s organization.
“I don’t expect him back,” Soetaert says. “But who knows? I know they have a lot of defencemen but I don’t expect him to be back.”
Last season, his first in the WHL, Gudas had 37 points and 151 penalty minutes in 65 games.
Gudas, were he to return, would be a two-spotter -- a 20-year-old import.
“I’ll make two spots for him any day,” Soetaert says. “He’s a warrior.”
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The Tri-City Americans have re-assigned Dylan Fluter, 16, to the midget AAA Battlefords Stars. An eighth-round pick in the 2009 bantam draft, Fluter had 25 points and 43 penalty minutes in 43 games with the Stars last season.
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The Prince George Cougars have signed three players -- G Tyler Santos, 16; G Devon Fordyce, 16; and, D Joseph Carvalho, 16. . . . Santos, from Sherwood Park, Alta., came over last season in the deal that sent F Marek Viedensky to the Saskatoon Blades. Santos, a 10th-round pick in the 2009 bantam draft, will spend this week with the Cougars and is expected to play against the visiting Edmonton Oil Kings before joining a midget AAA team in Alberta. . . . Fordyce, a sixth-round pick in 2009, is from Cochrane. He stopped 30 of 33 shots in a weekend exhibition game against the Swift Current Broncos. . . . Fordyce and Santos both are on Hockey Alberta’s shortlist for Team Pacific at the U-17 World Hockey Challenge that opens Dec. 29 in Winnipeg. . . . Carvalho, from Burnaby, B.C., was a fourth-round pick in the 2011 bantam draft. He had 71 points in 66 games with the bantam Burnaby Winter Club Bruins last season. This season, he will play for the major midget Vancouver-North West Giants.
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The Stanley Cup-champion Chicago Blackhawks promoted five of their top executives on Tuesday, and that included Kevin Cheveldayoff (Brandon, 1986-90). Cheveldayoff, 40, now is the assistant general manager/senior director of hockey operations. He had his NHL playing career curtailed by injuries. Despite being only 40 years of age, he spent 12 seasons as GM of the Chicago Wolves before moving to the big club.
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The AJHL has jumped onto the outdoor game bandwagon. The Drayton Valley Thunder and Fort McMurray Oil Barons will play outside on Nov. 26. The game will be played on MacDonald Island in Fort McMurray.
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And now for something completely different. . . . If you’re wondering what Bill (Spaceman) Lee is up to these days, you should know that he pitched and won a game on Sunday. There’s more right here.

Sunday, September 5, 2010

Saturday . . .

If you follow sports, particularly baseball, you will be aware that Nyjer Morgan has been in the news a bit the last few days.
If you’re not aware, here’s the top of an Associated Press story from Friday evening:
“Nyjer Morgan’s wild week has landed him an eight-game suspension, one of nine punishments handed out Friday by Major League Baseball following a brawl between Washington Nationals and Florida Marlins.
“MLB suspended Nationals outfielder Morgan and fined him an undisclosed amount for three separate incidents over the past week. Friday’s penalty is in addition to a seven-game suspension he received Aug. 25 that is currently under appeal.”
That adds up to 15 games in suspensions, and that’s pretty hard to do by today’s standards.
Anyway . . . Morgan has been a popular fellow in the blogosphere because of his recent time in the spotlight. And he has carried the WHL and the Regina Pats into the spotlight with him.
It is the Internet at its ugliest and, I supposed, its funniest . . .
All because Morgan played seven games with the Regina Pats in 1999-2000. He scored two goals and had 20 penalty minutes. While those numbers show up at hockeydb.com, his name doesn’t appear in the WHL’s alltime player index that is in the 2009-10 Guide. There are three Morgans listed — Cory, Garth and Jordan — but no sign of Nyjer.
Anyway . . . back to the Internet.
There was this on one blog:
“A young Morgan was taken with the sport after watching the 1988 Winter Games in Calgary, and pestered his parents to play the game until he was able to snag a tryout with the British Columbia Hockey League's Vernon Vipers as a 16-year-old.
“He didn't make the team, but bounced around several other clubs in the low Canadian minors until hooking on with the Regina Pats of the famed Western Canadian Hockey League in 1999.
“Even now, the WCHL carries with it a reputation of making the tough players tougher and weeding out the rest. Morgan was no exception. He not only had to fight to keep his spot on the team, but also had to fend off cuture shock and prejudice; after all, he was trying to make his way in a sport that is predominantly Caucasian, in a league that is primarily Canadian, and in Regina, Saskatchewan — a bastion of lily-whiteness in the most lily-white of Canadian regions: the Prairies.
“The Regina Pats also carry with them a tradition of sending cementheads to the pros, guys who at one time might have been able to make a mark playing the game, but who were molded at this step into enforcers. Garth Butcher, Lyndon Byers, Stu Grimson are retired punchers with bona-fide NHL careers whose names stick out . . .”
Enough with that kind of bullcrap because it only gets worse. Oh, how painful is all of that?
Later, the blogger goes on to mention some rumours as to why Morgan was released by the Pats. Of course, there is no evidence to back up any of the rumours.
I asked Brent Parker, the Pats’ general manager at the time, about Morgan, and here’s what he told me, via email:
“He was a good kid . . . always smiling. Good skater but limited hockey sense.”
According to Parker, Morgan scored two goals in his first game — it was against the Moose Jaw Warriors — and that was it.
I also found this at one blog:
“Nyjer Morgan didn’t grow up dedicating his every waking minute to playing baseball, he spent a good chunk of his youth playing the one sport that actually encourages fighting, hockey. He fell in love with the game watching the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary and eventually talked his parents into letting him play. If he wasn’t tough enough already, being a skinny African American kid playing a rough sport almost entirely dominated by Caucasians sure did the trick. Morgan eventually made it to the low Canadian minors, playing for the Regina Pats of the Western Canadian Hockey League, a league with a reputation for toughness in a sport full of it. It was here in the rural Canadian prairie that before giving up hockey for baseball Nyjer Morgan was solidified as one tough s.o.b.”
More hilarity, not to mention stupidity. . . .
And somewhere else on the Internet, someone was looking for a game-worn Morgan jersey from when he played for the Pats.
Seriously!
I think I might know someone who has some. How many would you like?
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THE MacBETH REPORT:
F Petr Stoklasa (Tri-City, 2007-09) was released after his tryout ended with Kiekko-Laser Oulu (Finland Mestis). He had 11 goals and 13 assists in 25 games with HC 46 Bardejov (Slovakia 1.Liga) last season.
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The Medicine Hat Tigers have a player in camp with a familiar last name. Gavin Broadhead’s father, Curt, also played for the Tigers. Sean Rooney of the Medicine Hat News has that story right here.
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A tip of the hat to the Lethbridge Hurricanes. Their training camp reports include scoring summaries from their scrimmages. Seriously! . . . You are able to check out Saturday’s info right here.
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The Regina Pats have signed their four top picks from the 2010 bantam draft. They had signed F Morgan Klimchuk, their first pick, earlier in the summer. Now they also have signed D Kyle Burroughs (third round), D Colby Williams (fourth round) and F Ty McLean (fifth round). . . . Burroughs, from Langley, B.C., had 50 points in 33 games with the Langley Eagles of the Pacific Coast association last season. . . . Williams, from Regina, had 27 points in 22 games with the bantam Regina Oilers. . . . McLean, from Redvers, Sask., had 90 points in 25 games with the Carlyle-Moose Mountain bantam team.
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The U of Waterloo Warriors hockey team has revealed its recruiting class for 2010-11 and it includes D Ryan Molle, G Justin Leclerc, F Josh Schappert and F Andy Smith, all of whom played in the WHL. . . . Molle, the son of former CFL offensive lineman Bob Molle, played with the Swift Current Broncos and Kootenay Ice. Leclerc was with the Lethbridge Hurricanes and Kamloops Blazers. Schappert had played with the Seattle Thunderbirds and Smith with the Prince Albert Raiders and Chilliwack Bruins.
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Warren Henderson of the Capital News in Kelowna takes a look at F Zach Franko and why he chose to attend the Rockets’ camp rather than make plans to attend Bemidji State and play for the Mustangs. That story is right here.

Friday, September 3, 2010

Thursday . . .

THE MacBETH REPORT:
F Kirill Starkov (Red Deer, 2006-07) signed a one-year contract with Esbjerg (Denmark AL-Bank Liga). He had two goals and two assists in 55 games for Timrå (Sweden Elitserien) last season. . . .
F Martin Ruzicka (Everett, Lethbridge, 2003-05) signed a two-year contract with Trinec (Czech Republic Extraliga). He had 23 goals and 24 assists in 51 games with Trinec last season. . . .
F Duncan Milroy (Swift Current, Kootenay, 1998-2003) signed a one-year contract with Mlada Boleslav (Czech Republic Extraliga). He had 12 goals and 24 assists in 74 games for the Houston Aeros (AHL) last season. Milroy becomes the eighth individual in Mlada Boleslav with a connection to the WHL. The others are sports manager Milan Hnilicka (goalie in Swift Current, 1992-93), assistant coach Leo Gudas (father of Everett D Radko), and players G Marek Schwarz (Vancouver, 2004-05), D Darrell Hay (Tri-City, 1996-2000), F Jordan Krestanovich (Calgary, 1997-2001), F David Vrbata (Calgary, 2000-01), and F Zdenek Bahensky (Saskatoon, 2004-06). . . .
F Petr Dvorak (Regina, 2002-03) signed a one-year contract with Cracovia Krakow (Poland). He had 20 goals and 45 assists in 42 games for Valasske Mezirici (Czech Republic 2.Liga) last season.
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The Everett Silvertips have signed F Ryan Chynoweth, who was their first pick, 24th overall, in the 2010 bantam draft. From Cranbrook, he had 60 points and 78 penalty minutes in 32 games with the bantam AAA Lethbridge Golden Hawks last season. . . . He is the son of Jeff Chynoweth, the president and general manager of the Kootenay Ice, and the grandson of the late Ed Chynoweth, the former WHL commissioner.
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Outside of Kelowna, not much has been said or written about Zach Franko, a 17-year-old forward out of Winnipeg. He apparently had made a commitment to Bemidji State, but decided to attend the Rockets' camp and check things out. He liked what he saw and chose to stay. . . . The Rockets had picked him 32nd overall in the 2008 bantam draft. Last season, with the MJHL's Winnipeg South Blue, he put up 54 points in 51 games. . . . Lorne Frey, the Rockets' assisant GM, head scout and director of player personnel, told the Kelowna Daily Courier that Franko "isn't an overly big guy yet, but he’s got great skill, great speed and he competes, which is what we're looking for." . . . The Daily Courier story referred to Franko as being 5-foot-11 and 160 pounds. . . . There's a bit more right here from the Western College Hockey blog.
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The Vancouver Giants held their intrasquad game and the top story had to be F Brendan Gallagher scoring four goals. I had someone tell me, however, that F Craig Cunningham, who turns 20 on Friday (Sept. 3), was the best player on the ice. Cunningham will go to camp with the Boston Bruins, who selected him in the fourth round of the 2010 NHL draft, in search of a contract. . . . "Cunningham was head and shoulders above anybody else," an observer told me. . . . The long-time WHL observer also told me that the Giants look to be "bigger and faster than last season." Which can't be good news for the rest of the teams in the B.C. Division and Western Conference.
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The Tri-City Americans have signed three 16-year-old players to WHL contracts — D Justin Hamonic, F Dylan Fluter and F Gage Rapitta. . . . Hamonic, from Winnipeg, was a fifth-round pick in the 2009 bantam draft. The 6-foot-2, 190-pounder had 21 points and 54 penalty minutes with the midget AAA Winnipeg Monarchs last season. . . . The 5-foot-11, 170-pound Fluter, from Saskatoon, was an eighth-round pick in 2009. He had 25 points and 43 penalty minutes in 43 games with the midget AAA Battlefords Stars last season. . . . Rapitta, a list player, is from Regina. The 5-foot-11, 190-pounder had 15 points and 56 penalty minutes with the midget AAA Yorkton Harvest last season.
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D Dallas Jackson (Regina, Red Deer, Prince George, Kelowna, 2007-10) has signed with the ECHL's Reading Royals. Jackson, from Edson, Alta., split last season between Prince George and Kelowna, picking up 45 points in 45 games. He totalled 102 points and 173 penalty minutes in 174 regular-season WHL games over three seasons.
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F Willie Coetzee scored four goals Wednesday night to help Team White to a 9-8 shootout victory over Team Black in the Red Deer Rebels' intrasquad game. Coetzee, 20, has signed with the Detroit Red Wings. He leaves for their camp next week and is expected to play in the Detroit organization.
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You know what they say about one man's misfortune being another man's opportunity, or something like that. Well, D Hubert Labrie has a knee injury so won’t be able to play for the Dallas Stars’ team at the NHL prospects tournament in Traverse City, Mich., Sept. 11-15. So . . . the Stars have added 19-year-old F Cole Grbavac (Kamloops, Medicine Hat, 2008-10) to their roster.
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The Spokane Chiefs have reassigned four players as they prepare to head for Everett and the Silvertips’ tournament this weekend. D Boomer Rooney, 16, and D Cole Wedman, 16, will play midget AAA or junior A in Alberta, while D Jordan Swenson, 17, will play midget AAA or junior A in Saskatchewan, and F Josh McEwan is to join the BCHL’s Trail Smoke Eaters. . . . The Chiefs go into Everett with a 31-man roster — four goaltenders, nine defencemen and 18 forwards.
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Kevin Heise, who has worked in the WHL with the Tri-City Americans and Seattle Thunderbirds, has signed on as the ECHL-Victoria Salmon Kings’ athletic therapist. He spent last season with the Central league’s Amarillo Gorillas.
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A former WHL head coach and a former star player are among those the NHL has announced as recipients of the 2010 Lester Patrick Trophy for outstanding service to hockey in the U.S. David Andrews, the president of the American Hockey League since 1994, and Cam Neely, the president of the Boston Bruins, will be honoured, along with Jack Parker, the longtime coach at Boston University, and Jerry York, the coach at Boston College. . . . Andrews was head coach of the Victoria Cougars for two seasons (1982-84), while Neely starred with the Portland Winterhawks during the sdame two seasons.
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F Quinn Peplinski, whose father, Jim, had a pretty good run in the NHL, is in camp with the Calgary Hitme. The Calgary Herald has that story right here.
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Here’s something from the Winnipeg Sun that will be of interest to fans of the late, great Winnipeg Jets (and the early Phoenix Coyotes):
Curt Keilback is going back behind the microphone.
The former voice of the NHL’s Winnipeg Jets will call 10 Manitoba Junior Hockey League games this season on NCI-FM radio.
Keilback spent more than two decades calling Jets games. His first MJHL contest will be on Sept. 23, when the OCN Blizzard visits the Winnipeg Saints.

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Wednesday . . .

THE MacBETH REPORT:
F Jakub Sindel (Brandon, 2004-05) signed a one-year contract with the Pelicans Lahti (Finland SM-Liiga) after his release by Tappara Tampere (SM-Liiga) earlier in the day. He had 11 goals and nine assists in 44 games with Kometa Brno (Czech Republic Extraliga) last season and no points in six exhibition games with Tappara this season. . . .
D Josef Melichar (Tri-City Americans, 1997-99) has been assigned on loan to Ceske Burejovice (Czech Republic Extraliga) by Linköping (Sweden Elitserien) until mid-October. He had five goals and nine assists in 52 games for Ceske Budejovice last season.
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The WHL’s exhibition season began Wednesday night with two games. In Moose Jaw, the Warriors doubled the Swift Current Broncos, 4-2, while, in Prince Albert, the Saskatoon Blades edged the Raiders, 3-2, in a shootout. Yes, the dreaded shootout already has reared its ugly head! . . . Anyway, for more on those games, visit the WHL website. A tip of the cap to whomever is responsible for the posting of scoring summaries on the website. Tonight’s were there by 9:50 Pacific time. Great stuff. . . . By the way, attendance in Moose Jaw was reported at 2,473.
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A teenaged shoplifter in Kelowna has learned not to mess with Hitch. Don Plant of the Kelowna Daily Courier reports that well-known hockey coach Ken Hitchcock, who hangs out in Kelowna during the summer these days, “was in a parked car outside clothing shop Cruzwear Unlimited on Bernard Avenue on Wednesday morning. A 14-year-old boy left the store with three pairs of shorts as employee Sherrie Lessare grabbed his pack sack and held on.
When she called for help, Hitchcock and a man riding a motorcycle seized the thief and pinned him against the store window. Lessare phoned the downtown security patrol while the two men detained the youth.
“They were both just wonderful people,” she said later. “Both guys, no questions asked, just came and helped.”
The youth ended up being banned from the store and also was informed that he would be charged with trespassing were he to return.
And if you know Hitchcock, you know he wasn’t done.
The former Kamloops Blazers head coach, Plant reports, “came back to the store half an hour later to see if Lessare was OK.”
Hitchcock declined The Daily Courier’s request for an interview.
By the way, Plant also reported that “Lesarre . . . described (Hitchcock) as ‘distinguished,’ tanned, wearing walking shorts and expensive white runners.”
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You likely have heard by now that the Subway Super Series will be stopping in Kamloops on Nov. 17 and Prince George on Nov. 18, with the Blazers and then the Cougars facing a touring Russian side.
If you missed it, the CHL/WHL press release started like this:
“Team WHL will renew their rivalry with the Russian National Junior Team in Kamloops . . .”
Isn’t it time people took off the blinders and quit calling the Russian outfit the national junior team? Sheesh, the CHL holds a 36-6 record in the seven years of the series.
The WHL, by the way, is 13-1 and has outscored the Russians, 65-21.
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The Regina Pat have acquired F Colin Reddin, 20, from the Prince Albert Raiders for a conditional sixth-round pick in the 2012 bantam draft. Reddin split 68 games between the Portland Winterhawks and Prince Albert last season, totalling 23 points, including 10 goals. He is preparing for his fourth WHL season, and is from Corona Del Mar, Calif. . . . Regina now has two 20-year-olds on its roster, with F Cass Mappin being the other. . . . The deal leaves the Raiders with three 20-year-olds — D Nathan Deck, D Jordan Rowley and Belarussian F Igor Revenko. Revenko is due to arrive in Prince Albert on Friday and GM/head coach Bruno Campese is adamant that he will be one of the 20-year-olds this season.
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The Swift Current Broncos have signed five players — F Brandon Bruce, 17, of Kelowna; F Brendan Hopkins, 16, of Airdrie, Alta.; F Zac MacKay, 15, of Swift Current; F Josh Sinatynski, 15, of Fort Saskatchewan, Alta.; and, D Bobby Zinkan, 15, of Calgary. . . . The latter three all are 2010 bantam draft selections.
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Swift Current F Dillon Wagner, 19, is at home in Edmonton, recovering from offseason knee surgery. The Broncos hope to have him back late this month. . . . F Michael Hay, a Winnipegger who had one point in 30 games with Swift Current last season, will play this season with the MJHL's Selkirk Steelers.
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The Moose Jaw Warriors have signed F Brayden Cuthbert, a 2009 bantam draft pick from Brandon, and G Brandon Stone, 17, of Langley, B.C.
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Kelly Kisio, the general manager of the defending-champion Calgary Hitmen, admits that, yes, he had discussions with the Calgary Flames’ brass about moving up to the NHL club. But, yes, he’s back with the Hitmen. The Calgary Herald has that story right here.
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The Tri-City Americans have broken up one of the three brother acts that were in their training camp. F Mitch Owsley, the 17-year-old brother of starting goaltender Drew Owsley, is on his way back to Lethbridge. . . . Also leaving are G Ross Baadsvik of Langley, B.C., G Jay Hudon of Zenon Park, Sask., D Josh Cronan of Nanaimo, B.C., and D Brett Pile of Winnipeg. . . . F Lucas Nickles has been reassigned to the junior B team in Golden, B.C. . . . .Two others players — G Eric Comrie and F Trevor Moore — will be returning to Los Angeles after Thursday’s workout. Both will report to the midget AAA Los Angeles Selects.
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Veteran F Carter Ashton, who had taken part in only day of training camp, struck for four goals Wednesday night as Team Blue beat Team White 4-2 in the Regina Pats’ intrasquad game. . . . A sprained wrist suffered at the Canadian national junior team’s selection camp in August had kept Ashton out of contact drills.
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The Prince George Cougars survived a scare Tuesday when F Brett Connolly, the Tampa Bay Lightning’s first pick in the NHL’s 2010 draft, went down during their intrasquad game. Connolly, who missed most of last season with hip problems, was felled in a collision and came up limping. Eventually, he was diagnosed with a bruised kneecap. "We were a little bit (concerned) but he's fine," Dallas Thompson, the Cougars’ general manager, told the Prince George Citizen. "The doctor and (Cougars trainer Ramandeep Singh Dhanjal) looked at him and he had a bruised kneecap. So he iced it down and he was fine." . . . The Cougars weren’t on the ice Wednesday, choosing to have a team softball game, instead. The Citizen reports that Connolly played an active role in the softball game. . . . As for the intrasquad game, Team Black dumped Team White, 9-4. F Parker Stanfield and F John Odgers each scored twice for the winners, with F Spencer Asuchak doing the same for Team White.
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D Scott Jackson (Seattle, 2002-08) is getting closer to his goal of a regular spot in the NHL. That story is right here.

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Monday . . .

THE MacBETH REPORT:
Firstly, a note in response to a comment on yesterday’s posting . . .
Oops! Your poster is correct. Geleen is named after the Trail Smoke Eaters and the name is Smoke Eaters Geleen. They did go by Meat Eaters for a brief period in the early ’90s (a sponsorship tie-in with Meet Point Entertainment as their main sponsor) and I guess I still have that stuck in my head. They are currently known officially as Ruijters Eaters Geleen — their main sponsor is Ruijters, a Dutch real estate and financial services firm — but they use Smoke Eaters everywhere. . . .
As for Monday’s moves . . .
Medvescak Zagreb officially announced the Wacey Rabbit signing Monday morning. Rabbit (Saskatoon, Vancouver, 2001-07) signed a one-year contract with Medvescak Zagreb (Croatia, plays in Austria Erste Bank Liga). He had eight goals and 10 assists in 76 games for Milwaukee Admirals (AHL) last season. . . .
D Perry Johnson (Regina, Spokane, 1993-98) signed a one-year contract With Milano Rossoblu (Italy Serie A2). He had four goals and six assists in 33 games for Mörrum (Sweden Division 1) last season. . . .
D Paul Albers (Calgary, Regina, Vancouver, 2001-06) signed a one-year contract with the Krefeld Pinguine (Germany DEL) after a successful try-out. He had three goals and 10 assists in 49 games for Nuremberg Ice Tigers (Germany DEL) last season.
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Steve Oursov is back in camp with the Red Deer Rebels. In February 2009, Oursov came out of a fight with F Charles Inglis of the Saskatoon Blades with a bad concussion. Eleven months later, he joined the BCHL’s Trail Smoke Eaters but now admits he wasn’t “feeling great.” . . . Now, he tells Greg Meachem of the Red Deer Advocate, “I started feeling better later in the spring and started training hard. I took it step by step and got better and better every single day. I feel good now. I’m cleared up and I’m feeling great out there. I’m just working my hardest and hopefully it will pay off.” . . . Oursov also said: “I’m here now and I consider myself fortunate. A year ago I weighed 165 pounds and I couldn’t lift a dumb-bell. Now I’m feeling great. Thank God. There’s nothing more important than your health.” . . . The complete story is right here.
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The Tri-City Americans have added former WHL F Chad Kletzel to their scouting staff. Kletzel (Edmonton Ice, Lethbridge, 1996-99) will handle southern Alberta, mostly in the Lethbridge area. After playing in the WHL, Kletzel, who is from Indus, Alta., played four seasons for the U of Lethbridge Pronghorns.
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The Moose Jaw Warriors have signed a pair of 17-year-old forwards — Matt Grant of Ladysmith, B.C., and Sam Fioretti of Calgary. . . . Grant had 45 points with the Comox, B.C., Glacier Kings of the junior B Vancouver Island league last season. Fioretti had 21 points in 24 games with the midget Calgary Buffaloes. . . . The Warriors also announced that goaltending coach Dave Marcoux is returning for a second season. . . . Matthew Gourlie of the Moosse Jaw Times-Herald has more right here.
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Bruce Luebke, the play-by-play voice of the Brandon Wheat Kings on radio station CKLQ, takes a look at the club’s prospects right here. The Wheat Kings open training camp with registration Tuesday.
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The Regina Pats think they’ve got a blue-chip prospect in Alec McCrea, a 15-year-old California. Now all they have to do is get him to commit to playing in the WHL. Greg Harder of the Regina Leader-Post has that story right here.
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After more than 20 years on the NHL beat, Elliott Pap now is writing about the Vancouver Giants for the Vancouver Sun. Today, he has a look at veteran F Craig Cunningham, who will be the Giants’ captain . . . unless he earns a contract with the Boston Bruins, who took him in the fourth round of the 2010 NHL draft. That story is right here. (By the way, Giants fans are the real winners here because Papp knows the way around the rink and his fingers know their way around a keyboard. Enjoy!)
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The Kelowna Rockets have both their import players in camp. Warren Henderson of the Capital News takes a look at Norwegian F Andreas Stene and Slovenian F Gal Koren, and how the Rockets plan to be patient with them, right here.
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Cory Wolfe of the Saskatoon StarPhoenix does a regular feature in which he interviews someone of note. Last week, he chatted up Saskatoon Blades F Curt Gogol and the results are right here.
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It turns out that F Tristan King, 20, isn’t in camp with the Medicine Hat Tigers, who have lost F Taylor Gal to the U of Lethbridge Pronghorns. . . . The 20-year-olds in Medicine Hat’s camp are D Thomas Carr, D Jace Coyle, F Joey Frazer and F Wacey Hamilton. . . . Coyle has signed with the NHL’s Dallas Stars, while Hamilton has a free-agent tryout deal with the Colorado Avalanche.
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G Brant Hilton (Prince Albert, Swift Current, 2003-06) has signed with the Central league’s Mississippi RiverKings. Hilton, from Winnipeg,, played the last three seasons with the U of Regina Cougars.
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Yes-s-s-s-s! It’s time for the latest episode of . . . BLOG WARS!!!!
If you are familiar with the ESPN show Pardon the Interruption (PTI), you are aware that co-hosts Tony Kornheiser and Michael Wilbon frequently play games such as Toss Up and Odds Makers.
And at the end of such games, the one-sided conversation invariably goes like this:
KORNHEISER: That’s it. The game’s over. And I win. Again.
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Well, folks, BLOG WARS is over . . . and I win!
Hope you enjoyed it. And thanks for the 4,000,001 emails of support.

Monday, August 30, 2010

Sunday . . .

THE MacBETH REPORT:
F Dan Lapointe (Seattle, Portland, Prince George, Spokane, 2001-05) signed a one-year contract with Meat Eaters Geleen (Netherlands Eredivisie). He had 20 goals and 24 assists in 70 games split between the Dayton Gems and Flint Generals (both IHL) last season.
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The Prince Albert Raiders appear to have settled on their goaltending tandem for the approaching season. John MacNeil of the Prince Albert Herald reports that the Raiders have released G Jacob Edwards, a sixth-round pick in the 2007 bantam draft. That means that Eric Williams, a fourth-round pick in 2008, is likely to be backing up Jamie Tucker when the season opens. “We went into training camp with an open mind, and at the end of the day, we just thought Eric Williams had a better camp than Jacob Edwards, and (Williams is) a year younger,” Raiders GM/head coach Bruno Campese told MacNeil “We just decided to make a decision sooner rather than later, just to get everything somewhat settled in that position and just move forward.” . . . G Brenden Fiebelkorn, 16, remains in camp but is seen as a stopper of the future. . . . The Raiders already are down to 32 players, including two 15-year-olds. . . . F Shane Danyluk, a second-round pick in 2009, is on crutches after suffering a sprained ankle in Saturday’s final scrimmage. It’s a high-ankle sprain, which is the worst, and he is out indefinitely.
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The U of Lethbridge Pronghorns have three former WHLers in their recruiting class for the 2010-11 season. . . . F Taylor Gal (Medicine Hat, 2007-10) has chosen to pass up his 20-year-old season and return to his hometown in order to attend classes. He had 57 points last season with the Tigers. . . . F Ryan Letts, a native of Newport Beach, Calif., played five seasons in the WHL, splitting his time between the Calgary Hitmen and Spokane Chiefs. He had eight points in 52 games as a 20-year-old with Spokane last season. . . . Nick Hotson (Portland, Lethbridge, 2004-08) enrolled at the U of Manitoba after leaving the WHL. He played for the Bisons in 2009-09 but sat out last season, so is eligible to play for the Pronghorns this season. . . . The head coach of the Pronghorns is Greg Gatto (Brandon, Spokane, Prince Albert, Regina, Portland, 1990-92).
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Gal’s decision leaves the Tigers with five 20-year-olds on their roster — D Thomas Carr, D Jace Coyle, F Wacey Hamilton, F Tristan King and F Joey Frazer. . . . Medicine Hat has both its import players in camp. D Sebastian Owuya, 6-foot-3 and 200 pounds, is from Sweden, while 5-foot-9, 160-pound F Patrik Parkkonen is from Finland. Owuya was selected by the Atlanta Thrashers in the sixth round of the NHL’s 2010 draft.
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F Corey Tyrell, a veteran WHL forward, ended up not reporting to camp with the Regina Pats, as was expected. Tyrell, who turns 20 in December, played last season with the SJHL’s Flin Flon Bombers after two seasons with the Prince George Cougars. . . . His decision leaves the Pats with one 20-year-old in camp, that being F Cass Mappin, who scored twice in a veterans’ scrimmage Sunday.
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Cory Wolfe of the Saskatoon StarPhoenix reports: “RW Walker Wintoneak, who graduated from the Blades last season, is close to signing with the Boston Bruins’ ECHL affiliate in Reading, Penn.”
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And now for your reading enjoyment . . . and if you ain’t chuckling, you ain’t breathing . . . we bring you the latest installment of . . .

BLOG WARS:
If you’re a fisherman, you know the feeling. You bait the hook and you get it in the water and . . . nothing. So you change spots and . . . nothing. . . . Sometimes you go home empty-handed.
But then there are those days when you get the hook in the water and — BANG! — you get the big one.
Well, Sunday started out like the former and ended like the latter. It ended when this showed up:
“Hey Gregg,
The (bleep) Pedersen continues to show his classless and immature ways. Here is an excerpt from his "Monday Morning Goalie" (already posted on his blog Sunday night):
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“And finally .... he bit.
“Gregg Drinnan of the Kamloops Daily News got snippy on his blog Saturday regarding the comments I made about his website in Friday's column. At one point, he referred to me as a ‘fatheaded blogger’. I love it!! Here's a delicious excerpt from his Saturday post:
"But why, oh why, would the god of gods, the icon of icons, the cheerleader of cheerleaders fire the first shot? Geez, he hasn’t spoken to me since that night more than 10 years ago when I asked him on the record to explain how he felt about lying to his listeners. (In two preseason games, the Pats had played a player under an assumed name and he, knowing full well what was going on, didn’t let on to his listeners that Connor McRae actually was Konrad McKay. The later-to-be king of bloggers turned his back and walked away without answering. The Pats later were disciplined by the WHL.)"
“In truth, if you read closely, I never actually spoke to Drinnan in the above exchange either so I guess I haven't spoken to him and (sic) much more than 10 years. And it will go on much longer. And it feels grrrrrrrrrreat!
“The fact is he's a bully, and I don't care much for bullies. He doesn't scare me anymore although I know he still scares quite a few in the Dub. So, it's going to be a very fun season of blogging and following the WHL!”
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Now I will admit to having been called a few things during my career in newspapering, but a bully wasn’t one of them. Until now, that is. All I ask is that you keep in mind that that comment comes from a guy who, I’m told, once had a picture of me in his cubicle at work and used it as a dartboard.
A bully?
Sheesh, I started the Christmas Cheer Fund at the Regina Leader-Post, and the Christmas Cheer Fund at the Kamloops Daily News. Between those two funds, more than $1.8 million has been passed along to charities.
And, by the way, I have never, ever made a fool of myself by verbally attacking an on-ice official.
A bully? You decide: Who is the bully?
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Hey, Sheila, hold all my calls. Yeah, and get Lucas back on the line, will you please. Yeah, that Lucas . . . George Lucas.
Yeah, the guy who did Star Wars. Yeah, that’s the same guy who called a few minutes ago when I was on another line.
Who knows? Maybe he’s interested in doing something on BLOG WARS!!!!!!

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Friday . . .

THE MacBETH REPORT:
D Robert Schnabel (Red Deer, 1997-99) signed a one-year contract with Slovan Bratislava (Slovakia Extraliga). He had no goals and four assists in 41 games with HK 36 Skalica (Slovakia Extraliga) last season. . . .
F Cam Paddock (Kelowna, 1999-2004) signed a one-year contract with the Iserlohn Roosters (Germany DEL). He had 15 goals and 12 assists in 80 games for the Peoria Riverman (AHL) last season. . . .
 F Randall Gelech (Kelowna, 2000-04) signed a one-year contract with Vipiteno (Italy Serie A2). He had 21 goals and 25 assists in 63 games for the Victoria Salmon Kings (ECHL) last season.
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D Jeff Regier, 19, is back with the Everett Silvertips after playing last season for the BCHL’s Surrey Eagles. Regier, a second-round pick by Everett in the 2006 bantam draft, was dealt to the Prince George Cougars early in 2008-09. He left the Cougars a year ago, was dropped from their list, and now is in camp with the Silvertips. . . . With the Silvertips having lost two 20-year-old defencemen — Curtis Kulchar and Chris de la Lande, both of whom chose not to return for their final season — they definitely have room for some experience on the back end.
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A couple of notes from A Bird Brain, one of the blogs over there on the left:
“The (Seattle Thunderbirds’) No. 1 bantam draft pick from this past spring, Jared Hauf, was not playing because of an ankle injury that he suffered at conditioning camp. I understand he will probably be around this weekend but will not be able to participate. . . .
“In my preview of this year's team I mentioned that 18-year-old-Austin Baecker hadn't played yet in the WHL and that wasn't a good sign. I learned today that he badly injured his back last July while training and wasn't able to walk until late October and didn't get on the ice until late November. By that time Lethbridge had made trades for other D-men and Austin asked to be traded. From what I understand he fully intends to make the Birds this year. He is now 6 foot 7 and 239 pounds!”
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F Wacey Rabbit (Saskatoon, Vancouver, 2001-07) appears to be on his way across the pond. He posted on Facebook that he has signed with KHL Medvescak Zagreb and is “leaving saturday . . . smell ya later north america HELLOOOOOOOOO europe.” . . . Last season, he had 18 points in 76 games with the AHL’s Milwaukee Admirals. . . . Garth MacBeth checked it out and it seems that Medvescak Zabreg has yet to make the announcement. There was nothing on its website, the Croatian hockey website, or the Erste Bank Liga web site. “Medvescak just signed Don MacLean to a try-out — that is their most recent signing,” MacBeth reported late Friday night, adding that “the KHL is part of the team name — KHL Medvescak Zagreb — and they play in Austria's Erste Bank Liga. The KHL stands for Klub Hokeja na Ledu, which means Club ice hockey.”
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The Regina Pats have a handful of WHL veteran forwards in their camp who played elsewhere last season. Jesse Hall (Brandon), Dane Muench (Swift Current), Corey Tyrell (Prince George) and Devin Balness (Edmonton Oil Kings) reported to Regina, which opens camp Saturday morning. . . . G Cory Nygaard, 17, had offseason knee surgery so isn’t yet participating in the Pats’ camp. . . . Greg Harder of the Regina Leader-Post has a good look at the Pats in his Slap Shots blog over there on the left.
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LW Jesse Paradis, 19, didn’t even get on the ice with the Moose Jaw Warriors before he was sent home. “He is not meeting our team standards,” Warriors head coach Dave Hunchak told Matthew Gourlie of the Moose Jaw Times-Herald. Hunchak refused to elaborate, but did add: “As a result he’s been sent home to get himself in a position where he can meet team standards.” Paradis, who came over from the Kelowna Rockets in a trade last season, had 20 points in 65 games in 2009-10.
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The Vancouver Giants will have a guest coach at training camp early next week. Former Kamloops Blazers head coach Ken Hitchcock, who now is a consultant with Columbus after the Blue Jackets fired him last season, will be on hand Sunday and Monday. Hitchcock and Giants head coach Don Hay are long-time friends.
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D Carter Berg, a second-round pick, 26th overall, by the Chilliwack Bruins in the 2007 bantam draft, is back in the WHL. Berg, 6-foot-4 and 190 pounds, was dealt to the Calgary Hitmen last season, for a fourth-round pick in the 2011 bantam draft, but played just one game for them. Instead, he played with the SJHL’s Melfort Mustangs. Berg, who turns 18 on Sept. 4, will be in camp with the Hitmen.
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First came a note from a friend that carried with it the subject line: He still doesn’t like you.
Sheesh, I wondered, who doesn’t like me?
In the body of the note was this: “WHL blog god Gregg Drinnan was crowing on his website the other day that his page has attracted 2,000,000 all-time hits. I guess since we're talking about it, this website hit 4,000,000 all-time hits on the weekend. Thank you for you continued patronage."
Shortly after that, an anonymous posting showed up on this blog:
“Hey Gregg,
“Just to let you know, you are apparently known to Rod Pedersen as Greggy (on his blog in the comments section).....he was pointing out how many hits his blog has on his ‘Friday Rodservations.’ ”
And then this one popped up:
“I love reading Roddy's blog, hilarious each time I go there. What a shocker, he wouldnt have taken the PBP job if offered just wanted the experience, exactly what I said when Burger King didnt hire me at 14.
“I also wonder how an american getting the Oiler job is political? Racking my brain to see how this is political.
By the way, did you realize you were crowing here Gregg?”
Uhh, no, I didn’t realize I was crowing. Unlike some fatheaded bloggers out there, some of whom are nothing but cheerleaders for the teams they yap about, I was trying to make a point with the WHL and its 22 teams.
But why, oh why, would the god of gods, the icon of icons, the cheerleader of cheerleaders fire the first shot? Geez, he hasn’t spoken to me since that night more than 10 years ago when I asked him on the record to explain how he felt about lying to his listeners. (In two preseason games, the Pats had played a player under an assumed name and he, knowing full well what was going on, didn’t let on to his listeners that Connor McRae actually was Konrad McKay. The later-to-be king of bloggers turned his back and walked away without answering. The Pats later were disciplined by the WHL.)
But I digress . . .
Please allow me to state quite clearly that, being the only computer-literate person in the free world who doesn't visit THE blog, until that second note arrived, I had no idea what Rodservations was. In fact, it strikes me as a direct ripoff of Robservations, a column that has long been written by Rob Vanstone of the Regina Leader-Post.
Also, please allow me to point out that some people aren’t as well-known as they think they are.
Here’s a snippet from the Edmonton Journal that I noticed earlier this week and at the time chose to ignore:
“The Oilers were bowled over by the applications. They considered the Kelowna Rockets' Regan Bartel and Toronto Marlies' John Bartlett closely, along with Steve Kouleas of The SCORE. Dennis Beyak, who used to work here and now does the Toronto Maple Leafs radio games; Ron Pedersen, the Regina Pats and Riders CFL play-by-play voice; and TSN's Ryan Rishaug were also considered.”

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