Showing posts with label Spencer Bast. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spencer Bast. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 10, 2017

Pats make big splash before deadline . . . Cougars add another top gun . . . More trades


WHL trades since Dec. 27:
Trades: 31.
Players: 55.
Bantam draft picks: 40.
Conditional bantam draft picks: 10.
(WHL trade deadline is Jan. 10, 3 p.m. MT).
——
The Regina Pats jumped into the WHL’s trade deadline pool on Tuesday, making like a cannonballer at a Hawaiian resort. They made a deal with the Red Deer Rebels that involved four players, two first-round
bantam draft picks and two conditional selections.
The Pats acquired D Josh Mahura, 18, F Jeff de Wit, 18, and a conditional third-round pick in 2019 for F Lane Zablocki, who turned 18 on Dec. 27, D Dawson Barteaux, 16, a first-round pick in 2017, a first-round pick in 2018 or 2019, and a conditional third-rounder in 2020.
Mahura and de Wit both played for the Rebels last season when they were the host team for the 2016 Memorial Cup tournament. The Pats, obviously, are a serious contender for the Ed Chynoweth Cup as WHL champions this season and are considered by most observers to be the favourite to be named hosts of the 2018 Memorial Cup.
Thus, any deals the Pats make have to be examined under that light. Were the Pats to win the WHL this season and also be the host team for the 2018 Memorial Cup, Mahura and de Wit could play in three straight national championship tournaments.
Keep in mind, too, that the Pats own the WHL rights to D Tyson Jost, who is playing for the U of North Dakota Fighting Hawks. Should he end up joining the Pats at some time, and they are hoping he will be in their lineup next season, they will owe a first-round pick to the Everett Silvertips. Should Jost end up in Regina for 2016-17, Red Deer likely would get that 2018 first-rounder, with the 2019 pick going to Everett.
The 6-foot-0, 180-pound Mahura, from St. Albert, Alta., missed all but two games last season with an

injury to his left knee, but that didn’t stop the Anaheim Ducks from selecting him in the third round of the NHL’s 2016 draft. He was injured on the opening weekend of the 2015-16 season and was back in time to play in 17 playoff games and the Memorial Cup.
This season, Mahura had 33 points, including nine goals, in 39 games with the Rebels. In 92 career regular-season games, he has 42 points, 11 of them goals. The Rebels selected him in the second round of the 2013 bantam draft.
De Wit, from Red Deer, had four goals and five assists in 36 games with the Rebels this season, his third in Red Deer. Last season, the 6-foot-3, 190-pounder had 23 points, seven of them goals, in 70 games. In 174 career games, he has 14 goals and 30 assists.
Zablocki, from Wetaskiwin, Alta., had nine goals and 16 assists in 33 games with the Pats this season. Last season, as a freshman, he had 18 goals and 19 assists in 72 games. The 6-foot-0, 185-pounder was a fifth-round pick by the Prince George Cougars in the 2013 bantam draft. Regina acquired Zablocki in a deal that had F Jesse Gabrielle go to Prince George.
Barteaux was a first-round selection by the Pats in the 2015 bantam draft. From Foxwarren, Man., the 6-foot-1, 170-pound Barteaux will turn 17 on Thursday. He has two assists in 18 games with the Pats this season.
Something else that makes this trade interesting is that the Pats are loading up for a run at perhaps two Memorial Cups, while the Rebels are working to rebuild after making a boatload of moves leading into the 2016 tournament.
——
The Prince George Cougars added another top-end player to their roster on Tuesday when they acquired Slovakian F Radovan Bondra, 19, from the Vancouver Giants for Dutch F Bartek Bison, 18, F Tyler Ho, 16, and a third-round pick in the 2018 WHL bantam draft.
Later in the day, the Cougars got F Tanner Wishnowski, 19, from the Spokane Chiefs for a conditional eight-round pick in the 2018 bantam draft.
Bondra was a fifth-round pick by the Chicago Blackhawks in the NHL’s 2015 draft. In 90 career games, the 6-foot-5, 215-pound Bondra has 34 goals and 27 assists. This season, he had 19 goals and 12 assists in 32 games with the Giants.
Bondra was to join the Cougars in Red Deer prior to a game with the Rebels on Tuesday. They are to play in Medicine Hat on Wednedsay, Lethbridge on Friday and Calgary on Saturday.
The 6-foot-3, 190-pound Bison, who is from Amsterdam, has been sidelined with a concussion since Dec. 3. He had five goals and an assist in 22 games with the Cougars this season, after putting up six goals and nine assists in 56 games last season.
Ho, from North Vancouver, is the key to this deal from the Giants’ perspective. He was a third-round
selection by Prince George in the 2015 bantam draft and has signed a WHL contract. Ho has 14 goals and 21 assists in 26 games with the Valley West Hawks of the B.C. Major Midget Hockey League.
Meanwhile, Wishnowski, from Oakbank, Man., hasn’t played since Nov. 19 due to an undisclosed injury.
He was listed by the Kelowna Rockets in 2013. Last season, he had seven goals and six assists in 54 games with the Rockets. He started this season with Kelowna, scoring once and adding an assist in 10 games, before being dealt to Spokane. In 13 games with the Chiefs, he had two goals and six assists before being injured.
The Cougars are on an Alberta road swing and Wishnowski will join them when they get home on Sunday.
In the past month, the Cougars added three prime-time players in Bondra, Russian F Nikita Popugaev and D Brendan Guhle, giving up six players and five bantam draft picks in the deals.
After putting Wishnowski on their roster, the Cougars were left with a 24-man roster that includes 15 players born in 1996 or 1997.
——
The Prince Albert Raiders have acquired F Jordy Stallard, 19, and a seventh-round pick in the 2017 bantam draft from the Calgary Hitmen for F Luke Coleman, 18, and a 2018 fourth-round selection.
The 6-foot-2, 185-pound Stallard, from Brandon, had eight goals and 19 assists in 32 games with the Hitmen this season. In 158 career games, he has 35 goals and 67 assists. The Hitmen selected him in the fourth round of the 2012 bantam draft. The Winnipeg Jets picked him in the fifth round of the NHL’s 2016 draft.
Coleman, from Red Deer, was a fifth-round pick by the Raiders in the 2013 bantam draft. This season, he had seven goals and five assists in 39 games with the Raiders. In 123 career games, he has 21 goals and 21 assists.
Interestingly, the Hitmen are scheduled to visit Prince Albert on Wednesday night.
——
The Moose Jaw Warriors have acquired F Branden Klatt, 18, from the Edmonton Oil Kings for a fourth-round pick in the 2018 bantam draft and a conditional sixth-round pick in the 2019.
The Warriors also added F Spencer Bast from the Kamloops Blazers for an eighth-round selection in the 2018 bantam draft.
This season, the 6-foot-2, 195-pound Klatt, who is from Moose Jaw, had four goals and five assists in 41 games with Edmonton. In 85 career games, he put up five goals and 12 assists.
The Oil Kings selected Klatt in the sixth round of the 2013 bantam draft.

Bast, from Macklin, Sask., turned 20 on Jan. 5. A list player, the 5-foot-11, 170-pound Bast had six goals and five assists in 40 games with the Blazers this season. Last season, in 47 games, he had four goals and eight assists.

There has never been a subscription fee for this blog, but if you enjoy stopping by here, why not consider donating to the cause? Just click HERE. . . and thank you very much.
PhotobucketPhotobucketPhotobucket

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

McDavid's right hand in spotlight . . . Benson returns with injury . . . That's 20 for Chartier








F Zdeněk Blatný (Seattle, Kootenay, 1998-2001) has signed a contract for the rest of this season with Dornbirn (Austria, Erste Bank Liga). This season, with Frederikshavn (Denmark, Metal Ligaen), he had three goals and five assists in five games.
---

THE FIGHT:

About the time when Connor McDavid swung and missed on Tuesday night, Sportsnet was running a Friday Night Hockey promo during its telecast of the Subway Super Series game from Brandon.
"What separates Connor from his class?" intoned the voice. "Brilliant hands . . ."
Meanwhile, on Twitter, it was as though the stable was on fire.
McDavid, of course, is The Next One. He plays for the OHL's Erie Otters and is likely to win the league's scoring OHLtitle . . . well, he was until last night, that is. He had 42 points through 14 games, was blanked in No. 15 and then put up seven points over his next two games.
The Otters were at home to the Mississauga Steelheads last night. They had a 4-0 lead in the second period, and McDavid already had a goal, his 16th, and an assist. Then, at 13:50, McDavid took exception to a whack from Steelheads F Bryson Cianfrone and dropped his gloves.
(Victor Fernandes, who covers the Otters for the Erie Times-News, tweeted: "For those keeping score, that was #McDavid's 2nd #OHL fight - 1st where he actually threw punches.")
About halfway through the bout, McDavid's right fist made contact with the boards, dasher or glass. He skated off the ice, his left hand clutching the top of his right hand in obvious discomfort, and headed to the dressing room. He later went to an area hospital for X-rays, the results of which weren't available last night.
McDavid, according to the Otters, is to see a hand specialist today. However, reports late last night indicated that there is a fracture in there somewhere, although it isn't believed to be major.
The Sportsnet gang may not get any sleep as it awaits word on McDavid's immediate future. Game 3 in the Subway Series, this one featuring the OHL and the Russians, is scheduled for Thursday in Peterborough. McDavid is on the OHL's roster.
On Friday, as part of its 12-year CHL contract, Sportsnet is scheduled to show us a game that has the Otters visiting St. Catharines to play the Niagara IceDogs.
We won't even get into how the personality of Canada's national junior team changes if McDavid isn't able to play in the 2015 World Junior Championship that is to be played in Montreal and Toronto. Of course TSN has the TV rights to the WJC, which is why Bob McKenzie was all over this story from the moment McDavid's hand hit the wall.
And if you were tired of hearing about McDavid prior to Tuesday's bout, well, you ain't seen nothin' yet. You can bet that it's going to be all McDavid all the time between now and the Canadian team’s December selection camp. Will he be able to, or won’t he?
Meanwhile, on Twitter, the pro-fighting crowd was braying before the X-ray tech took the first picture of McDavid's hand. Presumably that bunch all will be watching Sportsnet on Thursday and Friday nights if McDavid isn't available.
---
Cathal Kelly, The Globe and Mail's sports columnist, was at last night's game in Erie, Pa. His column on what transpired is right here.
---
If you haven't yet seen video of the scrap, it is right here.
---
Adam Proteau of The Hockey News wrote a piece about the Connor McDavid situation last night. It could be that he was doing a little trolling, too. If so, he caught some big ones. Just check the comments that follow this piece right here.
---



The Vancouver Giants aren’t expected to have F Tyler Benson in the lineup tonight when they meet the visiting Tri-City Americans. Steve Ewen of the Vancouver Province reported Tuesday morning that Benson returned from the U-17 World Hockey Challenge with an undisclosed injury. . . . Benson, who has three goals and eight assists in 11 games, skated by himself prior to the Giants’ practice, so isn’t believed to be seriously injured. . . . Ewen also reported that F Jakub Stukel (hand), who has played only two games this season, will see a doctor on Nov. 18. He has at least been shooting pucks. . . . F Johnny Wesley, a 17-year-old from White Rock, B.C., skated with the Giants on Tuesday and may be an option for tonight. Wesley, who played one game with the Giants last season, plays with the BCHL’s Surrey Eagles.
---
The Kamloops Blazers have released F Spencer Bast, 17, from their roster and he is expected to join the SJHL’s Battefords North Stars. Bast, from Macklin, Sask., was pointless in six games with Kamloops. . . . The Blazers are carrying 24 players, including eight defencemen and 14 forwards.
---
Russia won Game 2 of the Subway Super Series, beating the WHL 3-2 in Brandon on Tuesday night. That sends the Russians east with a 5-1 lead in the series -- it’s three points for a regulation victory, zero for a regulation loss, two points for a shootout victory, one point for a shootout loss). . . . Attendance was announced at 4,788. The capacity of Westman Place is 4,999. . . . Russian F Maxim Mamin took an awkward tumble into the end boards after behind hit by WHL D Joe Hicketts on Monday in Saskatoon. Mamin was taken from the ice on a stretcher and apparently was taken to hospital. I didn’t hear an update on his condition during Game 2. . . . D Shea Theodore, who played for the WHL in Monday's 3-2 shootout loss in Saskatoon, didn't get into the lineup last night. Earlier in the day, he rejoined the Seattle Thunderbirds. He practised with them and should be in their lineup tonight when they meet the Warriors in Moose Jaw.
---
D Jarret Tyszka and D Alec Capstick, a pair of WHL bantam draft picks, apparently visited the U of Wisconsin on Sunday. . . . Tyszka, from Langley, B.C., was selected by the Seattle Thunderbirds with the 16th overall pick of the 2014 bantam draft. He is playing for the Yale Hockey Academy U18 team. . . . Capstick, also from Langley, was taken by the Saskatoon Blades in the fourth round of the 2014 bantam draft. He also attends the Yale Hockey Academy. . . . Tip of the hat to Andy Johnson (@AndyJohnsonB5Q) for the tweet.
---



Dwight Jaynes, a veteran sports journalist on the Portland scene, was carrying a suitcase down some stairs in his home recently. He fell before he got to the bottom, banging his head against a wall in the process. . . . His first-person account of what followed is well worth reading. It’s right here. . . . As he writes, he’d rather have broken a leg.
---

THE COACHING GAME:

The AHL’s Iowa Wild made a coaching change on Tuesday, with John Torchetti replacing Kurt Kleinendorst. . . . Torchetti, who had previously coached the Minnesota Wild’s AHL affiliate when it was in Houston, spent last season as head coach of the KHL’s CSKA Moscow. . . . Iowa was 2-10-0 at the time of the change.
---

TUESDAY'S GAME:

In Spokane, F Rourke Chartier scored twice to help the Kelowna Rockets beat the Chiefs, 4-3. . . . Rourke leads the WHL with 20 goals. His 20th goal, at 9:18 of the third period, gave the Rockets a 4-2 lead. . . . F Adam Helewka, with his 11th, got the Chiefs to within one at 18:14. . . . Kelowna F Nick Merkley, who leads the WHL scoring race, had two assists. He is No. 1 in assists (29) and points (36). . . . Chartier has 34 points. . . . Rockets D Jesse Lees had two assists. . . . The Chiefs got two goals from F Riley Whittingham, who now has four. . . . Chiefs F Liam Stewart had two assists. . . . The Rockets (18-1-1) are 8-0-1 in their last nine. . . . The Chiefs are 8-6-3. . . . The Rockets were without D Madison Bowey and F Tyson Baillie, both of whom played for the WHL in the Super Series game in Brandon. . . . The Chiefs announced prior to the game that their players will wear CH decals on their helmets for the remainder of this season. Cole Hamblin, a defenceman, played for the Chiefs in 2010-12. Hamblin died of cancer a week ago. He was 21. . . . During last night's pregame warmup, Chiefs captain Jason Fram and Stewart wore No. 6 jerseys with Hamblin on the nameplate in honour of their former teammate.
---




  © Design byThirteen Letter

Back to TOP