Wednesday, December 30, 2015

THE CCHL CLUBHOUSE IS OPEN!!!

Another piece of the CCHL moves from idea to reality this morning as I'm pleased to announce the debut of our CCHL Clubhouse! The link is located just under the CCHL Blog link on the far right side of the homepage, near the daily scoreboard.

After some back and forth on the design of the section, we're going after a lean look that has some interesting content and that can be updated fairly easily.

Each team has its own page or "clubhouse" and so far there's some introductory info at the top along with our team logos, courtesy of Blake Wendt.

Below that, if you recall the GM survey's I had everyone do last Summer? Well, everyone responded and the results are posted on each page. Which CCHL GM hated working at Fedex? Which GM's Dad bought cows from Bobby Hull?  Which GM wants to go to Mars? Which GM worked in a sex fetish nightclub?

While the answers are a little out-dated in some cases, I think you'll enjoy this quite a bit. Thank you again for all your responses!

In the future, I'd like to add some team specific info that's interesting but not cumbersome to add to the pages. Team captains, alternates, coaching staff, etc. would be fun. Having a current, real time roster page, not so much. I want the content on these pages to be unique from anything else available on the site or the CCHL Blog. We'll probably move fairly slow to make sure we don't "junk-up" this section.

Try as I might, I'm unable to add pictures of the GM's to the pages. I've tried and there are massive resizing issues that wind up effecting the entire page and as of right now, its much better without any.

As far as updating your team page, if you have something you think belongs on there, please contact me and we'll work on an update.

Enjoy!

Bill

Tuesday, December 29, 2015

CCHL 2016 Inter-Conference play Notes by Dick “Dirty Mitts” Puxindeep

CCHL 2016 Inter-Conference play  Notes by Dick “Dirty Mitts” Puxindeep
December 29, 2015

Interleague play in the CCHL is now over, and to say it didn’t provide for some surprises would be an understatement.

The biggest surprise of course is that the Corfield Conference won the overall inter-conference play, but this article will look at some of the dominant teams, and teams that surprised during inter conference play.

The Dayton Musicmen continued their dominance this season in inter-conference play, sporting a 20-2 record against the Canosa crew.  If GM Bill Corfield had concerns about how his team would fare against the other conference, I’d say those fears should be put to rest; although two games separated will not provide the same true measure as a seven game final series would for the Musicmen.

In what would be one of the bigger surprises, the Wisborg Donuts went 13-8-1 in the 22 games against the Canosa to help them get within six points of a playoff spot in the Corfield Conference.

Fort Erie helped Wisborg as well, playing to a 10-10-2 record over that stretch; often starting Lindback or Jones against the heavy artillery of Copenhagen, Victoria and Reykjavik leading to the surprising .500 record.

The Norsemen of Minnesota surprisingly lost eight of their 13 games this season against the Corfield Conference; a surprise unto itself given how well Minnesota has played this season.  Those losses proved costly as well, as it caused Minnesota to drop to second in the conference.  While they only sit two points back of first, it could be hard to catch the surging Copenhagen Crusaders who went 17-4-1 over that stretch with some dominating victories over their Corfield Conference foes.

Winnipeg was a bit of a surprise as well, as they went 10-10-2 over the 22 game stretch and have yet to truly get rolling this season like they had at points last year.

The Siberia IceCats also benefitted from play against the Corfield Conference, winning seven of 22 contests.  While that record on the surface isn’t great, the ‘Cats more than doubled their win total prior to inter-conference play and vaulted themselves into double digit win totals much to the chagrin of GM Silvio Saouaf who had visions of Austin Matthews dancing in his head prior to this surge.

Calgary also really enjoyed feasting on Canosa Conference opponents, going 16-5-1 in the 22 game series, and looking fantastic at times.  Of course, when you have Carey Price in goal, he can help erase a lot of mistakes made in front of him while providing a great chance to win nightly.

If there is a team that is celebrating the end of inter-conference play more than the Victoria Ronin, I’d love to know who it is.  Yes we know Boston, Hamilton and Springfield struggled mightily during inter-conference play, but nobody expected a cup contender like Victoria to sport a 9-10-3 record against the Corfield.  After posting such a strong record within the tough Canosa Conference, Victoria should have done better against the Corfield on paper; alas that wasn’t to be for Crosby and company.

Finally, happy vacation wishes go out to the Canosa Conference doctors who can enjoy a vacation now that their team has played Niagara Falls for the season.  While Niagara went 14-6-2 during inter-conference play, their lasting legacy will be in the number of bruises they left the Canosa Conference with this season.  After playing the Thunder, the only wishes the Canosa Conference have is that the Thunder lay enough of a beating down on Dayton in the playoffs they’ll be in tough to win by the time the final starts.

Now here’s a look at the inter-conference overall standings for your viewing pleasure.

Dayton  20-2-0 40 pts
Copenhagen 17-4-1   35 pts
Calgary 16-5-1 33 pts
Niagara Falls 14-6-2 30 pts
Georgetown 14-6-2 30 pts
Wisborg 13-8-1 27 pts
Minnesota  12-8-2 26 pts
Reykjavik 12-9-1 25 pts
Long Island 11-8-3 25 pts
Seattle 11-9-2 24 pts
Sanibel 11-10-1 23 pts
Fort Erie 10-10-2 22 pts
Linz 10-10-2 22 pts
Winnipeg 10-10-2 22 pts
Victoria 9-10-3 21 pts
Montreal 7-13-2 16 pts
Siberia 7-14-1 15 pts
Halifax 5-15-2 12 pts
Portland 4-15-3 11 pts
Springfield 4-16-2 10 pts
Boston 3-16-3 9 pts
Hamilton 3-17-2 8 pts

What we can draw from this is that no matter who they are playing, teams like Dayton and Copenhagen are still dominant and could potentially meet in the CCHL finals.  While things can change over any given playoff series, these two have to be the favorites given their domination over the league as a whole.  Carey Price can certainly change that equation over a seven game series, but the target should be squarely on Copenhagen and Dayton as the season draws to a close.

About the author:
Dick “Dirty Mitts” Puxindeep has been a CCHL columnist since December of 2015.  When he’s not watching hockey or eating chicken wings, he can be found at local karaoke competitions performing his world famous rendition of ‘Baby Got Back’.  Dick knows what he knows and won’t stray from that.  Enjoy reading Dick’s semi-regular column here when he posts it.  


Monday, December 28, 2015

CCHL 2016 Draft Notes by Dick “Dirty Mitts” Puxindeep

CCHL 2016 Draft Notes by Dick “Dirty Mitts” Puxindeep
December 28, 2015

With the New Year just days away, it behooves the management teams to start looking ahead to the CCHL draft in late June of 2016.

While many know the big names like Austin Matthews and Jakob Chychrun, but there are many other quality players that are out there you may not know all that much about.
Why aren’t they known commodities you ask?  Well it’s simply because they play on teams where they have been over-shadowed by other players, or their draft status has fallen from where it was expected to be when they entered the OHL.  This stuff happens but I’m here to tell you about those players and why you should have them on your draft lists.

Sean Day, defense, Mississauga Steelheads – Day was once considered a top ten pick overall in the NHL draft but has slid considerably since then.  In a lot of ways, Day was failed by the system of the “Exceptional Player rule” as he was the player many on the committee feel was most like an average 15 year old mentally; yet was still granted exceptional status to enter the league as a 15 year old defenceman.  It’s easy to knock the process though years after the fact, as Day stood 6’3” tall and weight 220lbs as a 15 year old.  He was dominating Michigan midget leagues and tournaments that season as a 14 year old; it really seemed like the right thing to do at the time.
The issue now is that Day still stands 6’3” and 225lbs (though he showed up to camp with exceptionally more weight than 225lbs), so he hasn’t matured physically since his OHL draft year.
The real issue at hand is that Day will always be compared to other exceptional players such as Tavares, Ekblad and McDavid.  All three guys are, for lack of a better term, mutants who excelled in the OHL far more than Day has to date in Mississauga.  In fairness to Day, he hasn’t been surrounded by the talent the three have been either throughout his OHL career; Mississauga GM and Head Coach James Boyd just hasn’t gotten it done in terms of surrounding Day with the talent to play with.
As he slides down the draft rankings, CCHL GMs should remember the bucket of tools that had scouts once salivating.  Those tools are still there and if he puts it together at the next level, many will be left wondering just how they missed out on the talents of Sean Day in the first few rounds.

Alex DeBrincat, forward, Erie Otters – The diminutive forward is maybe 5’7” tall and 160lbs, but within that small package is a whole lot of skill that should have CCHL GMs taking note.  DeBrincat was not even selected in the OHL draft but was invited to the Otters camp prior to the 2014-15 season as a walk-on and had players asking management on day one if he was their first round pick because they were floored with the skill level he brought to the table DeBrincat would go onto score 50 goals and over 100 points on the season, but many credited playing with McDavid and Dylan Strome as the reason for his success.  Many wondered how he would do early this season with McDavid gone and Strome having an extended stay at the next level and the answer was, in a word, fantastic!
DeBrincat moved to center and had a five goal game early in the season against Niagara, and ten in his first three games.  DeBrincat continued his fine play once Strome returned to the lineup, and is averaging over a goal per game (33 goals in 30 games) this season. DeBrincat is a reminder that good things can come in small packages, and this small package should be taken in the first round or very early in the second round in the CCHL daft.

Alex Nylander, forward, Mississauga Steelheads – The younger brother of William Nylander, Alex is a combination of high skill and speed much like his older brother.
Not many people knew what to expect coming into this season, his first in North America, but Nylander has been the subject of many highlight reel goals and has a very quick release to his shot that he can surprise goaltenders from pretty far out.
Nylander is in the top ten in OHL scoring and is the only rookie in the top 20 scoring leaders in the league, but he does have some warts to his game from where this reporter sits.  He tends to leave the offensive zone earlier than others and doesn’t work as hard on the back check however with his offensive skillset, one could worry about improving his defense later on in life, as he’s spending a lot of time with the puck when he is on the ice this season in the OHL.  It’s tough to teach defense when a player like Nylander has the puck as much as he does.
Nylander should be a slam dunk for the first round this year in the CCHL draft; the only question to be answered is whether or not he gets picked higher than his brother did in the CCHL draft.

Cliff Pu, forward, London Knights – Poor Cliff Pu of the London Knights.  Last season Pu found himself in a tough spot in Oshawa, with very limited minutes on a veteran team and one that would eventually go on to win the Memorial Cup.
Of course Pu was not a part of that experience, after being dealt in January to London in exchange for Michael McCarron.  It was thought at the time that Pu, would get all sorts of opportunity in London, given their lack of depth in comparison to the team he was on in Oshawa.
At the start that was pretty true, however with London adding Matthew Tkachuk and Max Jones this season, Pu has once again fallen down the depth chart.  It should be noted that Pu has an abundance of skill; he was selected 16th overall in the OHL draft in the spring of 2014 so the kid thinks the game at a high level.
I’m not sure exactly where Pu will fall to in the draft, but young Cliff has 16 points in 29 games this season as a third liner and that is without receiving any sort of significant power play time on the loaded London Knights.
It stands to reason that with some power play time available to him next year and beyond, he could also be another player CCHL GMs wonder how they missed out on given his talent level.

Stephen Dhillon, goaltender, Niagara IceDogs – Buffalo native Stephen Dhillon has had an interesting ride in the Ontario Hockey League thus far, and one should be excused if they aren’t familiar with him.
Dhillon made the IceDogs last season, beating out overage goaltender Blake Richard and 19 year old Mackenzie Savard for the backup position – despite spending all but 3 days of training camp as a 15 year old!
As we all know, the goaltender position takes much longer to develop at than any other position on the ice, so the fact that Dhillon made the team while competing as a 15 year old says quite a bit to his natural ability.
It wasn’t to be for Dhillon last season though, as he spent most of his time on ice in practice, only suiting up for a handful of games due to erratic play and playing behind veteran goalies Brent Moran and Brandon Hope (Hope was acquired when both Moran and Dhillon were struggling).
Flash forward to 2015 and Dhillon once again rose to the occasion in training camp, not giving up a single goal in the entire exhibition schedule. Dhillon continued that hot play over the first month of the season when Moran struggled, posting a.930 save percentage through the first month of the season.
Unfortunately for Dhillon, he was unable to sustain that level of play and now he backs up goaltender Alex Nedeljkovic.  Dhillon is slated to be the number one goaltender in Niagara next year, and with his 6’4” frame, projects to be a solid option going forward.  It should also be noted that Dhillon maintains a 94% average in school and his ability to develop with coaching is said to be top notch – according to both goaltending coaches he has had in Niagara.
This fine play didn’t come as a surprise to some of his ex-teammates in the Buffalo system, with one commenting that he is the best goalie he’s ever played with; noting the number of times they were outshot 2:1 but came away with the victory.
Dhillon will likely be a very late round pick in the CCHL draft but it should be noted that he could also be a guy that really develops late and could get overlooked with the immense talent of European goaltending surely to be available in the draft.

That’s all for this month’s edition of Draft Notes.  I hope you have enjoyed reading and I’ll be back to talk about other players in a month.

About the author:
Dick “Dirty Mitts” Puxindeep has been a CCHL columnist since December of 2015.  When he’s not watching hockey or eating chicken wings, he can be found at local karaoke competitions performing his world famous rendition of ‘Baby Got Back’.  Dick knows what he knows and won’t stray from that.  Enjoy reading Dick’s semi-regular column here when he posts it.  


Sunday, December 27, 2015

CCHL Sunday hockey notes by Dick “Dirty Mitts” Puxindeep

A little topic of the day followed by an update on 5 players around the league.


CCHL Sunday hockey notes by Dick “Dirty Mitts” Puxindeep
December 27, 2015

Inter-conference play is coming to a close and much to the surprise of many, the records between the two conferences have been fairly close with just two days remaining.

Many pundits thought that the power house teams in the Canosa Conference would walk over some of the Corfield Conference teams, but that has not happened as planned.

Minnesota and Copenhagen continue to battle for the top spot in the Canosa Conference, with Victoria, Reykjavik and Georgetown rounding out the third, fourth and fifth spots but trail by eight and nine points respectively for the conference lead.
The Long Island Express have seemingly locked up the last playoff spot, extending their lead to 12 points over the seventh place Sanibel Islanders during the inter-conference play.

Over in the Corfield Conference, the Dayton Musicmen continue to parlay stingy defence into the league’s best record and are on pace to tie a league record for fewest goals given up in a season; a record also held by Dayton from many years ago.
While Dayton leads the conference by a whopping 18 points, Calgary and Niagara Falls are separated by three points for second place.  Calgary are riding goaltender Carey Price to the solid record, while Niagara Falls is quite happy to run and gun with the best of them with the defense focussing on offense.

Winnipeg and Seattle with fourth and fifth respectively in the Corfield, and look to be settling in as a playoff team, with three time finalist Fort Erie leading the race for the last playoff spot by ten points.

While we don’t know how things will play out the rest of the way in the season, what we have learned is that the Corfield Conference is quite capable of playing with the Canosa Conference despite the bigger named talent lurking in the Canosa Conference.

This should make for an exciting playoff season as everyone has a shot given the competitive play we’ve seen in the inter-conference play.

UPDATES ON FIVE: 

Pavel Datsyuk, SAN:  With Sanibel falling back of a playoff spot further, it only makes sense for the team to look at options to trade their elder statesman.  This is a team that came into the season having lost a lot of talent from the past two seasons, and could really use the boost in their prospect pool that would come from dealing a talent like Datsyuk.  The team wants to hang onto him, but does it make sense?  Time will tell.

Jaromir Jagr, FOR:  Yes Jagr has a year left on his deal but at $4,000,000 per season, he’s a relative bargain given he’s posted 53 points in 50 games this season.  While the Falcons are in a playoff spot right now, given the youthful direction they’ve undertaken, does it make sense for them to keep a 43 year old despite his production?  While GM Young isn’t actively shopping the dynamic forward, one has to wonder if he’d move him given an offer of a talented young player.

Dion Phaneuf, SAN:  Dion is in the last year of his contract and is a UFA after the season is complete.  Will Sanibel want to re-sign Phaneuf for over $6,000,000 a season given the modest offensive production he produces these days?  Adding fuel to the fire here is the fact that Phaneuf has been a scratch lately.  Again, like Datsyuk, Phaneuf could bring in some prospects or picks for a team that sees him as a valuable addition as a rental.

Ryan McDonagh, WIS:  McDonagh isn’t a guy that Wisborg is likely looking to move, but you have to think they may consider listening to offers.  Listen, Wisborg is a very young team and McDonagh’s best years will be behind him by the time this team is back in contention.  Does it make sense for them to pay him big money in the interim when teams like Victoria, Copenhagen and Minnesota would all use upgrades on the left side?  I still think McDonagh stays, but you can’t help but wonder if there is something out there that makes sense given where he is at in his career and where Wisborg is at in their cycle.

Willie Mitchell, LNZ:  The wily veteran Mitchell is a five rated defenseman and is getting up there in age.  Does it make sense for a guy like Mitchell to stay in Linz for a lost season when he could be a useful pickup for a team bound for a deep playoff run?  In addition to his five defensive rating, Mitchell is also valuable on the PK given his shot blocking ability rated at the highest rating he can get.  Dealing Mitchell, if he wants to go, is probably the smart thing for Linz to do and there likely wouldn’t be a shortage of buyers for his services at the deadline.

About the author:
Dick “Dirty Mitts” Puxindeep has been a CCHL columnist since December of 2015.  When he’s not watching hockey or eating chicken wings, he can be found at local karaoke competitions performing his world famous rendition of ‘Baby Got Back’.  Dick knows what he knows and won’t stray from that.  Enjoy reading Dick’s semi-regular column here when he posts it.  

Saturday, December 26, 2015

CCHL CHRISTMAS PRESENTS HAVE BEEN ANNOUNCED!!!


Santa is a bit late, but don't worry about your teams. These are the gifts for you:

Team: Boston Banshees
Halak and Greiss can use their save% for this year in NHL, instead in CCHL.

Team. Calgary Chinook
Letang defies the odds and stays healthy the whole season and the playoffs.

Team: Copenhagen Crusaders
A forward that can the lead in the internal scoring race, come on Kopitar and Stamkos.

Team: Dayton Musicmen
For the team that has it all and manager who has won it all already. Since GM Corfield is playing for his living right now, the best we can give is a stand in organ player at the home games.

Team: Fort Erie Falcons
Jagr keeps himself healthy and plays another 10 years for Falcons.

Team: Georgetown Millers
That the injury bug keep out of the locker room.

Team: Halifax Hammerheads
Kinkaid gets unlimited number of games this season.

Team: Hamilton Tigers
I guess Auston Matthews would make the season worthwhile.

Team: Long Island Express
Clear views for The king on all shots, then he will take them all.

Team: Linz Blackwings
A new team doctor with magic hands to keep the guys on ice.

Team: Minnesota Norsemen
Raanta gets to play as many games as he wants.

Team: Montreal Aces
Wake up calls for the goalies Smith and Niemi.

Team: Niagara Fall Thunder
Two new front teeth for Kevin Bieksa.

Team: Portland Owls
Gets a shaman to keep the evil devils out of their players, to keep them healthy.

Team: Reykjavik Puffin
They find the real Rask in the dressing room, as a bonus Andersen finds himself as well.

Team: Siberia Icecats
Gets a new rule that only the first three injuries count.

Team: Seattle Reign
Crawford find his playoff form early and carries the team to the playoff and beyond.

Team: Sanibel Islanders
A bus load of Russians land in Sibera to help out Ovie and Datsyuk.

Team: Springfield Homers
Gets a first line center.

Team: Victoria Ronin
A PK unit that works would be great.

Team: Wisborg Donuts
The draft year of 2012 turns out to be the best ever, just takes a while more.

Team: Winnipeg Ferrets
Gets all defensemen healthy at once.

Ho, ho, ho  Merry Christmas!
/Johan
WIS

Friday, December 25, 2015

Kallum's Kids: A look at the prospects of the Halifax Hammerheads...

Kallum's Kids: A look at the prospects of the Halifax Hammerheads...

....a look at the prospect pipeline of the CCHL teams.

Top 6 Forwards Grade:A
Yakov Trenin, C
Jansen Harkins, C
Michael Dal Colle, LW
Jake Virtanen, LW
Artem Panarin, LW
Pontus Aberg, LW

Top 4 Defensemen Grade: C
Kyle Wood
Vili Saarijarvi
Christian Djoos
-

Top 2 Goalies Grade: B
Thatcher Demko
-

Comments: Halifax is set to end the season in the basement of CCHL and will hence look forward to new high garde prospects. May I then suggest to go for defenseman in the first rounds and a few goalies in the later rounds. The forward stock is very well built, there is in addition a couple of late Russian picks that should make the CCHL. In defense and goalies there is only Demko that can match the forwards. So it shows Halifx is in rebuild but should upgrade the defense and goalie prospect stock to have a complete pool.
Total grade: B

Thursday, December 17, 2015

Favorites for Season Awards - December Edition by Silvio Saouaf...

Welcome back sports fans, this is the December 2015 edition of the CCHL Season Awards.  Let's take a look at the top 3 candidates for each award!

President's Trophy
Dayton Musicmen – No surprise here.  The Musicmen continue to be the best team with a healthy 13 point lead on the #2 team which is….
Copenhagen Crusaders – The defending champs have really hit their stride, going 8-1-1 in their last ten games.  You can never count out the champs!
Minnesota Norsemen – The Norsemen have fallen to #3, but still have a very strong team

Hart Trophy
Jason Spezza (DAY) – now the leading scorer, Jason is centering the best line in the game!
Carey Price (CLG) – Carey continue to dominate and is one of the (if not THE) best goalies in the game!  Calgary strength is defense and Price is the cornerstone
Jiri Hudler (LNZ) – a surprise entry, the diminutive winger has quietly put together a great year, currently sitting 5th in points behind the Dayton pack.  The Blackwings are struggling this year, but where would they be without Hudler?

Norris Trophy
John Carlson (DAY) – John has rocketed up and is the leading scoring defenseman on Dayton with 48 points!
Justin Faulk (MIN) - the young blueliner continues to help the Norsemen challenge for a title and is second in scoring with 44 points
Roman Josi (GEO) – Roman is the rock on the Millers blueline, with 40 points!

Vezina Trophy
Devan Dubnyk (DAY) – Dubnyk continues to be the frontrunner for this award, posting a GAA of 1.36 and SV% of .947, both tops for goalies playing at least 10 games!
Carey Price (CLG) – Need we say more about Carey?
Cam Talbot (GEO) – Young Cam has helped backstop the Millers to the #4 position in the Canosa Conference, with a 2.05 GAA and a SV% of .926

Jennings Trophy
Devan Dubnyk (DAY)
Carey Price (CLG)
Andrew Hammond (DAY)

Calder Trophy (minimum 3 games played, not on last year's disk)
Aaron Ekblad (HAM) - this young blueliner’s star continues to rise, scoring 21 points in 39 games
Andrew Hammond (DAY) - the young netminder has a GAA (1.42), and it helps playing on such a stacked team as Dayton!
Johnny Gaudreau (CLG) - the young sniper has 23 points in 43 games for the Flames

Selke Trophy
Jason Spezza (DAY) - this high scoring center also leads all forwards in +/- with a +51!
Tyler Seguin (DAY) – another member of the best line in hockey continues his strong 2-way game this year, with a +44
Wayne Simmons (VIC) - the tough, power forward brings a defensively sound game with a +32

Art Ross Trophy
Jason Spezza (DAY) – Mr. “Do It All” is leading the league with 66 points!
Tyler Johnson (DAY) – Trails his teammate with 60 points
Tyler Seguin (DAY) – The other “Tyler” rounds out the sweep of this race for Dayton with 59 points

Rocket Richard Trophy
Corey Perry (GEO) – Corey is the new leader with a league leading 32 goals for the surging Millers
Tyler Seguin (DAY) – Have we mentioned this guy enough?  Tyler has 29 goals
Tyler Johnson (DAY) – Tyler Johnson caps off the Tyler attack with 27 goals

GM of the Year
Bill Corfield (DAY) - GM Corfield continues to tweak his team and they are humming.  Nothing short of a title will be acceptable with this team!
Blake Wendt (MIN) - GM Wendt’s team continues to be a front runner for a championship, and it’s all because of GM Wendt’s moves
Bruce Niblett (COP) – GM Niblett has chosen to stay quiet during the regular season, having made his moves earlier in the year.  Just keeping his core stars in place and giving them time to gel with their new teammates is shrewd enough, and the Crusaders have pushed up the standings
Eugene Yip (CGY) – GM Yip has done a fantastic job of setting his team up for success this year and for years beyond with a strong stable of prospects (including NHL ROY candidate Dylan Larkin)

Wednesday, December 16, 2015

INTER-CONFERENCE BATTLES ADD TO OVERALL LEAGUE PARITY

[SAINT PAUL | MINNESOTA]

        The implementation prior to last season to divide the CCHL into two conferences for the purposes of creating rivalries within each conference, while doing the same in pride for your conference during Inter-Conference play, has seemingly more than lived up to the hype of the separation.

        "I think this season in particular has been fantastic," said Norsemen general manager, Blake Wendt. "Obviously if you're winning, it's a lot more fun. But the parity within our own Canosa Conference has been a dog fight all season. Now that we've officially played every team in the league, with being halfway through Inter-Conference games, it's just as much a fight every night going up against those guys. Both conferences are built well and very evenly matched."

        Case in point, the current CCHL Standings:

 # TEAM NAME       GP    W    L    T    Pts    PCT
1 Musicmen        42   37    3    2     76   0.905
2 Norsemen        42   29    9    4     62   0.738
3 Crusaders       42   29   10    3     61   0.726
4 Chinook         42   27    9    6     60   0.714
5 Thunder         42   26   10    6     58   0.690
6 Ronin           42   26   11    5     57   0.679
7 Millers         42   24   15    3     51   0.607
8 Puffin          42   23   15    4     50   0.595
9 Reign           42   23   16    3     49   0.583
10 Express         42   21   17    4     46   0.548
11 Ferrets         42   20   16    6     46   0.548

        That's the top two clubs being from each conference. The Corfield with three in the top five, and the Canosa with six in the top eleven. It doesn't get much more evened out than that.

        "At the beginning of the season, it was looking as if the Canosa Conference was the superior side," said Wendt. "But a few major impact trades completed by Calgary and Niagara Falls in particular, really boosted up the Corfield Conference. Dayton was completely running away. They still are an extremely dominant team. But the Chinook and Thunder will absolutely give them fits as we get closer and into the postseason. Niagara proved a couple of seasons ago that brut strength and physicality can get you to that ultimate goal. I personally don't see that changing for them. Calgary is a pretty stout, all-around good team. They more resemble the Musicmen in their defense and goaltending. Maybe don't have the offense to keep up with them. But (Carey) Price is capable of shutting down anyone's offense single handily. It has been and will be fun to compete at such a high caliber within our conference and hopefully one of those Corfield clubs in the postseason."

        Outside of the top eleven in the CCHL, you have a mix of teams that are very close to moving up now or very soon, or rebuilding themselves into the contenders oftomorrow. Then there's Fort Erie. Like the falcon on a telephone pole. Just watching and waiting for their opportunity to swoop in.

        "The Falcons are one of those clubs you always keep an eye on," said Wendt. "They sell off a bunch of their key assets, make it look like they have packed it in. But they're still hanging around. Still very much in contention of making some noise. Definitely not a fully committed rebuild team. It would not surprise me in the least if they make a deal or two to drastically alter their roster into a now team. Just don't see them getting their wings clipped and being in the audience this season."

        For the Norsemen, the goals remain the same from before the season. The whole thing.

        "We're not going anywhere," said Wendt. "First goal is to win the regular season conference. We're on the top rung, but know it's going to be a continued battle with Copenhagen and Victoria and really Georgetown and Reykjavik are in the ring too. We can't overlook any opponent, any night. Second goal is the Presidents' Trophy. Currently fourteen points behind Dayton is an enormous hill to climb to get there. But climb we will. Third goal is to win the Canosa Conference and the ultimate goal is the Kehler Cup."


Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Kallum's Kids: A look at the prospects of the Georgetown Millers...

Kallum's Kids: A look at the prospects of the Georgetown Millers...

....a look at the prospect pipeline of the CCHL teams. Revisited to reflect GEO/DAY trade of 2nd of Dec.

Top 6 Forwards Grade: D
Brock Boeser, RW
Thomas Novak, C
Axel Holmstrom, LW
Mattias Janmark, C
-
-

Top 4 Defensemen Grade: C
Noah Juulsen
Brett Pesce
Dylan McIlrath
-


Top 2 Goalies Grade: C
Igor Shestyorkin
Jordan Binnnington

Comments: Even after taking into account the trade with Dayton it is still a shallow pool. In the trade GEO also got a ton of picks. With good drafting this prospect pool could look better next year even though the graduations in this pool. But a big step forward for GEO and a nice trade to address the pool both short term and (hopefully) long term.
Total grade: C-

Previous:
HAM A
BOS B
COP B
CAL C
DAY C
FOR C

Monday, December 7, 2015

Seattle Brew - Issue 4

Seattle Brew
Issue #4

The digest with news and notes from and about the CCHL and Seattle’s own CCHL team the Reign


Now that we have entered the holiday season, and the pandemonium associated with all the Black Friday deals are over, people can now focus on the CCHL as it nears the halfway point of the season. Over the last handful of weeks much has changed yet little has changed it’s a Dickensesque dilemma (best of times, worst of times sort of thing).

We look at the Reign’s play over the last month and here are a few takeaways

1. Consistently inconsistent. That best describes Seattle over the last little while, win streaks have been short-lived. Losing streaks have been short. They’ve lost to teams near the bottom of the league and beaten teams ahead of them in the standings. If you bet on sports avoid Seattle on your ticket as you never know which team will show up.

2. Depth charges. The one area Seattle management addressed in the offseason was adding some depth up front and on the blueline. A few of those additions have underachieved and have yet to show the same skills they put on display last year. As injuries have hit, the coaching staff has done well juggling the lines but in doing so they have had to alter the type of system played in those games.

3. Is there a doctor in the house? Seattle has not suffered the same number of injuries that some other CCHL franchises have this year (hello, Linz, Siberia and Springfield) but they have had 2/3 of their top line miss time and they currently have a couple wingers out. Luckily the injuries on defence have been minimal and trouble could arise if Wideman or Vlasic miss any extended periods.

4. The walking dead. Coach Stevens hates to be outworked. He along with assistants Ken Daneyko and John MacLean have preached effort and hardwork throughout the season. There have been times where the team has looked lackadaisical at best and listless at worst. While things have improved on that front in the last few weeks it rears its ugly head at the worst times which makes one wonder even if this team makes the playoffs will it be a one and done?

5. Silence is golden? Little moves or rumors of possible moves have come from Seattle’s head offices which makes one wonder if they are content with the team as it stands. If any moves are made they would have to go all in or start a complete rebuild? There have been rumblings of unhappiness but those seem to have waned over the last few weeks.


Seattle year to date

Boasting a 19-14-2 record is decent when you consider they have went 16-8-1 record over the last 25 games. Their penalty killing unit continues to excel having the highest PK% in the league at 90.2 and ranking 3rd overall in efficiency.  Corey Crawford has played well and the defence is actually the 5th stingiest in the league. The offence has been paced by Evgeni Malkin whose 37 points in 30 games has him just outside the top 10 in scoring. Gustav Nyquist and Patrice Bergeron are the goal scoring leaders with 13 goals apiece. Dennis Wideman is in the top 10 in defencemen scoring having recorded 28 points year to date.


League news and notes

Minnesota is now just 3 points up on the defending champion Crusaders from Copenhagen. Will either team be able to have success against the Corfield division to build a lead before their head to head battles resume?

Winnipeg Ferrets Alex Steen has been an offensive juggernaut, not only does he sit 3rd in league scoring with 46 points but he also is 13 points ahead of the 2nd leading scorer on his team (Wheeler and Ladd have 33 pts) which is the biggest difference between a team’s top two scorers in the league.

The Musicmen made another astute move getting incredible value and a cash infusion for mostly late round picks. The cash will help their bottom line but a Championship win will net them some dollars and with only 50 goals surrendered in 35 games and the top offence in the league only an unforeseen disaster doesn’t see Dayton right there in the end.

The Falcons in Fort Erie have pulled off quite a feat this season. They have been able to rebuild and contend at the same time. A series of moves gutted last season’s finalist but their young talent has emerged already and they sit in the final playoff spot in the Corfield division.

The Aces in Montreal have been busted more often than they have cashed in this year but they have a core of young talent and have made moves to acquire extra picks as they look to become perennial contenders. The loss of the CCHL leader in goals by a defenceman Brent Burns may be hard to replace so hopefully Erik Johnson who was part of the return the Aces got can pick up where Burns left off.

Would the Linz Blackwings be higher in the standings had they not already suffered over 200 man games to injuries? We may find out soon as it appears they will have a full healthy roster early in the week. Even with the injuries unless someone other than Jiri Hudler or Ryan Johansen start scoring Linz may end up in the same precarious position, not enough talent to get them into the playoffs but too much talent to get a high draft pick.


Finally some key injuries may hurt the following teams over the next couple of weeks;

Calgary – Giordano is out for around 3 weeks however the 2nd best defensive team in the CCHL has Carey Price…nuff said.
Montreal – The aforementioned Erik Johnson is out 3-4 weeks so evaluating his production for his new team will be delayed.
Portland – Kyle Okposo will still be out for a little over 1 week and even though Portland appears to be headed for a high draft pick Okposo was one of the few bright spots. He leads the Owls with 18 points, 9 goals, 2 GWG, an even +/- rating and 86 SOG and doing it averaging only 17 minutes per game.
Siberia – Word out of the North is that both Palmieri and Brewer will both be out at least 3 weeks more. Siberia has the #1 draft pick on the horizon, pending the lottery results, but the injury bug (197 man games lost) has devastated any momentum the Icecats had hoped to build.
Springfield – Marc Methot will be sidelined for around 3 weeks. Although he may not have the name recognition like other defenceman around the league he was the Homers best defenceman. He is the only Springfield regularly starting defenceman with a positive +/- rating at +4 and with 10 points is just 1 behind the Homers more heralded offensive dmen, Ryan Ellis and Dan Boyle.


Saturday, December 5, 2015

Kallum's Kids: A look at the prospects of the Fort Erie Falcons...

Kallum Kids: FOR

....a look at the prospect pipeline of the CCHL teams. After a vacation and a flurry of trades it looks like the prospects pools are set for a while.

Top 6 Forwards Grade:B-
Dylan Strome, C
Brendan Perlini, RW
Anthony Beauvillier, C
Philip Danault, LW
Remi Elie, LW
Daniel Catenacci, C

Top 4 Defensemen Grade: C
Vince Dunn
Matthew Spencer
David Musil
-

Top 2 Goalies Grade: B-
Alex Nedeljkovic
Antoine Bibeau

Comments: As sometimes can be expected in a perennial contenders there is a slim talent pool. In the list there is big span between top and bottom and some might even be

borderline for this list. Strome is top prospect followed by Perlini after that it is a significant drop.
Total grade: C

Sunday, November 15, 2015

YIP, YIP HOORAY: THE CCHL Team and Player of the Week..(Week Six)

Calgary Chinook Presents:

Week 6: (Day 37 through Day 43)

CCHL Team of the week:

Minnesota Norsemen (4-0-0)

The Minnesota Norsemen has 4 wins in 4 games to earn this week’s team of the week.  The Norsemen scored 25 goals in 4 games and only allowed 7 goals during the span (which averaged more than 6 goals a games!)  Voracek was the main contributer with 3 goals and 6 assists in 4 games.  The Norsemen is only 1 point behind the Musicmen for the top spot in the standing.  Expect a tight finish between the two.

Honorable mentions:

Dayton Musicmen (4-0-0)
Reykjavik Puffin (4-0-1)

CCHL Player of the week:

Nicklas Backstrom, Georgetown Millers (5GP 3G 8A 11PT)

Backstrom led all players with 3 goals, 8 assists and 11 points in 5 games to help the Millers staying close to the top pack in the Canosa division.  The line of Schenn-Backstrom-Perry was impressive this week with combined 25 points in 5 games between them (Perry 5GP 4G 4A 8PT, Schenn 5GP 2G 5A 7PT).

Hororable mentions:

Jakob Voracek, Minnesota Norsemen (4GP 3G 6A 9PT)
Sidney Crosby, Victoria Ronin (5GP 2G 7A 9PT)

Friday, November 6, 2015

Early Favorites for Season Awards by Silvio Saouaf of the Siberia Icecats...

Early Favorites for Season Awards

Welcome sports fans, this is the first edition of the CCHL Season Awards.  Let's take a look at the top 3 early candidates for each award as of 11/6/2015

President's Trophy
Dayton Musicmen - 31 out of a possible 34 points, and a shutout streak of over 3 games
Minnesota Norsemen - most points in the league with 32, and leading the league in goals scored
Victoria Ronin - 28 out of a possible 36 points, and own the second best offense in the league

Hart Trophy
Tyler Seguin (DAY) - leading the league in scoring and leading the top ranked Musicmen
Jeff Carter (MIN) - the leading scorer for the Norsemen is helping to bring the Norsemen to new heights
Carey Price (CLG) - One of the best goalies in the league, Carey is backstopping the surging Chinook

Norris Trophy
Roman Josi (GEO) - leading the Millers with 21 points in 18 games
Tyler Myers (VIC) - the Ronin backline is being lead by this big defender who is second in the league in points from a defenseman with 18
Justin Faulk (MIN) - the young blueliner has been lighting up the scoreboard and helping lead the Norsemen with 17 points

Vezina Trophy
Devan Dubnyk (DAY) - Journeyman Dubnyk seems to have found a home with the Musicmen and it doesn't hurt to play behind a stoudt defense.  He leads the league with an eye-popping 1.12 GAA and .954 SV% and 5 shoutouts
Carey Price (CLG) - The young Chinook are depending on the Al-Star goalie to "Carey" their team and he has not disappointed, with a 1.46 GAA and .945 SV%, both good for 2nd in the league
Steve Mason (VIC) - Mason is doing a great job in keeping goals out for the high scoring Ronin.  His 2.03 GAA and .926 SV% are good for 3rd in the league

Jennings Trophy
Devan Dubnyk (DAY)
Carey Price (CLG)
Steve Mason (VIC)

Calder Trophy (minimum 3 games played, not on last year's disk)
Aaron Ekblad (HAM) - this young blueliner is a star in the making, and has 11 points in 19 games
Andrew Hammond (DAY) - the young netminder has a GAA (0.71) that requires a microscope to find
Johnny Gaudreau (CLG) - the young sniper has 8 points in 17 games for the high flying Flames
Tobias Rieder (SAN) - 7 points in 16 games.  This young Islander is close enough to include in the race!

Selke Trophy
Jeff Carter (MIN) - this high scoring center also leads the league in +/- with a +22
Wayne Simmons (VIC) - the tough, power forward is currently second in the league with a +21
Tyler Seguin (DAY) - the typically "offensive only" forward is playing a strong 2-way game this year, with a +19

Art Ross Trophy
Tyler Seguin (DAY) - the ultra-talented Seguin leads the league with 29 points
Jeff Carter (MIN) - 28 points for the hulking center for the Norsemen
Zach Parise (MIN) - the speedy, skilled winger is currently 3rd in the league with 27 points

Rocket Richard Trophy
Jeff Carter (MIN) - Jeff's 14 goals leads the league, but he is followed closely by..
There is a 4 way tie for second place with 13 goals each
Mike Hoffman (GEO)
Corey Perry (GEO)
Wayne Simmonds (VIC)
Zach Parise (MIN)

GM of the Year
Bill Corfield (DAY) - GM Corfield has loaded up his team with a ton of talent from top to bottom.  The league leading Musicmen are dominating their opponents
Blake Wendt (MIN) - GM Wendt has not been shy about making trades to challenge for the title, and if they succeed, it will have been all worth it
Paul Canosa (VIC) - the shrewd GM Canosa continues to contend for the title year in and year out.  Watch out for the Ronin

YIP, YIP HOORAY: THE CCHL Team and Player of the Week..(Week five)

Calgary Chinook Presents:

THE CCHL Team and Player of the Week..(Week five)

Week 5: (Day 30 through Day 36)

CCHL Team of the week:

Dayton Musicmen (4-0-0)

This week we can see the elite teams starting to separate from the rest of the pack with the top 6 teams (Musicmen, Norsemen, Ronin, Chinook, Thunder and Crusaders) all have a perfect win record (no loss, no tie).  The most impressive team this week is the Dayton Musicmen which has over 190 minutes of shut out streak going.  Musicmen has recently added Eberle, Pavelski and Marc Staal via trades, the CCHL powerhouse just gets better and better.

Honorable mentions:

Niagara Thunder (4-0-0)
Minnesota Norsemen (3-0-0)

CCHL Player of the week:

Roman Josi, Georgetown Millers (3GP 1G 5A 6PT)

Getting 6 points in 3 games is no easy feat for CCHL defenders nowaday,  Roman Josi is one of the main reason why the Georgetown Miller is currently sitting at 4th place in the Canosa division.  Josi has 2 goals, 19 assists in 17 games which is on pace to 91 assists!

Honorable mentions:

Anze Kopitar, Copenhagen Crusaders (2GP 2G 4A 6PT)
Tyler Seguin, Dayton Musicmen (4GP 4G 3A 7PT)

Thursday, October 29, 2015

YIP, YIP HOORAY: THE CCHL Team and Player of the Week..(Week four)

Calgary Chinook presents: Week 4: (Day 23 through Day 29)

CCHL Team of the week:

Victoria Ronin (3-0-1)

This weeks is a hard week to decide which team (Victoria Ronin or Minnesota Norsemen) to become the team of the week since they both have an identical record.  At the end I picked the Victoria Ronin because they played a more complete games (20 goals for and 7 goals against), there are 14 players on the team that got at least 3 or more points in the four games played.

Honorable mentions:

Minnesota Norsemen (3-0-1)
Reykjavik Puffin (2-0-1)

CCHL Player of the week:

Zach Parise, Minnesota Norsemen (4GP 6G 4A 10PT +6 2GW)

If the Victoria Ronin use the scoring-by-committee approach, then the Minnesota Norsemen are at the other extreme.  The Carter-Parise-Voracek line are on fire right now (combined 13 goals 13 assists 26 points +21 in 4 games), that’s over 50% of this week goals for are from this line.  The Minnesota native Zach Parise notched 6 goals (including 2 game winners), 4 assists for 10 points in 4 games to become the CCHL player of the week.

Hororable mentions:

Jeff Carter, Minnesota Norsemen (4GP 4G 5A 9PT)
Radim Vrbata, Copenhagen Crusaders (4GP 5G 2A 7PT)

Kallum Kids: The Hamilton Tigers

Kallum Kids: HAM

....a look at the prospect pipeline of the CCHL teams.

Top 6 Forwards Grade: A
Mitch Marner
Max Domi
Kerby Rychel
Nick Ritchie
Jake DeBrusk
Josh Ho-Sang

Top 4 Defensemen Grade: A
Brandon Gormley
Jacob Larsson
Darnell Nurse
Ryan Sproul

Top 2 Goalies Grade: A
Andrei Vasilevskij
Malcom Subban

Comments:
This team is loaded, baring trades they will be nicely set in a few year down. Might not be top notch in the whole group not mentioned above, but they include Ilya Samsonov, Brett Pollock and Joshua Jacobs, so they are well set even if the mentioned group doesn't pan out. So keep an eye below in the standings, before the Tigers jump ahead. Already next year they will be improved and then a few years to come.
Total grade: A

Friday, October 23, 2015

NORSEMEN A PART OF HEAVY CANOSA CONFERENCE....

  With the 2015 CCHL Canosa Conference playing out like the NL Central Division in Major League Baseball did in 2015, the Minnesota Norsemen are preparing daily for what is expected to be a dog fight all season to come out on top of. 

        "As teams were lining up in the offseason, it was obvious then that we were in a highly competitive conference," said Norsemen GM Blake Wendt. "As we've crossed that 10-game threshold, you're really starting to see how much parity there is in the Canosa. It's great to have the competition. Any victory is hard fought and well deserved. Makes every team that much tougher on each other and wield the sword when we get into inter-conference play." 

        Currently sitting atop the Canosa Conference, the Norsemen are 9-2-1 (19 points). Only one point ahead of the Victoria Ronin and five points from the sixth-ranked Georgetown Millers in the conference. 

        "The talent is immense," said Norsemen head coach, Craig Hartsburg. "We face it every game, so we have to come into every game dialed in and ready to go with a game plan. As a coaching staff we have to formulate a pre-plan that reflects the given opponent, adjust in-game and the players execute the plan. The team across from you is doing the same thing, so it's a constant battle. 'W' goes to the one who wants it more or gets the lucky bounces." 

Click here to continue reading...

The Latest from Hamilton: GM Chuck Taylor and George Weston have another run-in....

Tough time in Hamilton, GM Taylor holds a press conference...

After dropping a 6th straight game and losing two critical players in Evander Kane and Boone Jenner to injury Tigers GM Chuck Taylor called a press conference.

Walking to the podium an unhappy looking Taylor prepares to speak. Standing 6'4" and 300+ lbs looking more like an NFL lineman than a CCHL General Manger despite a faintly pinstriped charcoal grey suit.  "I will be making a prepared statement then fielding questions." He looks around the room then a faint look of relief shows on his face.  "After twelve games we are three and nine.  This is obviously unacceptable.  I will get back to that in a moment.  It looks like Boone Jenner is going to be out four to six weeks with an lower body injury and Evander Kane is day to day with a upper body injury.  This puts a bit of a crimp in out line-up but we have veterans Geoff Lupul and Matt Fraser ready to jump into the fray."

Stepping back a bit putting on a frank expression.  "As I said when I was hired 4 seasons ago this will be a long slow painful process but we are building through the draft and this is how Juggernauts are made.  We are not out here to make the playoffs.  We are out here to win the Kehler Cup and win it repeatedly."

His expression shifts to one of regret. Now lets get back to our current situation.  This team seems to have quit on Mike.  I had a meeting with him a few minutes ago and I officially relieved Iron Mike Keenan of his duties.   Assistant coach Kirk Muller will be taking over as interim coach. Conditioning Coach Gary Roberts will assume the role of assistant. I will take questions now."

He looks around seeing he gestures to a waiting Darren Dreger "It seems a bit early to pull the pin on Coach Keenan.  Can you tell us your reasoning" Taylor nods "I held meetings with a few players after watching what I would consider a listless practice.  The players weren't listening to Mike anymore.  They had lost confidence. That is a situation he could not recover from."

Glancing the other direction he motions to Eric Engels.  "Will Evander be available for the game against rival Montreal?"  Taylor shakes his head "I doubt it.  He will be out at least a week"

A thin balding man in a barely presentable tweed suit, carrying a messenger bag and reeking of Wisers pushes his way to the front. "When are you going to give up and quit so we can get a competent GM?"  Taylor shakes his head "Who let him in.  I thought the Spectator fired you George?"  Weston looks predatory "I have my own blog not.  It's called Chuck Taylor is clown shoes"  He then reaches into the messenger bag pulls out a huge pair of floppy shoes and throws them at Taylor.

Taylor dodges then walks off the platform.

Thursday, October 22, 2015

YIP, YIP HOORAY: THE CCHL Team and Player of the Week..(Week three)

Calgary Chinook Presents:

Week 3: (Day 16 through Day 22)

CCHL Team of the week:

Long Island Express (4-0-0)

A perfect week for the Express, the 4 wins brings the team back to over .500 and a playoff spot in the Canosa conference.  Callahan scored 6 goals and added an assist in 4 games.  Quick note that the top 6 teams in the Canosa conference are only seperated by only 3 points.  Expect a tight races between all 6 teams from start to finish.

Honorable mentions:

Minnisota Norsemen (3-0-0)
Calgary Chinook (3-1-0)

CCHL Player of the week:

Jamie Benn, Victoria Ronin (4GP 2G 6A 8PT +6)

The Victoria native scored 2 goals and added 6 assists for a total of 8 points in 4 games.  In the game against the last year Kehler cup winner Copenhagen Crusaders, Jamie Benn logged 25 minutes ice time with 5 assists to help the Victoria Ronins crushing the defending champion by a score of 8-1.

Hororable mentions:

Ryan Callahan, Long Island Express (4GP 6G 1A 7PT)
Sean Monahan (4GP 5G 2A 7PT)

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

Kallum's Kids: A look at the prospects of the Dayton Musicmen...

Kallum Kids: DAY

(a look at the prospect pipeline of the CCHL teams...)

Top 6 Forwards Grade: D
Artemi Panarin
Mark McNeill
Julius Nattinen
Roope Hintz

Top 4 Defensemen Grade: C
Dylan McIlrath
Vili Saarijarvi
Matt Finn
Konrad Abelthauser

Top 2 Goalies Grade: B
Juuse Saros
Ilya Sorokin

Comments:
As expected with Dayton there are lots of prospects. But a current cup drive could explain a clear lack of high end talent in the system. Hard to even find probable NHL forwards and all positions are filled with question marks in this survey. So a cup run and collecting many lower picks show its toll. But good drafting could find jewels even in dirt.

Total grade: C

Sunday, October 18, 2015

Seattle Brew - Issue #3

Seattle Brew
Issue #3

The digest with news and notes from and about the CCHL and Seattle’s own CCHL team the Reign...


After a couple of weeks of action, trends have started to emerge in the 2015-16 CCHL season. For Seattle, that trend is one they would like to see end as a slow start has further been compounded by a couple of key injuries. We had a chance to ask Reign coach Scott Stevens about his team’s early season results.

SB - Do you think your team has played well enough to win more games than they have year to date?

Stevens - No

SB - Have you been able to take away positives from some the early season losses?

Stevens - No

SB - Is there any aspects you need to focus on, such as defensive zone coverage, power play, fore-checking?

Stevens - Yes

SB - Do you care to elaborate?

Stevens – No

SB - Has it been tough incorporating all the new players into your system?

Stevens – Yes

SB - Do you think more changes in personnel are in order?

Stevens -Yes

SB - I don’t suppose you care to elaborate on the changes needed?

Stevens *glares in silence*

SB - Thank you for your time coach.

Stevens - Thanks


Game #5 – Wisborg Donuts – 2, Reign – 1 (OT)

Wisborg picked up their 1st win of the season as Seattle fell to 0-2 in extra time.

Seattle stayed out of the penalty box but went 0 for 6 with the man advantage and that cost them the game. Dennis Wideman was the best Reign player on the ice along with Bergeron and Crawford.

Game # 6 – Reign – 4, Winnipeg Ferrets - 1

The tables were turned for Seattle when it came to the power play chances from the previous game as they gave Winnipeg 6 opportunities but held them without a goal. Seattle trailed after the 1st period but scored twice in the 2nd and a Darren Helm short-handed goal 7 minutes into the 3rd was the insurance marker they needed to get their 2nd win.

Bergeron, Helm, Jeff Petry, Andrew Ference and Kari Ramo who recorded his 1st win by stopping 41 of 42 shots led the way for Seattle. All of Seattle’s points have come on the road with 2 wins and a tie.

Game #7 – Reign – 4, Niagara Falls Thunder – 6

A back and forth wild affair saw 6 goals scored in the 1st 20 minutes of action with the Thunder taking 2 leads of 2 goals and 1 goal only to have Seattle tie it up in the last minute of the period.

Niagara Falls took control with 2 goals late in the 2nd period and built up a 3 goal lead with another goal at the 13:33 mark of the 3rd as Jonathan Toews and Marian Hossa dominated this game for the Thunder.

David Desharnais was the top producing Reign player with 2 goals and an assist and Wideman picked up 2 assists in his 31 minutes of work. Crawford struggled in net yielding 6 goals on just 37 shots and Marek Zidlicky struggled with extra minutes ending up with a -3 for the game.

2 keys injuries were among 4 suffered by Reign players, Malkin (upper body) and Ference (lower body) will miss the next few games while Thomas Hickey and Jeff Petry left early but will not miss any further game action.

Game #8 – Reign – 1, Portland Owls – 3

Portland picked up their 1st win of the season and bragging rights with their interstate west coast rivals with the victory. It seemed Seattle could not handle the pressure created by the Owls and appeared to have little left in the tank at the end of the road trip.

After a scoreless 1st Portland dominated the 2nd period opening the scoring with one of their 1st 2 power play goals and adding a 2nd goal just 16 seconds later and outshooting Seattle 16-4. A goal by Reign’s Dominic Moore with just less than 6 minutes to go in the game was answered by the Owls with their 2nd power play goal off the stick of Torey Krug at the 17:59 mark was the end of the scoring.

Crawford was the lone bright spot for Seattle after struggling in the previous game but Portland was led by Ryan Kesler who logged 30 minutes of ice time and ruled the faceoff circle winning 22 of 32 draws.

Seattle year to date

Holding a 2-5-1 record is a rough start for Seattle fans and ownership may not allow this kind of play to continue so changes could be on the horizon. Their penalty killing unit is the lone bright spot overall as a team and individually Dennis Wideman, David Desharnais and Carl Hagelin have played well. Corey Crawford, Thomas Hickey and Erik Cole have been disappointing so far this season and need to show something to justify their ice time going forward.

League news and notes

Reykjavik and Victoria appear to be adding their hat into the ring in the dog fight for 1st place in the Canosa division with Minnesota and Copenhagen.

Georgetown’s Roman Josi (1G – 9A – 10 PTS) and Montreal’s Brent Burns (6G – 4A – 10 PTS) are the early pace setters on defence and have really helped spark their respective team’s offence.

Hamilton and Springfield are looking to get on a few game win streak if they want to keep pace with the division leaders or at least stay near a possible playoff spot.

Calgary has shown they may have a case for the best defence in the league but Carey price looks like a world beater through his 8 games. The Chinook also handed Dayton their 1st loss of the season so there may already be a season-long rivalry established.

Tyler Seguin from Dayton still sits atop the league scores with his 16 points, while his teammate Tomas Tatar is tied with Copenhagen’s Steve Stamkos for the goal scoring lead with 8. Watch out for Sanibel Islanders Alexander Ovechkin who sits in 3rd place with 7 goals and has been known to score goals in bunches.

The only team who has yet to get a point is the Siberia Icecats and at the rate they are surrendering goals it could be a while before they do get a win. Mika Zibanejed has been a bright spot for the Icecats if their fans are looking to take a positive out of their early season struggles.

Finally, some key injuries may hurt the following teams over the next couple of weeks;

Boston – Colin Greening is out for around 3 weeks but that may be addition by subtraction with his 0 pts and -6 rating in 6 games
Copenhagen– Gritty and versatile Brandon Dubinsky will be on the shelf for about 3-4 weeks. Anton Lander is a big step down.
Linz – Tobias Enstrom will be sorely missed from the blue line. The slick puck moving defenceman is replaced by Cody Franson. Franson has 4-6 weeks to try to give management a reason to keep him in the lineup every day.
Long Island – J.T. Miller (4 weeks) had shown much in his limited ice time so perhaps Jay beagle will provide better return while serving as his replacement.
Sanibel – Stephen Gionta (6 weeks) can ill afford to lose any players especially a defensive minded fore checking forward. Matt Calvert has slid into the lineup to try to fill the gap.

Friday, October 16, 2015

YIP YIP HOORAY - The CCHL Team and Player of the Week (Week two)

YIP YIP HOORAY - The CCHL Team and Player of the Week (Week two)

Calgary Chinook Presents:

Week 2: (Day 9 through Day 15)

CCHL Team of the week:

Dayton Musicmen (4-0-0)

Another perfect week for the Musicmen winning all 4 of their games.  The only team remains that still unbeaten.  Seguin, Spezza and Tatar continued to impress with combined 21 points in 4 games.  There will be a tougher schedule ahead this week for the Musicmen (vs Calgary, Niagara Falls, Winnipeg and Fort Erie).   Let’s see if anyone of the teams can finally defeat the Musicmen.

Honorable mentions:

Montreal Aces (3-0-0)

If it wasn’t for the Musicmen perfect record,  the Aces would be my pick for the team of the week.  After going 1-3-0 the first week, the Aces bounced back with an impressive 3-0-0 record.  Niemi winning all 3 of the games and Burns having two 2-goals games in that span.

Niagara Fall Thunder (3-1-0)

CCHL Player of the week:

Tyler Seguin, Dayton Musicmen (4GP 2G 7A 9PT)

Blossoming into elite player, Seguin is a the main reason the Musicmen went undefeated this week.  “He’s a tremendous package of skill and speed.” Said one GM “ He is just entering his prime and I don’t think Tyler realizes how good he can be and now it’s just learning the little parts of the game that make you one of the elite players in the game.”

Hororable mentions:

Roman Josi, Georgetown Millers (3GP 1G 5A 6PT)
Wayne Simmonds, Victoria Ronin (2GP 2G 3A 5PT)






Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Kallum's Kids looks at the Copenhagen Crusaders...

Kallum Kids: This week a look at the prospect pipeline of the Copenhagen Crusaders....

Top 6 Forwards Grade: A
Colin White, C
Alexander Khokhlachev, C
Brayden Point, C
Jack Roslovic, C
Zachary Senyshyn, RW
Zach Nastasiuk, RW

Top 4 Defensemen Grade: B
Julius Honka
Robert Hagg
Travis Dermott
Ben Hutton

Top 2 Goalies Grade: B
Kristers Gudlevskis
Merrick Madsen

Comments:
Many cup runs show its toll. Many prospects but mainly late picks. But quite a few late picks show high potential, so good drafting. But overall not deep on quality on any position. Interestingly very few listed as LW.
Total grade: B

Thursday, October 8, 2015

YIP YIP HOORAY - The CCHL Team and Player of the Week (Week one)

Calgary Chinook Presents:

Week 1: (Day 1 through Day 8)

CCHL Team of the week:

Dayton Musicmen (3-0-0)

3 wins in 3 games a perfect record for the Dayton Musicmen earn them the first team of the week this season.  Musicmen scored average of 5 goals per game and only allow 1 goal per game in the span.  The Musicmen also brings in star center Tyler Johnson and Depth with Plekanec, Semin and Regher this week.  Expect Musicmen to be taking a serious run for the Kehler Cup this season.

Honorable mentions:

Winnipeg Ferrets (3-0-1)
Copenhagen Crusaders (4-1-0)

CCHL Player of the week:

Alexander Ovechkin, Sanibel Islanders (5GP 5G 2A 7PT +2)

This week award goes to Sanibel Islander forward Alexander Ovechkin,  Scoring 5 goals in 5 games and a dominated performance vs the Puffins (2 goals with the game-winning goal).  With Datsyuk as his playmaker,  Ovechkin have everything he needed to become the scoring leader this season.

Honorable mentions:

Nick Leddy, Minnesota Norsemen (5GP 4G 2A 6PT +8)
Carey Price, Calgary Chinook (2-0-2, 0.96GAA, 0.961SV%, 1SO)

Wednesday, October 7, 2015

Seattle Brew Issue #2

Seattle Brew
Issue #2

The digest with news and notes from and about the CCHL and Seattle’s own CCHL team the Reign


A handful of games have been played by most teams in the CCHL at this point so while it’s too early to put a barometer on  how each team’s season will go the rest of the year there have been some quick and slow starts which may raise or furrow some eyebrows.

As the focus on this article is to inform all the Northwestern fans here in Washington about their beloved Reign let’s take a look at how the team made out in their first games of this season.

Game #1 – Reign – 1, Calgary Chinook – 1

A tight checking, evenly played game. Crawford looked good as did Calgary’s goalie Carey Price.

Bergeron played well doing a bit of everything, winning faceoffs, block shots, battling of the puck and drew an assist. Zidlicky was efficient in moving the puck and seemed to fit in well under Reign coach Scott Stevens’ system.

Game # 2 – Dayton Musicmen – 3, Reign – 2 (OT)

The 1st home game saw raucous rabid Reign fans roaring as the puck dropped but this game saved all the drama for the 3rd period as the teams scored all 4 regulation goals in that frame, including one with just over 90 seconds left by Dayton to tie things up. OT was short lived as the winner was potted at the 3:35 mark.

The ice was tilted in Dayton’s favour in the 3rd and OT although they were pressing for the tie later in the 3rd period. Malkin’s struggle in the circle hurt puck possesion time for the Reign and needs to be addressed going forward. Zidlicky and Crawford were again some of Seattle’s better players, Zidlicky had a goal in 22 minutes of action and Crawford faced 35 shots.

Game #3 – Halifax Hammerheads – 6, Reign – 3

Any hope Reign fans had of a home win were quickly extinguished after Halifax built up a 5-0 lead in the opening 14 minutes. They put it on cruise control from there and coasted to an easy win.

Few bright spots here other than the line of Malkin, Nyquist and Abdelkader who were solid with a collective 2G and 2A and an even +/- rating. Crawford was awful and it is perplexing as to why Stevens did not remove him early in the 1st. The trio of Moore-Zucker and Jones was overmatched all night and need to play much better going forward.

Game #4 – Reign – 4, Boston Banshees – 2

A close game after 40 minutes (2-1 Reign, 23-22 shots on goal in favor of Boston) was broken open when Seattle scored just 6 second into the 3rd period and a little less than 9 minutes later and they held on for the victory, their 1st of the season.

Kari Ramo got the start but handled just 2 shots and 8 minutes of play before leaving with what the team only said is a day-to-day injury. Crawford rebounded *wink* from his last game stooping 34 of 36 for the win.

Despite his continued faceoff woes Malkin did spark the offence getting the unofficial GWG and adding a helper. Wideman was the offensive contributor from the point matching Malkin with a goal and assist of his own in his 21 minutes of work.

Seattle year to date

Holding a 1-2-1 record is not a bad start for Seattle and their management and while there are some positives  to be found, only 1 PPG against in 18 short-handed situations, those are usually offset by a weakness that needs addressing 1 PPG scored in 24 chances.

It will be interesting to see what Seattle does in their next ½ dozen games and if Mangement and the players are happy with how thing are progressing.

League news and notes

Quick starts out of the gate for Minnesota (3-0-1), Dayton (3-0-0) and Winnipeg (3-0-1) has fans in those regions giddy with excitement. However it is not just the central part of the continent that has some early hope as Calgary (2-0-2) and Halifax (2-0-1) have yet to suffer a loss.

Speaking of continents it appears Europe may have had a summer that went longer than expected as Siberia (0-4-0), Linz (0-2-1) and Wisborg (0-3-1) have been a little slow out of the gates. Portland (0-3-1) is the only other team seeking to put something into their win column. Of course powerhouse Copenhagen is looking strong (3-0-1) so maybe our Scandinavian friends had a regular summer and fall.

Quite a powerful line in Dayton with Tyler Seguin, Tomas Tatar and Jason Spezza with their 18 points and +22 rating. The line has earned the nickname the JT line and as evidenced by their play their bringing the sexy back to Dayton.

Crusading in Copenhagen is the entire Canosa division All-star defence of Duncan Keith, Shea Weber, Brent Seabrook, Jay Bouwmeester and Erik Karlsson. With 5 points in 4 games, tied with teammate Weber, Karlsson has done it while averaging just 15:30 of ice time, imagine what he would have with 25 minutes a game. Of course the fact that in all of his time on the ice that he has yet to meet teamamte and Crusader goalie Jonathan Quick might be one reason.

Not only does he do a great job of playing homage to THE hockey movie https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-ST-JyiOyV0 Springfield Homers Marc-Andre Fleury has been great in the blue paint so far facing almost 31 shots a game and yielding just 2 total goals in the team’s 3 games.

Leaving behind the burning tire town of Springfield there is a strong smell coming out of the state of Oregon. It seems to be centered in Portland where the hometown Owls have used 4 netminders early on and all but Scott Darling have struggled mightily and 11 goals scored as a team in 4 games is not bad but when you yield 18 as a team it’s tough……

…..unless you are Jonas Hiller in Siberia who has requested an actual suit of armour be made available as his 5.50 GAA and 22 goals surrendered in the first 4 games are tough but then he has faced an average of 45 shots a game. There could be hope things will improve but 6 goals scored in those same 4 games does not foster much…however we all know hope springs eternal so stay strong Icecats fans.

Finally some key injuries may hurt the following teams over the next couple of weeks;

Springfield – David Krejci is out for around 3 weeks so another forward in the top 9 will have to step up
Sanibel – Matt Stajan will be sidelined for a couple weeks so Derek Roy and Kyle Brodziak will fill in during his absence
Portland – Scott Laughton (3 weeks) and Wisborg – Johan Larsson (5 weeks) will have their youth movement and evaluations hinderd while these two are on injured reserve.
Winnipeg – Kris Versteeg will see Brad Richardson take his place for the next 3 weeks while he gets treatment.


George Weaston asks: What the Hell Is GM Chuck Taylor's Plan for Hamilton?

AP Hamilton:

Are the kids alright?

The loyal fan base here in the Hammer are starting to get sick of both losing and watching the parade of talented players leaving town.  Tyler Johnson off to Dayton & Jaromir Jagr to Fort Erie...  These two superstars are just one of a long line of great players to get the bums rush out of Copps Coliseum since the team relocated in 2011.  I would say in my humble opinion that Mr. Taylor is hanging on by a thread and team ownership should be digging out the scissors.  Jimmy Howard for a 9th and 10th round pick? Incompetent.  Dan Hamhuis and Eric Gudbranson for a couple prospects? Stupid. Taking Geoff Lupul for any amount of money.

Ridiculous.

Megastar Shea Weber gone for a guy who had a stroke. Facepalm.

How did this guy not just get and keep his job?

Ryan O'Rielly, Patrick Marleau, Phil Kessel, Zedeno Chara, Henrik Sedin?

Headshake. What do we have to show for it?  A big pile of maybe's. I'm not convinced that any of them will be regular NHL players. If management can't turn this sinking ship around and at least make the it's time to get rid of this clown and hire someone who can bring in and retain talent.

George Weston for the Hamilton Spectator

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Kallum's Kids: This week, the Calgary Chinook...

Kallum's Kids: This week in the CCHL Prospect Report, the Calgary Chinook...


Top 6 Forwards Grade: A
Travis Konecny
Dylan Larkin
Hunter Shinkaruk
Emile Poirier
Micheal Dal Colle
Nikita Scherbak

Top 4 Defensemen Grade: A
Travis Sanheim
Marcus Pettersson
Zach Werenski
Ivan Provorov

Top 2 Goalies Grade: F
-
-

Comments:
Spectacular defensive prospects and really nice forwards but no real goalie prospect.

Total grade: C

(Next week: The Copenhagen Crusaders....)

Sunday, October 4, 2015

Boston Banshees GM Zak Davis on his rebuild....

When Zak Davis took over the Boston Banshees, he knew a rebuild was needed.

He began tearing down the hockey club and building from the ground up.  The fanbase has endured two brutal seasons full of losing.  A third season is underway with the losses expected to pile up.  Or so it would seem.

Boston hosted the Portland Owls on opening night.  Davis admits he had a glass-half-empty outlook prior to faceoff.

"Honestly?  I was thinking we lose 3-0 and get booed off the ice.  The fans have been patient and expect results," Davis said.

That is exactly what 17,148 people at the Shriek Center received on September 30.  Linemates Jordan Staal and Curtis Glencross combined for six points and goaltender Jaroslav Halak denied 41 of 42 shots against to backstop the Banshees to a 4-1 over Portland.

Davis' initial reaction to the season opener?

"The exception to the rule," Davis suggested.  "It was a pleasant surprise considering how rough it's been around here the last few years."

Boston outhit the Owls and won in the faceoff circle.  Portland edged out the Banshees in corner battles and puck possession.

"That one was closer than the scoreboard shows.  No way do we win without Jaro in goal," the GM stated.

Two days later, Halak was back in net as Boston traveled to Wisborg.

A more complete team effort from the Banshees lead to a 5-2 victory over the Donuts.  Staal and Glencross needed just 21 seconds to get on the stat sheet.  Linemate Charlie Coyle followed with his first goal less than a minute later.

"Those opening two minutes set the tone.  Even with Danny DeKeyser's penalty, Wisborg was constantly playing catchup after Charlie's goal," commented Davis.

Third liner Colin Greening's night ended early after accumulating 22 penalty minutes in the first period.  Just over a minute after serving a minor penalty, Greening was sent to the shows following a 10-minute misconduct and a game misconduct.

"Colin's performance was disappointing, to say the least.  A complete lack of focus.  Casey (Cizikis) and Drew (Shore) suffered with minimal ice time because of it," Davis said.

With the Banshees now 2-0 and outscoring the opposition 9-3, has Davis' expectations changed for his club?

"These wins are well-deserved.  Ws have been few and far between since I took over.  The rebuild is far from over," answered Davis

Boston now returns home for a Sunday matchup with the Dayton Musicmen.

"Bill Corfield has a talented and exciting club over there," said Davis.  "We need to build on these early wins and continue working.  Dayton is a good team and a great challenge."

BANSHEE NOTES

-Defenseman Luca Sbisa, acquired from the Minnesota Norsemen in exchange for forward Tomas Kopecky and a sixth-round draft pick, made his debut against Wisborg on Boston's third defensive pairing.  He was solid in 14 minutes, emerging a +2 while contributing a shot on goal.  Matt Bartkowski was scratched to make room for Sbisa.

-Winger Martin Erat and ex-Musicman Anton Volchenkov were both signed to one-year, $525,000 contracts yesterday.  Erat will debut against Dayton.

-Davis and frequent trade partner Matt Young completed another deal: defenseman Ryan Ellis went to Fort Erie while Jussi Jokinen and minor leaguer Danny Biega head to New England.  Jokinen is expected to line up alongside Marcus Kruger and Erat on Sunday.  Unconfirmed reports state that Richard Clune, who failed to report to training camp, was part of the trade as well.

Saturday, October 3, 2015

Johan Kallum looks back at trading Ovechkin and Datsyuk to the Killers...

This entry appeared on the CCHL Transaction page on November 7, 2013....

(11/07/13) WIS trades P.Datsyuk & A.Ovechkin & M.Michalek to KRL for N.Yakupov & J.Bailey & E.Etem & Elias Lindholm-p & Oscar Klefbom-p & Griffin Reinhart-p & KRL 1st (Kasperi Kapanen)... 

The blockbuster trade made a splash in the league, it was truly some big pieces that moved. It is soon 2 years since the trade and let us look in the trade and see how it looks today.

Motives for the trade: WIS

Wisborg had during the summer gotten hold of both Datsyuk and Ovechkin. The team relied heavily on the first line to produce, the other lines where not bad but not either even close to the first line. The prospect pool was shallow. The season started out not quite as good as WIS management hoped for. A top 8 club for sure at that time early in the season. Would the team turn it on later on the season or was this the potencial? Ovechkin came with uncertainties, he had just finished a sub par season for him with just 32 goals. His third straight year with goals in the 30´s. Face it, that was part of the reasons WIS could get him in the first place. Was the gas starting to run out from
Alexander the G8? KHL was moving up and russians started turning home, the russian factor. So for a team that leaned heavily on two pieces and those two players value could fast turn into dust with a low scoring Ovie and a Datsyuk that was a bit older and it all could change with moves back to Russia. Ovie was off to a great start that season pointing toward once again reaching 50 goals, but would that hold?

Motives for the trade: KRL

Johan E was owner of the Karlstad Killers and the team is today Sanibel Islanders, so this part is all speculation. Since Johan choose to leave CCHL after the season it could be seen as a last push in the league, all or nothing. His team at the time was also a top 8 club with lots of talent but missed a top line that could be relied upon. In addition the team was good at collection prospects and Johan was always very keen on getting the Swedes.

Mechaniques of the trade

KRL mailed out to the league that he wanted to get first line players. I told him my interest in letting go off Ovechkin and Datsyuk but it wouldn't come cheap. So we started to put pieces into the trade. Ovechkin was on a four year contract so there was a chance for me to flip Michalek for Bailey (4 year contract) which evened out nicely for me. I aimed for 3 pieces each for Ovie and Dats and I really would like to get rid of Michaleks salary. In my opinion I got the good pieces I could find in KRLs prospect pool. After this trade WIS was a seller and KRL made some moves to strengthen his push chasing after Copenhagen. He had his centerpieces and WIS sold them.

Two years after, the verdict was in. On KRLs side it worked out pretty well, player wise. Datsyuk had kept going and had a stellar year last season, but maybe age is starting to work against him with a present injury and age of 37. Ovechkin did find his old form and have had 50+ goal seasons since and also started to find some kind of defensive play. None of the players have even been rumored to go back to Russia so it must be considered that KRL got full value for their side of the trade.

As for the push KRL just nipped the second place, a point in front of Fort Eire. In the playoffs however Fort Eire took revenge by winning the semi final against KRL by a 1 goal win in game 7. That must have been disappointing to Johan. Copenhagen went on to eventually beat out Fort Erie in the final series.

As for the players that WIS received it has been a mix of success and disappointments so far. Yakupov was a centerpiece and has yet to put it all together, but hope remains. Etem has likewise not really moved forward as expected but the recent trade to NYR could be a new beginning for him. Griffin Reinhart has been slow to get into NHL and might not be the top pairing as expected but should be a top 4 in Edmonton eventually. Lindholm is more on track as expected while the high hopes for Klefbom was realized and is now a teammate with Griffin. Kasperi Kapanen looks like it was good value for the 21 st pick and since WIS once hade father Sami on the payroll it will be a great father/son story. Bailey who was flipped for Michalek in the deal, has been decent value but not the top player either, he could have been.

While KRL got full value for the players and even better than expected on Ovies part, WIS has some of the players not really living up to what was expected of them. But the players are young and things can still happen. KRLs disappointment must instead be in the derailed cup run.

So for the 2 year anniversary of the blockbuster trade I would say KRL got the better deal so far. But they lost out on the cup and it can be argued that WIS didn't have enough to make the push anyway. It would not have been easy to find another trade partner with enough talent in the prospect pool to pull the deal off then. In hindsight it would probably have been better to trade Ovie later on at a higher value, but that was unknown at the time.

So a good trade back them for both teams with a disappointing short term goal for KRL while WIS players still have some way to go to realize their potential. I would however put KRL ahead in the deal since the involved players provided full value.

/Johan
GM WIS