Doug Zywina
There were plenty of sports highlights in the past year
With the world coming out of the COVID-19 pandemic, things got back to normal with the return of festivals, fairs and sports.
There were several highlights in Dauphin and the Parkland when it came to sports.
Perhaps the biggest highlight of 2022 in Dauphin was the Kings winning the eighth Turnbull Trophy in team history, with a 2-1 win in game seven of the Manitoba Junior Hockey League final against the Steinbach Pistons in Steinbach.
The Kings finished the regular season in first place in the West Division, posting a 41-12-1-0 record. They were second overall behind the Pistons (42-9-2-1).
In the first round, Dauphin beat the Swan Valley Stampeders in six games, then upended the Winkler Flyers in five games.
In the game seven victory over the Pistons, Roblin native Brayden Dube tallied the winning goal with 8:27 left in the third period to snap a 1-1 tie.
Three Kings won league awards, last season.
Parker Malchuk was named Top Defenceman, while Carson Cherepak won the Top Goaltender Award, as well as Playoff MVP and head coach Doug Hedley won the Coach of the Year honour.
Malchuk and Cherepak were also named to the first all-star team, while Kaden Bryant, who led the league with 36 goals, and defenceman Colby Jaquet were selected to the second all-star squad.
Dube and rearguard Jayden Jubenvill were named to the rookie all-star unit.
In the Centennial Cup in Estevan, Sask., Dauphin was first in their pool after the round-robin with three wins and a shootout loss. Their run at a national title ended with a 2-0 loss in the semifinals to the Ontario Junior Hockey League’s Pickering Panthers.
It wasn’t all good news for the Kings, however, as a racist gesture by defenceman Klim Georgiev at the end of a game against the Waywayseecappo Wolverines made national headlines. Georgiev would receive an 18-game suspension, 11 regular season and seven playoff games.
Off the ice, the Kings announced in March, they had eliminated the team’s debt.
With the encouragement of his high school coaches, Dauphin’s Kelton Amendt was selected to the Manitoba Selects football program as a middle linebacker.
The program was facilitated by CFL professional athletes and trainers, with the focus being on athlete performance, competition, scouting and recruiting. Amendt’s goal is to play football at the college level.
A group of friends from Pine Creek took the basketball world by storm, winning the Hoop It Up national title in Tempe, AZ.
Get the full year recap in this week's Dauphin Herald!
Rangers deserved better fate
The Parkland Rangers missed a chance to close the gap on a playoff spot with a pair of losses to the Eastman Selects over the weekend.
The Rangers couldn’t overcome a 3-0 first-period deficit, Saturday, dropping a 4-2 decision, before falling 4-3 on Sunday.
Parkland (6-17-3-0) now trails the eighth-place Selects by 10 points. Eastman (12-11-1-0) is one point ahead of Interlake (11-14-1-1) and seven up on Kenora (8-17-2-0).
Rangers head coach Tyler Carefoot said the Rangers deserved a better fate in both games.
Parkland, he said, ran into penalty problems right off the bat in Saturday’s game, which resulted in two Eastman power-play goals.
“I thought we did a pretty job of trying to get back into the game. We hit a couple of posts and might have had an opportunity to make it a little bit closer,” he said.
The Rangers wanted to play a strong third period to build momentum for Sunday’s game, which they did. The Rangers could have pulled the goalie, Carefoot said, but they decided to focus on winning the period.
“Sunday, we were the better team. I think we hit two cross bars and then, with 10 seconds left to tie it, we hit a post,” he said. “I thought we played five solid periods of hockey this weekend. For the most part, I’m pretty happy.”
There are games where teams have to contend with questionable calls by the officiating and that was the case on Sunday, according to Carefoot.
“We had to persevere, not only through the Eastman Selects, but we had to beat the stripes. I just didn’t like some of the calls,” he said. “I just thought some of the calls were far too soft.”
It didn’t help that the Rangers were shorthanded with some players out of action due to injuries.
“So I was proud of how everybody competed and just didn’t quit,” he said.
The Rangers have just one game this week, Sunday on the road in Souris against the Southwest Cougars. Then they play the Yellowhead Chiefs, Dec. 20, in Shoal Lake.
Carefoot hopes the team can enter the Christmas break on a high note.
“We always say that the rural teams are the teams we’re supposed to compete well against and we beat both of them this year. So I feel that the guys will be up for it. If we can find a way to get four points going into the holidays, everybody will be feeling good about themselves,” he said, adding the Rangers will face the league power houses in the new year.
Defenceman Bo Eisner had a tremendous weekend for the Rangers.
“He’s one of those guys who, not only does he produce offensively, but he’s a tremendous defender,” Carefoot said. “He logs a lot of minutes and he does a tremendous job in the O zone and defensive zone. He’s a quiet leader. He just goes out and does his job. He’s a low-maintenance kind of guy. For him the journey is just starting and he’s got lots of recognition throughout, not just the Manitoba Junior Hockey League, but also going west, as well. I just feel he’s a guy that goes under the radar.”
Tractor Lotto winners
Ray Karlson, outgoing general manager of the Dauphin Lake Golf Club, draws the winning ticket in the Dauphin Kings Tractor Lotto, Sunday, following the Kings game against the Swan Valley Stampeders.
Walter Kochalyk was the winner of the grand prize of $100,000. Tony’s Auto was the winner of $10,000, while Richard Kolochuk and Clem Bouchard each won $5,000, and Johnny and Gay Rushinka and Keri Elliott each pocketed $2,500. Winning $1,000 each were Lance Cory, Darla Abrey, Dean Morran, Julie Leblanc, Loreen Husband, Kim Watson, Steve Hogue, Lion Lepla, Tom Hanke and Kim Fillion and Charlene Gulak. Barb Gordon won $36,625 in the 50-50 draw and the supplemental draw winners were Risa Oleksy, Michael Sytnyk and Tim Hill.
Kings hanging in the West Division race thanks to three straight wins
The Dauphin Kings snapped a four-game losing skid, last week, and are now riding a three-game winning streak.
Dauphin snapped the losing streak with a 6-5 shootout win over the Portage Terriers, last Wednesday in Portage, with local product Rylan Gibbs netting the shootout winner.
The Kings made it two straight with a 4-1 win over the Winnipeg Freeze, Friday in Winnipeg. On Sunday, Jakob Brook’s second of the game, 47 seconds into overtime lifted Dauphin to a come-from-behind 5-4 win over the Swan Valley Stampeders.
As a result, the Kings enter the week in fourth place with 36 points, one back of the Waywayseecappo Wolverines and three behind the Stampeders and OCN Blizzard, who are tied for first in the MGEU West Division.
Get the full rundown in this week's Herald!
Brezden looking forward to competing in national stage
When the current skating season started 16-year-old Breken Brezden’s goal was to qualify for the Canadian Tire National Skating Championships.
To do so, she had to finish in the top 18 skaters from among the 37 other competitors hitting the ice at the recent Skate Canada Challenge in Winnipeg.
The only Manitoban in the event, Brezden accomplished that goal, finishing 10th overall, thus qualifying to compete at nationals, Jan. 9 to 15 in Oshawa, Ont.
Brezden started skating at the age of four. Her dad Brian, first put her in hockey skates.
“Because he was a hockey player,” Brezden noted.
After Brezden was registered for CanSkate, it wasn’t long before her local instructor Donna Kemp-Drysdale told her parents to get her into figure skates.
“Because I don’t think I’m really built for hockey,” she said.
Kemp-Drysdale has had a great influence on Brezden’s skating, teaching her a lot of the basics.
“She’s taught me all of my dances pretty much. She’s taught me the good skating skills and good work ethic. She really started me young on those types of things,” Brezden said, adding Kemp-Drysdale was also the one who encouraged her to start learning under guidance of Patricia Hole, a professional skating coach based in Virden.
Kemp-Drysdale had told Brezden she didn’t think she could provide the resources and knowledge to keep improving.
“I’m super thankful for her and all the things that she’s been able to help me with and the fact that she’s been able to pass me on to more coaches who can really help me out,” Brezden said.
Brezden has always considered herself to be someone who enjoys skating, something Kemp-Drysdale saw, as well.
“That’s why she told my dad, ‘you’ve got to get that girl in figure skates,’,” she said.
Brezden has been training under Hole for about seven or eight years now, initially traveling to Virden once a week.
“But as things progressed and I really wanted to get more competitive and I was really more committed to it, we started seeing her more often,” she said.
While it took some time to adjust to the travel, eventually, the Brezdens got used to it.
“I’m really thankful for my dad. He calls himself my chauffeur for skating. I’m thankful for him for being able to make all this time and drive me out to Virden and to Brandon and to Yorkton when it’s horrible driving conditions,” she said.
Brezden’s mother has family in Hamilton, Ont., and it was while visiting last Christmas that she skated with the local skating club.
“It was for a couple days and then we came back. And then this summer is where we really kicked it up and we said that’s the place that I need to be, because they have a lot of good competitive skaters there and I wanted to be around that. And I wanted to have that intensity of training,” she explained. “So we decided for the summer, we went there and I skated for about five weeks.”
At the end of the summer, a decision was made for Brezden to continue training in Hamilton through the fall and early part of winter.
“For me, I realized I had been progressing so much and I really felt like I was making improvements and I wasn’t sure if I would be able to keep that same rate of improvement up as we were coming back to Dauphin and having to drive everywhere,” she said, adding she is thankful she made that decision. “Because it’s turned out really well so far to move out there for a bit for my first semester of classes and to really work hard and train with the coaches in Hamilton,” she said.
To accommodate her training, Brezden is taking courses online.
Brezden has noticed an improvement in her skating herself since she started training in Hamilton and it is showing in the results.
“From the past competitions, we’ve just kept building, kept on making those, whether they be small steps or big steps, we just kept on making those improvements,” she said.
One of the highlights of her training in Hamilton came a couple of months ago when Brezden hit her first triple flip, which was a great accomplishment.
“It’s been a jump that I was working on for quite a while throughout the summer. The feeling of landing a new jump is always a really good feeling, because it’s satisfying because you know it’s something you’ve been working towards and you’ve been really wanting to get,” she said, adding it will be a while before she is confident enough to incorporate the jump into her program. “I definitely need to gain more consistency on it, though, because right now, it’s not to the point where I can include into my programs. For now. I’m continuing to work on it and hopefully, we can get there.”
Last month, Brezden won the gold medal at provincials, a feat which gave her a good feeling to be able to skate well in her home province.
There was some trepidation at the Skate Canada Challenge as to whether Brezden would qualify for nationals after her long program skate wasn’t as good as she had hoped it would be. But there was a sense of relief when she realized she had made it.
“That’s been my goal for this whole season. That’s what has helped push me through the hard training moments,” she said.
Brezden’s goal for nationals is to train to get her triple-triple into her short program.
“And I just want to go out there and have the best skates that I can. Do what I know I can do and what I’ve been doing in training,” she said.
Throughout her skating endeavours, Brezden has received a lot of support from her family and friends, which she appreciates.
Her dad, she said, spends a lot of time on Facebook and constantly posts updates on her. And when she can’t read the comments herself, he reads them to her.
“It’s nice to have people believe in you. It’s a good feeling, for sure,” she said, adding there was a lot of family and friends at the Challenge in Winnipeg cheering her on. “I’m really thankful for it and it’s nice to know they have an interest in what I love to do and what I’m doing,” she said.
Brezden admits the Olympics is a dream, but at this point in her career, it is a distant dream.
“I have a lot of goals that I need to get before that point. People don’t realize, the Olympics is the competition that’s put on a pedestal to everybody. I think they don’t understand how difficult it actually is to get to that level of competition. It’s pretty crazy,” she said. “That would definitely be a dream, but baby steps for now.”
Art work on display
Dauphin Public Library’s Glenn Irvine, left, admires a painting by local artist Hazel Yates as she sets up a display of her latest work.
Yates’ artwork will be on display at the library until the end of January.
Four-game skid drops Kings into fourth in West Division
A four-game losing streak had dropped the Dauphin Kings to fourth place in the Manitoba Junior Hockey League’s MGEU West Division.
After they were swept in a home-and-home with the Neepawa Titans the previous weekend, the Kings dropped a pair of games to the Winkler Flyers, this past weekend.
The Flyers scored a 3-1 victory, Friday in Winkler, before completing the home-and-home sweep with a 5-2 win, Saturday in Dauphin.
Prior to the weekend, the Kings were busy on the trade front as the Dec. 1 deadline limiting teams to 25 player cards came and went.
The transactions began with the Kings acquiring forward Logan Walker, 19, from the Estevan Bruins of the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League for future considerations.
Defenceman Thomas Stewart was then shipped to the Winnipeg Freeze for a 2023 third round draft pick, while forward Riley Borody was traded to the Kam River Fighting Walleye of the Superior International Junior Hockey League for futures.
The deals didn’t stop there as forward Jovan Malay was sent to the SJHL’s Nipawin Hawks for futures and Blake Boudreau and futures were sent to the Portage Terriers for forward Jamie Valentino, 20.
The final deal saw defenceman Jonathon Wong sent to the Merritt Centennials of the British Columbia Hockey League for futures.
Kings head coach and general manager Doug Hedley said the new-look Kings will be okay once everyone is back from injuries and suspensions.
Get a full rundown in this week's Herald!
Clippers hand out season awards
Matthew Zurba took home the coveted Norris Aitken Memorial Award, presented by Aitken’s daughters, Joan Nadolny and Beth Monson, at the Dauphin Clippers football team’s awards banquet, Nov. 30.
Other award winners were:
Most Improved From Last Season - Oliver Dandeneau
Most Improved During This Season - Kyle Lunsted
Most Outstanding Player, Defence - Joseph Lopez
Most Outstanding Player, Defensive Line - Damon Nepinak
Most Outstanding Player, Offence - Lopez and Scott Gower
Most Outstanding Player, Offensive Line - Sully Fox and Owen Tyschinski
Rookie of the Year - Mitchell Rauliuk
Wellborn Family Dedication Award - Gower
Coaches Award - Liam Jamieson
Best First-year Player, Grade 11 or 12 - Josiah Seale
Special Teams Most Outstanding Player - Austen Semchyshyn
Playoff Most Outstanding Player - Lopez
Ron Ricketts Family Award - Rob Tomkins.
Players voted for their choice for each award and the coaching staff made the final decision.
Brezden qualifies to skating nationals
At the start of the season, Dauphin’s Breken Brezden set a goal of making it to the Skate Canada nationals in January. She fulfilled that goal after qualifying at the Skate Canada Challenge in Winnipeg, this past weekend.
Brezden was seventh after the short program and finished 10th after the free skate, thus earning a spot at the Canadian Tire National Skating Championships, Jan. 9 to 15 in Oshawa, Ont.
Of the 38 skaters competing in Winnipeg, the top 18 qualified for nationals and Brezden was the only skater representing Manitoba.
Make sure you check out this week's 'A View From The Couch' podcast on the Dauphin Herald's Facebook Page with Breken slated to join Doug and Christian.
Rangers climb back in the playoff hunt
The Parkland Rangers find themselves back in the Manitoba U18 AAA Hockey League playoff race after earning three of four points from the Southwest Cougars, this past weekend.
Two goals in the third period lifted the Rangers to a 3-2 victory, Friday in Dauphin. On Saturday in Killarney, Nate Robson netted the winner with 35 seconds left in overtime to give the Cougars a 4-3 win.
Southwest led Friday’s game 2-1 after the first period on goals from Kelby Diehl and Sebastian Stone, while Dru Mushumanski replied for the Rangers.
After a scoreless second period, goals from Tavyn Boychuk and Hayden Seib erased the deficit and put the Rangers in front, and they hung on for the victory.
Glover was outstanding in net for the Rangers, finishing with 45 saves, while Southwest’s Micky Gross stopped 28 shots.
On Saturday, the Rangers had three different leads only to see Southwest to tie the game on each occasion.
Andrew Pidskalny and Mushumanski with two, scored for Parkland, while Nicholas Cullen, Stone and Luke Mackenzie replied for Southwest.
Evan Svoboda made 22 saves for Southwest, while Glover made 32 saves Parkland.
Rangers coach Tyler Carefoot was pleased with the team’s play in both games.
“I think Friday, other than our first period, I thought we were the better team in the second and third. I just thought, after we made some little adjustments going into the second period, we were the better team and I was very pleased,” he said. “Not only did we get the win, but just how we executed the game plan. It was good to see, considering it’s been a work in progress. And to finally have a game where, for the most part, we put everything together, it was gratifying, for sure.”
The Rangers are 3-2-1-1 in their last seven games and are now just six points behind the eighth-place Eastman Selects.
That is something the team talked about on Saturday, Carefoot said, about how if they keep picking up points they can get back into the playoff race.
“So we had to have the mindset that this is a playoff mentality. And (Saturday) night, almost from start to finish, I thought we were the better team,” he said.
Another topic of discussion was the need to hang onto leads.
“That’s something we’ve got to do a better job of is locking down some of these leads that we have,” Carefoot said. “But we stuck to the game plan, we outworked them and they got a late goal to tie the game and we went to overtime. Three-on-three, anything can happen.”
Carefoot has seen a lot of improvement from the team from the start of the season, noting the players are playing with more confidence and are feeling good about themselves.
The Rangers have a chance to close the gap on Eastman as they play the Selects, Saturday and Sunday in Beausejour.
Carefoot hopes the players have the mindset of sacrificing the body to make plays.
“I hope they have the mindset that we’re going to have to hurt. We’re going to have to take hits to make the right play and getting in lanes to block shots. That’s something we’re going to have to add to our repertoire this weekend,” he said. “Eastman is probably somewhat of a surprise this season. They’re usually at the top of the league and this year, they’re near the bottom. I’ve heard they’re a big team and I feel if we can continue with focussing on getting pucks behind their D and all of the things that we’ve been talking about, hopefully, we’ll have some success.”