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Canucks Development Camp: Aiden Celebrini using 2023 sixth-round draft selection as incentive

Canucks Development Camp: Aiden Celebrini using 2023 sixth-round draft selection as incentive

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Captain and leader wants to be like Brayden Point. That would be something. A battler and grinder with sneaky scoring skills. Was also captain of Canada's Under-18 team at worlds. Future culture carrier.
Wilson Bjorck, C, Djurgardens Jr. (Swe-J20), 6-foot, 165 lbs., GP: 43, G: 28, A: 39, PTS: 67, 2025 draft, 143rd overall.
Strong family hockey lineage. Brother Viggo is a big 2026 draft prospect. Wilson is labelled a 'project' heading to Colorado College.
Riley Patterson, C, Barrie Colts (OHL), 6-foot, 194 lbs., GP: 64, G: 25, A: 34, PTS: 59, 2024 draft, 125th overall.
Two solid seasons depict a solid game without the 'wow' factor, but excels in 200-foot game that coaches really crave.
Anthony Romani, RW, Barrie Colts (OHL), 6-foot-1, 190 lbs., GP: 29, G: 19, A: 11, PTS: 30, 2024 draft, 162nd overall.
Lit it up in OHL post-season with 24 points (12-12) in 16 games and is jumping to the NCAA with the Michigan State Spartans.
OVERTIME — UBC group camp session Monday at 1:30 p.m. On Tuesday, group session at 10 a.m. and small-area games at 11:10. On Thursday, group session at 10 a.m. and intrasquad game at 11:15 a.m.
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When will local OHL teams hit the ice again?
When will local OHL teams hit the ice again?

CTV News

time6 days ago

  • CTV News

When will local OHL teams hit the ice again?

The Kitchener Rangers team bus is seen parked outside the Kitchener Memorial Auditorium on September 2, 2024. (Shelby Knox/CTV News) Summer is in full swing, but local hockey fans are already eagerly looking forward to the start of a new Ontario Hockey League (OHL) season. The 2025/2026 regular season officially gets underway in mid-September, but there will be lots of local action to tide fans over until then. Preseason showcase and Kitchener Rangers' FanFest The Kitchener Rangers are getting ready to host the Brantford Bulldogs, Oshawa Generals and Saginaw Spirit for their second annual preseason showcase at the Kitchener Memorial Auditorium. The showcase gets underway on Friday, Aug. 29 and will continue through the weekend, wrapping up on Sunday, Aug. 31. The Kitchener Rangers said tickets for each game will be available at the door and support Make-A-Wish Canada. The Kitchener Rangers' FanFest will also return alongside the showcase. It will be held on Aug. 31 from 11 a.m. until 2 p.m. in parking lot A at the Aud. Admission is free. Fans can play games, enjoy carnival rides, grab something to eat at a barbeque and meet some of the Kitchener Rangers players. Proceeds from FanFest will also support Make-A-Wish Canada. Kitchener Rangers FanFest 2024 Kitchener Rangers fans gather at FanFest outside the Kitchener Memorial Auditorium on September 1, 2024. (Shelby Knox/CTV News) Preseason schedule All told, the OHL preseason schedule includes 50 games between Friday, Aug. 29 and Sunday, Sept. 14. The schedule includes the showcase games at The Aud. 'There are an additional 18 neutral site games taking place in non-OHL venues, including four with locations still to be announced in the coming weeks,' the league said in a news release. Here are the dates for the Brantford Bulldogs, Guelph Storm and Kitchener Rangers preseason games: Friday, Aug. 29 Guelph Storm @ Brampton Steelheads - 7 p.m. Brantford Bulldogs @ Kitchener Rangers - 7 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 30 Saginaw Spirit v. Brantford Bulldogs (at The Aud in Kitchener) - 2 p.m. Oshawa Generals @ Kitchener Rangers - 7 p.m. Brampton Steelheads @ Guelph Storm - 7:07 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 31 Saginaw Spirit @ Kitchener Rangers - 2 p.m. Monday, Sept. 1 Brantford Bulldogs v. Guelph Storm (at the North Dumfries Community Complex in Ayr) – 2:07 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 4 Brantford Bulldogs @ Niagara Icedogs – 7 p.m. Friday, Sept. 5 Niagara Icedogs @ Brantford Bulldogs – 7 p.m. Oshawa Generals @ Guelph Storm – 7:07 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 7 Guelph Storm @ Oshawa Generals – 4:05 p.m. Friday, Sept. 12 Guelph Storm @ Brantford Bulldogs 7 p.m. Oshawa Generals @ Kitchener Rangers – 7 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 13 Kitchener Rangers v. Windsor Spitfires (at the Atlas Tube Centre in Lakeshore) – 7:05 p.m. The Flint Firebirds will also face off with the Erie Otters on Friday, Sept. 12 at the William Allman Memorial Arena in Stratford.

Team of sex assault victim support centres to oversee OHL's consent training to help with 'accountability'
Team of sex assault victim support centres to oversee OHL's consent training to help with 'accountability'

CBC

time31-07-2025

  • CBC

Team of sex assault victim support centres to oversee OHL's consent training to help with 'accountability'

A centralized team will now help Ontario Hockey League (OHL) squads enrol in the right mandatory consent and healthy masculinity training and ensure it's completed, under a new agreement between a coalition of sex assault victim support centres and the league. CBC spoke to parties involved in this move nearly a week after the Hockey Canada criminal trial in London ended with not guilty findings. The OHL made gender-based violence and consent training mandatory for all major junior teams about a decade ago. The league's Onside Program was developed for junior hockey teams by two sexual assault support centres in the province, with curriculum delivered to each team at the local level, by members of the Ontario Coalition of Rape Crisis Centres (OCRCC). Karley Doucette is manager of education and communications at the Sexual Assault Support Centre of Waterloo Region, which is part of the team of victim support centres that'll help oversee the Onside program. Previously, Doucette said, completion of the training wasn't tracked and about half of the 20 major junior hockey teams didn't actually participate every year or took different training not developed for OHL teams. "There have been gaps in accountability and there hasn't been any centralized oversight, so it's been impossible to ensure consistency and quality across the league," Doucette said. Importance of 'understanding consent' The two-hour Onside program was developed in 2008, with the OHL making it mandatory in 2016. The curriculum was distributed to OCRCC members, and each team was expected to connect with local centres, which would proceed to deliver the sessions every fall before the start of the junior hockey season. In recent years, however, some teams and resource-stretched sexual assault victim support centres said they have had trouble scheduling the sessions, which focus on healthy masculinity, relationships, power dynamics and bystander intervention consent. "I think it's critical that we're talking about this now and understanding consent, and how it's given and all the pieces of the program," said OHL commissioner Bryan Crawford. The Hockey Canada trial centred on the issue of whether there was consent between the complainant, E.M., whose identity is protected under a standard publication ban, and the men, who were charged in relation to what went on in a London hotel room in 2018 when they were players on the gold medal-winning world junior team. All five were found not guilty by Justice Maria Carroccia after an eight-week trial. That trial has started conversations that should keep going, said Crawford. "It's critical that we're talking about it and understanding what consent is. There are certainly differences between legality and morality, and understanding consent and how it is given." The not-guilty verdict in the high-profile Hockey Canada sexual assault trial has sparked a national conversation about how we define and understand consent. As the legal system wrestles with questions around fear, coercion, and credibility, Just Asking looks at what consent really means in practice and how we can talk about it more openly. Joining us are Farrah Kahn, a consent educator and the CEO of Possibility Seeds, and Gillian Hnatiw, a Toronto-based lawyer who specializes in gender-based violence. The Onside program links local sexual assault centres with junior teams, but some centres have had better luck getting their city's teams to participate than others, Doucette said. "Some teams have done the training, others have done other types of training. There hasn't been a consistency throughout the league." For example, the OHL's London Knight, this year's Memorial Cup champions, had been in a one-hour training course with an organization not accredited to deliver the two-hour Onside program developed specifically for players. Doucette said sexual assault centres met with the league in 2023 to propose more money for victim support centres that offer the training and a centralized co-ordination to expand the Onside program to ensure every team participated. But they did not hear back from OHL management at the time. "This summer, we went back to the OHL and had another meeting and proposed the same things we proposed in 2023, and we're pleased that they've responded and entered into a partnership with us," Doucette said. "We will now oversee the training across the province." More funding for training Sexual assault centres previously were given a $300 honorarium for the Onside training, but they said that did not properly compensate them for the staff time spent preparing and delivering the curriculum. The honorarium amount has now increased significantly, said Doucette, who would not provide specifics. The OHL remains responsible for ensuring each team follows through with the training and schedules it with their local centre. Doucette's centralized team will both help teams link up with the centres accredited to provide the training and track their participation. "We're hoping that because this trial was so publicly talked about, it will be a wake-up call," she said. Crawford called the changes a positive evolution of the program, and said he fully supports a more centralized oversight body to continue to tweak and make improvements. "It helps us achieve what we all want, which is administering this really beneficial, impactful programming that makes a difference and achieves the goals that we're setting up to achieve."

Rowan Henderson eyes big sophomore season with Sudbury Wolves
Rowan Henderson eyes big sophomore season with Sudbury Wolves

Ottawa Citizen

time29-07-2025

  • Ottawa Citizen

Rowan Henderson eyes big sophomore season with Sudbury Wolves

Article content Just as it took OHL clubs a little while to truly appreciate Rowan Henderson's game, Sudbury Wolves fans may have needed to watch a few shifts last season before realizing what they had in the rookie forward from Wellesley, Ont. Article content Soon, however, they were bound to note not only Henderson's consistently high work rate, but the effective use of angles, stick placement and speed that made him one of head coach Scott Barney's most trusted penalty killers and a deserving winner of the team's Best Defensive Player. Article content Article content After potting his first goal into an empty net back on Nov. 10, the 5-foot-10, 178-pound Waterloo Wolves minor hockey product also showcased his offensive skill down the stretch, finishing with 11 goals and 13 assists in 66 games. Article content Article content 'I had a lot of fun,' said the 17-year-old son of Andrew and Alecia Henderson, reached in his hometown earlier this month. 'It was really different, meeting all the new guys, but it was such a good group. I had fun coming to the rink every day. Article content 'Being on the ice every day was something new, but I enjoyed it, just showing up, being with the guys and the grind of the season is fun, road trips and all that type of thing. I thought it was successful and it's something to build off of, for sure.' Article content Sudbury's first-round pick, 12th overall, in the OHL Under-18 Priority Selection last year, Henderson followed the likes of Nick DeGrazia, Emmett Serensits, Nate Krawchuk and Mitchell Weeks in making the most of a second chance to turn the heads of Wolves brass. But not even those impressive predecessors made such an impact at such a young age as Henderson, who won't celebrate his 18th birthday until Dec. 10 and isn't eligible for the NHL Entry Draft until next summer. Article content Article content Signed out of training camp last fall, the newcomer embraced his role as a pesky, persistent forechecker and a diligent defender, while adhering strictly to the system put in place by Barney and his staff. Article content 'I think it was just listening to the coaches, listening to what they had to say,' Henderson suggested. 'They know better than me, so I just had to listen and whatever they said, I did. I adjusted my game to what I needed to do and the communication was always great, so I always knew what I had to do and when I had to do it.' Article content He pointed to his vision and ability to read plays, which served him so well on offence while leading Waterloo to the Alliance U18 AAA championship, as attributes that also lent themselves well to his success on the other side of the puck. Article content 'I was always leaned on a little bit more for offence on previous teams,' Henderson said. 'I always killed penalties, but it kind of became an identity for me, being a pesky guy, putting my sticks in the right lanes, being hard to play against and being solid defensively.'

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