
Joel Hanley sticking with Calgary Flames, signs two-year contract
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On Tuesday, about an hour-and-a-half before the NHL's free-agent frenzy, the Calgary Flames shared to social media a photo of a tray of nachos.
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It was their way of announcing that defenceman Joel Hanley, nicknamed 'Nacho,' was sticking around the Saddledome. He was set to be an unrestricted free agent.
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Hanley, who recently turned 34, inked a two-year extension with an annual cap-hit of $1.75 million U.S.
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'It means a lot,' Hanley told Postmedia. 'Myself and my family, we love Calgary so much. We kind of fell in love with the city, the fan-base, the people, everything like that. So to be able to come back …
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'End of the season, obviously we didn't reach our ultimate goal. So to have another opportunity with that and kind of build with the team, I'm just really excited.'
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A journeyman lefty, Hanley showed this past winter that he can be trusted in a Top-4 role. He was elevated in the second half of the season to skate alongside workhorse MacKenzie Weegar and wound up with career-highs in basically every individual stat category — two goals, nine points and an average of 18:35 per night in his 53 appearances.
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Globe and Mail
4 minutes ago
- Globe and Mail
Alex Delvecchio quietly built a Hall of Fame career with the Detroit Red Wings
By the age of 23, Alex Delvecchio had placed his name on the Stanley Cup three times. He kept skating with the Detroit Red Wings until he was 41, but he never won another championship. For nearly a quarter-century, he quietly put together one of the greatest careers in National Hockey League history, though few outside Detroit paid much notice. The forward never won a scoring title, never was named a first-team all-star, never won a most-valuable-player award. Overshadowed by teammate Gordie Howe, it was barely noted upon Mr. Delvecchio's retirement as a player that he was the league's second-highest scorer of all time, trailing only his famous linemate. Mr. Delvecchio, who has died at 93, was a durable and consistent forward who made teammates better thanks to his unselfishness with the puck. Known for crisp passing and clever playmaking, the centre also had a deceptively hard and quick shot delivered with little flourish. A clean player on the ice and regarded as a gentleman off it, Mr. Delvecchio won the Lady Byng Memorial Trophy for sportsmanship three times. He also served as an unofficial ambassador of the sport, which led to him being awarded the Lester Patrick Trophy in 1974 for outstanding service to hockey in the United States. A left-handed shot, Mr. Delvecchio spent more than a decade playing alongside Mr. Howe on versions of the famed Production Line: with Ted Lindsay during the 1954 playoffs, as a left winger with Norm Ullman at centre, and as a centre with Frank Mahovlich on left wing. All five players have been inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame. For his part, the good-natured centre who was known to enjoy cigars in the dressing room said the secret to his success was 'hustle and skate.' But his career suffered from the incompetence of Red Wings management. A dynasty was broken up by general manager Jack Adams with a series of ill-considered trades in the mid-1950s. Toward the end of Mr. Delvecchio's playing days, the club hired college hockey coach Ned Harkness before promoting him to general manager, an era remembered by fans as the 'Darkness with Harkness.' After his playing career Mr. Delvecchio assumed both coach and general manager titles, though he had no success reviving the club. Alexander Peter Delvecchio was born on Dec. 4, 1931, in Fort William, which is now part of Thunder Bay. He was the fourth of five children born to the former Anne Tapak, the daughter of Slovakian immigrants, and Francesco (Frank) Delvecchio, an American-born son of Italian immigrants who was an automobile mechanic at the time of Alex's birth and later became an engineer with the Canadian Pacific Railway. Alex's mother died of ovarian cancer in 1943, when he was just 11 years old. Having learned to skate on an older brother's hand-me-downs, he began playing organized hockey the following year. The youth signed with the Detroit organization after being scouted by Lou Passador. At 18, Mr. Delvecchio was the leading scorer for the junior Fort William Hurricane Rangers, also leading the league in penalty minutes with a scrappy style of play. At the end of the season, he was added to the roster of the rival Port Arthur Bearcats for an unsuccessful defence of their Memorial Cup title. At home, his father urged him to get a real job. 'He'd say, 'You can't eat pucks,'' Mr. Delvecchio told reporter Patrick Kennedy in 2021. 'But I was determined to show him that while you couldn't eat them, you could make a living playing with one.' Detroit assigned him to the junior-A Oshawa Generals, where he led the Ontario Hockey Association with 72 assists in just 54 games. He also scored 49 goals, finishing second in league scoring behind linemate Lou Jankowski. But despite his success, coach Larry Aurie told him he was no help to the club in the penalty box, a lesson later reinforced by Mr. Adams in Detroit. 'I was a hothead then, getting too many penalties for fighting and popping off to the referees,' Mr. Delvecchio once told The Hockey News. He made his NHL debut in the final game of the 1950-51 regular season, seeing limited action in a 5-0 shutout of the Montreal Canadiens in Detroit. It would be the first of Mr. Delvecchio's 1,550 NHL games, all with the Red Wings, during which he scored 456 goals and 825 assists. He scored another 35 goals with 69 assists in 121 playoff games. Though the stylish centre still had a season of junior eligibility, he was assigned to the minor professional Indianapolis Capitals. After just six games, during which he recorded nine points, he was called up to the parent Red Wings, a posting he would hold for 23 consecutive seasons. In his rookie season, he was put on Detroit's third line with Johnny Wilson and Metro Prystai, and the trio often had the duty of checking the other team's top scorers. The Red Wings went on to win the Stanley Cup in 1952 by winning eight consecutive playoff games, during which Mr. Delvecchio recorded three assists. It was his first championship of any kind in hockey. The Detroit centre got a single vote for the Calder Trophy for rookie of the year, which was won by Bernie (Boom Boom) Geoffrion of the Montreal Canadiens. Mr. Delvecchio's teammates had memorable nicknames. Mr. Howe was Mr. Hockey, Mr. Mahovlich was The Big M and Mr. Lindsay was Terrible Ted, but Alexander the Great – a moniker coined by newsreel announcers to describe Mr. Delvecchio – never caught on. He had been saddled since childhood with the unfortunate nickname Fats, which more than once led Mr. Adams to pick on a player who was far from overweight. The sobriquet had been bestowed by an uncle who thought his nephew had a round face. The Red Wings repeated as Stanley Cup champions in 1954 and 1955. The slick-skating, six-foot, 195-pound centre emerged as a top scorer in the 1955 playoffs with seven goals and eight assists in just 11 games. In Game 7 against the Canadiens that year, with the Cup on the line at the Olympia in Detroit, Mr. Delvecchio opened the scoring by grabbing a loose puck before launching a 15-foot backhanded shot over Jacques Plante's right goal pad. Then, with Montreal trailing 2-0 at the start of the third period and pressing in the Detroit end, Mr. Delvecchio intercepted a pass by Don Marshall before outpacing a pursuing Tom Johnson, who harassed him from behind with his stick, to drive the puck past a desperately diving Mr. Plante. Detroit went on to win the game by a 3-1 score, clinching the Cup. The consistent centre also proved to be durable, rarely missing games with injuries. One exception was a broken ankle suffered early in the 1956-57 season, which forced him to miss 22 games. Upon his return from the injured list, Mr. Delvecchio began a streak of 548 consecutive games played, which ended nearly eight years later when he suffered a hairline fracture to his jaw after being struck by a shot by former teammate Red Kelly. He only missed two games on that occasion. He was made captain in 1962, an honour he would carry for 12 seasons until retiring as a player. Mr. Delvecchio won the Lady Byng Trophy for ability, sportsmanship and gentlemanly conduct in 1959, 1966 and 1969. On the first occasion, his general manager told reporters Andy Hebenton of the New York Rangers was more deserving. For the 1968-69 season, Mr. Delvecchio, 37, centred a line with Mr. Howe, 40, on right wing and Mr. Mahovlich, 31, on left wing. The veteran trio set league records for goals (118) and assists (264) by a forward line, both marks later surpassed. The late-career success, coming after the NHL expanded to 12 from six teams, earned Mr. Delvecchio a cover of Hockey Illustrated magazine. The headline read: 'Alex Delvecchio: Quiet, but Great.' Mr. Delvecchio played alongside Mr. Howe for 20 seasons. He assisted on 210 of Mr. Howe's 786 goals with the Red Wings, more than any other player. Over his career, Mr. Delvecchio skated in 13 all-star games. He also played in eight Stanley Cup finals, losing five. He only twice received league end-of-season honours, being named to the second all-star team in an era dominated by such centres as Jean Béliveau and Henri Richard of Montreal, Stan Mikita of Chicago, Dave Keon of Toronto and Phil Esposito of Boston. A month before his 42nd birthday, Mr. Delvecchio retired as a player to become Detroit's coach, the seventh man to hold the position in five years. When he got home that day, his wife said, 'You have joined the ulcer department.' Seven months later, he was named general manager, but his four years upstairs and behind the bench failed to revive a Red Wings franchise widely derided as the Dead Things. In 1977, Mr. Delvecchio was fired and replaced by Mr. Lindsay, his old linemate. The centre's No. 10 sweater was officially retired by the Red Wings in 1991. A bronze statue of Mr. Delvecchio by Omri Amrany stands on the concourse of Little Caesars Arena, the Red Wings current home, near statues honouring Mr. Howe and Mr. Lindsay. The statues were originally unveiled in Joe Louis Arena. Mr. Delvecchio was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1977, his first year of eligibility. He was named one of the NHL's 100 greatest players on the league's centenary in 2017. He was inducted into the Northwestern Ontario Sports Hall of Fame in his hometown in 1982 and into the Michigan Sports Hall of Fame in 1977, as part of a class including former U.S. president Gerald Ford, who was honoured for his football career with the University of Michigan Wolverines. Near the end of his playing days, Mr. Delvecchio launched an eponymous public-relations company and acquired a sign-making company which produced plaques, corporate gifts and other promotional materials. Mr. Delvecchio died on July 1 at his home in suburban Rochester Hills, Mich., about 40 kilometres north of Detroit. A cause of death was not announced. He leaves his second wife, Judy Munro, a painter. He also leaves five children, 10 grandchildren, four great grandchildren and a sister. He was predeceased by two brothers and a sister. Mr. Delvecchio was the last living member of the 1952 and 1954 Stanley Cup teams. Glenn Hall, who played two regular-season games in 1954-55 for Detroit, is now the lone surviving member of that championship team, though his name was not engraved on the Cup as he was only a spare during the playoffs. In 1974, the Detroit organization held a night in Mr. Delvecchio's honour at the Olympia, the arena that was his home for more than two decades. He received a note of congratulations from Pope Paul VI and a telegram from Mr. Ford, then U.S. president. Another telegram sent from his Thunder Bay hometown ran for 28 pages to include the names of hundreds of supporters. He received gifts, including a US$2,000 cheque from the NHL to donate to charity, as well as two pieces of luggage and a battery-operated portable television from the players. 'The best gift I could ask for on this day is a win,' Mr. Delvecchio told a reporter. Instead, the Red Wings lost 4-1 to the Los Angeles Kings. 'I'm glad it only went three periods,' he said after the game. 'We were getting worse.' Special to The Globe and Mail You can find more obituaries from The Globe and Mail here. To submit a memory about someone we have recently profiled on the Obituaries page, e-mail us at obit@


CTV News
4 minutes ago
- CTV News
‘It's not just boys that are playing': 2-day camp introduces 40 girls to golf
A two-day golf camp for young girls at Victoria Golf Course on Thursday and Friday taught participants the basics of the sport, from swing techniques to the spirit of the game. 'I'm not hitting the ball every single time.… That's a part of golf,' one new golfer, Ariana, told CTV News Edmonton. Paul Horton, who has won and been nominated for some of Canada's highest teaching awards and now coaches at Golf Channel Academy in Calgary, ran the clinic. 'It's not just boys that are playing,' he said. 'There's an increase of girls playing golf, and we're just trying to make it fun so that it's more accessible to the kids – whether it be boys or girls.' Most of the 40 participants were newbies. They told CTV News Edmonton the sport was fun to learn how to play, but that they also enjoyed making friends. 'It's really fun because you don't have to worry about being judged. You can just do it and they're here to help you,' Ariana said. 'It gets easier as you keep on going and learning how to do it,' said another participant, Amelia. On both days, they practiced drives, putts and chipping. On the second day, they held a long drive contest and played a couple of holes on the course. Some, like Quinn, who golfs with her family, were there for more practice. 'My favorite thing about golf is when you use the driver and the ball just flies in the air. It just makes me feel free and happy,' she said. The camp is put on by Golf Town and was sponsored by Cobra Golf, which provided a set of clubs for each participant to take home after the camp. Golf Town also put on camps in Calgary and Toronto, and is considering expanding to more cities in the future, said Horton, who is an ambassador for the brand. 'It's been a long time for me, but I still enjoy what I do, and it gives me great joy (seeing) the smiles on the faces and the faces light up after they hit a good shot,' he told CTV News Edmonton. 'It's all about the joy of exploring. Sometimes it's just one shot that gets somebody hooked to the game.' With files from CTV News Edmonton's Nahreman Issa


CBC
35 minutes ago
- CBC
Clean 3-set sweep by Canada over the Netherlands at Nations League in Slovenia
Canada defeated Netherlands in three straight sets 25-22, 25-20, 25-15 Friday at the FIVB Nation's League tournament in Ljubljana, Slovenia.