Game On Magazine - April 2017 Game on Preview Edition | Page 22

Dauphin Kings (17-36-7 41 pts) Head coach Marc Berry and his staff have much higher expectations this season after their club struggled with a young lineup in 2016-17 and finished out of the playoff hunt with a 17-36-7 record. A plus-.500 record and post- season berth could be within reach as the team expects to return nearly a dozen play- ers from a year ago. Those returnees include defenseman Riley Shamray, who is expected to anchor the team’s defense, and forwards Riese Gaber, Kyle Oleksiuk, Grady Hobbs and Brett Piper. “We want to make sure we promote confidence in the guys. We’re a little young but we want them to know we can compete,” Berry said. “We’re going to be a fast team and we have a ton of skill. We have a lot of speed and a lot of skill. We’re not blessed with a ton of size yet but that’s still a bit of a work in progress.” Neepawa Natives (21-33-6 48 pts) The Neepawa Natives (21- 33-6) caught fire in the second half of 2016-17 and clinched the MJHL’s final playoff berth in the dying days of the regular season, giving the Steinbach Pistons a run for their money in a quarter final series loss. Head coach Dustin Howden and his staff are looking to build on that momentum this season. They appear to be in good position to do so with all but two players eligible to return from last year’s squad. Goalie Evan Robert, who was obtained last year in a trade with the Selkirk Steelers, will be looking to build on a solid first year in Neepawa. He’ll have some help on the back end from Griffin Chwaliboga, a fourth-year shut-down D-man with some offensive ability. Up front the team will be led by forwards Justin Metcalfe, who led Neepawa with 38 goals last year, and Ashton Anderson. “We’re going to be a fast team. We’ve got good speed up front and on the back end,” Howden said. “We’re not going to give other teams a lot of time or space. We’re gritty, gritty but skilled.” OCN Blizzard (39-17-4 82 pts) It was turn back the clock time for the OCN Blizzard in 2016-17. The team posted its best regular season record in years (39-17-4), pushed the eventual league champion Portage Terriers to the limit in the MJHL final and enjoyed some of its biggest home crowds in a decade. They also managed to survive a potential funding crisis and are back on solid financial footing. Head coach Doug Hedley said the key to his team’s on-ice turnaround last season was a work ethic that was second to none and expects hard work to be a cornerstone of this year’s team. OCN could have as many as 16 returning players including goalie Matt Kustra, defenceman Ethan Constant and forwards Brady Valiquette, Anthony Keeper, Lantz Hiebert and Daylon Campbell. “Up front we have some real- ly good quality guys. We’ll have at least three really good lines up front. Last year we scored by committee and I think we’ll have the same thing this year,” Hedley said. “We’ve lost five 20-year-old defensemen. That will be our biggest concern, to fill that backend.” 2 2 | G AM E O N | S E P T EM BER 2 0 1 7 Selkirk Steelers (39-18-3 81 pts) Steinbach Pistons (49-10-1 99 pts) The Selkirk Steelers took a quantum leap forward last season, improving from 22 wins the previous year to 39. Although they lost a number of key veterans to graduation, the pieces are in place for the Steelers build on that momen- tum with as many as 15 players eligible to return. One of the key returnees will be workhorse netminder Hayden Dola, who will be helped out on the back end by defensemen Mark Wilson and Ryan Gardiner. Up front, the Steelers will be led by the likes of forwards Nathan Halvorsen, brothers Connor and Carter Barley and Nico Labossiere. “To start the year, we’ll be built from the crease out. Our back end will be our founda- tion,” head coach Dustin Hughes said. “I think we’ve got enough offence with some speed and size that we could pose some problems for other teams. We’ll be a three or fo ur- line team up front.” After compiling the best regular season record in the league in 2016-17, the Steinbach Pistons (49-10-1) were eliminated in the second round of the playoffs by the eventual league champion Portage Terriers. While it wasn’t the kind of finish the team had hoped for, head coach Paul Dyck has no concerns about there being any lingering disappointment when the season opens. The Pistons will ice a vet- eran team with a solid core of experienced returnees in for- wards Braden Purtill, Bradley Schoonbaert, William Koop and Drew Worad, defencemen Mark Taraschuk, Darby Gula and Declan Graham and net- minder Matthew Radomsky. “We’ll have some skilled guys up front. One thing I know is we’ll be a little bigger this year. I think we’ll have a little more grit too,” Dyck said. Anthony Keeper will be back to lead OCN