Game On Magazine - April 2017 GameOn-Apr2017-P001-144-ONLINE | Page 16

MANITOBA JUNIOR HOCKEY LEAGUE were good, but nobody thought they were 49-wins good. “I didn’t think we’d do as well as we have,” said Taraschuk. “It’s just that at the start of the season, we got on an early roll and we just kept rolling. It seemed as if we start- ed winning and all the guys just bought in and kept believing. “Even when we made changes at the trade deadline, we didn’t miss a beat. It hurt to lose the guys we did, but the entire team just accepted the new guys as if nothing had changed. This has just been a great group of players to be around.” Taraschuk started playing organized hockey at Southdale Community Centre at age five. He fell deeply in love with the game early in his life and hasn’t stopped loving it, despite some disap- pointing times during his Western Hockey League stint. “I often remember playing in the Dyna- mite Cup when I was eight and nine,” Tara- schuk said. “I still have great memories of that tournament today. It was a pre-season event and it was the only time I remember play- ing minor hockey and having music in the rink, just like the NHL guys. It’s a really big minor hockey tourna- ment when you have music.” Taraschuk played with the Railcats, then the Warriors as a Bantam and City Midget player and finally, he played two seasons of Triple A Provincial Midget with the Winni- peg Wild. He was selected in the sixth round (112th overall) by the Brandon Wheat in the 2012 WHL Bantam draft and played the 2014- 15 season in Brandon. He started the 2015-16 season with the Wheat Kings, but was dealt to Swift Current and while bouncing in and out of the Broncos lineup, he decided he just wasn’t having fun anymore. That’s when he contacted Coach Dyck and made arrangements to join the Pistons this season. “We’ve had a lot of players contribute to our success this season and Mark is one of them,” said Dyck. “It started in goal with the great play of All-Star and the league’s top Darby Gula, Ryan Carlson and Mark (Tara- schuk) gave us a real good back end. Mark brought that WHL experience he has and was a real leader for us.” As well as things have gone all season, however, Dyck and Taraschuk both know that the game has to be won in the greasy parts of the rink at this time of the year. And, of course, despite Steinbach’s 49-10-1 regu- lar season, that means nothing come playoff time, especially in a league that was a lot closer than Steinbach’s record might have indicated. In fact, seeds two-through-five – Winkler, OCN, Selkirk and Portage – were extremely close to one another in the standings and not that far back of the Pistons. “Every game is tough, it seems, this year,” said Dyck. “There are a lot of games, where if you look at the standings, they seem like they would be an easy team but that isn’t the case. A lot of teams feel like they’ve been in contention, so the playoffs have already been very interesting. “But we have a pretty good group of guys. The experi- ence we can draw on from last year being in the finals and what it takes to be a champion, will be something