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Thursday, May 21, 2009

2009 Herald Jason Stadstad Classic matchups set

The third annual Herald Jason Stadstad Classic has been set for December 17th-December 19th, 2009 in Grand Forks, ND. Games will be held at both Engelstad and Purpur Arenas.

The three Minnesota teams participating this season will be Apple Valley, Roseau, and East Grand Forks. This past year it was Blaine, Bloomington Jefferson, and Roseau.

The four North Dakota teams will be Bismarck Century, Grafton-Park River, Grand Forks Central, and Grand Forks Red River.

Unlike in 2008, the 2009 Classic will be a bracket-style tournament. Last year's Classic was done in a round robin format.

Here is the tentative game schedule:

December 17th

1:00 PM | Apple Valley vs. East Grand Forks | Purpur Arena

3:15 PM | Bismarck Century vs. Grand Forks Central | Purpur Arena

6:15 PM | Grand Forks Red River vs. Roseau | Engelstad Arena

8:30 PM | Bismarck High vs. Grafton-Park River | Engelstad Arena

December 18th

1:00 PM | Losers of afternoon games | Purpur Arena

3:15 PM | Losers of night games | Purpur Arena

6:15 PM | Winners of afternoon games | Engelstad Arena

8:30 PM | Winners of night games | Engelstad Arena

December 19th

11:30 AM | Third place | Ralph Engelstad Arena

1:45 PM | Championship | Ralph Engelstad Arena

5:15 PM | Seventh place | Purpur Arena

7:30 PM | Fifth place | Purpur Arena

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Chicago Blackhawks' Byfuglien focuses on playoffs, remembers Roseau

Check out this good article on Chicago Black Hawks growing star and Roseau native, Dustin Byfuglien. It starts out talking about his role on the team during the playoffs but then goes into a nice story about the people that surrounded his life in Roseau.

Blackhawks' Dustin Byfuglien kicks it up a notch

By Jim O'Donnell
jodonnell@suntimes.com

The easy ebony eyes of Dustin Byfuglien belie an intriguing wheat-field mosaic. They reflect a growing professional confidence, a Minnesota-nice manner without the ''Fargo'' overtones and a fervent wish that the next interviewer will want to talk about Blackhawks playoff hockey and not his childhood around the lakes, skates and trucker laments of Roseau, Minn.

''There have been a whole lot of questions about that,'' Byfuglien, 24, said. ''I understand, but the whole focus right now is about what's happening with the team. I like talking about that.''That's understandable. Because what's happening with the team right now is that your Blackhawks -- after seasons in the NHL shadows -- have picked up where Derrick Rose and his Bulls crew left off and continue the remarkable theater of an energized spring in local sports.

The Hawks will open play this afternoon in Detroit in the Western Conference finals, and there appear to be only two certainties on the threshold of the series:

• • There is no reason to believe the talent, speed and upscaling youth of victories against the Calgary Flames and Vancouver Canucks won't remain in evidence against the big, bad Red Wings.

• • There is ample reason to believe the big, imposing presence of Byfuglien will haunt the Red Wings' crease and their defenders as surely as it did against the Flames and the Canucks.

'''Buff' has been a tank in the playoffs,'' ace teammate Patrick Kane said. ''He has created havoc inside. He is playing his best hockey at the best possible time.''

Added coach Joel Quenneville: ''Honestly, I thought his regular season was ordinary. But he has picked up his game so much, picked up his focus. He's a big body, and he is understanding more and more what he can do with his skills and that body. His overall awareness has been so much better in the playoffs. And I think there remains so much upside to his game.''

But through good times and more challenging ones, Byfuglien always has had Roseau -- and the remarkable family rootedness that set him on his way.

• • • ''It's all Norwegians and Swedes up here,'' grandfather Kenny Byfuglien said. ''The Norwegians like us wanted the woods and the swamp, don't ask me why. And the lakes, of course. And the Swedes are always going to follow the Norwegians.''

Please read the rest of the article on the Chicago Sun-Times website.
Roseau, population 2,756, is in far northwestern Minnesota -- Canada begins 10 miles north -- five hours north of Minneapolis- St. Paul by car.

It also lays claim to the Roseau High School Rams, a perpetuating hockey ensemble that has won seven state titles since 1946, most recently in 2008. Some in faceoff-mad Minnesota say the Rams are hockey's equivalent of ''Hoosiers'' -- if old Hickory had come back to win six more state titles.

The most famous player to come out of Roseau was Neal Broten, still the only man to play on championship teams in the NCAA (Minnesota, 1979), the Olympics (USA, 1980) and the NHL (New Jersey Devils, 1995). He also won three state crowns at Roseau High.

''The town itself is about a mile long and 12 blocks wide,'' said Dick Johnson, the primary coach for Broten and Byfuglien in pee-wee and squirt leagues. ''Everybody knows everybody, and sometimes I think there was a Byfuglien or a Broten in every part of the town.''

Grandpa Kenny took over his father Knute's trucking company in the early 1950s and expanded it into a regional concern. He and grandma Crystal had nine children; then she worked at the Roseau American Legion Hall.

''I sold pull-tabs for six years and then worked in the kitchen,'' she said. ''I'm retired now.''

Child No. 7 was daughter Cheryl, an adventurous sort. After high school, she set off for the bright lights of St. Cloud to attend beauty school. There she met and was romanced by a fellow named Rick Spencer, an African American who played football and baseball at St. Cloud State.

Together, they had a son named Dustin. The relationship didn't last. Mother and son returned to Roseau.

''I've got 23 grandchildren now, and to tell you the truth, I can't remember what number Dustin is,'' Grandpa Kenny said. ''All I know is that when it was time for Cheryl to come home with him, they came home.''

Home was not far from her parents' house, on an 11-acre lot five miles outside of town. She took a full-time job as a forklift driver at the local Polaris plant, then the world's leading manufacturer of ATVs and snowmobiles. Home was sometimes a trailer on her parents' property.

''We took Dustin down to the arena [Memorial Arena, the grandest of three ice rinks in town] when he was 3, and I remember he wouldn't put on the skates,'' Grandpa Kenny said. ''But he would go out and shuffle around the ice. By the next winter, he put on the skates and took off like a natural, and what you're seeing now down in Chicago is the result.''

• • •

What Hawks fans are seeing now isn't Byfuglien's first tour of duty around Chicago. That happened seven years ago -- during the winter of 2001-02 -- in a tale that fully capsulizes the spirit of Robert Frost and ''The Road Not Taken.''

''I had no interest in school,'' Byfuglien said. ''And I mean none. And then the opportunity came to play midget hockey down in Chicago.''

The program was the Chicago Mission, then based in Addison and now in Woodridge. A scout in Canada was impressed by Byfuglien's potential and aware of his academic ineligibility to play for Roseau High. He knew a coach with the Mission. A possible link was set in motion, but the key question loomed: Would the tight-knit Byfugliens allow Dustin to leave town to work on his dream 750 miles away?

''We sat down with Dustin, and I told him it was time to fish or cut bait,'' mother Cheryl said. ''He was not cut out for school, but it was obvious that he could hold his own with the boys who were playing for the high school. I told him it was his decision, but I thought he should go for it.''

He did. With the help of Mission administrators, Dustin relocated and moved in with the Szupura family -- parents Bill and Laurie and their son Matt, who also played for the Mission. In the end, it was a decision that has made all the difference.

''It's impossible to say how nice the Szupuras and others were to me,'' Byfuglien said. ''There were nights when I was homesick, but as soon as I got back on the ice, everything was all right again. The ice has always been my refuge.''

• • •

That embryonic west-suburban refuge led to Byfuglien's emergence on major hockey radars. After one year with the Mission and two seasons with the Brandon Wheat Kings of the Western Hockey League, the Hawks chose him in the eighth round of the 2003 entry draft.

While there were few questions about his pure hockey potential, Byfuglien always has been shadowed by matters of conditioning. During his four-year run-up to the Hawks, he reportedly carried as much as 280 pounds on his 6-3 frame.

This season, the team said he played in the 240- or 250-pound range. By NHL standards, that's still Bunyanesque.

''And,'' TV analyst Eddie Olczyk said, ''what is amazing for a fellow of Buff's size are his soft hands and his skating skills. That's why people continue to speak of his upside. When his instincts and talent fully come together, the sky is the limit.''

For now, back in Roseau, the town has become a mini-center of Hawks mania.

Dustin bought Grandpa Kenny a wide-screen TV a few years ago.

''And I've got the Dish [Network] and NHL Center Ice, too, so I've got it all,'' the retired trucker said. ''Nights when he's playing, it's on all the TVs -- at the Legion, at the Eagles, at the Pizza Ranch, everywhere.''

Mother Cheryl is retired and lives on an island northeast of Roseau in a community named Lake of the Woods. Her paramour is Dale Smedsmo, a former World Hockey Association grinder who also played briefly with the Toronto Maple Leafs in the early 1970s.

She has made the 11-hour drive to Chicago four times this season, most recently for Games 3 and 4 of the series against the Canucks. Speaking like the daughter of a trucker, she said: ''We left at 1:09 a.m. and got to Chicago at 12:25 p.m., just as Dustin was getting off the ice after practice. We made three stops -- two for gas and one for McDonald's.''

Byfuglien himself lives with longtime girlfriend Emily within walking distance of Wrigley Field. Tucked behind the easy ebony eyes and the Minnesota-nice manner, there is no doubt he is working on a dream.

''One day the playoffs are starting, and the next thing you know, here we are about to play in the conference finals,'' he said. ''Of course, the goal is the Stanley Cup for us. But my personal goal has been every summer to go back to Roseau with a better story than the summer before.''

It seems assured he already has one.

Matt McNeely (St. Thomas Academy) leaving for the USNDP

If you have not heard the news already, highly touted 'back-up' sophomore goaltender for the St. Thomas Academy Cadets, Matt McNeely, decided that his talents would be best utilized with the United States National Development Program (USNDP) next season in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

McNeely was backup to junior Kurt Altrichter this past season. He played in 10 regular season games going 7-1-1 with one shutout, a 1.97 goals against average, and a .910 save percentage. He only played the remaining 17 minutes in the opening round playoff game against Chisago Lakes Area. The Cadets won that game 10-1.

Altrichter went 11-3-3, shutout three opponents, had a 1.97 gaa, and a .912 save percentage in 16 regular season games. In three playoff games, he went 2-1-0, 2.63 gaa, and a .870 save percentage. Altrichter took the loss in the Section 4A championship game against Mahtomedi.

McNeely has already made a verbal commitment to attend the University of Maine in 2011.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

2009 USHL entry draft | Zane Gothberg highest Minnesota high school player on the list


A year after the Fargo Force convinced Roseau's Mike Lee to forego a shot at a Minnesota state high school hockey title and play in the USHL (United States Hockey League), the Force went after another top Minnesota goaltender in the first round of the USHL draft today. The Force selected Thief River Falls' junior goaltender Zane Gothberg as their number one pick, the seventh overall pick in the draft.

In '08-'09, Gothberg finished with a 20-5-2 record, 1.54 GAA, and a .930 save percentage. Thief River Falls fell just short of making the Minneota high school boys hockey state tournament. They lost 3-2 to their Section rival and perrenial hockey powerhouse Warroad in the Section 8A championship game.

In the second round, Fargo went after another Minnesota high school player. This time it was Blake School senior defenseman Blake Doerring.

Gothberg and Doerring were the only two Minnesota high school hockey players selected in the first six rounds of the draft. I think that is a good sign for Minnesota high school hockey as I tend to believe that the USHL teams draft players early that are, of course, very good, and also willing to commit to their programs the entire season. With most of the Minnesota high school players drafted in the later rounds, it tells me that all or most of the underclassmen that were selected will play for their high school team for 2009-2010.

Junior Joey Benik from St. Francis was selected in the ninth round by Indiana. Benik, the St. Cloud State recruit, most likely will play in the USHL next season but there has been no confirmation.

The USHL draft does not guarantee that a player will play in the USHL. The draft only means that a USHL team holds the rights to that player if that player decides to play in the USHL. Also, they have to participate in tryouts to make the team. Check out the USHL Entry Draft FAQ for further information on what being drafted means.

The USHL is a Tier I junior hockey league that consists of 12 teams. Team 13, Youngstown, Ohio, is an expansion team that will play in 2009-2010.

Here is how the Entry Draft went for Minnesota's players:

Round 1, Pick 7: Fargo: Zane Gothberg (11) - Thief River Falls

Round 2, Pick 7, Overall 20: Fargo: Blake Doerring (12) - Blake School

Round 7, Pick 3, Overall 81: Sioux City: Max Gaede (11) - Woodbury

Round 8, Pick 1, Overall 92: Tri-City: Blake Schammel (12) - Red Wing

Round 8, Pick 8, Overall 99: Omaha: Justin Holl (11) - Minnetonka

Round 9, Pick 11, Overall 115: Indiana: Joey Benik (11) - St. Francis

Round 11, Pick 2, Overall 132: Des Moines: Taylor Wolfe (12) - Eden Prairie

Round 12, Pick 2, Overall 145: Des Moines: Joe Faust (11) - Bloomington Jefferson

Round 12, Pick 7, Overall 150: Green Bay: Brock Nelson (11) - Warroad

Round 13, Pick 9, Overall 165: Waterloo: Andrew Prochno (11) - Minnetonka

Round 14, Pick 3, Overall 172: Sioux City: Caleb Herbert (11) - Bloomington Jefferson

Round 14, Pick 4, Overall 173: Chicago: DJ Jones (10) - Wayzata

Round 14, Pick 8, Overall 177: Omaha: Garrett Hendrickson (10) - Virginia/MIB

Round 14, Pick 10, Overall 179: Lincoln: Izaak Berglund (12) - Little Falls

Round 16, Pick 6, Overall 201: Sioux Falls: Adam Knochenmus (11) - Roseau

Round 17, Pick 3, Overall 211: Sioux City: Justin Crandall (11) - St. Thomas Academy

Round 17, Pick 6, Overall 214: Sioux Falls: Sam Windle (11) - Osseo

Round 17, Pick 7, Overall 215: Fargo: Willie Corrin (11) - International Falls

Round 17, Pick 13, Overall 221: Green Bay: Adam Wilcox (10) - South St. Paul

Round 19, Pick 6, Overall 240: Sioux Falls: Sam Coatta (12) - Minnetonka

Round 20, Pick 8, Overall 255: Omaha: Christian Horn (9) - Benilde-St. Margaret's

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Team Minnesota wins the 25th Annual Chicago Showcase

The 25th Annual Chicago Showcase was held at the Bensenville Edge Ice Arenas in Bensenville, Illinois from April 15th through April 19th, 2009. 24 high school teams from across the United States competed in 52 total games.

Team Minnesota won the championship game by defeating Team Michigan 3-2 in overtime.

Per the stats, I would have given the MVP award to Casey O'Connor for giving up only one goal in the six games that he played in. He saved 72 out of 73 shots. He gave up the one goal in the first period of the championship game against Team Michigan. O'Connor and Paul Moberg played half of each of the six games. O'Connor always started and Moberg always finished the games.

Zach May, Tyler Voight, Andy Pearson, Schyler Adams, and Sam Rendle also had a very good tournament.

Congratulations to Team Minnesota on winning the Chicago Showcase!

Team Minnesota roster

8




Schyler Adams


New Prague




F


2/6/91


Sr




5'10"


180
9




Casey Eckman


Two Harbors




F


12/18/90


Sr




6'3"


195
2




Willie Faricy


St. Paul Johnson





D


10/4/90


Sr




5'9"


140
3




Cory Frautschi


Lakeville South




D


12/13/91


Sr




5'10"


160
4




Reid Herd


Breck School




D


4/18/90


Sr




5'11"


160
10




Riley Horgan


Mound-Westonka




F


11/19/90


Sr




6'0"


165
11




Trent Johnson


Moorhead




F


8/20/90


Sr




5'6"


170
14




Pat Mahoney


Duluth Marshall




F


7/2/91


Sr




6'0"


170
12




Zachary May


Burnsville




F


10/11/90


Sr




5'10"


160
5




Alex McLean


Duluth East




D


11/6/90


Sr




6'3"


175
6




Bryan Mitchell


Red Wing




D


2/12/91


Sr




6'0"


180
1




Paul Moberg


Forest Lake




G


3/24/91


Sr




6'1"


178
20




Trevor Ness


Wadena-Deer Creek





F






Sr









35




Casey O'Connor


Bloomington Jefferson




G


12/14/90


Sr




6'0"


165
19




Andy Pearson


Burnsville




F


12/6/90


Sr




5'10"


170
15




Kyle Reinarts


New Ulm




F


2/15/91


Sr




5'10"


175
7




Samuel Rendle


Grand Rapids




D


6/27/90


Sr




5'11"


160
16




Blake Schammel


Red Wing




F


10/26/90


Sr




5'10"


180
17




Tyler Voigt


Rockester Lourdes




F


4/20/91


Sr




5'11"


190
18




Colton Warner


Apple Valley





F


1/8/91


Sr




6'3"


210

E. W. Froiland







Co-Head Coach









Phil Housley







Co-Head Coach









David C. Larson







Co-Head Coach









Dave Stigen







General Manager




dstigen@prtel.com



_______________________________________________________

Team Minnesota Results:

April 19th, 2009

Finals | Championship

Minnesota 3, Michigan 2 OT |GS|
1P: R Horgan (1) from S Rendle and Z May | Even | 3:35
3P: T Ness (1) from S Rendle | Even | 4:14
OT: T Voight (3) from C Eckman | Even | 2:38 left in overtime

C O'Connor | 26:15 minutes | 18 saves on 19 shots
P Moberg | 24:45 minutes | 19 saves on 20 shots

Minnesota |1|0|1|1| 3
Michigan |1|0|1|0| 2

April 18th, 2009

Finals | Semifinal

Minnesota 3, New Jersey 0 |GS|
1P: W Faricy (1) unassisted | Even | 3:21
1P: Z May (3) from A Pearson and S Rendle | Power Play | 12:11
2P: S Adams (3) from T Voight | Power Play | 4:37

C O'Connor | 26:59 minutes | 12 saves on 12 shots
P Moberg | 24:01 minutes | 10 saves of 10 shots

Minnesota |2|1|0| 3
New Jersey |0|0|0| 0

April 18th, 2009

Finals | Quarterfinal

Minnesota 7, Missouri 1 |GS|
1P: A Pearson (1) from Z May and Riley Horgan | Even | 1:42
1P: A Pearson (2) unassisted | Even | 15:41
2P: S Adams (2) from A Pearson | Even | 5:36
2P: K Reinarts (2) from C Frautschi and T Ness | Even | 7:36
3P: C Warner (3) from T Johnson | Even | 3:38
3P: A McLean (1) from C Eckman and T Ness | Power Play | 10:03
3P: T Johnson (1) from P Mahoney and W Faricy | Power Play | 12:56

C O'Connor | 25:42 minutes | 5 saves on 5 shots
P Moberg | 25:18 minutes | 14 saves on 15 shots

Minnesota |2|2|3| 7
Missouri |0|0|1| 1

April 17th, 2009

Round Robin | A Pool

Minnesota 4, Pittsburgh 1 |GS|
1P: C Eckman (2) from K Reinarts | Even | 1:00
1P: K Reinarts (1) unassisted | Power Play | 5:23
2P: C Warner (2) from T Johnson | Even | 2:55
2P: T Voigt (2) from S Adams and W Faricy | Even | 4:19

C O'Connor | 25:38 minutes | 16 saves on 16 shots
P Moberg | 25:22 minutes | 14 saves on 15 shots

Minnesota |2|2|0| 4
Pittsburgh |0|0|1| 1

April 16th, 2009

Round Robin | A Pool

Minnesota 4, Michigan 2 |GS|
1P: T Voigt (1) from S Adams and B Mitchell | Power Play | 6:37
3P: R Herd (1) from P Mahoney | Even | 6:04
3P: Z May (1) from A Pearson and R Horgan | Even | 9:21
3P: Z May (2) unassisted | Even | 13:16

C O'Connor | 26:37 minutes | 9 saves on 9 shots
P Moberg | 24:23 minutes | 11 saves on 13 shots

Minnesota |1|0|3| 4
Michigan |0|1|1| 2

April 15th, 2009

Round Robin | A Pool

Minnesota 3, New Jersey 1 |GS|
2P: C Eckman (1) from K Reinarts and S Rendle | Even | 5:58
2P: C Warner (1) from P Mahoney and T Johnson | Even | 16:04
3P: S Adams (1) from B Schammel and T Voigt | Even | 0:58

C O'Connor | 25:41 minutes | 12 saves on 12 shots
P Moberg | 25:19 minutes | 16 saves on 17 shots

Minnesota |0|2|1| 3
New Jersey |0|0|1| 1