Archive for ‘blog’

January 16, 2012

Norovirus outbreak turns conference into horror film

By Andy Veilleux

National student conferences are commonly the scene of puking 20-somethings, but Canadian University Press’ NASH74 saw students puking as a result of a suspected outbreak of Norovirus as opposed to alcohol consumption.
While Saturday night was supposed to bring misbehaviour, drunken fun, and endless memories, the night became memorable for unforeseen reasons.

Twitter was full of reports of projectile vomit, people unable to stand on their own, and even stairwells covering in puke.
It all began with isolated text messages about some people getting sick not too long after the Harbour Towers Hotels and Studies dinner – and they have hosted two meals a day for students through the four-day long conference – and quickly escalated.
The first message to cross across my phone was a story about a student puking on another student in the hotel lobby, while the students attending the gala were waiting for a shuttle bus to take them to the University of Victoria’s Vertigo club, which was hosting the event.
Next, messages from the bus ride to the gala started streaming it about people puking on the bus. At this point, it seemed like a few people started their pre-drinking a couple of hours early.
Twitter began to light up with messages under the #nash74 hashtag, but the event still seemed like isolated cases.
Students on the next wave of the shuttle bus were forced to wait tens of minutes longer than expected for their ride, and when it showed up to the hotel, the pervading smell of vomit met students. Unphased and ready to drink, students boarded the bus and headed out to the event.
As the bus left, students began getting ill in the bus, again. When the bus made its way over to Vertigo, students poured out, in a strange resemblance of the “zombie apocalypse,” as it has been told to me. The club had been shut down due to the outbreak of the illness, and rumours of air ambulances, and of course land ambulances, began to swirl.
The shuttle was unable to hold any additional passengers, and made for the hotel.
With the gala closed, many of the students who were not expelling liquids from either end made their way out around the local Victoria bars.
Some were hit by sickness while about town, but the worst of the spread seems to have happened while in the hotel rooms. An unofficial twitter, text message, and Facebook count was made and the number kept growing.
My first report began around 11:30pm, with tens of students sick. As the night grew, so too did the number of sick, and the number of papers affected. As the night wore on, students tweeted the hashtag, and myself, and a list became available [I will post the list below].
People began to provide regular updates on their twitter accounts, and the whole event of #pukefest at #nash74 became a trendy – although somehow not a trending – topic on twitter.
As night turned to morning, several students continued the Twitter conversation, and CUP released more official figures.
At 4am the official numbers were approximately 60 sick, and 11 hospitalized, as provided to Lambda by Matt Hirji of CUP.
There are several scary bits of information to consider. First, the hotel did not inform guests, who stayed overnight last night and were leaving this morning, about the outbreak.
I spoke to several different guests at the hotel, and witness tens of high-school-aged students – presumably the ones here for a basketball tournament – standing around in the lobby for at least 15 minutes, without any masks on.
Also, several student journalists left the hotel this morning, most symptom-free and some who were ‘feeling better,’ to return to their respective provinces. They will be passing through airports across the country, and returning to their homes nation-wide.
While an out-right quarantine would seem to be an overreaction, it seems sketchy to allow the students to travel nationally less than 24 hours after such a big outbreak. Also, not informing guests may be good for reducing panic, but what about their personal safety?
In closing, the role of the students who took a leadership role, from the CUP staff, to individual students, must be commended. Many students kept the mood light with jokes, such as Justin Mcelroy from the the Ubyssey, who tweeted, “All 25 of our group fully accounted for now at #NASH74. I have a renewed appreciation for parents dealing with teenagers.”
Mike Sholars of the Excalibur tweeted “Hey @norovirusnl wtf did @CUPNash do to you? We were just trying to party and bond over our shared love of grammar and pestering. #Nash74”
Students, such as Divyesh Mistry of Imprint and Glen O’Neill of the Martlet, were instrumental with collecting my data on the number of people showing symptoms. Laura Beeson of The Link reported ”@andyveilleux UPDATE: 2/8 puking from @linknewspaper #Nash74 #barfapelago” in what became the typical method of delivery for updates through Twitter.
Most students got through the conference without getting sick, and that is a blessing considering how much contact with the virus they all had, and considering how many people were sick. The outbreak could have been much worse considering the rooms had four students each and how serious the norovirus is.
The biggest question remaining at this point in the outbreak is how it all began, but it remains a mystery.

March 30, 2011

Wolves take stranglehold on series

Mike Lomas was mobbed by his teammates after scoring the game-winning goal to put the Wolves up 3-0 in their series against the Ottawa 67's. Photo by Andy Veilleux

By John Langdon

The Sudbury Wolves are on the brink of upsetting the second seeded Ottawa 67′s after Mike Lomas scored the game-winning goal 33 seconds into overtime of Game #3 to give the seventh seeded Wolves a commanding 3-0 series lead in the OHL Eastern Conference Quarterfinal.

Lomas buried a shot from within the left circle past 67′s goaltender Petr Mrazek to give Sudbury a 5-4 overtime win while sending 4, 427 fans into eruption at Sudbury Community Arena.

“That was my biggest goal of my OHL career for sure,” Lomas said.

Immediately after the puck found the back of the net, Lomas dropped to his knees while looking skyward and yelling out of excitement as his teammates mobbed the overtime hero.

“I honestly can’t even tell you what happened, it happened so quickly,” he said. “I know we had a good forecheck there and I got a good pass and just shot it and it went in. Before I knew it, everyone was piled up on top of me.”

It seemed as though the 67′s were just seconds away from pulling themselves back into the series, until Josh McFadden scored with just 16.6 seconds remaining in the third period to force overtime and the hometown faithful into a frenzy.

The Wolves defenceman stepped up his game by registering a hat-trick in the win, including two power play goals in the third period.

“The first two games of the series weren’t really my best games so I knew I had to step up tonight,” McFadden said. “It felt really good to get three goals. We have the best fans in the OHL. So, to score three goals at home, especially that last one, it was great.”

After blowing a 2-1 lead and trailing 4-2 in the third, the Wolves gave a big assist to their fans in the dramatic win.

“The fans here are unbelievable,” Lomas added. “When we were waiting to go out for the overtime, they were cheering. We heard them in the hallway. We looked at each other and we just knew that we had to do it for them, for us, and they were behind us.”

The loss was a tough pill to swallow for the 67′s. Ottawa Head coach Chris Byrne was left shaking his head after the game.

“It was a tough loss,” Byrne said. “I thought our guys played very hard and competed hard all night and did what we asked of them. But it’s tough to win a game taking five minors in the third period. That was our undoing. A couple of tough ones there where we put ourselves down and their power play got rolling.”

After Wolves forward Eric O’Dell opened the scoring at 11:35 of the first period from a beautiful play by Frank Schumacher, Ottawa’s Steven Janes evened the score just over two minutes later.

Sudbury regained the lead at 17:19 when Michael MacDonald placed a perfect pass in the slot for McFadden who hammered a one-timer past Mrazek, giving the Czech netminder little chance of stopping.

Trailing 2-1 after the first, the 67′s offence found its form by scoring three goals in the second period. First, Sean Monahan jumped on a loose rebound after Wolves goaltender Alain Valiquette failed to control a shot from Ottawa captain Thomas Nesbitt. Five minutes later, Janes recorded his second point of the game by setting up Ben Dubois in close. The visitors extended their lead with a power play marker from Marc Zanetti, after Wolves captain Marcus Foligno was sent off for tripping.

Looking to reply, the Wolves fired 14 shots on Mrazek throughout the second period, but the Detroit Red Wings prospect had an answer for each one, as the Ottawa netminder bailed his team out on a number of occasions.

Sitting just 20 minutes away from making it a 2-1 series, Ottawa hurt their chances by taking five minor penalties in the final frame which allowed Sudbury to climb back into the game with two power play markers from McFadden.

After a delay of game call was handed to Dubois for firing the puck over the glass in his own zone, Dalton Smith put the 67′s in a deeper hole by taking a double-minor for high sticking. It didn’t take long for the Wolves power play unit to capitalize when McFadden demonstrated his cannon of a shot for the second time by blasting home a shot from the point to bring the Wolves within one.

The Wolves found themselves on the power play for the fifth time in the final frame when Adam Sedlak was sent off for interference at 17:52. Wolves Head coach Trent Cull elected to pull Valiquette with 30 seconds remaining giving his team a 6-on-4 man advantage. It seemed as though Ottawa was seconds away from earning a hard fought road win until McFadden fired a laser wrist shot from inside the blue-line with just 16.6 seconds remaining.

Lomas wasted no time putting the game to an end, as the Wolves forward scored on the first shift of overtime.

Sitting with a 3-0 stranglehold on the series, the Wolves aren’t celebrating just yet.

“You never know what can happen in the playoffs,” Lomas said. “They’re a great team. We just can’t get ahead of ourselves. We’re going to have to go back to their barn which is a hard place to play and we know they’re not going to give up. So, we just have to come out that much harder.”

The Wolves will look to complete a first round upset when they travel to the nation’s capital on Thursday for Game #4. Game time is scheduled for 7pm at Ottawa Civic Centre.

January 31, 2011

Wolves fight through Storm

Wolves forward Mike MacDonald scores the short-handed, game-winning goal against Guelph's Brandon Foote in OHL action Saturday night in Sudbury. Photo by Andy Veilleux.

By John Langdon

Sudbury Community Arena was the place to be in the Nickel City on Saturday night where the hometown Wolves clashed with the Guelph Storm in a game that delivered great goals, great fights, great saves, and an unbelievable finish.
After giving up a two goal lead in the third period and being called for a penalty in the final minute of a 6-6 game, it seemed as though the Sudbury Wolves were staring into the barrel of a gun and it was just a matter of time before Guelph’s power play unit pulled the trigger.
However, Wolves forward Michael MacDonald had other plans.
As frantic action transpired within the Sudbury zone in the dying seconds and Guelph players pressed for the go-ahead goal, MacDonald stole the puck at his own blueline, broke into the Storm zone on a breakaway and beat goaltender Brandon Foote to put the Wolves ahead 7-6 with only 2.8 seconds remaining.
“It was definitely my biggest career goal [as a member of the Sudbury Wolves],” MacDonald said.
The Thunder Bay native leaped into the glass and was mobbed my teammates at the Wolves bench after scoring the game-winning goal. It’s fair to say it was a special moment for MacDonald and his teammates to win in such dramatic fashion.
“It was one of those feelings in hockey you can’t describe,” MacDonald added. “It’s like what you grow up dreaming of, even though it’s just a regular season game. Scoring a goal like that is always one of the best feelings in hockey.”
While the Wolves bench exploded out of joy and excitement, the Guelph bench exploded for entirely different reasons. As MacDonald entered the Storm zone, he momentarily lost control of the puck near the blue line and possibly put himself offside. The linesmen allowed play to continue which caused an uproar from the visiting team.
Guelph Storm Head Coach Scott Walker expressed his disagreement with the non-call but didn’t hold the officials accountable for his team’s loss.
“It was definitely offside but that’s besides the point,” Walker said. “Guys shouldn’t get a breakaway on a penalty kill. We got guys trying to do spin-o-ramas out there on the power play with under ten seconds left.”
MacDonald also shared his thoughts on the play.
“It did occur to me that I possibly could have [been offside] because the puck seemed to stop right on the line,” the Wolves forward said. “I wasn’t sure what the call was going to be, but obviously it was called onside and it gave me a good chance to get in there and score.”
After second period goals from forwards Josh Leivo and Eric O’Dell put Sudbury ahead with a commanding 5-2 lead, the physical tone elevated which resulted in fisticuffs being thrown between Wolves defenceman Justin Sefton and Storm forward Michael Latta. Minutes later, Brody Silk and Cody McNaughton dropped the gloves in a heated exchange.
The Wolves were in the driver’s seat heading into the final frame with a 5-3 lead. However, the Storm turned the tide by scoring two quick goals early in the third. First, Guelph leading scorer Taylor Beck buried his second goal of the game by finishing a nice passing play from linemates Latta and Richard Panik to pull within one. Then just 51 seconds later, Scott Kosmachuk fired home a shot past screened Wolves goaltender Alain Valiquette to even the score.
With the momentum shifting in Guelph’s favour, the Storm silenced the home crowd by taking the lead at 16:42 of the third period. Francis Menard found himself alone in front of the Sudbury net and beat Valiquette.
The lead would be short-lived, however, as Greg Jambrosich flew into the Storm zone and hammered a hard slap shot past Foote just 12 seconds later to tie the game 6-6.
It appeared as though overtime was on the horizon until Guelph was awarded a late power play with just one minute remaining. Wolves captain Marcus Foligno was called for a retaliatory slash.
However, reliable goaltending by Valiquette allowed his team to weather the storm while an opportunistic MacDonald capitalized on the shorthanded breakaway to give the Wolves a 7-6 win.
MacDonald and Foligno each found themselves playing with new linemates on Saturday. MacDonald was moved to the top line playing alongside Michael Sgarbossa and Mike Lomas, while Foligno found himself on a line with O’Dell and Andrey Kuchin.
“I wanted to add a little bit of a spark and change things up,” Wolves Head Coach Trent Cull said. “MacDonald’s a good player for us but I want him doing better, and I know Marcus is a good leader. He’s going to play with anybody.”
The move by the Wolves bench boss proved to be wise as both MacDonald and Foligno registered 1 goal apiece and a combined 5 points.
Guelph goaltender Garret Sparks was pulled midway through the second period after the rookie netminder allowed 5 goals on 17 shots and was replaced by the veteran Foote.
Valiquette turned away 37 shots between the pipes for Sudbury to earn his 18th win this season.

January 29, 2011

Bulls charge past Wolves

Wolves Defender Josh McFadden battles with Belleville forward Brendan Gaunce in OHL action Friday night. Photo by Andy Veilleux.

By John Langdon

By winning six of their past eight games, the Sudbury Wolves have climbed into the playoff race by pushing themselves into seventh place of the Eastern Conference and leap frogging the Belleville Bulls in the standings.
So, with Belleville sitting in Sudbury’s rear-view mirror, the Wolves looked to carry the momentum into Friday night when they hosted the Bulls at Sudbury Community Arena.
What began on a positive note for the Wolves, failed to result in the same manner as the visiting team capitalized on four scoring chances in the first period to earn a 5-3 win and climb two points closer to Sudbury in the standings.
“I was really happy with our first 5 minutes,” said Wolves Head Coach Trent Cull. “I thought we came out with the start that I wanted.”
After jumping out of the gates at the beginning of the game, the Wolves carried the momentum early by moving both their legs and the puck quickly.
They were rewarded with an early goal on their first shot of the game when a point shot from defenceman Frank Corrado was redirected off a Bulls player and past Belleville goaltender Malcom Subban at 1:24 of the opening frame.
Sitting with an early lead, the Wolves began to make mental mistakes which eventually turned the game around in favour of the Bulls.
The Sudbury bench was called for too many men on the ice at 5:17, giving Belleville an opportunity to even the score. The Bulls did exactly that when Luke Judson redirected a point shot past Wolves goaltender Alain Valiquette for his first of the night.
“That’s almost inexcusable at that point,” Cull said in regards to the too many men penalty.
“Even on the (penalty kill) we had an opportunity to get those pucks out. After that I thought we got a little bit out of character. We started to play a little bit more selfish,” Cull added.
Just 31 seconds after the tying goal, the Belleville captain netted his second goal of the game after the Wolves lost focus in the defensive zone which allowed Bulls forward Carter Sandlak to make a nice play behind the Sudbury net and find an open Judson who buried a laser shot for his team-leading 21st goal of the season.
The Bulls added to their lead not even four minutes later on a well executed play which started in their own zone and ended in the back of the Wolves net when forward Scott Simmonds broke into the Sudbury zone on his off-wing and fired a backhand shot past Valiquette. Forwards Braeden Corbeth and Dylan Corson provided the assists.
Poor defensive zone work on the Wolves’ part proved to be vulnerable once again when Belleville’s Andy Bathgate managed to slide a pass through three Wolves players and find Austen Brassard in the slot for a one-timer to give the Bulls a comfortable 4-1 lead heading into the first intermission.
Stephen Silas also contributed an assist on the play for his second helper of the game.
The Wolves capitalized on a power play opportunity in the second period when Michael Sgarbossa won a draw back to Corrado who set up defensive partner Josh McFadden for a blast from the point which beat Subban to make it a 4-2 game.
However, as the game progressed, things wouldn’t get any easier for Sudbury as Sgarbossa dropped the gloves with Bjorn Krupp, resulting in the Wolves’ top goal scorer being handed a combined 27 minutes in penalties to end his night.
Wolves captain Marcus Foligno was ejected from the game with a 10 minute misconduct at 7:16 of the third period after expressing his disagreement with a minor hooking call.
The Wolves head coach admits it was a tough night to keep emotions in check, but said his players should know better.
“You can’t have that lack of discipline at that juncture, especially from Marcus,” Cull said.
“It’s a frustrating night though, I admit, being part of that. That’s the worst game I’ve seen here so far with my experience in the league with officials.”
After Belleville reestablished a two goal lead in the final frame, Sudbury’s Eric O’Dell buried a loose puck to make it 5-3 but that’s as close as the Wolves would get as Subban held off a late surge to help lock up a road win for Belleville.
Subban registered 22 saves in the win, while Belleville outshot Sudbury 34-25 in the game.
The Wolves will look to bounce back from the loss when they return to action on Saturday night as they host the Guelph Storm at Sudbury Community Arena. Game time is scheduled for 7pm.

January 15, 2011

Battalion outwork Wolves to 3-2 win

Brampton's Cody St. Jacques makes a game-saving, glove save on Wolves' Mike Lomas.

By John Langdon

The Brampton Battalion continued their winning ways against the Sudbury Wolves this season when they rolled into the Nickel capital on Friday night and earned a hard fought 3-2 win.

The Battalion occupied foreign territory by playing a near-perfect road game and snapping the Wolves two-game win streak in the process.

“They’re a hard-working team and one of our game plans was that we have to outwork them,” Wolves Head Coach Trent Cull said. He added the Wolves failed to do that, “by giving them a freebie period, and trying to battle back in two. As everyone says, it’s a 60 minute game.”

Stephon Thorne helped lead Brampton to victory with two goals, including the game-winner, while linemate Philip Lane contributed three assists and earned the game’s first-star selection.

The Battalion were backstopped by goaltender Cody St. Jacques who made 32 saves, including a magnificent glove save on the Wolves Mike Lomas, taking away a wide-open net midway through the third period to keep Brampton ahead 3-2.

The veteran netminder, who was arguably the best player on the ice Friday night, displayed tremendous composure throughout the game, as his solid positioning and rebound control allowed very few second-chance opportunities.

Brampton, who stuck to their game plan of getting pucks in deep and outworking the opposition, were rewarded with the first goal of the game just 4:02 into the opening frame when Thorne jumped on a loose puck in the crease and beat Wolves goaltender Alain Valiquette, after Sam Carrick rang a shot off the post.

Sudbury evened the score at 12:25 of the first when defenceman Josh McFadden fired a shot past St. Jacques on the powerplay. Michael Sgarbossa and Frank Corrado provided the assists.

However, just minutes later, Brampton regained the lead after Michael Santini buried another rebound to put the Battalion ahead 2-1.

After being outworked and outshot 14-4 in the first period, Cull elected to mix his team’s lines in order to generate some offence.

“I wasn’t pleased with our first period and some guys weren’t pulling their weight,” the Wolves head coach said.

The decision appeared to spark the Wolves in the second period as they managed to turn things around by directing pucks on net and eventually evened the score 2-2 when Eric O’Dell gave Sudbury its second powerplay goal of the game, after Brampton’s Ian Watters was handed a double-minor for high-sticking.

The Wolves looked to carry the momentum into the third period after outshooting the Battalion 14-8 in the middle frame, however, Brampton restored their lead early in the third when Thorne cashed-in his second goal of the contest after receiving a beautiful pass from Scott Tanski. The Battalion forwards broke into the Sudbury zone and Tanski displayed some skilled hands to set up Thorne for the game-winning goal.

The Wolves pressed for the equalizer but failed to capitalize, as St. Jacques held the fort for the Battalion by making 16 saves in the final 20 minutes.

This was the sixth meeting between the two teams this season with Brampton owning a 5-1 record.

The Wolves will need to put the loss behind them as they prepare for a two-game road trip this weekend where they head to Peterborough to face the Petes on Saturday, while on Sunday they take on the Generals in Oshawa.

January 11, 2011

Wolves devour Colts 8-3

By John Langdon

Photo by Andy Veilleux

Wolves forward Michael Sgarbossa dekes Barrie goaltender John Chartrand.

The Sudbury Wolves offence exploded for eight goals against the Barrie Colts on Friday night in front of 3737 fans at Sudbury Community Arena, as the home team walked out with an 8-3 win.

Sudbury was led by forwards Michael Sgarbossa who scored a hat-trick and Kristoff Kontos who finished with two goals in the win.

Sgarbossa, who has recorded nine goals and 15 points in nine games since being traded to Sudbury from Saginaw, was reunited with linemates Marcus Foligno and Mike Lomas.

The trio didn’t require much time to rediscover their chemistry as the Wolves top line registered a combined four goals and five assists in the win.

Foligno, who won a Silver Medal with Team Canada at the 2011 IIHF World Junior Championship in Buffalo, N.Y., tallied one goal and two assists in his return to Sudbury while Lomas contributed three assists.

The Colts’ Zach Hall lead his team offensively with two goals.

Wolves goaltender Alain Valiquette was solid once again with 29 saves.

After going into the first intermission with the score locked 2-2, the Wolves offence overwhelmed the Colts by generating five goals in the second period, three of which were scored in the span of 1:42.

The Wolves have owned the Colts this season with a perfect 6-0 record this season against their division rival.

December 16, 2010

Wolves split weekend

Wolves captain Marcus Foligno hits the IceDogs Shayne Rover

Story by John Langdon

Photo by Andy Veilleux

The Sudbury Wolves were the recipients of some good news last week when the team found out forward Eric O’Dell would be returning to the lineup on Friday night against a tough opponent in the Niagara IceDogs.

After scoring 33 goals for the Wolves in 2009-2010, O’Dell was sidelined for the opening 29 games this season after being told by doctors he was experiencing heart palpitations caused by a hole in his heart.

The additional offensive fire the Wolves were hoping to find on Friday was quickly put out by the IceDogs as O’Dell and his Sudbury teammates were ineffective while going head to head with one of the league’s better teams.

Niagara played a near-perfect road game through a team effort as the IceDogs dominated in all three zones by winning faceoffs and battles along the boards, creating turnovers, and executing strong puck mobility through the neutral zone which led to a 5-1 win.

Myles Doan lead Niagara’s offense with 2 goals, including the eventual game-winner while Mathew Campagna scored the lone goal for Sudbury.

Former Saginaw Spirit defenceman Frank Schumacher registered his first point as a member of the Wolves by assisting on the goal.

The Brighton, Michigan native was acquired by the Wolves on Thursday, along with forwards Michael Sgarbossa and Alex Racino in a five player deal with Saginaw in exchange for center John McFarland and defenceman Ben Chiarot.

Wolves backup goaltender Jacob Riley also got his first start with his new club since being traded from Brampton last month, however, things did not unfold as Riley would have liked, as the young sophomore was pulled midway through the 2nd period after allowing 4 goals on 18 shots.

Wolves Head Coach, Trent Cull came to the defence of his goaltender after the game.

“We’ve got to play better in front of him,” said the Wolves coach.

“You’re not winning many games in this league with one goal,” Cull added.

Niagara opened the scoring at 7:34 of the first period when Alex Friesen beat Riley from in close for his 11th goal of the season. Linemates Andrew Agozzino and David Pacan tallied the assists.

The Wolves managed to hold off a consistent Niagara attack throughout the first 20 minutes and head into the dressing room trailing only 1-0.

The IceDogs offence was unleashed in the 2nd period, however, as Niagara capitalized three times during the middle frame. Doan scored his first of two goals on the night as he jammed the puck home just 1:20 into the second period after receiving a pass from linemate Freddie Hamilton who created the play from behind the Sudbury net.

Minutes later, Andrew Agozzino broke into the Wolves zone on the left wing and fired a hard slap shot from inside the left circle that beat Riley to make it 3-0 IceDogs. The goal was the 19th of the season for the Niagara captain, who leads his team in goals scored.

After Campagna replied for the Wolves at the 11:24 mark, the IceDogs added to their lead when Dougie Hamilton went end-to-end with the puck and pulled the trigger on a laser wrist shot from inside the right circle, putting his team up 4-1 and convincing the Wolves coach to replace Riley with Alain Valiquette.

Hamilton, a 17 year old defenceman from Toronto, is currently ranked #3 in the 2010 NHL Central Scouting Preliminary Rankings for the OHL. “I’m excited about that, but I just focus on my game,” said Hamilton.

Knowing that National Hockey League scouts are watching his game doesn’t seem to intimidate the 6’4 defenceman.

“It adds to your confidence a bit, but it doesn’t really affect the way you play,” added the young prospect.

Along with scoring a goal and finishing the game +2, Hamilton executed all of the necessities which were required. The Wolves had a difficult time penetrating the Niagara defence as they were often victims of Hamilton’s effective stick work and solid play along the boards.

When the Wolves did manage to create scoring opportunities, there was an additional obstacle standing in their way – Niagara goaltender Mark Visentin.

Visentin demonstrated why he was selected to the 2011 Team Canada World Junior Selection Camp to the Wolves and their 3,457 fans in attendance. He stopped 24 of 25 shots and came up big when needed, including a great right pad save on Sudbury’s O’Dell in the 3rd period.

“We have a solid team up front and my defence does a great job in front of me, so that makes things easier for me,” said the netminder.

When asked about the opportunity to represent Canada on the biggest stage in junior hockey, Vistentin expressed his enthusiasm.

“I’m excited about it,” the netminder said. “I’m going to go there and work really hard and just give everything I’ve got.”

Wolves captain, Marcus Foligno will be joining Visentin at the 2011 Team Canada World Junior Selection Camp which will be held from December 12-15 in Toronto.

December 10, 2010

10 Minute Major: Sudbury’s first sports talk radio show

I recently had a chance to sit down with CTV’s Andy Barbato to discuss the new sports talk radio show 10 Minute Major, which he hosts.

Whose idea was the sports talk radio show?

The guys at YMP (Your Media Productions) approached me with an idea. We all sat down and fine tuned it into what it is today. We all agreed that Northern Ontario was well overdue for a sports talk radio show.

What sports will you be covering, and which will you mostly be focusing on?

Since Sudbury is a “hockey crazed” town, we’ll be focusing mainly on hockey especially the Sudbury Wolves. But we want to give the audience a bit of everything. Three weeks a month we will have hockey related interviews. Once a month we will feature a special guest in the Sudbury sports community. For example. Laurentian University’s Athletic Director Peter Hellstrom, Mixed martial artists Mitch Gagnon, Olympic Gold medalists Tessa Bonhomme and Rebecca Johnston etc.

Do you plan to cover a lot of professional sports, or amateur?

We want to focus mostly on local sports and athletes in and around the Sudbury area. However, we are not opposed to branching out. If the right opportunity presents itself we would be more then happy to talk to “the pro’s.” We do plan on having some “local pro’s” on the show. Guys like Ottawa Senator Nick Foligno and Anaheim Duck’s assistant coach Mike Foligno.

What does a show like this bring to Northern Ontario?

10 Minute Major brings a lot to the North. It’s an opportunity for fans to get to know these athletes and sports ambassadors on a more personal level. We delve into personal topics with our interviewees, something you won’t here anywhere else.

Are there plans to cover Laurentian University’s sports?

Laurentian athletics/athletes will be one of our main focuses on the show. I’ll have an in depth conversation Laurentian University’s Athletic Director Peter Hellstrom about brining OUA hockey back to the north. We also plan to talk to Shawn Swords, the Voyageurs men’s basketball coach. As well as Hanmer native Katie Goggins, OUA all-star and Lady Vee’s captain. We want to touch on just about every sports angle you can think of at LU.

What do you think will interest students most about the program?

It’s a high energy show. It’s very loose and off the cuff and again, it gives listeners a chance to see these coaches, athletes etc. in a different and more casual setting.

Any additional comments?

10 Minute Major is exactly what the North has been missing. People up here love their sports and we want to give them a different way to embrace it. We have top notch guests every week. We are giving away great prizes every week. It’s fun, high paced, and we ask the questions nobody else does. You can listen on KFM 95.5 or you can watch on line at www.10minutemajor.com. You can also follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

The first two shows are up on the website, the first interview features Wolves captain Marcus Foligno, and the second features Wolves forward Eric O’Dell.

-Andy

November 25, 2010

Sports Recap

By Andy Veilleux

Male athletes of the week

Voyageurs basketball player Isiah Pasquale has been named male athlete of the week ending on Nov. 21.

Pasquale, a fourth year English student, had a game-high 32 points and eight rebounds Friday against Wilfrid Laurier,

Pasquale also added twelve points and seven rebounds Saturday against Waterloo.

Voyageurs basketball player Mike Hull has been named male athlete of the week ending on Nov. 14.

Hull, a fourth year History student, had a strong weekend for the Voyageurs in which he put up 22 points against McMaster and 11 points against Lakehead.

Female athletes of the week

Lady Vees basketball player Lisa Furchner has been named female athlete of the week ending on Nov. 21.

Furchner, a Concurrent Education student, posted a double double with 22 rebounds, and 23 points against Wilfrid Laurier on Friday.

Furchner put up 26 points and nine rebounds Saturday against Waterloo.

Aqua Vees swimmer Jennifer Piper  has been named female athlete of the week ending on Nov. 14.

Piper, a third year Nursing student, swam in two CIS qualifying performances.

She won a silver medal in the 100 meter freestyle, before finishing fourth place in the 100 meter butterfly at the Campbell Divisional Championships.

Piper also placed fourth in the 50 meter.

X-country runners compete in nationals

Lady Vees cross-country runners Emma Tallman and Gracie Tetslaff competed at the CIS Cross-Country Championships last weekend placing 42nd and 59th respectively.

The competition was held at Sherbrooke Golf Course in Quebec.

Tallman placed 18th out of the OUA runners, while Tetzlaff placed 24th.

Tallman ran the race in 19:42 and Tetzlaff completed it in 20:01.

Head coach Dick Moss was impressed with the runners.

“Emma and Gracie made significant improvements over last year’s race and I’m very pleased with their progression,” he says.

“The course was a beast, but both girls adapted well and laid down excellent races.”

The coach confirmed both runners would be back next season.

Aqua Vees off to strong start

The initial rankings are in, and they are good news for Laurentian’s Aqua Vees.

The team is ranked 10th place nationally, following a strong showing at the divisional finals in Toronto last weekend.

Jennifer Piper and Emily Jones have both qualified for the CIS championships due to their strong performance.

The men and women ranked fourth in the weekend tournament.

Coach Phil Parker was happy with the weekend.

“It was a great weekend of racing here at U of T this weekend,” he says.

Parker was impressed when his team obtained national ranking after their first meet.

“They have been working very hard since early September and for them to crack the top 10 in the first rankings of the season is great.”

Some members of the team will compete in the Canada Cup this weekend in Toronto.

(Editor’s note: We did not have room to fit this article in the paper, so we decided to publish it online. Enjoy!)

October 7, 2010

Laurentian’s position on lobbyist funding

The Sudbury Star wrote an article re: Laurentian’s funding. We wrote our article about it but were unable to get Laurentian’s perspective on things due to the late hour we wrote it at (5AM). Chris Mercer, chief of staff at Laurentian University, offers up the university’s opinion in this article.

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