Tumgik
#Strathroy-Caradoc ontario
goalhofer · 10 months
Text
2024 IIHF World Juniors Canada Roster
Wingers
#17 Macklin Celebrini (Boston University Terriers/North Vancouver, British Columbia)
#18 Matthew Wood (University Of Connecticut Huskies/Lethbridge, Alberta)
#20 Carson Rehkopf (Kitchener Rangers/Barrie, Ontario)
#21 Owen Allard (Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds/Renfrew, Ontario)
#22 Jordan Dumais (Halifax Mooseheads/Longueuil, Quebec)
#27 Easton Cowan (London Knights/Strathroy-Caradoc, Ontario)
Centers
#8 Owen Beck (Peterborough Petes/Peterborough, Ontario)
#9 Nate Danielson (Brandon Wheat Kings/Red Deer, Alberta)
#12 Fraser Minten (Saskatoon Blades/Vancouver, British Columbia)
#15 Matt Poitras (Boston Bruins/Ajax, Ontario)
#26 Matthew Savoie (Wenatchee Wild/St. Albert, Alberta)
#28 Conor Geekie (Wenatchee Wild/Yellowhead Municipality, MB)
#29 Brayden Yager (Moose Jaw Warriors/Saskatoon, Saskatchewan)
Defensemen
#2 Tristan Luneau (Anaheim Ducks/Victoriaville, Quebec)
#3 Jake Furlong (Halifax Mooseheads/Labrador City, Newfoundland)
#4 Noah Warren (Victoriaville Tigres/Île Bizard, Quebec)
#5 Oliver Bonk (London Knights/Ottawa, Ontario)
#6 Tanner Molendyk (Saskatoon Blades/Kamloops, British Columbia)
#13 Maveric Lamoureaux (Drummondville Voltigeurs/Hawkesbury, Ontario)
#24 Denton Mateychuk (Moose Jaw Warriors/Emerson-Franklin Municipality, Manitoba)
Goalies
#1 Scott Ratzlaff (Seattle Thunderbirds/Wainwright Municipality, AB)
#30 Mathis Rousseau (Halifax Mooseheads/Boisbriand, Quebec)
#31 Samuel Saint-Hilaire (Sherbrooke Phoenix/Saint-Elzéar-De-Beauce, Quebec)
2 notes · View notes
atlanticcanada · 2 years
Text
New Brunswick tops list of most U-Haul one-way traffic in 2022
According to a recent report by U-Haul, a truck rental company, New Brunswick saw the largest growth of one-way U-Haul traffic in 2022.
The company states this is an indication that moving out east was popular in 2022.
“There are many reasons people are packing up U-Haul trucks and coming to New Brunswick,” stated Devin Mitchell, U-Haul Company of Atlantic Canada president, in a news release. “In the last year, we’ve seen more movement into New Brunswick and the rest of the Maritimes because people are looking for affordable housing and a relaxed lifestyle. The lack of affordable real estate in other provinces is pushing people east.”
New Brunswick saw the greatest net-gain in one-way U-Haul traffic in 2022, announced the company in a news release on Jan. 9. That’s in stark contrast to the year prior, where New Brunswick saw the greatest net loss out of all the provinces.
In 2022, arriving traffic accounted for 51. 1 per cent of all one-way U-Haul trucks coming and going from New Brunswick.
In the company’s 2021 rankings, Alberta came in first. But for 2022, Alberta came in last, representing 49.5 per cent of arriving traffic coming and going from the province.
Here’s where the other provinces ranked:
These are the U-Haul’s 10 top Growth Provinces in Canada in 2022:
1. New Brunswick
2. Quebec
3. Ontario
4. Prince Edward Island
5. Nova Scotia
6. Saskatchewan
7. Manitoba
8. Newfoundland
9. British Columbia
10. Alberta
As well, U-Haul also ranked cities based on one-way U-Haul truck arrivals.
The city of Chatham, Ont., was ranked first, followed by Trois-Rivières in Quebec, and Sarnia, Ont, in terms of net-gains compared to the company’s 2021 list.
Mitchell said that remote work has allowed people to “find cheaper housing outside of the major metropolitan areas.”
“People are trying to find the most affordable places with the lowest cost of living while still being able to access the great outdoor amenities for which Canada is known,” he said in the press release.
Trois Rivieres city of Quebec came at No. 2 in the ranking followed by Sarnia in Ontario, Quebec City and Kelowna city in British Columbia as third, fourth and fifth top growth cities, respectively.
Here are U-Haul’s 25 top growth cities in Canada in 2022:
1. Chatham, ON
2. Trois-Rivières, QC
3. Sarnia, ON
4. Quebec City, QC
5. Kelowna, BC
6. Syndey, NS
7. Greater Sudbury, ON
8. Brantford, ON
9. Montreal, QC
10. Chilliwack, BC
11. North Bay, ON
12. St. Thomas, ON
13. Belleville, ON
14. Saint John, NB
15. Strathroy-Caradoc, ON
16. Camrose, AB
17. Nepean, ON
18. Sherbrooke, QC
19. Salmon Arm, BC
20. Saint-Hubert, QC
21. Penticton, BC
22. Sault Ste. Marie, ON
23. North Vancouver, BC
24. Peterborough, ON
25. Fredericton, NB
METHODOLOGY:
According to U-Haul, the company states their growth index report “is compiled according to the net gain (or loss) of one-way U-Haul trucks arriving in a province or city, versus departing from that province or city, in a calendar year. Migration trends data is compiled from well over two million one-way U-Haul truck transactions that occur annually across Canada and the U.S.”
  Reporting for this story was paid for through The Afghan Journalists in Residence Project funded by Meta.
from CTV News - Atlantic https://ift.tt/V8qIuYz
0 notes
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Olivia + Kevin
These Two + This Day + That Sunset = Epic
Wedding Photography at Crescent Hill Acres by Lambton County Wedding Photographer Daniel McQuillan Photography
0 notes
if-you-fan-a-fire · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media
“Anaesthetic Used By Chicken Thieves,” Toronto Star. September 18, 1931. Page 04. ---- Poultry Drugged to Prevent Noise - Sold in Different Markets --- Special to The Star London, Ont., Sept. 17. - As wholesale chicken thefts continue in Strathroy district, county police believe a highly organized gang is at work employing an anesthetic to quiet birds, and using some farm in London district for a clearing place.
The theory is that after choosing certain hen houses to rob, raiders drive up in a truck in the dead of night, spray the interior of the coop with gas fumes and quickly bag dozens of chickens as they drop from their perch. Agents are used to distribute loot to widely separated markets, where they are quickly sold.
Two latest victims of wholesale poultry raids are John Brady, of Caradoc, whose entire flock of nearly 100 chickens was stolen, and J. McIntyre, Metcalfe township, who lost 60 birds last night. During the last month hundreds of dollars worth of poultry has been stolen.
Albert Johnson, no address pleaded guilty in county police court today to chicken stealing, resulting from an unsuccessful raid in West Nissouri township. There, Max Schweiter, of the 5th concession and his daughter, Ruth, captured Johnson, two other men escaping. Johnson was remanded until Sept. 23 for sentence.
0 notes
wigmund · 6 years
Photo
Tumblr media
From Canadian Wildlife Federation Photo of the Day; July 29, 2018:
American Avocet (Recurvirostra americana) at Strathroy, Ontario’s sewage lagoon
Photographer: Suzanne Southon
11 notes · View notes
kayla1993-world · 3 years
Text
With Mounties due for a pay bump, cash-strapped municipalities seek reprieve from Ottawa
Mounties are due to obtain a chunk of retroactive pay after negotiating their first-ever collective agreement. Some municipalities say the looming income bump will stress their budget — and they prefer Ottawa to step up.
This summer, the federal government and the union representing RCMP participants ratified an agreement to deliver a large pay increase to nearly 20,000 members. Constables — who account for more than half of all RCMP officers — will see their maximum earnings jump from $86,110 as of April 2016 to $106,576 next year.
The deal also lays out retroactive pay increases going back to 2017. The RCMP last updated its wage scale in 2016. According to the agreement, the prices of pay will change within 90 days of Aug. 6, when the collective agreement was signed. It's then up to the RCMP to make its "best effort" to enforce the retroactive payable amounts within 270 days of signing.
The Federation of Canadian Municipalities (FCM) says communities that pay the RCMP for policing services are growing alarmed over the agreement's cost. "It's widespread coast to coast to coast and our municipalities are really very concerned, very, very concerned," said FCM president Joanne Vanderheyden, also the mayor of the municipality of Strathroy-Caradoc in Ontario.
"This problem is really urgent given the possible impacts on municipal finances." The RCMP is a federal organization but it offers policing services, under contract, to eight provinces, all three territories, about 150 municipalities and more than 600 Indigenous communities.
The price of the RCMP's offerings — including salaries and equipment — is split between the federal government and other levels of government. How much a municipality is on the hook for depends on its size.
Municipalities with populations of less than 15,000 pay 70 per cent of the costs, while the federal government can pay 30 per cent. Municipalities with more than 15,000 residents pay 90 per cent. Vanderheyden said that while negotiations on the collective agreement were happening behind closed doors, municipalities were advised through the federal government to set money aside to cover the expected pay hike.
"Well, the percentage was way too low," she said, adding the retroactive pay also came as a surprise to most mayors. "We are really not against collective bargaining. That's not it. It's when you're not at the table and the direct impact comes to you."
The FCM has written a letter to the federal government asking it to absorb all retroactive costs associated with the collective agreement. Without federal help, Vanderheyden said, "municipalities will be forced to make quite difficult decisions because they're either along have to make cuts to their imperative services or bypass it alongside to the property tax, local residents. Because they can't go into arrears, they can't go to deficits."
Peter Brown, mayor of Airdrie in Alberta, said that while he firmly supports paying RCMP officers more, he was surprised by the final price tag. He said his city, just north of Calgary, has budgeted and held money back over the past few years but nonetheless has only about half of what it wishes to cover the added policing costs.
"The message from me is, recognize that we've all been hit. We're all suffering," he said, referring to the pandemic. Malcolm Brodie, mayor of Richmond, B.C., said his municipality estimates the retroactive pay lump sum will cost it something between $9 million and $11 million, plus the annual pay increase itself.
"What that means for us is to cover that the amount going forward on our budget, it is about a one-time 2.5 to 3.5 per cent tax increase," he said. "We certainly have stayed with the RCMP for a good reason. We think that they've achieved a proper job for our community. Having said that, you know, it's getting a whole lot more expensive."
A spokesperson for the federal Department of Public Safety said the department has kept in touch with regions with RCMP contracts on a normal basis since 2018. "Contracting jurisdictions were aware that the salary of RCMP officers had been frozen since 2016 and that the collective bargaining process began in 2020. With the new collective agreement for RCMP regular members and reservists, salaries are in line with other police services across Canada," said Tim Warmington.
"It is fair for regular members and reservists as well as reasonable for Canadian taxpayers."
0 notes
Text
THE MAN UNDER THE UNIFORM: Part 1: Young Art Curry: The first 25 years
(Volume 24-01)
By Bob Gordon
General Sir Arthur Currie. The Canadian Corps’ first and only Canadian commander. The first full general in the Canadian Army (1919). Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St. Michael and St. George, and Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath (Britain); Chevalier of the Legion of Honour and Croix de guerre (France); Knight of the Order of the Crown and Croix de Guerre (Belgium); Distinguished Service Medal (United States).
A century later, the accolades still echo. Royal Military Academy Sandhurst instructor Christopher Pugsley describes Currie as “perhaps the most brilliant corps commander of the war,” who led “the most effective fighting formation among the British armies on the Western Front, superior in performance to its vaunted Australian contemporary in terms of organisation, tactical efficiency and staying power.”
This “most effective fighting formation,” the Canadian Corps, first took to the gas-soaked fields of the Ypres salient in April 1915. During the last hundred days, they spent three months at the sharp end as the shock troops of the Empire. Their route from novice to master of the arts of Ares was once seen as a simple, linear progression with the Canadian forces consistently and persistently growing in combat effectiveness. More recently, the variability, inconsistency and irregularity of change have been emphasized. Evolutionary dead ends, explored and abandoned, have been identified. Periods of sudden and revolutionary change (January to April 1917) are also evident. Today, historians concur the march to the final Hundred Days Offensive was anything but straight for the Canadian Corps.
Its leader, General Sir Arthur Currie, the man under the uniform, has never been granted a similar, measured reappraisal. In the immediate wake of the Great War, former Minister of Militia Sam Hughes slagged Currie, all but branding him a vainglorious butcher. Initially, much attention was directed at dismissing these accusations as baseless. More recent analyses have focused on his achievements as he progressed from brigadier to corps commander. The narrow focus has been on his military career, and one such assessment is even subtitled “A Military Biography.” Moreover, as was once the case with the corps itself, they suggest an unvarying and inexorable rate of ascent: A career simply destined to greatness.
From whence this apparent military genius arose has remained unexplored or, like an elephant in the room, been politely ignored. Was he a failed land developer and embezzler? A frustrated lawyer? A dedicated militia officer and daring entrepreneur? A chance confluence of man and circumstance? Was he all of the above or none of the above?
This series will tack this way, exploring Currie’s civilian life from his youth in Ontario through his financial coming of age in Victoria. This portrait of Currie to age 40 in 1914, when his military, as opposed to militia, career commenced will provide a lens through which his military biography will be reinterpreted. Currie was hardly wet behind the ears when he went to war. He was approaching 40. He was on the verge of retiring from the militia. He was a self-made man of considerable influence socially, politically and financially, precarious as the latter may have been by 1914. These life experiences were foundational to Currie’s success with the Canadian Corps.
According to the Dictionary of Canadian Biography: “Arthur Currie’s paternal grandparents, John Corrigan and Jane Garner, a Roman Catholic and an Anglican, fled religious intolerance in Ireland to farm in Adelaide Township, Upper Canada. Upon their arrival in 1838, the Corrigans changed their name to Curry and became Methodists ... The elder son, William Garner Curry, married Jane Patterson in 1868.” William Curry was relatively affluent and held numerous local government positions. Born from this union on December 5, 1875, on the family farm near Napperton, six kilometres west of Strathroy, in Adelaide Township, was William Arthur Curry. He would not change his name to Currie until he was a militiaman and, reportedly, tired of the jokes about spicy food that were told at his expense in the mess and orderly room.
Curry began his education in a one-room schoolhouse in Napperton, Ontario. Apparently a promising student, he moved on to Strathroy Collegiate at the age of 14. On October 23, 1891, 15-year-old Arthur’s father, William, unexpectedly died from an “inflammation of the bowels” at the age of 46. The [Strathroy] Age, describing William Curry as “well known” with “numerous friends,” noted that “the funeral on Sunday last was one of the largest ever seen in the township, 165 rigs being in the procession.” Not surprising, considering that William had served as a township councillor, school board trustee, was deputy reeve at the time and owned a 300-acre farm.
In the wake of this tragic event Curry left Strathroy Collegiate and entered the Model School, earning a 3rd Class Teaching Certificate. His biographers imply that this abandonment of his dream of becoming a lawyer was necessitated by strained financial conditions following his father’s death.
However, circumstantial evidence tends to undermine this assertion. The Currys were a reasonably affluent family and they seem to have remained financially stable and secure following William’s death. Crystal Loyst, Museum Collections and Research Coordinator at the Museum Strathroy-Caradoc, has stated that, “As for the farm, the original plot was divided into two – William Currie [an older brother of Arthur’s] lived on the west half of the west half of lot 15 con 5 SER and his brother T.O. Currie lived on the east half of the west half of lot 15 Con 5 (by the map, however other records state Lot 14) … Arthur’s cousin Harold owned the property next door.” Under these conditions, it is difficult to see penury driving Arthur out of school.
Regardless, leave he did, only to discover positions for a novice pedagog with a 3rd Class Teaching Certificate were few and far between. By November 1892, he had returned to the Collegiate hoping to achieve his honours and qualify for admission to a university.
As treasurer of the Strathroy Collegiate Institute Literary Society he took an active role in debates as both a disputant and a judge. In November 1892 he failed to demonstrate that “The Indian in North America has suffered more injustice than the Negro.” Four months later, Curry decided against the resolution, “War has caused more destruction and misery to the human race than intemperance.” A story published in his hometown newspaper, The Age Dispatch, on February 27, 1930, headlined “Sir Arthur Retreated Like a Good Soldier,” affirmed his debating prowess. It details his youthful determination to finish his arguments leading him to depart the podium, but circumambulate the room at a slow march, spitting out arguments, before resuming his seat.
Other schoolmates’ reminiscences, published in the Age Dispatch on April 17, 1919, affirm young Curry’s energetic and independent disposition. The article describes him as “the recognized star of the large class of which he was a member,” taking note of both his wit and pugilistic prowess. Proof of the former is provided by the pleasure he took, in later life, as Principal of McGill University, sharing a dram with an economics professor on the faculty by the name of Stephen Leacock. Coincidentally, as a young student teacher Leacock had done a brief placement at Strathroy Collegiate and taught Curry in the early 1890s.
Between Curry’s grades and his extracurricular activities, biographer, and former subordinate on the staff of the Canadian Corps, Hugh Urquhart asserts that the principal regarded his attaining “honours” as a given. Regardless, in May of 1894, weeks shy of graduation, Arthur Curry dropped out and headed west to Vancouver Island. Purportedly, the rather rash decision was precipitated by a dispute with a teacher. Contradicting himself, Urquhart then asserts that it was a premeditated excursion with a total of six young men participating. What is clear is that enough planning was required for Curry to have secured the $25 train fare.
While the timing of Curry’s exodus may have been impetuous, it was hardly Quixotic: he left with a well-defined destination. In Victoria he had arrangements to stay with a maternal great-aunt, Mrs. Orlando Warner, and her husband, a master shipwright from Pugwash, Nova Scotia. He promptly settled into their large house on Alston Street, overlooking the harbour.  The welcome was warm enough that Curry remained for 16 months while he qualified for a BC teaching certificate at which point he took a position teaching in Sydney that paid $60/month. The local trustees were impressed with his abilities, noting particularly his classroom management along with his students’ deportment and discipline.
As soon as possible, upon securing a job at Victoria Boys’ Central School, he returned to the city. One year later he moved to Victoria High School. This apparently lateral move was actually a step up for Curry as the high school had a more prestigious reputation and drew its students from the most affluent and influential families in Victoria. Curry would remain there into a fourth school year. It was during this period that he began spelling his name Currie.
In the winter of 1899–1900, Currie’s teaching career was interrupted by a prolonged illness. Apparently, Currie used the down time to contemplate his future. Probably with an eye to marrying, he left teaching, concluding it offered prestige but not pounds sterling. In the spring of 1900, presumably capitalizing on connections made with students’ parents, Currie reinvented himself as an insurance salesman joining Matson and Coles, a prominent Victoria firm.
Liberal Prime Minister Wilfred Laurier claimed the new century for Canada: “As the 19th century was that of the United States, so I think the 20th century shall be filled by Canada.” Currie, a life-long Liberal, set out to personify this dictum in the century’s first dozen years.
 Next month: Currie’s affluence, influence and profile all grow exponentially. Ascending to the top of Victoria society, Currie is staring into a financial abyss when European rivalries and violence erupt into global war in the summer of 1914.
0 notes
goalhofer · 1 year
Text
2023 NHL Draft Results Picks 1-50
1st overall, Chicago: Connor Bedard (Regina Pats/North Vancouver, British Columbia) 2nd overall, Anaheim: Leo Carlsson (Örebro H.K./Karlstad, Sweden) 3rd overall, Columbus: Adam Fantilli (University Of Michigan Wolverines/King Township, Ontario) 4th overall, San José: Will Smith (USNTDP/Lexington, Massachusetts) 5th overall, Montreal: David Reinbacher (E.H.C. Kloten/Hohenems, Austria) 6th overall, Arizona: Dmitriy Simashev (K.K. Lokomotiv/Kostroma, Russia) 7th overall, Philadelphia: Matvei Michkov (K.K. S.K.A./Perm, Russia) 8th overall, Washington: Ryan Leonard (USNTDP/Amherst, Massachusetts) 9th overall, Detroit: Nate Danielson (Brandon Wheat Kings/Red Deer, Alberta) 10th overall, St. Louis: Dalibor Dvorský (Allmänna Idrottsklubben Ishockeyförening/Zvolen, Slovakia) 11th overall, Vancouver: Tom Willander (Rögle Bandyklubb J20/Stockholm, Sweden) 12th overall, Arizona: Daniil But (K.K. Lokomotiv/Yaroslavl, Russia) 13th overall, Buffalo: Zach Benson (Winnipeg Ice/Langley, British Columbia) 14th overall, Pittsburgh: Brayden Yager (Moose Jaw Warriors/Saskatoon, Saskatchewan) 15th overall, Nashville: Matthew Wood (University Of Connecticut Huskies/Lethbridge, Alberta) 16th overall, Calgary: Samuel Honzek (Vancouver Giants/Trenčín, Slovakia) 17th overall, Detroit: Axel Sandin-Pellikka (Skellefteå A.I.K./Gällivare Stad, Sweden) 18th overall, Winnipeg: Colby Barlow (Owen Sound Attack/Orillia, Ontario) 19th overall, Chicago: Oliver Moore (USNTDP/Mounds View, Minnesota) 20th overall, Seattle: Eduard Šalé (H.K. Kometa Brno/Brno, Czech Republic) 21st overall, Minnesota: Charlie Stramel (University Of Wisconsin, Madison Badgers/Rosemount, Minnesota) 22nd overall, Philadelphia: Oliver Bonk (London Knights/Ottawa, Ontario) 23rd overall, New York Rangers: Gabe Perreault (USNTDP/Sherbrooke, Quebec) 24th overall, Nashville: Tanner Molendyk (Saskatoon Blades/Kamloops, British Columbia) 25th overall, St. Louis: Otto Stenberg Frölunda Hockeyklubb/Stenungsud Stad, Sweden) 26th overall, San José: Quentin Musty (Sudbury Wolves/Hamburg, New York) 27th overall, Colorado: Calum Ritchie (Oshawa Generals/Brampton, Ontario) 28th overall, Toronto: Easton Cowan (London Knights/Strathroy-Caradoc, Ontario) 29th overall, St. Louis: Theo Lindstein (Brynäs I.F./Gävle, Sweden) 30th overall, Carolina: Bradly Nadeau (Penticton Vees/Saint-François-De-Madawaska, New Brunswick) 31st overall, Colorado: Mikhail Gulyayev (K.K. Avangard/Novosibirsk, Russia) 32nd overall, Vegas: David Edstrom (Frölunda Hockeyklubb/Göteborg, Sweden) 33rd overall, Anaheim: Nico Myatovic (Seattle Thunderbirds/Prince George, British Columbia) 34th overall, Columbus: Gavin Brindley (University Of Michigan Wolverines/Lee County, Florida) 35th overall, Chicago: Adam Gajan (Chippewa Steel/Poprad, Slovakia) 36th overall, San José: Kasper Halttunen (H.I.F.K./Helsinki, Finland) 37th overall, Tampa Bay: Ethan Gauthier (Sherbrooke Phoenix/Drummondville, Quebec) 38th overall, Arizona: Michael Hrabal (University Of Massachusetts, Amherst Minutemen/Prague, Czech Republic) 39th overall, Buffalo: Anton Wahlberg (Malmö Rödhökar/Malmö, Sweden) 40th overall, Washington: Andrew Cristall (Kelowna Rockets/Vancouver, British Columbia) 41st overall, Detroit: Trey Augustine (Michigan State University Spartans/South Lyon, Michigan) 42nd overall, Detroit: Andrew Gibson (Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds/LaSalle, Ontario) 43rd overall, Nashville: Felix Nilsson (Rögle Bandyklubb J20/Stockholm, Sweden) 44th overall, Chicago: Roman Kantserov (Stalnye Lisy/Magnitogorsk, Russia) 45th overall, Buffalo: Maxim Štrbák(Michigan State University Spartans/Košice, Slovakia) 46th overall, Nashville: Kalan Lind (Red Deer Rebels/Swift Current, Saskatchewan) 47th overall, Detroit: Brady Cleveland (USNTDP/Wausau, Wisconsin) 48th overall, Calgary: Étienne Morin (Moncton Wildcats/Salaberry-De-Valleyfield, Quebec) 49th overall, New York Islanders:: Danny Nelson (USNTDP/Maple Grove, Minnesota) 50th overall, Seattle: Carson Rehkopf (Kitchener Rangers/Barrie, Ontario)
1 note · View note
goalhofer · 1 year
Text
2023 IIHF Worlds Canada Roster
Wingers
#17 Milan Lučić (Calgary Flames/Vancouver, British Columbia)
#22 Jack Quinn (Buffalo Sabres/Whitewater Region Township, Ontario)
#63 Jake Neighbours (St. Louis Blues/Airdrie, Alberta)
#67 Lawson Crouse (Arizona Coyotes/Strathroy-Caradoc, Ontario)
#73 Tyler Toffoli (Calgary Flames/Toronto, Ontario)
#79 Sammy Blais (St. Louis Blues/Montmagny, Quebec)
#91 Adam Fantilli (University Of Michigan Wolverines/King Township, ON)
Centers
#8 Cody Glass (Nashville Predators/Winnipeg, Manitoba)
#11 Jack McBain (Arizona Coyotes/Toronto, Ontario)
#19 Peyton Krebs (Buffalo Sabres/Valleyview, Alberta)
#21 Scott Laughton (Philadelphia Flyers/Oakville, Ontario)
#90 Joe Veleno (Detroit Red Wings/Kirkland, Quebec)
Defensemen
#7 Pierre-Olivier Joseph (Pittsburgh Penguins/Chambly, Quebec)
#20 Justin Barron (Montreal Canadiens/Halifax, Nova Scotia)
#52 MacKenzie Weegar (Calgary Flames/Ottawa, Ontario)
#57 Tyler Myers (Vancouver Canucks/Calgary, Alberta)
#74 Ethan Bear (Vancouver Canucks/Ochapowace, Saskatchewan)
#96 Jake Walman (Detroit Red Wings/Providence, Rhode Island)
Goalies
#27 Devon Levi (Buffalo Sabres/Dollard-Des-Ormeaux, Quebec)
#30 Joel Hofer (Springfield Thunderbirds/Winnipeg, Manitoba)
#35 Sam Montembeault (Montreal Canadiens/Bécancour, Quebec)
1 note · View note
goalhofer · 1 year
Text
2022-23 Henderson Silver Knights Roster
Wingers
#11 Ivan Morozov (Verkhnyaya Salda, Russia)**
#37 Spencer Foo (Edmonton, Alberta)*
#46 Jonas Røndbjerg (Hørsholm, Denmark)
#54 Jermaine Loewen (Woodlands Municipality, Manitoba)
#56 Sheldon Rempal (Calgary, Alberta)
#60 Connor Ford (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)
#64 Sakari Manninen (Oulu, Finland)**
#67 Kyle Marino (Niagara Falls, Ontario)*
#72 Gage Quinney (Las Vegas, Nevada)
#77 Maxim Marushev (Saratov, Russia)
Centers
#24 Brendan Brisson (Manhattan Beach, California)
#47 Patrick Guay (Magog, Quebec)**
#48 Gemel Smith (Toronto, Ontario)*
#51 Byron Froese (Winkler, Manitoba)*
#79 Colt Conrad (Brandon, Manitoba)
Defensemen
#5 Daniil Chayka (Moscow, Russia)**
#40 Lukas Cormier (Kent County, New Brunswick)**
#42 Daniil Miromanov (Moscow, Russia)
#44 Layton Ahac (North Vancouver, British Columbia)
#45 Jake Bischoff (Grand Rapids, Minnesota) A
#65 Dysin Mayo (Victoria, British Columbia)*
#84 Brandon Hickey (Leduc, Alberta)
#85 Connor Corcoran (Markham, Ontario)
#87 Noah Carroll (Strathroy-Caradoc, Ontario)**
#94 Brayden Pachal (Estevan, Saskatchewan) C
Goalies
#30 Jiří Patera (Prague, Czech Republic)
#31 Isaiah Saville (Anchorage, Alaska)**
#34 Jesper Vikman (Stockholm, Sweden)**
0 notes
goalhofer · 2 years
Text
2022-23 Arizona Coyotes Roster
Wingers
#9 Clayton Keller (St. Clair County, Illinois) A
#11 Dylan Guenther (Edmonton, Alberta)**
#12 Nick Ritchie (Orangeville, Ontario)
#36 Christian Fischer (Chicago, Illinois) A
#44 Zack Kassian (Windsor, Ontario)*
#63 Matias Maccelli (Turku, Finland)**
#67 Lawson Crouse (Strathroy-Caradoc, Ontario) A
Centers
#8 Nick Schmaltz (Verona, Wisconsin)
#17 Nick Bjugstad (Blaine, Minnesota)*
#22 Jack McBain (Toronto, Ontario)**
#29 Barrett Hayton (Peterborough, Ontario)
#38 Liam O’Brien (Halifax, Nova Scotia)
#72 Travis Boyd (Hopkins, Minnesota)
Defensemen
#2 Patrik Nemeth (Stockholm, Sweden)*
#3 Josh Brown (London, Ontario)*
#4 Juuso Välimäki (Tampere, Finland)*
#6 Jakob Chychrun (Boca Raton, Florida)
#14 Shayne Gostisbehere (Parkland, Florida)
#51 Troy Stecher (Richmond, British Columbia)
#61 Dysin Mayo (Victoria, British Columbia)
#90 J.J. Moser (Biel-Bienne, Switzerland)
Goalies
#39 Connor Ingram (Saskatoon, Saskatchewan)**
#70 Karel Vejmelka (Třebíč, Czech Republic)
0 notes
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Heather + John
Well this was definitely the first Surprise Wedding I have ever been a part of!  The excitement of it was overwhelming - I was so deep undercover at their ‘engagement party’ that John didn’t even know I was the wedding photographer at first! hahaha Wedding in Strathroy, Ontario by Sarnia Wedding Photographer Daniel McQuillan Photography
0 notes
goalhofer · 2 years
Text
2021-22 NHL Western Conference All-Names Team
Forwards
#11 Taylor Raddysh (Chicago Blackhawks/Caledon, Ontario)
#12 Radek Faksa (Dallas Stars/Vítkov, Czech Republic)
#13 Yakov Trenin (Nashville Predators/Chelyabinsk, Russia)
#16 Jujhar Khaira (Chicago Blackhawks/Surrey, British Columbia)
#18 Michael Raffl (Dallas Stars/Villach, Austria)
#24 Roope Hintz (Dallas Stars/Tampere, Finland)
#28 Mackenzie MacEachern (St. Louis Blues/Bloomfield Hills, Michigan)
#32 Rem Pitlick (Minnesota Wild/Plymouth, Minnesota)
#37 Sam Lafferty (Chicago Blackhawks/Hollidaysburg, Pennsylvania)
#44 Kiefer Sherwood (Colorado Avalanche/Columbus, Ohio)
#67 Lawson Crouse (Arizona Coyotes/Strathroy-Caradoc, Ontario)
#75 Sampo Ranta (Colorado Avalanche/Naantali, Finland)
#77 Kirby Dach (Chicago Blackhawks/Ft. Saskatchewan, Alberta)
#83 Jay Beagle (Arizona Coyotes/Calgary, Alberta)
#86 Mike Hardman (Chicago Blackhawks/Hanover, Massachusetts)
#88 Andrew Mangiapane (Calgary Flames/Caledon, Ontario)
#91 Cole Perfetti (Winnipeg Jets/Whitby, Ontario)
#93 Dmitrij Jaškin (Arizona Coyotes/Vsetín, Czech Republic)
Defensemen
#2 Niko Mikkola (St. Louis Blues/Kiiminki, Finland)
#3 Jack Johnson III (Colorado Avalanche/Bloomfield Hills, Michigan)
#4 Neal Pionk (Winnipeg Jets/Hermantown, Minnesota)
#5 Urho Vaakanainen (Anaheim Ducks/Joensuu, Finland)
#6 Erik Gudbranson (Calgary Flames/Ottawa/Ontario)
#55 Mat Dumba (Minnesota Wild/Regina, Saskatchewan)
#58 Oliver Kylington (Calgary Flames/Stockholm, Sweden)
#61 Dysin Mayo (Arizona Coyotes/Victoria, British Columbia)
#92 Andrej Šustr (Anaheim Ducks/Plzeň, Czech Republic)
Goalies
#34 Kaapo Kähkönen (Minnesota & San Jose/Helsinki, Finland)
#35 Thatcher Demko (Vancouver Canucks/San Diego, California)
#80 Daniel Vladař (Calgary Flames/Prague, Czech Republic)
0 notes