Wednesday 20 July 2011

Third time lucky for Cloutier as Ondrej completes import line-up


Excel Hull Stingrays player-coach Sylvain Cloutier has today completed his ten strong import quota for 11/12 Elite League campaign, signing all-around blueliner Martin Ondrej at the third time of asking.

The 27 year old joins the Stingrays from Italian Serie B club Milano Rossoblu - where he registered 11 points in 21 games last season - less than a year after rejecting Cloutier in favour of joining the Italian side.

Having initially attempted to sign the 6'1 defenceman while coaching the CHL's Corpus Christi Ice Rayz, the Hull boss went back in for Ondrej last season after form which saw his side win just twice in 15 fixtures in the opening two months of the season, however, he was disappointingly rejected for a second time.

Nevertheless, Ondrej has now agreed the join the Elite League club at the second time of asking, and Cloutier at the third time of asking, signing as part of a three strong import defence which also contains 33 year old American Joshua Mizerek and 36 year old Estonian Dmitri Suur.

It is hoped the experienced pair, together with Ondrej - who has played in Slovakia, North America and Italy - will help blood young British blueliners Daniel Scott (18) and Sam McCluskey (20), who will be entering their first and second full seasons in the British top flight respectively.

The Slovak defenceman began his career in 03/04 with hometown side HC Presov, recording 14 points and 143 penalty minutes in 38 games during his debut year before moving on to the Slovakian top flight the following season, icing in 29 games with Zilina.

He returned home to Presov in 06/07 upping his points total to 15 in 29 games but moved to North America the next year, signing for Flint Generals, then of the United Hockey League, alongside former Stingray Ryan Jorde. He spent the best part of three years in Flint, Michigan, attending the NHL's Detriot Red Wings training camp in 2008 - as a result of their affiliation with the Generals.


He went on to record ten goals, 67 points and 380 penalty minutes with Flint before being traded to Kalamazoo Wings - where he eventually hit ten points in 28 game - in February 2009 in exchange for former Coventry defenceman Jason Robinson and another player.

Ondrej has since spent the majority of the past two years in Presov, Slovakia - hitting the 110 appearance mark with his hometown side - making a bit part appearance with top flight side Zilina in 09/10 before chosing Milan over Hull at the last minute last November.

Having tried to sign him on two other occasions, Cloutier is clearly a fan of Ondrej and likens him to former hard-hitting, hard-working Stingray defenceman Stephen Burns - who also plied his trade in Italy last season:
"He's just one of those players you want to try and sign. He plays physical and he battles - a bit like a Steve Burns type but with a more offensive side and he sees the ice better. He's a competitor every night. He's not a fighter or a tough guy, but he plays hard and physical and makes it a pain in the butt for the opposition."
Meanwhile Kalamazoo head coach Nick Bootland - who traded former EIHLer Robinson for Ondrej in 2009 - said:
"I know he has the ability to play against top lines. He's a tough player to play against. He's a guy, when you play against him, you hate him. When he's on your team, you love him. He has that mentality. He's chippy, he plays on the edge, but he also moves the puck well. He shoots the puck when it's the right time to shoot the puck."
Noted for his tough, physical style of defensive play, the Rays newest recruit and final import appears to be the most complete of the club's three foreign defencemen, capable of both an offensive punch as well as defensive solidity. The most obvious question mark over the Slovakian - whose signature officially confirms that Trevor Read, Kurtis Dulle, Drew Bannister, Aivars Gaisins and Jozef Sladok will not be returning to Hull next season - appears to be his high penalty count, which currently stands at over 800 in minutes in eight seasons of play, although this may partially be down to his "on the edge" mentality.

As well as Suur and Mizerek, Ondrej joins netminder Christian Boucher, and forwards Dominic Osman, Frantisek Bakrlik, Derek Campbell, Jason Silverthorn, Jereme Tendler and player-coach Cloutier on the ten strong import roster - down from 11 last season. He also becomes the third non-Brit European on the roster after Czech forward Bakrlik and Estonian Suur.

 

The Rays boss appears to have opted for the tried and tested method of signing former team mates and former opponents, with which he knows what he is getting. While many EIHL clubs will opt for foreign contingent made up largely of Central Hockey League talent, 'Clouts' has stuck with what he knows with the only other doubt cast over the three European signings given the relative levels they have joined the club from in Italy and Poland.
"I've tried to stay familiar with the group. You can listen to five people and they'll tell you how great someone is," he said. "You can get them over here and think 'oh, what have we got here?' and you think 'I guess those guys were just being five nice people'."
The roster for the 11/12 EIHL season now sits at 19 players, including four netminders - two on two-way contracts - five defencemen and ten forwards, with a British player and a further couple, two-way contracted British players expected to be the final pieces in the puzzle for Cloutier. Pre-season kicks off in little more than a months time with a home-away double header with ownership rivals Coventry.

BREAKING NEWS: Ondrej completes import line-up

Excel Hull Stingrays player-coach Sylvain Cloutier has today completed his ten strong import quota for 11/12 Elite League campaign, signing all-around blueliner Martin Ondrej at the third time of asking.

More soon...

Friday 15 July 2011

Stingrays add fourth netminder and fifth pre-season fixture

The Excel Hull Stingrays have today announced the signing of former GB junior international Ben Bowns on a two-way contract from English Premier League side Sheffield Steeldogs alongside the news that they will take on the Steeldogs at Ice Sheffield on 30 August as part of their pre-season preparations.

Bowns, 20, was called up to Paul Thompson's senior national side as reserve netminder for April's World Championships in Ukraine having thoroughly impressed in four years with GB U18's and U20's. Last year the EPL stopper claimed netminder of the tournament at the U20 Division 1 Worlds having recorded a 90.9sv.% in 50 games as the underdog Steeldogs edged into the playoffs in eighth place.

He joins the Stingrays on a loan deal from his hometown Sheffield - where he has been since starting his career in 06/07 - and, although he is unlikely to make regular appearances in the blue and yellow, he will gain valuable experience training and backing up starter Christian Boucher in the Elite League when the Steeldogs are without a game.

Rays player-coach Sylvain Cloutier spoke of his first two-way signing of the summer:
"I am delighted to have Ben on board and to be able to help further his development. He will be on a two-way contract between us and the Sheffield Steeldogs and we have signed him in case of an emergency as we already have Andy Brummitt backing up Christian Boucher”.

With Andy Brummitt signed up to ice for both the Stingrays and English National League side Kingston Jets, and Hull born keeper Liam Jackson also training with Cloutier's side, the club is evidently taking different route with its backup netminding situation this season.

Previously - as is the case at the majority of Elite League clubs - it is common for a backup keeper to be used very sparingly, normally only when his side is on the receiving end of a thrashing or handing out a beating of its own.

That was the exact situation last season in Hull - when backup Andy Jaszczyk icing in just three games, mostly against a lacklustre Edinburgh side - however, with Brummitt, Jackson and Bowns all mixing Elite League time with lower league experience, the club and Cloutier instead look to be trying to develop a number of options next season.

Bowns has fast become a big prospect in British hockey, and Steeldogs coach Andre Payette told the Sheffield Star he believes Bowns can take his game to the next level:
"Ben is fast becoming as good as Elite League imports. We will lose him at some stage, but for now his main responsibility is Steeldogs - he can train and play for Hull when we’re not playing.”
Meanwhile, the Stingrays have also announced that their fifth pre-season fixture of the summer will see them take on the Bowns' Steeldogs in Sheffield on Tuesday 30 August (7.30pm).

The two clubs last met at Ice Sheffield in a pre-season encounter prior to the 09/10 season - Cloutier's first season in Hull - when a nine import Rays came away with a hard-fought 2-0 victory over the one import EPL side. In that game Bowns and former Hull favourite Pasi Raitanen played a big part in keeping the score to two as Tommy Sandahl notched his first and only shutout with the club and Adam Knight also impressed on his debut.

The Steeldogs will have at least three former Stingrays in their line-up in August following the signings of Ukrainian Pavel Gomenyuk, first year Ray Stuart Brittle and last season's Andy Hirst - who has returned to Sheffield.

Stingrays pre-season will see them take on Coventry home and away on the weekend of August 27 and 28, Steeldogs on Tuesday August 30 and Tilburg and Geleen on September 3 and 4 respectively.

The signing of Bowns and arrangement of the pre-season fixture only heightens speculation that the two clubs are set to announce an official link that will see tighter links between the two clubs.

Last season the Steeldogs controversially bypassed links to Elite League neighbours Sheffield Steelers in favour of their players icing in Hull. Forward Hirst made the move from two-way contractee to a full time Stingray, and Chris Sykes and Hull born Craig Elliott, amongst others, also made the trip up the M18 for ice-time, and it is thought this looks set to continue next season.

Wednesday 13 July 2011

Fan favourite Lake returns

Energetic, fan favourite Ryan Lake has today become the only British returnee from the Excel Hull Stingrays 10/11 EIHL campaign, joining Sylvain Cloutier's side for another year following the departure of no fewer than six British players.


27 year old Lake - who last season netted a valuable five goals and five assists on his return to the sport following four years away - becomes the sole homegrown returnee after Craig and Lee Mitchell, Andy Hirst, Lee Esders, Ben Lowe and Andy Jaszczyk all left the club this summer.

Those six have been replaced by five new recruits in Andy Brummitt (Chelmsford), Sam McCluskey, Tristan Cameron-Harper (Dundee), Jack Watkins (Telford) and Bobby Chamberlain (North America) with at most two more British players and a couple of players on two-way contracts likely to join up with the squad ahead of the Elite League September start.

Lake, having fallen out of love with the sport in 05/06 after recording ten goals and 16 points in 31 games during the Rays torrid season in the EPL, returned to the ice last summer and took no time to settle back in at Hull Arena, netting in the club's opening two games against Cardiff and Braehead.


With a fearless attitude, the speedy winger once again proved a hit, eventually growing into his familiar role as a third line pocket rocket after initially being used somewhat sparingly in the season's opening weeks.

Despite rumours earlier in the summer that he was looking to play a bigger role at this, or if it came to it another club, Cloutier was today excited to confirm the signature of the Hull favourite, saying:
"He's a spark plug. He brings energy to the team, and he'll get better this year having got last season under his belt. He's one of our veteran Brits, and I'm just excited to have him back. He comes to play every night, and does anything you ask him to."
Named British Player of the Season by fans last year, he is clearly highly thought of by both fans and management, and while popular, he is also mightily effective in the physical, agitator role thanks to his fearless, gung-ho style of play. Size and stature wise he may not be the most intimidating of players, but that style of play was invaulable for a timid Stingrays side that lacked physicality all too often last season. Admittedly that is an area Cloutier has looked to address this summer.

A 20 plus goal target may be unrealistic, however, provided he is made available more regularly and is given more ice-time and responsibility by the Rays coach, double figures are certainly not out of the question for the former Great Britain international.

Fan favourite Lake returns

Energetic, fan favourite Ryan Lake has today become the only British returnee from the Excel Hull Stingrays 10/11 campaign, returning to Sylvain Cloutier's side for another year following the departure of no fewer than six British players.

The 27 year old forward - who last season netted a valuable five goals and five assists on his return to the sport following four years away - becomes the sole homegrown returnee after Craig and Lee Mitchell, Andy Hirst, Lee Esders, Ben Lowe and Andy Jaszczyk all left the club this summer.

More soon...

Tuesday 12 July 2011

P&O Cup set to return and complete Rays pre-season with double Dutch weekend


V
 


 The Coventry Blaze have today confirmed the revival of the P&O Cup - first played in Hull in 09/10 - with the announcement that the third year of the tournament - set for September 3 and 4 - will feature the Excel Hull Stingrays, ownership rivals and hosts the Blaze and Dutch sides Tilburg Trappers and Geleen Eaters.

The tournament will end Sylvain Cloutier's Stingrays four game pre-season for the 11/12 EIHL season the week after their home and away double header against the Blaze on August 27 and 28 and will see them take on Tilburg on September 3 and Geleen Eaters for the first time on September 4, both at the Skydome Arena, Convetry.

The Rays, under previous owners Mike and Sue Pack, organised and won the inaugural event following up a 4-3 win over Tilburg with a exciting 3-2 final victory over EIHL rivals Nottingham Panthers, who had previously thrashed the Trappers.

09/10 P&O Cup - Stingrays v Nottingham

However, having originally planned for the tournament to return to Hull last summer - in a renewed format that allegedly may have seen Belfast Giants join the original three teams - the Rays were forced to pull out after owners the Packs withdrew their funding of the team.

The tournament continued in a different format regardless with Nottingham edging Tilburg 7-5 at the NIC having initially lead 5-0, with the Dutch side continued their weekend with a fixture against Paul Thompson's Blaze.

This years competition, once agian sponsored by P&O Ferries, will see former Humberside Hawk and current Geleen Eaters coach Chris Eimers return to the UK.

© 9 Management

Last season, Eimers Eaters side - containing former EIHLers Jason Tejchma, Ryan Crane and Marc Lefebvre - finished sixth in the Eredivisie but reached the semi-final stage of the playoffs. Meanwhile, Tilburg ended the year as runners-up in both the league and playoffs, losing out to Joshua Mizerek's HYS Den Haag side in both the regular-season and post-season.

This years Stingrays two-week, four game pre-season is a marked improvement on last campaign, when the Rays were deprived of any warm-up fixtures and forced to move the beginning of their Elite League campaign back to October following the Packs sudden departure and the new ownership groups takeover.

Nevertheless, while it is good news the pre-season competition has been kept alive there have understandably been concerns raised about the Stingrays playing two pre-games in Coventry. Attendance will likely be poor in the Skydome for the two early fixtures featuring the Rays, and with both Dutch sides presumably entering the country at the P&O terminal in Hull it would have made more sense to keep the tournament close-by, particularly after the successful first tournament.

Still, there may have been other influences that affected the decision to stage the competition in Coventry, such as the availability of the Hull Arena, and the early weekend away for Cloutier and his squad will allow time to bond ahead of a 56 game regular season campaign.

Sunday 10 July 2011

Stingrays Five of the Best...10/11

With fixtures out, just a handful of signings remaining and little over a month and a half to go until the puck drops for the 11/12 Elite League campaign, F Block Blog is here to provide Rays fans with a refresher of what it believes were last seasons five best games.

5
26/03/11 - Stingrays 1-2 Cardiff (EIHL Playoff Quarter Final Leg 1)
It was perhaps fate that the Rays were to come up against the only EIHL opposition they hadn't beaten in 10/11 in the first round of the post-season. They took on the Cardiff Devils in just their second ever playoff appearance - the first time they have qualified in their own right - and a tense, chippy game followed as the Rays worked hard to keep it close heading into the second leg. Watch out for Tylor Michel's lovely solo opening goal!


4
03/10/11 Stingrays 3-3 Cardiff Devils
At one point it didn't look like this game would ever take place. Starting late in October following owners Mike and Sue Pack's departure, the Rays opened their 10/11 season against the very same Cardiff Devils side that would cause them so many problems later on in the season. Not a classic per se, but the Rays best result against the South Wales side all season long and an important game in that it saw the sport make an unexpected top flight return to the city after a turbulent summer. See Matti Uusivirta round off a lovely move with a clinical finish for the Rays first of the year.


3
20/03/11 Stingrays 6-1 Nottingham
The Rays saved some of their best for last as they thrashed top side Nottingham on the final weekend of the season. The Panthers - with former Rays head coach Rick Strachan at the helm - entered the weekend with little to play for and started backup Dan Green. Backup or not, the home side outplayed the big spending Nottingham outfit in all areas and deservedly came out on top.



2
04/12/10 Stingrays 7-2 Sheffield
The Steelers took a commanding 2-0 lead early on but the Stingrays came back very strongly and ran out easy winners, condemning the Steelers to their biggest ever Yorkshire derby defeat.


1
21/11/10 Stingrays 3-2 Belfast (OT)
2-0 down in the third, the Rays came back to snatch the win against another of the big spending top four, with Jason Silverthorn scoring a lovely overtime effort to seal the unlikely win.

Friday 8 July 2011

Stingrays get Soupy

Sylvain Cloutier has today completed his Excel Hull Stingrays import forward line-up for the 11/12 campaign with the addition of Elite League power forward Derek Campbell from Yorkshire rivals Sheffield Steelers.

A vastly experienced forward that spent five years in the EIHL, Campbell has lifted the league title twice in the last two years, winning it with Coventry Blaze in 09/10 and the Steelers last season, and comes to Hull with a reputation for his unique blend of offensive output and physicality.

His EIHL career stats say it all. In 252 games played since joining the Elite League's Manchester Phoenix in 06/07, the Nepean, Ontario native has scored 88 goals, added 157 assists for 245 points, seven points from point-a-game form. On the other side of the coin, he has also racked up a massive 1021 penalty minutes, good for just over four penalty minutes-per-game.

The Canadian joins Cloutier, last seasons record scorer Jereme Tendler, ever-consistent Jason Silverthorn, Dominic Bakrlik and new signing from the ECHL Dominic Osman on the import forward roster for next year.

Having spent his formative years in the junior Ontario Hockey League, Campbell moved to St Thomas University in 99/00, combining studying with playing for three years before entering his first fully professional season in 04/05 with Elmira Jackals on the ECHL. He iced for two years in the ECHL, splitting 05/06 between Columbia and Stockton, while being called up for the AHL for his sixth and seventh appearances, but flew across the pond the following year to sign for Tony Hand's Manchester Phoenix - enjoying a career year in all categories as he registered 25 goals and 42 assists for 67 points in 53 games.

The 6'1 winger moved to Newcastle the following year, spending two indifferent seasons on Tyneside, however, while his time in the North East was perhaps his favourite off-ice, by far his most successful spell on-ice has come in the last two seasons as he helped both Coventry and Sheffield secure EIHL league titles, hitting 82 points and 453 penalty minutes along the way.

After spending half-a-decade in the UK, Campbell has become part of the furniture in the Elite League, a entertainer and cannonball of a forward that bounces from incident to incident, whether that be altercation, goal or assist. He's not afraid to drop the gloves or get involved physically but by the same token he is prone drifting in and out of games, and his attitude has been called into question. As an opposition fan last season, Campbell was dangerous and infuriating, most notably silencing Hull Arena with a wonderful individual goal moments after playing jester for the night. All-in-all he is one of the league's most entertaining products but more than that he can also be mightily effective as he has proven in the last two seasons.

Having spent the best part of five years playing against Campbell, Rays player-coach Cloutier is well aware of what he is getting with his final import. Speaking to the Hull Daily Mail he said:
"Derek's one of those players who can play physical and put up numbers, he's the full package. Basically he's a power forward who has averaged a point a game over five seasons in the Elite League. He plays a physical game with an edge which I thought was often missing from our team last season."
Cloutier also addressed possible concerns with Campbell's high penalty count, which currents stands at more than 1000 and will likely rise in the near future:
"I'm not worried at all by Derek's penalty minutes, he plays with an edge and is feisty. He's put up numbers and won the league title in the last two seasons, so he knows what it takes to win. I have been battling against him for five years and know how much he competes. When you play against him you don't want to wake him up. I'm extremely happy to have him on my side and, speaking to our guys, I know they are too."
The final forward import slot, while effectively no different from the previous four, can often be a damp squib in that, in the hope to get the fanbase onboard for the next season the club announces its best players first, leaving the third line forwards as the final announcements. The Stingrays bypassed that trait today, signing a player that - okay, may not be an all conquering offensive forward - but one that ticks all required boxes. Capable of goals - check, physical - check, entertaining - check, willing to protect his teammates - check.

By no means is Campbell perfect - there have been questions over his attitude and application - but he is almost as close to a perfect fit for that final import forward slot as Cloutier could have gotten given the teams needs given last seasons failings.

The club now has just one import slot to fill with a North American defenceman, new to the country, allegedly signed up and waiting to be announced, with a number of Brits also to be signed and announced.

Campbell signs as final import forward

Sylvain Cloutier has today completed his Excel Hull Stingrays import forward lineup for the 10/11 campaign with the addition of experienced EIHL forward Derek Campbell.

Campbell has spent the last five seasons in the Elite League icing for Manchester, Newcastle, Sheffield and Coventry - winning consecutive league titles in the last two seasons with the latter two.

He has recorded 245 points in 252 games along the way, although is perhaps better known for his unpredictable physical style of play which has earned him 1021 PIM's.

More soon..

Wednesday 6 July 2011

Mizerek back for a second crack


33 year old American defenceman Joshua Mizerek has today rejoined the Excel Hull Stingrays, the club he quit 12  months ago following its untimely demise, signing from Dutch Eredivisie side HYS Den Haag.

He becomes the fourth former Adirondack player to join the club following the signatures of fellow blueliner Dmitri Suur, power forward Frantisek Bakrlik and player-coach Sylvain Cloutier, as the head coach looks to recruit known players ahead of his third year in charge in Hull.

The experienced Minnesota native spent four full seasons in the ECHL having graduated from Miami University in Ohio in 99/00, opening up his career in Baton Rogue, where he netted 11 goals and added 18 assists. He went on to ice in more than 250 games in North America's third tier, accumulating 20 goals and 65 points before moving on to the CHL in 04/05.

Mizerek joined up with Bakrlik, Suur and Cloutier in Adirondack for a 55 game spell during 05/06 moving on to ice for CHL side Amarillo Gorillas in 06/07.

He moved overseas in 07/08, opting to sign with HYS Den Haag and lifted the Dutch championship in just his second season, playing a big part in the success recording three goals and four assists in ten games. He hit a career hit in points in 09/10, bagged 36 in 44 games, before Cloutier made an approach to sign the veteran last summer.

Having initially agreed to join the Rays, the right shooting defenceman understandably opted out following owners Mike and Sue Pack's decision to leave with no new owners on the horizon. Although the Rays returned under Coventry ownership, Mizerek returned to Den Haag signing in a role that allowed him to combine playing with coaching of their junior section. On-ice he hit a four year low 24 points but once again captained his side to a Dutch championship, his second in four years at the club.

Mizerek, a pro of some 600 games, looks to have balanced out a backline that looked questionably imbalanced in the experience stakes with Sam McCluskey and Dan Scott combining for just over a 100 appearances and fellow import defenceman Suur hitting above the 650 mark. It is an area of the team that was all too often the weak spot last season but with hard-working all-around blueliner, and likely captain, Mizerek in the ranks there will be at the very least a continual leader in the defensive zone, another thing the club needed so urgently prior to the arrival of, the now departed, Bannister last term. Cloutier said:
"He is just the type of player I want in my team. He is a competitor, he is a leader and he comes to play every night. Miz has won championships before so he knows what it takes. We have recruited a number of players who have won before - it is import to surround the team with those kind of players, ones who care and have a winning attitude. Josh is a solid, all-around defenceman who takes care of his own end and he makes it hard back there for the opposition. He will do a great job for us."
The Rays now require just one import defenceman to complete their five strong blueline although Cloutier may yet sign further reinforcement and injury insurance at the back with a British player.

It is thought that the Rays player-coach has completed his import roster for next season with that defenceman and a forward with EIHL experience signed up and ready to be announced.

Mizerek signs again

33 year old American defenceman Joshua Mizerek has today rejoined the Excel Hull Stingrays, the club he quit 12  months ago following its untimely demise, signing from Dutch Eredivisie side HYS Den Haag.

He becomes the fourth former Adirondack player to join the club following the signatures of fellow blueliner Dmitri Suur, power forward Frantisek Bakrlik and player-coach Sylvain Cloutier, as the head coach looks to recruit known players ahead of his third year in charge in Hull.

More soon...