Showing posts with label Matt Suderman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Matt Suderman. Show all posts

Monday, 2 December 2013

Suderman quits Stingrays

Matt Suderman has today quit the Hull Stingrays citing abuse from fans - primarily but not exclusively online - and the poor standard of refereeing in the Elite League as his reasons for leaving the club.

Suderman - who was the Stingrays captain - leaves having registered just one point and amassed 115 penalty minutes in 22 games for the club.

Wednesday, 4 September 2013

Suderman named Stingrays captain; Silverthorn and Smith re-appointed alternate captains

30 year old defenceman Matt Suderman has been named the Hull Stingrays club captain for the 13/14 Elite League campaign - their 8th in the British top flight.

The Manitoba native - who joined the club this summer following nearly a year and a half out of the sport through illness - takes the 'C' from three-year captain Kurtis Dulle and will be assisted by alternate captains and fellow Canadians Jason Silverthorn and Jeff Smith.

Suderman - who originally joined the Stingrays in 2010 before opting out of joining due to the club's financial issues - has already made quite the impact on the roster according to player-coach Cloutier having been voted to become captain by his fellow teammates:
"This season I felt the guys should pick the captain and the vote went to Matt. You want your captain to lead by example and he will do that. He is a player who comes to work every night, he is a competitor and he battles all night. In the dressing room the guys are already listening when he talks, he has been around for a while and he has a lot of respect. Matt is a character and he is that hard hat-type of player and that is exactly what I want my team to be like. The Hull Stingrays need to have a team full of leaders who compete and battle - if we do that it will give us a chance.
On Smith and Silverthorn's re-appointment as alternate captains, Cloutier added:
"Silver and Smitty have been around a while too. They are experienced guys who come to work every night and also lead by example. I am very happy with the choices."
The Rays open the 13/14 season with an away fixture against the league, playoff and cup champions the Nottingham Panthers. Their first home fixture of the season comes on Sunday against reigning Gardiner Cup champions the Braehead Clan.

Wednesday, 10 July 2013

Stingrays round off 13/14 roster; announce 25th Anniversary game; Dulle done?

The Hull Stingrays line-up for the 2013/2014 Elite Ice Hockey League campaign was all but completed at tonight's fans forum with the announcement from player-coach Sylvain Cloutier that the club has signed up imports Chad Huttel and Matt Suderman, and hometown Brits Lee Bonner and Tom Ralph for the upcoming season.
In 30 year old Suderman it is again a case of Cloutier finally getting his man. The defenceman joins the Stingrays at the second time of asking, having previously agreed to join the club three years ago in 2010 prior to the club's untimely and temporary collapse, eventually joining the Dundee Stars before the Rays resurrection.

A tough defensive defenceman, he has previous experience in the now defunct United Hockey League, Southern Professional Hockey League and, primarily, the Central Hockey League - where he first caught the eye of Cloutier in 08/09 - while he has also spent a season in the Ligue Magnus in France with Morzine-Avoriaz.

A former seventh round draft pick of the Atlanta Thrashers in 2001, the Canadian spent a season north of the border in the Elite League following his spell in France, accumulating a goal and six assists as well as 186 penalty minutes in 57 games. Suderman was an alternate captain in Dundee and impressed enough to agree to return for a second season, only for a serious illness to rule him out of the whole of the 11/12 campaign.

After a year and a half out, he only returned to action in February this year with the SPHL's Mississippi Riverkings - recording an assist in three games - before he was loaned up the North American hockey pyramid for a two game spell in the CHL with the Bloomington Blaze.
At 6'3 and 236lbs, Suderman adds considerable and much needed size and strength to a side who's physical threat was likely to come in the form of Derek Campbell, who will, it is hoped, also be primarily but not solely focused  to produce offensively for the club, player-coach Sylvain Cloutier and fellow defenceman Jeff Smith.

The blueliner is certainly more than happy dropping the gloves if required, having fought on 72 occasions over his junior and professional career - including a high of 12 fights with the CHL's Arizona Sundogs during 07/08. In his last stint in the UK, the rangy Canadian fought on six occasions with two bouts coming against the Stingrays favourite Jozef Sladok.

While his CV from the outset may raise concern - particularly given the amount of time spent out of the sport in the last two seasons - the Canadian is a tough competitor and fills a sizeable hole in the Rays roster. Cloutier will be hoping that Suderman's re-signing turns out better than the last time he re-visited a player initially signed in 2010. On that occasion in 11/12, club captain Josh Mizerek failed to live up to expectations.

Also joining the defensive ranks alongside Suderman, Martin Ondrej, Omar Pasha, Jeff Smith, Jamie Chilcott and Scott Robson on the Rays defence is American blueliner Chad Huttel.

Photo - Sheffield Steelers
Similarly to Suderman, Huttel returns to the UK after time out of the sport. The 24 year old defenceman - who spent his rookie professional campaign with the Sheffield Steelers in 11/12 - joined the Texas based Fort Worth Brahmas on a try-out basis last summer only for an injury to his shoulder to rule him out for the season.

Prior to his three goal, 16 point spell down the M18 two seasons ago, Minnesota native Huttel spent four years at the University of Minnesota-Duluth, recording two goals, eight points and 125 penalty minutes over four seasons and 84 games. He capped a good college career in 10/11 by winning the NCAA national championship in 10/11 with a 3-2 overtime win over Michigan State at the Xcel Enegry Centre in St Paul, Minnesota.
Huttel, centre. Photo Jordan Doffing
Huttel is generally viewed as a gritty, hard working and physical defenceman who plays above his size 5ft 10 frame. In his own words upon signing for Sheffield in 2011:
"I'm a rock solid defenseman. I play things simple, I look to move the puck quickly and get it out of my own zone as fast as possible. I might not be the biggest guy on the team but I love the physical side of the game. I don't back down, I compete. I only know how to give 110%."
The upcoming campaign will be Huttel's second season as a professional as he tries to put the injury problems of last season behind him.

Like Suderman, concerns may be raised over his time out of the sport - and likewise the fragility of a shoulder injury for a physical player - and a lack of offensive production so far in his career - a criticism aimed at him by many fans when he first joined Sheffield. 

However, despite a relative slow start to his professional career in South Yorkshire, Huttel developed into a solid, reliable blueliner in the Elite League in 11/12. Cloutier will be hoping that, with that experience under his belt and the added responsibilities and reliance the Stingrays will naturally put on him, Huttel may prove to be one of the Stingrays most important signings this summer in anchoring the blueline.
Huttel fights former Stingray Andy McKinney. Photo Sheffield Star
The additions of Huttel and Suderman give the Stingrays eight defencemen and 12 imports - including back-up Greg Blais - heading into the 13/14 campaign, thus all but ending any likelihood of popular captain Kurtis Dulle returning to the fold for a fourth season.

Dulle - who looks set to be replaced like-for-like by Pasha - spent three years at the club, recording 26 goals, 80 assists and 106 points as well as a staggering 398 penalty minutes in 151 games. Those figures put the him 14th in Stingrays all-time games played, second in Stingrays all-time pointscored by defenceman and third in Stingrays all-time PIM.

In may ways, it was Dulle's high PIM count that prevented him solidifying his spot as the perfect offensive defenceman. Often guilty of a lack of indiscipline and trying to do too much himself - if anyone can ever be accused of such a thing - Dulle was nevertheless up there as one of the best defencemen the Stingrays have been lucky enough to sign. His and Jereme Tendler's signing late in the 2010 off-season two of the best things to come from the club's near collapse.
As well as two imports, the club also added two Brits on two-way contract to their roster this evening.

16 year old forward Lee Bonner will join the Stingrays for his first taste of professional hockey next season and, although he is highly unlikely to play a significant role on the team, he is very highly thought of as a future prospect by Cloutier and team owner and assistant coach Bobby McEwan. 

Bonner was top scorer for the Stingrays at U16 and U18 level last season and will play the apprentice role as tenth forward that so many, including Bobby Chamberlain who will play an important role on the Rays third line next season, have done in the past.

19 year old defenceman Ralph returns to the Stingrays on a two-way contract with the Whitley Bay Warriors having dressed in four Elite League games as a 17 and 18 year during 10/11 and 11/12.

The Hull born blueliner split last season between the Stingrays NIHL side and the Warriors - recording a goal and 13 assists in 23 games.

Meanwhile, the club also announced this evening a landmark 25th Anniversary game which will take place between the Stingrays and a squad of Hull ice hockey legends on 29th December. Further details of the event will follow but former Hull Thunder fan favourite Rob McCaig and Kingston Hawks defenceman Kelly Reed have already been confirmed as part of the legends team.

Saturday, 14 August 2010

Suderman joins Dundee as exodus begins

If the sad and emotional scenes in the early part of this week failed to hit home the reality that the Hull Stingrays will not take their place in the upcoming 10/11 Elite League season, then the disbandment of Sylvain Cloutier's 16 man squad certainly will.

That process began today as defenceman Matt Suderman signed in Scotland with the EIHL's newest side the Dundee Stars.

The departure of the tough 27 year old defensive blueliner marks the beginning of the very end for the Stingrays, at least for this year, and appears to have extinguished any hope of a rumoured saviour for the quickly approaching season. One-by-one during the coming weeks and days Suderman's 15 previously prospective team mates for the upcoming season will join the tough guy in signing elsewhere.

In other news, former Stingrays enforcer Adam Knight was confirmed as signing in the Central Hockey League with Wichita Thunder.

Tuesday, 20 July 2010

Suderman adds size and strength to Stingrays

Sylvain Cloutier has today added considerable size and toughness to the Hull Stingrays lineup for the 10/11 season with the addition of 27 year old defenceman Matt Suderman from French Elite League side Morzine-Avoriaz Penguines.

Suderman, who stands at 6'3ft tall and is a former draft pick of the NHL's Atlanta Thrashers (1999), joins returnees Craig Mitchell and Stephen Burns, and new captain Joshua Mizerek on the blueline for the Rays next season.

The native of Winkler, Manitoba, will be a six year pro with the Stingrays next season after spells in North American league's the CHL, SPHL and UHL and with a single year France.

It was in his junior years in the renowned Western Hockey League (WHL) primarily with the Saskatoon Blades that Suderman became best known for his physical play, hitting the 350 minute mark in penalties during a 190 game, four year spell in the juniors.

Undoubtedly, those 350 minutes and physical prowess helped him become part of the Atlanta Thrashers organisation, albeit briefly, in 2001 as the the Thrashers saw enough to draft him in the seventh round, 199th overall. He went on to make just one appearance in pre-season for the Thrashers, taking a five minute major for a fight with Jevon Desautels.

In his rookie season in 04/05 Suderman bounced between the SPHL with Knoxville, CHL with Rio Grande and UHL with both the Richmond Riverdogs and Kansas City Outlaws netting just one goal and adding four assists, a poor return for anyone but particularly for a former draft pick looking to establish himself.

He finally added some stability to his career in 05/06, spending the whole year with the Missouri River Otters, hitting a goal and three assists. Two goals, 16 assists, 258 penalty minutes and a CHL championship with the Arizona Sundogs followed in the next two years before he opted to end his stay in the States and move to Europe, where last season he hit a goal and two assists in 21 games with Morzine-Avoriaz of the French top flight.
While admittedly he has scored just five goals and added 25 assists in five years of professional hockey, coach Sylvain Cloutier is adamant that the massive defenceman, who is another new signing to have previously won a championshop, will add more to the side than most will expect of him.
"He's big and strong and I think we lack that last year. He will clear players from in front of our net. Last season we lacked the transition game, with Pavel Gomenyuk our best defencemen in that respect. This year we'll have four guys who can help us."
Initially it looks as though the enforcer, who has 55 career fights to his name, is stepping in to replace the considerable size of Pavel Gomenyuk, who was not offered a deal to return to Hull and has instead ended up in Manchester. The Ukrainian was consistently inconsistent season-on-season for the Rays, a solid defenceman with a big slapshot and a good outlet pass one minute, a slow liability defensively the next.

Naturally, while it will be a bonus if Suderman chips in with anything offensive, he will play a big role in protecting the likes of Konstantin Kalmikov, Jason Silverthorn and, to a lesser extent, Chris Korchinski, who will carry the brunt of the offensive thrust and will be a target for the more physical opposition players.

The more you analyse it the more the signing of Suderman appears to be a two for the price of one type deal for Cloutier, as he looks to mix the outlet pass and defensive solidity of Gomenyuk with the tough, no fear role of departed tough guy Adam Knight.

Although Cloutier has spoken of team toughness, with himself, Stephen Burns and Chris Korchinski all able to drop the mitts, there is no doubt that Suderman will be the go to guy with the fists.

His signing leaves the Stingrays searching for just one import, a defenceman, thought to be former Basingstoke Bison Trevor Read, ahead of their fifth EIHL campaign, just their second under coach Cloutier.