Showing posts with label Tilburg Trappers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tilburg Trappers. Show all posts

Tuesday, 12 July 2011

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


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 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, 30 August 2009

Trappers overpowered as Panthers take easy victory

Nottingham Panthers 11-3 Tilburg Trappers

The Nottingham Panthers easily swept aside Dutch side, the Tilburg Trappers, in their first game of the P&O Channel Cup, setting up a deciding clash with fellow Elite League side the Excel Hull Stingrays on Monday.

The Panthers got off to the worst possible start against the Trappers, who lost out 4-3 to the Stingrays on the opening day of the tournament on Saturday and started backup netminder Ian Meierdries, as import defenceman Kory Scoran slapped a bullet past new Panthers keeper Kevin St-Pierre after just 38 seconds.

It would be the only time in the game the Trappers lead as goals from Marc Levers and the reinvigorated Jade Galbraith, who took the Panthers man of the match in this game with 2 goals and three assists, put Nottingham ahead without having played their best.

In the second period the Panthers really began to click in what was their first game of the season. Former NHL forward Cameron Mann beat Meierdres down low for what is expected to be the first of many for the East Midlands side, before the Trappers unexpectedly responded through Dutch international Pieter Van Biezen, who netted on the powerplay after a nice setup pass from Cody Jacobs, pulling the deficit back to two goals at 4-2.

Three quick goals from player-coach Corey Neilson, returnee goalscoring forward Sean McAslan and Ross Dalgleish, signed from Edinburgh this summer, put the Panthers deservedly ahead by five goals as new teammates began to connect well, particularly for the Dalgleish goal, beautifully set up by Mann and Marty Gascon.

The third was all but a formality by this point, with the score at 7-2, however the Panthers did not take their foot off the gas, powering past goals eight and nine, from Galbraith and debutant Dominic D'Armour respectively, before Vanschagen scored his first and the Trappers third.

Inexperienced Brit Mark Hartley replaced St-Pierre in the Panthers net after 52 minutes, just before Nick Toneys rounded off the score with the Panthers 11th of the night, sealing an empathic start to the season.

F Block Blog MOM
Panthers- Jade Galbraith- After allegedly losing pounds of weight during the off-season, Galbraith started the season as his critics hope he will continue.

Trappers- Kory Scoran- His nice slapshot past St-Pierre aside, Scoran was a cool and calm head amongst a Trappers side that looked far too rushed during in the game, both in offence and defence.

Saturday, 29 August 2009

Rays edge out Tilburg in physical pre-season encounter

Excel Hull Stingrays 4-3 Tilburg Trappers

Opening the P&O Channel Cup, the Excel Hull Stingrays just edged Dutch champions, the Tilburg Trappers, in what was a heated and physical second game of pre-season for the Rays.

In a game which the Rays frequently had their Dutch counterparts under heavy pressure, Adam Knight opened the scoring with his first goal for the team after six minutes, as he wheeled around the outside of the Trappers defence before cutting inside and slotting past former NHL netminder Yukata Fukufuji in the Tilburg goal.

The game was chippy from the off, as the Rays played a typically aggressive style under Sylvain Cloutier, although it was assistant coach Curtis Huppe, one of the teams skilled players, that began with a bee under his bonnet as he received a roughing penalty, already his second of the game after just seven minutes, for throwing a gloved punch following the Rays opening goal.

Further chances fell to the home side, with Kalmikov and Glowa combining well whilst shorthanded to force a glove save from Japanese international Fukufuji in a low butterfly position. Kalmikov again challenged the netminder on the buzzer but the period ended with just a single goal separating the sides.

The second period began with spells of very scrappy play as both sides tried to get to grips with the game, although the physicality of the match continued in the same vein, most notably with Lee Esders upending a Trapper before a retaliatory check came flying in. Adam Knight picked up an obligatory two minute minor for having select words with the Trapper in question for picking on 5'7 Hull born Esders.

However, with James Hutchinson also sitting a minor, the Rays found themselves defending a 5-on-3, and it was on this penalty kill that Tommy Sandahl's shutout as a Stingray ended at 91 minutes, as Rody Jacobs levelled for Tilburg.

Six minutes later and more penalties followed. A scuffle, again involving Curtis Huppe, who was binned for the third time in the game, ended with the Stingrays enforcer-turned-goalscorer, Adam Knight, and Tilburg's Mark Donders dropping the gloves. Knight, something of a veteran fighter, left the Dutchman with a cut above his left eye and probably a fair share of regret for the actions that lead to the short fight as Knight easily knocked the 6'0 forward to the ground.

That fight spurred the Rays into action with two quick goals extending the scoreline three goals to one. Firstly Jeff Glowa netted his second in two games on a 4-on-3 powerplay on 38 minutes before Matt Reynolds bagged a deserved goal in his man of the match performance as he persevered through a number of Trappers defencemen and rocketed a shot over the shoulder of Fukufuji just before the second break.

The Trappers came out fighting in the third with a somewhat fortuitous quickfire Josh Liebenow double in the space of six minutes leveling the scores and with momentum very much on the side of the Dutch.

However, the Rays re-applied the pressure, and they were eventually rewarded for their superiority in the match, which saw them fire 46 shots on Fukufuji to Tilburg's 24 shots on Tommy Sandahl, with a winner with six minutes remaining.

Shaun Thompson's second goal in two games, a scrappy effort in a scramble in front of the Trappers net, saw off the Dutch side and gave the Rays a second win in two games ahead of a match against Elite League rivals the Nottingham Panthers on Monday. The Trappers, who, with just a couple of training sessions under their belt, showed the makings of a good squad, go on to face the Panthers tomorrow afternoon (3.30) before they return home.

Stingray Stats
Matt Reynolds 1+1, Jeff Glowa, Shaun Thompson and Adam Knight 1+0, James Hutchinson and Konstantin Kalmikov 0+2, Sylvain Cloutier, Slava Koulikov and Pavel Gomenyuk 0+1.

Tommy Sandahl: 24 shots/3 goals allowed.

Best Parts
Adam Knight showing that he can both intimidate, fight and score, big hits from the majority of the squad, including a crowd pleasing hip check from Pavel Gomenyuk, a solid performance.

Worst Parts
Again the amount of penalties the team conceded (and again in a friendly) leaving them open to two powerplay goals, a few nervy moments at the back, occasional goal shyness.

F Block Blog MOM
Stingrays: Matt Reynolds (1+2) Although Reynolds was far from average last season, as one of the team's best performers, he looked like a different player, perhaps one of the first few signs of the change in coaching. He produced a fit and tenacious performance that did not go unnoticed, particularly given how many hits he threw in comparison to last season. He was well worth his goal.

Tilburg: Josh Liebenow (2+0) Like much of the Tilburg side, he impressed, especially after just a couple of training sessions with his new side, after moving from Germany in the summer. Given a lack of familiarity with his teammates, he linked well and showed good touches, whilst his finishes gave the Trappers a respectable one goal loss.

Stingrays Verdict: 7/10
This game gave the Rays fanbase a first look at their 09/10 squad and they all impressed in some form.

Adam Knight and Tommy Sandahl once again stood out, for their solid goalscoring and goal saving abilities respectively, whilst Shaun Thompson scored his second goal in two games for the Rays, following up an impressive season in Basingstoke with a good start to this term.

If anything, coach Sylvain Cloutier and his assistant Curtis Huppe are the only players that have yet failed to significantly register on the scoresheet, when expected, although their worth, particularly tonight, was incredibly visible to home fans in their hard work and desire to get on the scoresheet and win.

Konstantin Kalmikov made his first appearance of the season and, sporting a new Troy Neumeier-esque helmet, continued where he left off, with his usual flawless skating, strong shot and determination plus-some. That plus-some came, like Matt Reynolds, in the form of an aggressive streak with the number of times he threw himself into hits. In contrast to last season, and his Ukrainian reputation, Kalmikov, who once had a fight with Andre Payette, was showed no fear when the physicality of the game intensified.

Matty Davies saw his opportunities limited by Kalmikov's return but he did ice semi-regularly and, like on Wednesday night, didn't let himself down.

Finally, the defence looked solid. Ryan Jorde, although not the fastest, may remind fans of a match fit Stuart Kerr, Stephen Burns continues to show why he was handed a university deal, with his offensive bursts, whilst on the British side of things, James Hutchinson was good, recording two assists, and Craig Mitchell was defensively solid.

Cloutier's Comments
"The guys showed character and found a way to win. Obviously you don't like to give up a two goal lead at home in the last period, but it's early in the season and it was a case of getting the cobwebs out, that's what pre-season games are for. Tilburg are a very strong side, they skated well, were very organised and not afraid to mix it up."

Friday, 28 August 2009

P&O Channel Cup Weekend Preview

P&O Channel Cup



Saturday 29th August: Hull Stingrays v Tilburg Trappers, F/O 5.30pm
Sunday 30th August: Nottingham Panthers v Tilburg Trappers, F/O 3.30pm
Monday 31st August: Hull Stingrays v Nottingham Panthers, F/O 5.30pm

Last 3 Meetings

v Nottingham
18/01/09 2-3 W A
08/02/09 1-5 L H
01/03/09 6-4 W H

v Tilburg
N/A

Last Season
Stingrays (9th, EIHL) PLD 54 W 13 L 33 D 3 OTL 5 PTS 37
Tilburg (1st, Dutch Eredivise) PLD 25 W 18 L 5 OTW 1 OTL 0 PTS 56
Nottingham (3rd, EIHL) PLD 54 W 33 L 13 OTW 4 OTL 4 PTS 78

Players to Watch
See for Nottingham and Tilburg HERE

Stingrays: Tommy Sandahl- The Swede produced a solid shutout in his Stingrays debut against the Sheffield Scimitars on Wednesday and looked unfazed by most of what the EPL side had to throw at him. This weekend, however, will be a different challenge altogether. Games against Tilburg and Nottingham should test him further and good displays in both games will set him up for what could be a very good season.

Absentees
Stingrays- Konstantin Kalmikov (doubtful; VISA issues), Lee Mitchell (knee)
Nottingham- None
Tilburg- Brian McGarry (late arrival)

News
- The Stingrays are the only team to have already opened their season after fighting out a difficult 2-0 win in Sheffield over the EPL's Scimitars, their third win in pre-season in Rays four year Elite League stay.

- Saturday's game with Tilburg will mark a first in the history of the Stingrays as it will be the first time the team has played an opponent from overseas.

-The Tilburg Trappers have not had idea preparations for the weekend tournament. With many of their players arriving early this week, their first training session was Wednesday night, leaving them a a week or so behind the Stingrays and Panthers in preparations.

- Following Sunday's Tilburg-Nottingham game, fans will be given a chance to 'Skate with the Stingrays' in which they will be able to take photos and have autographs with the players.

- Tilburg are certain to not have a full squad for this weekends double header. Whilst Canadian forward Brian McGarry will miss the weekend, as he arrives later on September 1, they also have a number of players lined up to sign on a try-out basis prior to their league campaign which, due to budgeting issues, could not join the team in Hull. The players include Swede David Brome, Norweigan junior international Hendrik Skouen, and Americans Jeff Kaspar and Paul Smyth.

Predictions
Stingrays 3-2 Tilburg
Nottingham 5-2 Tilburg
Stinggrays 1-4 Nottingham

Thursday, 27 August 2009

About our opponents

With the P&0 Channel Cup officially kicking off in two days, with the Stingrays game against Tilburg, F Block Blog looks at some of the key players from the Stingrays opponents, Tilburg and Nottingham.

Tilburg Trappers (NL)
Coach: Mark Pederson (Canada)

NM: Yukata Fukufuji (Japan)- One of the instantly recognisable names on the Trappers roster. Japanese international Fukufuji is a former NHLer, with three games under his belt with the LA Kings; he was also the first ever Japanese player to ice in 'The Show'. He comes with a high end pedigree and has been signed by Pederson, his former coach in the ECHL, to ice for a Tilburg side with high expectations for the upcoming season.

D: Kory Scoran (Canada)- A standout ECHL defenceman, Scoran, a former Idaho Steelhead, impressed in the third tier of North American hockey with 77 points in three seasons, last season recording 33 points. Much more is expected of him in the Dutch Eredivise.

D: Bjorn Willemse (Netherlands)- 25 year old Willemse, a native of Tilburg, has been an everpresent in the Dutch national side since his debut in 2003, after a lengthy junior international career, and, up to last season, had spent his whole career with the Trappers. Last season he ventured to France, where a six game spell in the French top tier saw a return of four points, before he bolted to re-sign in Tilburg.

F: Daryl Bat (Canada)- Entering his fourth year in Tilburg, Bat has stood out as one of the Trappers top scoring players in his three years with the club, notching up 73, 59 and 53 point seasons respectively. Bat outscored Stingray Matt Reynolds twice in two years in Canadian college at York University, and more goals and points will be expected from the 28 year old, both this season and this weekend.

F: Josh Liebenow (USA)- Another recruit from coach Mark Pederson's days in Bakersfield, Liebenow had a rough first season in the 'E', recording just five points in 28 games, before exploding for 27 goals and 55 points in 06/07. He quickly moved to the German Bundesliga and two seasons, 71 points and 86 games later he signed up to join Pederson again, this time in Holland.

F: Pieter Van Biezen (Netherlands)- Van Biezen, like defenceman Willmse, has spent his whole career with Tilburg, usually finishing off the season with a spell for his national side at the World Championships. Coming off the back of a career year, with 40 points in 40 games in the Dutch top flight, Van Biezen will surely be a scoring threat this weekend, despite his poor scoring record with the Netherlands.

Nottingham Panthers
Coach: Corey Neilson (Canada)

NM: Kevin St Pierre (Canada)- The 28 year old Sherbrooke, Quebec native has joined friend and former team mate Bruce Richardson at the Panthers and replaces Michel Robinson in net after two years in the CHL with Tulsa. St-Pierre is an experienced starting netminder with spells in all four North American minor leagues, with his best years coming in 02/03 (with Bakersfield, ECHL) and 03/04 (with Fort Wayne, UHL), where he recorded bests in save percentage (92.9%) and goals against average (1.98) respectively.

D: Dominic D'Armour (Canada) D'Armour is another new addition to the Panthers lineup and it is thought he will turn out to be one of the league's top defenceman. A third round draft pick of the Toronto Maples Leafs in 2002, D'Armour has over 100 games experience in the AHL and was twice called up to the AHL last season, after primarily spending the year in the ECHL with Florida and Dayton.

D: Corey Neilson (Canada) Whilst it is thought that D'Armour should turn out to be one of the Elite League's finest defencemen next season, there is no doubt that Neilson is already at that plateau. The Panthers player/coach has recorded an outstanding 174 points in 179 games from defence and came up with a career year last season in his first term as coach at the age of 32.

F: Cameron Mann (Canada) Surely one of the biggest signings in league history, Mann is a veteran of 94 NHL games, 302 AHL games, 34 SM-Liga games and, most recently, 172 DEL games...all some of the top leagues in the world. Not much more needs to be said about the forward, who last season scored 13 points in 17 DEL games, he should be one of the dominant forces during the P&O Channel Cup, and should be one of the top goal and pointscorers come the end of the season.

F: Sean McAslan (Canada) McAslan has returned for a second shot at the Elite League with Nottingham, following a successful two year spell between 2006 and 2008 in which he scored 166 points (and 84 goals) in 121 games as the Panthers won the Challenge Cup. A year in Denmark saw a return of 35 points in 43 games but the goalscoring forward will be wanting to help Nottingham end that long wait for a league title. A big season will be needed from him if the Panthers are to end that wait.

F: David Clarke (Great Britain) The Peterborough born forward has been a Great Britain regular for nine years and constantly hits the twine for both club and country. Now an adopted Panther, Clarke had a career year in 06/07, scoring 37 Elite League goals in 50 games, before trying his luck on the continent in Italy with HC Alleghe. An unlucky year later, in which he broke his leg, Clarke returned to Nottingham and helped the Panthers to the playoff final with 28 goals and 49 points in 41 games. He is one of the few Brits that can be relied on to hit the net regularly and is a huge part of the Panthers squad.

Sunday, 26 July 2009

Stingray news

Defencemen Move On

Three of the Stingrays defensive corps from last season have now officially moved on to pastures new.

Canadians Aaron Wilson and Stuart Kerr, who both joined the team from the Central Hockey League's Austin Ice Bats, have signed for Holland's Heerenveen Flyers and the CHL's Odessa Jackalopes respectively.

Meanwhile Brit Richie Thornton, who iced just five times for the club last year, has re-joined Elite League rivals the Newcastle Vipers.

Kerr, who recommended friend Wilson to the club following Jonathan Bernier's sudden decision to quit, played just 24 games after a knee injury effectively ended his season in November. The club honourably stuck by the Canadian in the hope that he would return prior to seasons end, however that return frustratingly failed to materialise.

Kerr has returned to the CHL where he amassed seven points and 208 penalty minutes in 62 games in 07/08.

Wilson (left), in a tussle with Newcastle's Andre Payette

Wilson, 27, ended the season with career best figures of two goals and 17 assists in 50 games and became one of the few defencemen able to avoid injury, an attribute which made him an important part of the team during the Rays lowest moments.

However, his solid form early on soon deteriorated and his own goal against Edinburgh in the team's final game of the season summed up a disappointing spell with the club. He has followed in the footsteps of fellow former Stingray and Trenton Titan Cole Byers by signing in Heerenveen.

Pre-season Preparations Announced





The Stingrays last week announced a three way pre-season tournament which will take place the Hull Arena featuring Elite League rivals Nottingham Panthers and Dutch side Tilburg Trappers.

The tournament, which will occur on August Bank Holiday weekend (29-31), a week before the 09/10 Elite League season kicks off, will see the Stingrays face foreign opposition for the first time in their history, before Tilburg and Nottingham matchup on Sunday, with the Rays ending the tournament by taking on the Panthers in a re-match of one of last season's most heated rivalry's.

The Panthers are likely to start the season as one of the favourites for the Elite League title after the signing of Cameron Mann, a former NHLer of over 80 games and DEL player of eight years, and last season reached the EIHL Playoff Final.

Whilst Tilburg, from the Southern provinces of the Netherlands, have signed Japanese former LA Kings netminder Yukata Fukufuji and are seen as a real force in Dutch ice hockey, having won the Eredivise title in two of the past three seasons.

Ticket prices and further details on the tournament will be unveiled at a later date.

Brotherly Love

Finally, former Stingrays defenceman Kevin Phillips has pulled out of a deal to re-sign in the EPL with Slough Jets, where he produced 40 points last season, in order to replace his brother on the Elite League's Belfast Giants.

Brother Dave Phillips last month made a U-turn on his contract with the Giants to join the American Hockey League's Rockford Ice Hogs on a two-way contract with their ECHL affiliate, and after his departure the Giants approached brother Kevin to replace him.

Kevin left the Stingrays in 06/07 after a difficult season in which he recorded two points in 50 games in the Rays first EIHL season, whilst Dave left the Rays a year ago, however in his two seasons in the EPL with the Jets Kevin has combined for 54 points in 94 games.

Photo's courtesy: Arthur Foster