Regina Leader-Post

Pats land star defenceman Fleury from the Ice

- GREG HARDER gharder@postmedia.com

It was only a matter of time before John Paddock tested the WHL trade waters.

Amid growing speculatio­n from a restless fan base, the Regina Pats’ head coach and general manager finally made a splash on Monday when he acquired 19-year-old defenceman Cale Fleury in a blockbuste­r deal with the Kootenay Ice.

While Paddock is eager to welcome the 2017 third-round draft pick of the Montreal Canadiens into his lineup, Fleury is equally excited to join the hosts of the 2018 Memorial Cup.

“It’s definitely a place I wanted to get traded to if I was going to get traded,” said the Carlyle product, who’s slated to arrive in Regina on Tuesday.

“Obviously the Memorial Cup is a pretty good thing. It’s pretty exciting, but everything I’ve heard about the team and the organizati­on (is attractive). Playing against them the last couple years, I’ve seen what it would be like to play there.

“Being from Saskatchew­an, too, it’s pretty neat coming back.”

Paddock had his eyes on Fleury for more than a year but couldn’t pry him away from the Ice. The franchise was sold last spring and Paddock quickly approached new GM Matt Cockell during the WHL awards luncheon in May.

They spoke again at league meetings in June and have had on-andoff discussion­s ever since.

“This has been a player that’s a priority,” Paddock said of the sixfoot-one, 201-pounder, who has six goals and 10 points in 17 games this season.

“He’s going to be a more physical defender than we have and he has a good shot. He’s just a real good (all-around) player. That’s what we were looking for.”

As Memorial Cup hosts, the Pats are obligated to upgrade a team that sits third in the Eastern Conference at 11-8-2. They landed the captain of the Ice in exchange for defenceman Jonathan Smart, 18, forward Cole Muir, 16, and two bantam draft picks (second- and sixth-rounders in 2018), plus a conditiona­l pick in 2019 or 2020.

Although Fleury didn’t come cheaply, Paddock had no issue pulling the trigger.

“We agreed on this price actually quite a while ago,” said Paddock. “It took a while to finalize (because school-age players have no-trade clauses).

“It’s hard giving up a young player like Cole Muir, who’s going to be a good player. But that’s the price you have to pay.”

Paddock isn’t done dealing, either.

His next priority is expected to be a top-six winger, but he’s also not done tweaking the back end.

“We’re a work in progress,” said Paddock, whose team lost 3-2 and 3-1 to the first place Moose Jaw Warriors over the weekend. “We faced one of the top teams in the league the last two games and we see where we’re at. I don’t think it’s a big, big gap, but Moose Jaw is a top team. They’re a pretty good barometer to know where you have to tinker with your team.”

Paddock believes he has the necessary ammunition, despite owing one more first-round pick to the Red Deer Rebels from last year’s Josh Mahura trade.

Another first-rounder is in limbo because of a previous deal with the Everett Silvertips for the WHL rights to Colorado Avalanche centre Tyson Jost.

Assuming Jost remains in the NHL, as expected, it will free up another asset before the Jan. 10 trade deadline.

“We have three of the next four first-round picks available,” said Paddock. “There’s nothing that isn’t available that can be available to get us where we want to be in May.”

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