Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Mahura knows Memorial Cup ropes

- DEREK VAN DIEST

EDMONTON The 2018 MasterCard Memorial Cup will not be Josh Mahura’s first rodeo.

The product of St. Albert, Alta., will be playing in his second national major junior hockey tournament as a member of the host team when the Regina Pats face the Hamilton Bulldogs in the opening game Friday.

Mahura, 20, has spent the last season and a half with Regina after being traded from the Red Deer Rebels, who hosted the event in 2016.

“Going through it the second time, it gets you a little more excited knowing what you are going to experience,” Mahura said. “For me, it’s a little more exciting being a little bit of an older guy now and taking a bit more responsibi­lity on the team. It’s very exciting for me having gone through it once already and knowing how it goes.”

A third-round pick — 85 overall — of the Anaheim Ducks in the 2016 NHL Entry Draft, the sixfoot-one, 185-pound defenceman was a stalwart for the Pats this season. Mahura finished the year with a career-high 22 goals and 69 points in 60 regular-season games. He then added five assists in seven post-season games as the Pats were knocked out in the opening round of the Western Hockey League playoffs by the eventual champion Swift Current Broncos.

“I felt like coming into the season I needed to upgrade my defensive ability a little bit to try and make it to the next level (NHL) and I felt l accomplish­ed that,” Mahura said. “There is obviously still work to do in all aspects of my game but, for this year, I felt like I accomplish­ed what I wanted to.”

Mahura played his minor hockey with the St. Albert Bantam AAA Sabres before heading to play at the Okanagan Hockey Academy. He was selected by the Rebels in the second round — 36th overall — of the 2013 WHL bantam draft and joined the team as a 16-year-old in the 20142015 season.

A knee injury early the following year cost Mahura the majority of the regular season before returning for the playoffs and the 2016 Memorial Cup. He was traded to Regina midway through the 2016-2017 season and made it to the WHL final with the Pats before losing to the Seattle Thunderbir­ds.

This season, Mahura took his game to another level both as a leader and point producer with the Pats.

“Some of it has to do, when you get older, you get more mature in this league,” he said. “When you come in as a 16-year-old, you still have a lot of maturing to do, and once you start to figure out the league a little bit more it gets a little easier on you.

“Coming into this year, I think a lot of it was coming in with confidence and trying to play my game. The coaching staff here set me up with some pretty good opportunit­ies to succeed, so I just tried to run with it throughout the year.”

The Pats had high hopes going into this season as Memorial Cup hosts, but didn’t hit their stride until the second half of the year. They finished third in the extremely competitiv­e WHL East Division behind the top two teams in the league in the Moose Jaw Warriors and Broncos.

Regina drew Swift Current in the first round and despite pushing the eventual champions to the limit, fell 3-2 in Game 7 and was eliminated.

 ??  ?? Josh Mahura
Josh Mahura

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