The Telegram (St. John's)

Newfoundla­nders prove to be world class

Eight players from province on Canadian entries at Internatio­nal Street and Ball Hockey Federation junior championsh­ips in Mount Pearl next month

- BY ROBIN SHORT TELEGRAM SPORTS EDITOR robin.short@thetelegra­m.com

The world juniors are coming to Mount Pearl.

Well, maybe not those world juniors — the IIHF World Junior Championsh­ip — but the Internatio­nal Street and Ball Hockey Federation’s world junior tournament next month.

The two rinks at the Mount Pearl Glacier will stage the world under-20 and U18 championsh­ips July 4-8, and both Canadian teams will have a distinct Newfoundla­nd and Labrador flavour.

Mount Pearl’s James O’brien and Jesse Sutton, Joel Bishop of St. John’s and Gander’s Jordan Maher, along with assistant coach Mike Dyke, who also hails from Gander, are on the U20 roster, while Jack Keough of Mount Pearl, Dawson Mercer of Bay Roberts, Adam Mouland of Gander and Brent Broaders of Fogo Island will suit up for the U18 squad.

It’s the second time the world juniors have been held in metro St. John’s, following the 2008 tournament. The region also staged the 2013 world men’s and women’s championsh­ips.

Canada enters the 2018 tournament as the defending U18 champion having beaten Slovakia in a gold-medal game shootout two years ago in Sheffield, England. The U20 squad had to settle for silver after losing in a shootout in the final

against — you guessed it — Slovakia.

The world juniors are held every two years, following the first tournament held back in 2000 in the

Czech Republic.

Seven countries will be represente­d in Mount Pearl

— the United States, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Great Britain, Italy and Switzerlan­d, along with the host.

Seven teams will vie for the U18 championsh­ip, with the U20 tournament drawing five teams.

In total, there will be some 400 players and coaches involved, not to mention delegation­s visiting from a pair of countries not exactly associated with hockey, be it ice hockey or ball hockey — Uganda and Cameroon.

“The ISBHF is trying to make the game global,” said Steve Power of St. John’s, who is a busy man on the ball hockey scene as president of both the Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Ball Hockey Associatio­n and Canadian Ball Hockey Associatio­n. In addition, Power coached the U20 team in Sheffield two years ago.

“Everyone knows the costs associated with ice hockey. Not so with ball hockey. We’re talking Uganda here. Ball hockey is played in outdoor venues all over the world, which makes the game attractive to a lot of countries.

“Switzerlan­d has a pro ball hockey league that’s played outdoors. It’s a vibrant sport.”

Power said local fans can expect to see “first-class athletes” competing next month, and that’s evident given the group of Newfoundla­nd kids on the rosters.

Sutton, Bishop, Mercer and Maher all played in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League last season (Maher won the Memorial Cup with Acadia-bathurst Titan), Broaders in the Maritime Junior Hockey League, and Keough and Mouland in the Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Major Midget Hockey League.

Two years ago in Sheffield, Nathan Yetman and Brad Power of St. John’s, and Thomas Hedges of Gander performed on Canada’s U20 squad, while Broaders, Mercer, Tristan Gray of Bonavista, Nick Gosse of Paradise and Kyle Petten of Bay Roberts played U16.

Since the 2016 world juniors, the U16 age group has been removed from the world juniors, and now is a separate developmen­t event — the U16 World Cup.

 ?? TELEGRAM PHOTO ?? Four players from Newfoundla­nd who will play for Canada’s under-20 and U18 ball hockey teams at the Internatio­nal Street and Ball Hockey Federation’s world junior championsh­ip next month at The Glacier were on hand for a news conference Tuesday at...
TELEGRAM PHOTO Four players from Newfoundla­nd who will play for Canada’s under-20 and U18 ball hockey teams at the Internatio­nal Street and Ball Hockey Federation’s world junior championsh­ip next month at The Glacier were on hand for a news conference Tuesday at...
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