Times Colonist

Alberta aims to join B.C., Ontario as Junior A lacrosse powerhouse­s

- JOHN CHIDLEY-HILL

The Okotoks Raiders and Calgary Mountainee­rs have brought the Minto Cup to Alberta. Now the challenge is to keep it there.

The two Rocky Mountain Junior A Lacrosse League rivals are co-organizers of this year’s Canada’s junior A lacrosse championsh­ip in Calgary, only the fourth time Alberta has been the site of the four-team tournament. Almost all of the other Minto Cup tournament­s in the trophy’s 117-year history have been held in and won by either Ontario or British Columbia.

“The time is close. I don’t know if it’s going to be our team this year, but an Alberta champion will be coming down the pike shortly,” said Raiders general manager and head coach Andrew McBride on Thursday. “It’s an inspiratio­nal story. Great success and great moments come from great opportunit­y and all we’ve done is put ourselves in a position where we have an opportunit­y to do something special.

“I’m really looking forward to the kids embracing the opportunit­y to play in front of their friends and family in their hometown.”

Calgary opened with a 16-1 loss to the Coquitlam Adanacs, representi­ng B.C., in the first game of the tournament Thursday night. Okotoks was playing Ontario’s Brampton Excelsiors in the late game.

Gov. Gen. Lord Minto donated the trophy in 1901 to be used as Canada’s amateur lacrosse championsh­ip in a challenge format. Teams that secretly paid their players began to play for the trophy almost immediatel­y and by 1909 only profession­al teams were competing. Between 1925 and 1936 no one contested the Minto Cup and in 1937 it was reintroduc­ed as Canada’s junior-A championsh­ip.

The Montreal Shamrocks won six of the first seven Minto Cups in the confusing semi-profession­al era, but since their last championsh­ip in 1907, a team from either Ontario or British Columbia has won it every time. Teams from Alberta only began competing in the Minto Cup in 2003, with the province hosting it in 2005 (Edmonton), 2008 (Calgary), and 2011 (Calgary).

Joe Vetere, the Mountainee­rs head coach, was born and raised in Calgary. He has seen lacrosse grow in Alberta over the past 20 years. If either the Mountainee­rs or Raiders win a Minto Cup, he believes it would take the sport to even greater heights in the province.

“It’s growing and we’re getting better and everybody’s contributi­ng,” said Vetere, who pointed to the 2016 Minto Cup as an example of Alberta’s growth as a lacrosse power. That year the Mountainee­rs beat a team from both Ontario and British Columbia in the same event for the first time in history.

“We have a lot of coaches and ex-players that are coming back and helping build programs and help coach and develop the youth to the point that we’re competing on a regular basis at the national championsh­ips.”

The St. Albert Miners, from just outside Edmonton, have won two straight President’s Cups as Canada’s best senior B team. Alberta’s midget provincial team won the national championsh­ip crown last year for the first time ever.

McBride, who grew up in Ladner and played his junior lacrosse for Coquitlam, is confident that a team from Alberta will break the jinx. He and Vetere both credit the NLL franchise — purchased by the NHL’s Flames in 2011 — with the growth of the sport in Alberta.

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