Waterloo Region Record

Barzal et al have left a lasting impression

- Kyle Cicerella The Canadian Press

WINDSOR, ONT. — When the Seattle Thunderbir­ds fell 7-0 on Tuesday to the Saint John Sea Dogs at the Memorial Cup, it signalled the last time the franchise’s core would play together.

It’s the end of a four-year journey for a group of teenagers who will now take the next step in their careers.

Forwards Mathew Barzal, Ryan Gropp, Keegan Kolesar, Scott Eansor and defenceman Ethan Bear — all rookies with Seattle in 2013 — will be moving on, with four full seasons of junior hockey under their belt.

“After we lost I was kind of having flashbacks from when I was 16 to now,” said Bear, an Edmonton Oilers pick. “Very sad, probably the last day I’ll throw on the jersey with those guys.

“Proud of what we accomplish­ed, tough to go out the way we did. Been a long season, went through a lot. I’m pretty happy with what we did.”

The future looks bright for the Thunderbir­d graduates.

In 2015, four of them had their names called at the NHL draft, with Barzal leading the way as the 16th overall pick by the New York Islanders. Gropp went 41st to the New York Rangers, Kolesar 69th to Columbus, and Bear 124th to Edmonton. Eansor, an overager who serves as Seattle co-captain, is undrafted but hoping to earn a contract. All five attended an NHL camp last fall.

But after their second straight thumping at the four-team tournament for the biggest trophy in major junior hockey, the future was the last thing any of them were thinking about. “We obviously had different plans for this tournament, not to score three goals and get outscored 18 to 3 or something,” said Barzal.

“Hasn’t really sunk in season’s done yet, just happened fast. In a day or two we’ll look back, it’s pretty impressive to win the WHL (championsh­ip).”

In 2012-13, the Thunderbir­ds finished 24-38-10 and exited the first round of the Western Hockey League playoffs. Seattle used the 2012 bantam draft to stock up for the future, selecting Barzal, from Coquitlam, B.C., Gropp of Kamloops, B.C., Winnipeg’s Kolesar and Bear, from Ochapowace, Sask., as 15-year-olds. Eansor, of Englewood, Calif., signed in 2013 and the five joined the team the next season.

Seattle never had a winning percentage below .590 in the four seasons they were together. They made two league championsh­ips, winning the franchise’s first in 2016-17.

Barzal (278) and Gropp (254) cracked the franchise’s top-10 all-time scorers, sixth and 10th, respective­ly. Eansor, a leader of the group, served as captain this year while Barzal was with the Islanders and rotated when he returned. Kolesar finished third on the team in goals despite missing eight weeks with hernia surgery and was their leading scoring in the post-season, while Bear won WHL defenceman of the year to cap his career.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Spitfires left-winger Jeremiah Addison is surrounded by teammates, including Julius Nattinen and Sean Day, after scoring a goal against the Erie Otters in the first period of a Memorial Cup round-robin hockey game in Windsor on Wednesday night. Windsor...
ADRIAN WYLD, THE CANADIAN PRESS Spitfires left-winger Jeremiah Addison is surrounded by teammates, including Julius Nattinen and Sean Day, after scoring a goal against the Erie Otters in the first period of a Memorial Cup round-robin hockey game in Windsor on Wednesday night. Windsor...

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