The Telegram (St. John's)

Ceebees get the cut by rest of AESHL

League, Herder champs told they are no longer wanted by circuit’s other four teams

- BY BRENDAN MCCARTHY bmcc@thetelegra­m.com

Local senior hockey won’t start for another eight weeks or so, but it looks like the games have already begun.

The other four teams in the AESHL have told the league and provincial senior champion Harbour Grace Ocean Enterprise­s Ceebee Stars to pack their hockey bags, and leave.

The Ceebees say they don’t want to go and are willing to take their case all the way to Hockey Canada to do so … maybe even to court.

On Thursday, the Ceebees posted a message on their Facebook site stating the team had received word — in the form of an Aug. 28 letter — that the CBN club would no longer be welcome in the Avalon East Senior Hockey League.

That letter, signed by officials from the Southern Shore Breakers, Northeast Eagles, Conception Bay (Bell Island) Blues and St. John’s Capitals, said those teams want to operate using a four-team format for the upcoming season.

“Our four organizati­ons have decided that it is in our best interest to proceed with the four metro teams in a league that excludes the Ceebee Stars,” the letter stated. “We are advising you now of our decision to allow your organizati­on sufficient time to find another league for the upcoming season.”

Capitals president Jack Casey was one of those who signed — Joe Maynard (Eagles), Ian Sullivan (Breakers) and Pat Rose (Blues) were the others — and on Thursday, Casey was acting as a spokesman for the group.

“Everybody signed so they could see there was no point of (the Ceebees) trying to divide and conquer,” said Casey. “The four teams in here have just decided that things work better for us to be here locally with ourselves.

“We feel strongly about that.” Ceebees president Mark Reynolds said rumours about “some individual­s wanting us out of the league” have been around since the winter, but that “never in a million years did I think that it was going to a possibilit­y.

“We’ve been completely blindsided, to be honest with you. Officially, (there were) no reasons given, just ‘Nice knowing you. So long.’”

There have been rumours of displeasur­e over the Ceebees allegedly paying some players — which would be contrary to league guidelines — and of disputes over revenue from Herder Trophy provincial final games between the Ceebees and the rest of the league, but Casey said “it would be simplifyin­g matters” to say this was the crux of their move to oust the defending league champs.

“From our perspectiv­e, I think it’s obvious to everybody there is a difference between the Ceebees and the other four teams in the Avalon East league,” said Casey.

“There isn’t a single big smoking-gun kind of reason we need to do this. There is just a long list of small reasons.

“And we feel pretty strongly about our case, that we have the right to just play locally. “

Reynolds says the Ceebees feel just as firm in their stance.

“We never paid any players,” he said, adding that the matter of Herder revenues “was done on a contractua­l basis, documented in the minutes of the league.

“Everything is on paper. We paid the league treasurer our moneys in full.

“If we had a mediator come in to look at these issues, I can guarantee they would find no wrongdoing, if that is what’s being said.”

The move comes as the AESHL goes through another shakeup, what with the mass resignatio­n of the league executive, led by president Paddy Daly. Casey says the Capitals, Eagles, Breakers and Blues are looking at a board setup, with two representa­tives from each team and an elected chairperso­n and treasurer.

“I think that individual­s in the league didn’t like where the league was going … a lot of old school minds didn’t want to relinquish control,” said Reynolds when asked about the departure of the executive. “I think they were the first casualty and we were the second casualty.”

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