Whitehorse Daily Star

Image title

Photo by Marcel Vander Wier

CELEBRATING OUR GAME – Whitehorse hockey enthusiasts show their excitement during  Sunday’s  Rogers Hometown Hockey broadcast in Yukon.

Image title

Photo by Marcel Vander Wier

GAME ON! – Young Yukon hockey players spent Sunday afternoon enjoying some boot hockey at the Hometown Hockey festival in Whitehorse.

Image title

Photo by Aimee O'Connor

STAR OF THE SHOW – Famed broadcaster Ron MacLean, right, autographs a copy of his book Hockey Towns for Josh Schroeder, centre, during a break in the broadcast.

Image title

Photo by Marcel Vander Wier

BLAST FROM THE PAST – Residents stay warm playing table hockey, Sunday.

Image title

Photo by Marcel Vander Wier

AUTOGRAPH SESSION – Former NHLer Darcy Tucker signs Benjamin Fecteau’s Leafs jersey, Sunday afternoon.

Image title

Photo by Marcel Vander Wier

SHOWING HIS SUPPORT – Kirn Dhillon waves a Calgary Flames flag during the NHL broadcast from Whitehorse.

Yukon hockey basks in national TV spotlight

It was quite the weekend.

By Marcel Vander Wier on January 27, 2016

It was quite the weekend.

Yukon’s hockey community was thrust into the country’s limelight Sunday afternoon, courtesy of a Rogers Hometown Hockey stop in Whitehorse.

Local hockey stories were broadcast to a national audience during an NHL game between the Calgary Flames and Carolina Hurricanes, with hundreds of fans gathering at Front Street and Steele Street to whoop it up in the shadow of fan-favourite host Ron MacLean.

The former Hockey Night In Canada mainstay told the Star that returning home is always special.

“The skate at the Hillcrest community rink was an incredible highlight,” he said of the weekend. “It just was a very inspirational 48 hours, I must say.”

MacLean’s visit to his childhood rink included members of the local atom development hockey team, coached by Derek Johnstone – who played under current Toronto Maple Leafs head coach Mike Babcock with the Red Deer College Kings in 1988.

A pre-game visit to the dressing rooms of both the Whitehorse Huskies and Powell River Regals at Takhini Arena Saturday night was also “a real treat,” said MacLean.

Former NHL stars Darcy Tucker and Geoff Sanderson were also in town for the weekend.

Tucker, a longtime Toronto Maple Leafs sparkplug, had never before visited the territory, despite playing alongside Yukon hockey star Jarrett Deuling with the Western Hockey League’s Kamloops Blazers.

“We played on the same line together for a full season,” Tucker said of Deuling, who was later drafted to the NHL. “He was a great captain. I couldn’t say enough good things about Jarrett, the type of person he was and what he brought to our locker room.”

Tucker and Deuling twice won the Memorial Cup – junior hockey’s top prize – with the Blazers in the early ’90s.

“It’s been great,” said Tucker of his Yukon visit. “I didn’t know what to expect when we took off on the plane, weather-wise, whether it was going to be 40 below, or what have you. But it’s been outstanding weather and the hospitality’s been second to none. I’ve enjoyed every moment of being here.”

Meanwhile, Sanderson is a rare Arctic-born hockey star, who grew up as a member of a mining family in Pine Point, N.W.T., but now lives in Calgary with his family.

The 43-year-old told MacLean he was blessed to take in the territory’s back-road beauty when he celebrated his 40th birthday with a moose hunt on the Blackstone River, northeast of Dawson City.

The half-hour Hometown Hockey segment kicked off with MacLean discussing his Yukon past, name-dropping his former teachers and love for the outdoor rink in Hillcrest spurred by the four-plus years he lived here as a child in the ’60s.

The pre-game show opened with some majestic footage from Fish Lake, where Up North Adventures worked to create an oversized rink, setting the stage for a local minor hockey team to be presented with the Stanley Cup last Wednesday.

MacLean recalled the 2007 Canada Winter Games that took place in the Yukon capital, where a star-studded Team Ontario beat Travis Hamonic-led Team Manitoba 6-4 in the boys hockey final.

Ontario’s roster at the time included current NHLers Steven Stamkos, Nazem Kadri, Cody Hodgson, Alex Pietrangelo, Adam Henrique and Michael Del Zotto.

The broadcast also featured Yukon Quest legend Frank Turner, who introduced Hometown Hockey co-host Tara Slone to the world of mushing along picturesque portions of the 1,600-kilometre race’s trail.

Other stories included Calgary Inferno defenceman Brigitte Laquette – who inspired many during NorthwesTel’s Learning to Lead hockey camp in Whitehorse last summer – as well as Arizona Coyotes goalie Mike Smith’s visit to Watson Lake in August with the NHLPA’s Goals and Dreams foundation.

The Hurricanes eventually dropped the Flames by a score of 5-2, setting the stage for local Mustangs stars, Bryce Anderson and Maddie Nicholson, to choose their three stars: Hurricanes’ Kris Versteeg, Eddie Lack and Flames forward Jiri Hudler.

Anderson, a member of last year’s Tier 3 B.C. championship-winning Bantam Mustangs team that was honoured prior to Friday night’s Huskies game, is one of the territory’s top hockey prospects.

Meanwhile, Nicholson was recently ranked the top player north of Kamloops, B.C., following a U16 northern zone B.C. Cup hockey camp.

Yukon Premier Darrell Pasloski – who moonlights as a referee – received a mention, as did the Yukon Sourdough Rendezvous Festival, and G&P Steakhouse – a local establishment MacLean said he visited twice over the weekend.

The free hockey-themed event along the Yukon River included a variety of free events for families both Saturday and Sunday.

The outdoor viewing party capped the weekend Sunday afternoon.

“That was a lovely stop,” Slone said to MacLean post-game. “It was nice to see this through your lens, the Whitehorse Women’s Hockey Association, Frank Turner. Just great characters, good stock.”

The show also featured a lengthy interview with local trans hockey player, Chase Blodgett. That story was featured in Monday’s Star.

Scotiabank also donated $15,000 to Whitehorse minor hockey, the local association confirmed today.

Be the first to comment

Add your comments or reply via Twitter @whitehorsestar

In order to encourage thoughtful and responsible discussion, website comments will not be visible until a moderator approves them. Please add comments judiciously and refrain from maligning any individual or institution. Read about our user comment and privacy policies.

Your name and email address are required before your comment is posted. Otherwise, your comment will not be posted.