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Puck drop for the start of the Herder Memorial Trophy Final isn’t until Friday, but controversy is already brewing off the ice as teams prepare to square off for Newfoundland and Labrador’s top hockey prize.
The Deer Lake Red Wings and Conception Bay South-based Baker Flooring Blues are making final preparations for the matchup, but the Avalon East Senior Hockey League (AESHL) is calling out Hockey Newfoundland and Labrador’s three-person senior council for allowing Deer Lake to make two final additions to their roster.
In a letter issued on Tuesday, AESHL president Jack Casey called the move unfair to the Blues so close to the start of Game 1.
“This has gone beyond trying to have a competitive series … to providing a decided advantage to one team over another,” Casey told CBC News Wednesday.
“We’ve been arguing for the last few years that pick ups are no longer required. That the team should just come as they are, and let’s just let the best team win on the ice.”
The idea of bolstering lineups with outside players isn’t new in the Central-West Senior Hockey League.
In the past, the decision to allow roster additions has been made because the player pool is much smaller in central and western Newfoundland than on the Avalon. It’s served as a way to keep the Herder a competitive east-versus-west battle.
The Red Wings, who are competing in their fourth consecutive Herder final, have been permitted as many as four strengthening players in past years.
This season, the Red Wings lineup includes Valentin Claireaux of St. Pierre and Miquelon — a former member of the French national team who has played professionally in Europe — and American goalie Keith Kincaid. Kincaid has played in nearly 170 NHL games over his career.
The team is also adding forward Cody Drover for the Herder. He scored 43 points in 18 games this season with the Grand Falls-Windsor Cataracts and is considered among the province’s best senior hockey players.
The second addition is forward Kurt Etchegary, who also played this season with the Cataracts.
But for Blues general manager Jonathan Kavanagh, just because something has been done before doesn’t mean it needs to be repeated.
WATCH | The finals haven’t started yet, but the controversy has:
Controversy hovers over Herder Memorial Trophy finals — before they even begin
The senior hockey championships get underway this weekend in Conception Bay South. But as Terry Roberts reports, before the puck has even dropped there’s already a dispute because one team is allowed to pick up extra players.
“We’ve asked our senior council to come with a consistent, a systematical process of determining in whether strengthening players are required,” Kavanagh said. “We’re less than five days from Game 1 … obviously what we’ve asked our leadership to do didn’t happen.”
Kavanagh says the team found out that Deer Lake would be allowed extra players on Tuesday. A request was made for clarity on how the decision was made, but no response from the senior council came.
CBC News also made multiple attempts to contact senior council chair Gary Gale, but he didn’t respond.
Kavanagh said the Blues have asked for Hockey N.L.’s rationale to allow the additions, and could ultimately decide to pull out of the series if they don’t get a good enough answer.
“We’ll take whatever steps we need to do to ensure that they review the decision and make it properly,” he said.
Deer Lake needs players to make things competitive: Coach
Meanwhile, Red Wings head coach Darren Langdon called Wednesday’s comments from Casey and Kavanagh an overreaction.
“They usually get what they want. Then I mean, when they don’t, they just cry over it,” Langdon said.
Deer Lake Red Wings head coach Darren Langdon expects a tight series, and says Deer Lake needs the boost to make the team competitive. (Mike Goulding Videographer/Facebook)
Langdon said Deer Lake’s additions are necessary given the player pool they can choose from and a desire for a competitive series. Although Deer Lake swept last year’s Herder final over Clarenville, he anticipates a tight series given the Blues’ success and undefeated playoff run.
“I think we just need, you know, a couple players just to get us over the bump,” he said.
“Give them two players, I don’t care. Like if they picked up two players, they got, what, 100 [thousand], 200,000 people to pick out of. We got 5,000. So, I mean, they’re getting on a little foolish. But I understand. They’re picking up for their league.”
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