Former Nisei Greenwood BC Hockey Goalie Remembers Internment Camp Hockey 

By Mel Tsuji   JANUARY 25, 2013  http://jccabulletin-geppo.ca

John Onizuka admitted he was very surprised to be honoured at the 50th anniversary celebration last year of the Canadian Japanese Hockey League.

At 85, the retired pharmacist was a long way from his hockey-playing days in Greenwood, BC. He was 14 years of age at the time when he and his family were among the 1,200 Japanese Canadians uprooted from their homes in Vancouver and interned at the then ghost-town of Greenwood.

Yes, you read right. John, or Yuki as he was known then, learned to play hockey in that isolated community.   \

“There was already an indoor rink there, but with natural ice,” he said. “The mayor of Greenwood fixed it up for us young kids because he was so happy about getting 1,200 JCs to his town.”

John recounted those days after he was contacted to be part of the Toronto-based league’s 50th anniversary, because the special night was also to be a “Celebration of Hockey” in the JC community.

He wasn’t able to reach any of his Greenwood team-mates at the time¸ but they soon found about the event and though they’re now well into their eighties several of his hockey-playing buddies showed up for an unexpected mini-reunion.

“I hadn’t seen them since those days, so it was nice to get together,” he said.

The anniversary gathering brought together many of Toronto’s hockey oldtimers, who started playing the game in the 1946-47 period in Toronto, after being released from internment camps and arriving with their families in Ontario.

Over 200 former players and their families came to mark the 50th anniversary of the founding of the Canadian Japanese Hockey League, a four-team league that is still going strong today in Toronto.

But as things turned out, the CJHL, as it’s known today, wasn’t the first for JC players. Newly-arrived Nisei teenagers found the colder, winter temperatures in Toronto better suited than BC for outdoor shinny games. And those informal get-togethers led to the formation of their NHL, the Nisei Hockey League that played on the outdoor rinks of Alexandra and Riverdale Parks in the mid-1940s.

The players who started JC hockey in Toronto were the same skaters from Greenwood, including John Onizuka, who went on to play a year in the newly-formed Nisei League then had to give it up to concentrate on his pharmacy studies at the University of Toronto.

John credits his hockey career to the mayor of Greenwood, W.E. McArthur Sr. who, he said, enthusiastically rebuilt the town’s hotels, stores, businesses and especially the hockey rink.

“He was happy because the town had died in the 1930s, when the copper boom went bust,” he said. “So the JCs brought money, business and new prosperity to the town. It also brought jobs to JCs, who worked in the sawmills, which happened to be owned by the mayor.”

Just before the JCs were bussed to Greenwood, the town only had about 200 residents, down drastically from about 10,000 to 20,000 at the turn of the 20th century.

After the Mayor refurbished the local rink, John joined many other JC teens to take up the game of hockey. “It was surprising how fast the fellows picked up skating,” he said. “I wasn’t a very good skater and because of this I tried goal.”

He said he can’t remember how he got goalie equipment, but thinks because he played goal in lacrosse, he must have used the same equipment for hockey.

He said after the Nisei players learned how to play the game and wanted to get more involved, they decided to make up two teams and join the local “hakujin” (white Greenwood players) league. “There was enough equipment to go around and they really enjoyed playing with us,” he says.

Eventually, John remembers the Nisei playing local teams from nearby towns. There are very few accounts of JCs playing hockey during the internment years, but John’s memories coincide with the scenes in the CBC movie, The War Between Us, that showed a Nisei team from an internment camp playing a local Caucasian team.

John said he played about three years in the Greenwood league, then left with his family in 1945 to move to Ontario.

Source: Former Goalie Remembers Internment Camp Hockey – The Bulletin

NOTE:

On February 4, 2015, John Onizuka peacefully passed away at the age of 87 surrounded by his loving family at Mackenzie Health Hospital in Toronto, Ontario.

NHL shouldn’t wait on results of AHL experiment to end fighting 

The AHL is putting new rules in place to cut back on fights. (JIM MCISAAC/GETTY IMAGES)

Pat Leonard   NEW YORK DAILY NEWS  Friday, July 8, 2016

The American Hockey League, the NHL’s primarily U.S.-based feeder league, passed new rules at its most recent Board of Governors meeting to clamp down on fighting.

Players who fight before, at, or immediately following a face-off will be ejected with an automatic game misconduct. During the AHL regular season, players will be suspended one game apiece for their 10th fight of the season, all the way through their 13th bout, until a two-game suspension kicks in for fights 14 and up.

Everyone is already asking why NHL commissioner Gary Bettman continues to allow fighting at the sport’s highest level, why he chooses even to champion its existence rather than oppose its presence or, at the very least, say nothing at all.

But now there is another question, because the NHL typically monitors new measures applied in the AHL before considering adding them to its own rule book:

Why should the NHL need to wait to see the results of these new AHL rules before acting?

Bettman has plenty of reason to ban fighting from hockey entirely already. All of this tip-toeing around officially abolishing the practice just feels tired and futile.

In May, the NHL had its motion to dismiss a lawsuit from former playersdenied, in the face of accusations that the league failed to warn, inform and adequately care for them while glorifying violence that leads to head trauma.

In the face of this litigation — and despite improved science and increased knowledge about the debilitating effects of repeated head trauma, concussionsand the degenerative brain disease CTE — Bettman nevertheless told Sports Illustrated recently that fighting “has been a part of the game, it does act a thermostat in the game” and contended “your question presumes that it should be eliminated, and that isn’t necessarily the case.

“Fighting may help prevent other injuries,” Bettman added.

Why he keeps fighting for fighting, though, is beyond me.

First of all, banning fighting would not necessarily imply the NHL is guilty as charged in this lawsuit of infractions in the past – unless the league has something to hide, of course.

Secondly, Bettman’s continued comments on the subject — including his 2015 assertion that there is “no evidence” linking concussions and CTE — are ignorant and insensitive to the findings of new science and the identification of the brain disease in late NHL players such as former enforcer Bob Probert.

Third, fighting is increasingly irrelevant in today’s NHL already, even in the AHL compared to the old days.

The NHL’s more-recently adopted “instigator” rule often deters players (they’ve told me themselves) from taking any sort of retribution they may desire, since the penalty would be too costly to that game’s outcome.

Clubs are more reticent to encourage the violence, since every win and point matters even more in a league with so many teams in the playoff hunt due to the NHL’s cherished baby, its competitive balance. They can’t afford to sacrifice games just to settle a score with a hated rival.

And with the NHL’s salary cap so restrictive and the game of hockey so much faster, most teams can’t afford anymore to pay or play a player who is strictly an enforcer anyway. A sort of natural selection has weeded out this type of hockey breed from the highest level of the game.

So why not just stamp it out for good and eliminate unnecessary risk to players’ health?

The NHL was policed by the Broad Street Bullies back in the 1970s. I remember Philadelphia Phantoms AHL games at the Spectrum in the 1990s when they barely needed a puck on the ice there were so many brawls.

But as a CBC article pointed out recently, Rockford’s Michael Liambas led the AHL with fighting majors with 20 last season, while in the NHL only four players reached the 10-fight threshold: Colorado’s Cody McLeod (12), Vancouver’s Derek Dorsett (11), former Islander and new Maple Leaf Matt Martin (11) and Shark/Canadien Mike Brown (10).

Even Bettman said that “fighting is at the lowest level … in the history of the game.” The only problem is, he is using that as an argument for keeping fighting in hockey. On the contrary, that is one of the best reasons to say goodbye to the glove-dropping altogether.

Granted, the NHL’s ever-faster, ever-more physical high-speed collisions can be even more dangerous for players than some fights. But the time for parsing these details and statistics and defending fighting’s place in the game of hockey is over.

From an image standpoint, at least, the always-booed Bettman should at least understand how much better he and the NHL would look if he simply stepped up and banned fighting, announcing that in a sport so inherently high-risk there is no need to put these men in increased danger.

He seems determined, though, to make the fighting issue a hill he will die on — when what he should really do is, well, lock it out.

_____________________________________________

Pat Leonard

Pat Leonard is in his fifth season on the Rangers/NHL beat. He has worked at the Daily News since May 2010. Pat graduated from the University of Notre Dame in 2006.

Source: NHL shouldn’t wait on results of AHL experiment to end fighting – NY Daily News

Canucks sign Markstrom to three-year extension

VancouverCanucksCANUCKS BANTER     By Andrew Chernoff    July 8, 2016

EDMONTON, AB – APRIL 6: Connor McDavid #97 of the Edmonton Oilers can’t get a shot past goaltender Jacob Markstrom #25 of the Vancouver Canucks on April 6, 2016 at Rexall Place in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. The game is the final game the Oilers will play at Rexall Place before moving to Rogers Place next season. (Photo by Codie McLachlan/Getty Images)

Vancouver, B.C. – Vancouver Canucks General Manager Jim Benning announced July 7 that the Canucks have signed goaltender Jacob Markstrom to a three-year contract extension. The contract will carry an annual average value of $3.67 million and will run through the end of the 2019.20 season.

“Jacob is a talented, competitive goaltender with size and a proven ability to make big saves at crucial moments in a game,” said Jim Benning. “He set career highs in several statistical categories last season and two years ago led the Comets to their first Calder Cup Final. He’s motivated and wants to help his team win. We’re excited to have Jacob competing in a Canucks uniform for years to come.”

Markström is a tall goaltender that has a lot advantage of being big and making himself look even bigger in net. He is a skilled goaltender with great mental strength as one of his major characteristics. He is cool, despite having a strong winner’s instinct. Plays the butterfly style with a decent glove and has fine positioning and agility in net. What has been noticeable, however, is that he sometimes goes down too early and has problems getting up on his feet fast enough after a save. He could also work some with his rebound control, but overall Markström has plenty of raw qualities that makes him a very interesting prospect. http://www.eliteprospects.com

Appearing in his sixth NHL season in 2015.16, Markstrom established career highs for games played (33), starts (30), wins (13), shots against (988), saves (904) and minutes (1,848). The 26-year-old finished the season with a 2.73 goals against average, a .915 save percentage and set career-highs for most shots faced (48) and most saves made (47) in a single game on March 22, 2016 at Winnipeg. Markstrom also posted a record of 1-0-1 along with a 2.40 goals against average during a two game conditioning stint with the AHL Utica Comets to start the season. In 83 career NHL games split between Vancouver and Florida, the 6-6, 201-pound goaltender has a record of 26-42-9 along with a 3.00 goals against average and .904 save percentage.

On the international stage, the Gavle, Sweden native has represented his country in numerous tournaments including the IIHF World Championship in 2016, 2013 (gold) and 2010 (bronze) and at the IIHF World Junior Championship in 2010 (bronze) and 2009 (silver). He is also set to represent Team Sweden at the 2016 World Cup.

Markstrom was acquired by Vancouver from Florida alongside Shawn Matthias in exchange for Roberto Luongo and Steven Anthony on March 4, 2014. He was originally selected by Florida in the second round, 31st overall, at the 2008 NHL Entry Draft.

FireShot Screen Capture #319 - 'Eliteprospects_com - Jacob Markström' - www_eliteprospects_com_player_php_player=9787

Source: Canucks sign Markstrom to three-year extension

Vancouver Canucks GM Jim Benning Era Transaction Summary 

jim_benning

Trades:

-2014-15———–
Bonino, Sbisa, 1st (#24 – McCann), 3rd — Kesler, 3rd (#84 – Deven Sideroff)
Dorsett — 3rd (#85 – Keegan Iverson)
2nd — Garrison, 7th (204th – Jack Sadek), Costello
Vey — 2nd (#50 – Roland McKeown)
Acton — Lain
Pedan — Mallet, ’16 3rd
Clendening — Forsling
Conacher — Jeffrey
Baertschi — 2nd (#53 – Rasmus Andersson)

-2015-16———–
3rd (66th – Brisebois) and ’16 7th — Lack
7th (210th – Tate Olson) — McNally
Prust — Kassian, ’16 5th
’16 2nd — Bieksa
Sutter, ’16 3rd — Bonino, Clendening, ’16 2nd
Etem — Jensen, ’17 6th
Granlund — Shinkaruk
Larsen — ’17 5th
Futures — Fox

-2016-17———-
Gudbranson, ’16 5th — McCann, ’16 2nd, ’16 4th

Signings:

-2014-15-———
AHL – Biega, Jeffrey, O’Reilly, Sanguinetti, Andersson, Archibald, Cannata, Freisen, Zalewski
ELC – McCann, Virtanen, Subban, Stewart
Miller — 3 yrs, $6 mil per
Vrbata — 2 yrs, $5 mil per
Kassian — 2 yr, $1.75 per
Weber — 1yr, $850K
Tanev — 1yr, $2mil
Tanev — 5yr, $4.45 mil per
Vey — 1yr, $735K
Dorsett — 4yr, $2.65 mil per
Sbisa — 3 yr, $3.6 per
Kenins — 1yr, $600K
Sautner — 3 yr, $678K (ELC)
Hutton — 2 yr, $900K (ELC)

-2015-16————–
AHL – Fedun 1yr, $600K, Bachman 2yrs, $575K per, Jones 1yr, $600K, Grenier, 1yr, Witt
Baerstchi — 1yr, $900K
Vey — 1yr, $1 mil
Bartkowski — 1yr, $1.75 mil
Weber — 1yr, $1.5 mil
Markstrom — 2yrs, $1.55 per
Cracknell — 1 yr, $575K
Corrado — 1yr $600K
Clendening — 1yr $760K
Sutter — 5 yrs, $4.375 per
Brisebois — 3yr $734K (ELC)
Zalewski — 3 gm, $575K
Biega — 2 yrs, $750 per
Tryamkin — 2 yr, $925K (ELC)

2016-17—————-

AHL — Stecher — 2 yr, $925K (ELC), Demko — 3 yr, $925K (ELC), Garteig — 1 yr, $925K (ELC), Laplante — 3 yr, $837K (ELC), Nilsson — 1 yr, $575K (2-way), Chaput, Billens, Rendulic
Rodin — 1 yr, $950K
Granlund — 2 yr, $900K
Baertschi — 2 yr, $1.85 per
Etem — 1 yr, $775K
Eriksson — 6 yr, $6 mil
Larsen — 1 yr, $1.025 mil

Draft Class:

2014: Virtanen, McCann, Demko, Tryamkin, Forsling, Pettit, Stewart
2015: Boeser, Brisebois, Zhukenov, Neill, Gaudette, Jasek, Olson
2016: Juolevi, Lockwood, Candella, Stukel, Abols, McKenzie
2017: 1, 2, 3, 4 , , , 7
2018: 1, 2, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7

14-15 turnover:

OUT:
Garrison, Kesler, Santorelli, Booth, Sestito, Dalpe, Schroeder, Welsh, Lain, Pelletier, Sauve, Ferriero, Mallet, Forsling
IN:
Vrbata, Miller, Bonino, Vey, Dorsett, Sbisa, McMillan, Baertschi, Sanguinetti, Pedan, Clendening, Conacher, Acton, Hamilton

15-16 turnover:

OUT:
Bieksa, Lack, Matthias, Richardson, Kassian, Bonino, Stanton, Clendening, Eriksson, Conacher, O’Reilly, Sanguinetti, McNally, McMillan, Defazio, Jensen, Corrado, Shinkaruk, Cracknell, Fox
IN:
Bartkowski, Prust, Sutter, Fedun, Bachman, Jones, Cracknell, Witt, Etem, Granlund, Larsen

16-17 Turnover:

OUT:
McCann, Higgins, Hamhuis, Kenins, Cannata, Weber, Vrbata, Vey, Blomstrand, Freisen, Fedun
IN:
Rodin, Stecher, Laplante, Gudbranson, Nilsson, Eriksson, Chaput, Billens, Rendulic

Source: Jim Benning Era Transaction Summary | Mod warning in OP – HFBoards

24 NHL PLAYERS ELECT SALARY ARBITRATION

TORONTO (July 5, 2016) – 24 players have elected Salary Arbitration:

Arizona Coyotes
Michael Stone

Colorado Avalanche
Tyson Barrie
Mikhail Grigorenko

Detroit Red Wings
Jared Coreau
Danny DeKeyser

Minnesota Wild
Jordan Schroeder

Nashville Predators
Calle Jarnkrok
Petter Granberg

New York Rangers
Kevin Hayes
Chris Kreider
Dylan McIlrath
Jonathan Miller

New Jersey Devils
Kyle Palmieri

Ottawa Senators
Mike Hoffman

Philadelphia Flyers
Brandon Manning
Brayden Schenn
Jordan Weal

St. Louis Blues
Jaden Schwartz

Tampa Bay Lightning
Alex Killorn
Vladislav Namestnikov

Toronto Maple Leafs
Frank Corrado
Peter Holland
Martin Marincin

Washington Capitals
Marcus Johansson

The deadline for Club-Elected Salary Arbitration notification is July 6, 2016 at 5:00 p.m. EDT.

Salary Arbitration hearings will be held in Toronto from July 20 to August 4, 2016.

Source: 24 PLAYERS ELECT SALARY ARBITRATION