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Kenai River Brown Bears

By frederick61, 08/24/13, 7:15AM CDT

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Note: There are six teams in the NAHL Midwest Division this year.  Two teams, the Minnesota Magicians and the Minnesota Wilderness are new franchises.  This post previews the Kenai River Brown Bears.  The Magicians and Wilderness and the Wenatchee Wild previews have already been posted.  Previews of the Coulee Region Chill and the Fairbanks Ice Dogs will follow.  The NAHL season opens in two weeks; September 1 is the day the teams have to cut their rosters to 23-25 players and submit them to the league.  The Magicians have announced a pre-season game schedule.

The Kenai River Brown Bears are an Alaskan based NAHL team.  On the Kenai Peninsula, the general consensus is that they want to be a team made up of Alaskan players when possible.  Almost the next statement Alaskans make is their second problem is their remoteness.  Their Kenai teams skate on an Olympic sized rink in the Soldotna Sports Center on the Kenai River Peninsula.  That is a 48 hour drive from Vancouver.

Second problem?  That is a surprise.  From the outside, it looks like the Kenai area can be a paradise for most players who like the outdoors and most junior hockey players do.  That may come as a “surprise” to most Kenai hockey followers.  Players who fish and hunt should love playing in the great outdoors on the Kenai River Peninsula whose landscape is marked by Mount Redoubt, an active volcano.  On the tip of the 150 mile long peninsula is Homer AK, home to some of the “Deadliest Catch” crabbers and some of the best fishing in the world.  Players who like to go to an occasional Yankee baseball game will become restless playing there, but none of that should be problem.

The Brown Bears coach, Geoff Beauparlent, is new to the Kenai team and inherited much of the 2013-2014 roster.  He was not involved in the draft. But he is an experienced and savvy coach.  He has coached junior hockey for a number of years.  The last two were as an assistant on the Kenai River’s arch rival, the Fairbanks Ice Dogs.

Beauparlent took the time to talk to YHH and immediately took the time to talk about Kenai Area hockey.

The Kenai Area Hockey Association has structured their development approach taking into account that competition is a long drive or flight for their teams.  In Soldotna they have integrated their youth program for kids going from mites through juniors thus providing opportunities locally for kids to develop into players.  The Brown Bears team is the pinnacle of that program and allows the Kenai Peninsula players to get that extra year or two exposure needed to move on to NCAA or pro hockey.

The Kenai River Hockey Association has developed a “mini” version of Minnesota Hockey but with Tier II juniors thrown in. And they draw good crowds for their games.

The Brown Bears represents multiple towns along the Kenai River.  Soldotna and Kenai River have rinks.  Solodotna, where the Brown Bears play, does not have ice is the year round.  As a result, the Bears were in the Twins Cities at Inver Grove Heights Veterans Memorial for their main camp earlier this month.
Out of that camp, they took 23 or so players back to Kenai River that will form the basis of their team.  They have to set their 23 player roster by September 1 as all the other 23 NAHL teams do, but they won’t announce their final roster until some players are fully decided where they will play in the 2013-2014 season.

The Kenai River team is likely to roster 2 goalies, 8 defense men and 13 forwards for the 2013-2014 season.

Goalies

Gustav Johansson was one of the key Brown Bear goalies last season until he was injured.  He was left unprotected in the NAHL draft and was claimed by arch rival Wenatchee. Evan McCarthy and Marcus Zelzer split the goal tending duties after the Johansson was sidelined.  Zelzer, a 1992, is gone.  McCarthy, a 1994 from Castle Rock CO started 17 games posting 9-8 record giving up 3.08 goals a game saving 90% of the shots on net.

Several Minnesota goalies tried out for the Kenai team at the main camp in Inver Grove three weeks ago including Zach Larson/Roseville.  The Brown Bears used a late round pick (#191 overall) in the NAHL to pick Tyger Howat, a 1995.  Howat started 17 games for Victory Honda U18 team and posted a 14-2 record giving up 1.71 goals a game saving 93% of the shots on net.  If the stats are correct, Howat is 6’5”.

But the real sleeper here is Kris Oldham.  Oldham, another tall goalie at 6’4”, saw limited action for the Brown Bears last season.   A 1997 borne, he made it to the USA National Team Development Camp and from there to USA Hockey’s U17 team that won the Four Nations title in a tourney played in Slovakia a week ago.  He was in the nets for the championship game.  The question is will he return to the Bears?  If he does he could be in the nets for the Magician’s first home game September 28 against Kenai.

Defense

Ryan Walker, one of Kenai River’s top defense men, will not return this season. A pair of top defense men from last year’s team is likely to return.  Vincent Stephan has skated in 90 games for Kenai and posted 34 points/8 goals in two seasons with the Bears.  He had a +17 score in last season’s 43 games.

Jacob Davidson, a Shattuck-St. Mary’s grad, is also a two year Bear player.   He scored 35 points/6 goals in 109 games with Kenai.  Davidson played on the Shattuck-St. Mary’s team in 2010-2011 that won USA Hockey’s Tier 1 National U18 Championship.

Carson Vance, a 1996er, played last season at defense for Kenai River and also made the Select 17 national camp this summer playing in the all-star game.  Vance played 55 games for Kenai River last year posting 10 points/3 goals.

The Bears drafted three defense men with their #38, #63, and #87 picks in the June NAHL draft.  They picked Brendan Smith off the Colorado Thunderbirds U16; Tyler Andrews from the AK Jr. Aces U18 (a bigger defense man and a good skater with a good shot that needs to get quicker); and Ben Blake from the Wenatchee Wild.

Forward

The Brown Bears traded their top scorer from last season, Matt Siedel, for two second round picks (#30  and #35 overall), one third round pick, and one fifth round pick.  They also lost their #3 and #4 scorers, Zac Lazzaro and Woodbury’s Mikhail Bushinski.

Still the Brown Bears have some strong performers returning.  Alex Jackstadt (39 points/20 goals) played 59 games for the Brown Bears.  Alec Butcher played part of last season in the Central Canadian Hockey League before joining the Bears; he posted 30 points/10 goals in 41 games.  Both players come  from neighboring Anchorage (three hour drive).  Albin Karlsson from Uppsala Sweden also returns.  Karlsson scored 29 points/11 goals in 48 games.  All three forwards started last season weighing around 150 lbs and standing around 5’10”.

Conor Deal, a two year returnee from Anchorage, is likely to be on the team.  Deal has scored 23 points/8 goals in 90 NAHL games for the Bears.
The Brown Bears drafted Thomas Lindstrom out of last year’s Class A State Tourney team, Breck with their #1 pick (#13 overall).  Lindstrom posted 184 points/92 goals for the Mustangs and could end up on the Kenai team.

The Brown Bears traded their top scorer from last season, Matt Siedel, for two second round picks (#30  and #35 overall), one third round pick, and one fifth round pick.    The #30 pick was used to draft Ryan McMurphy.  McMurphy played 58 games last season for the Tri-City Storm scoring 8 points/2 goals.  He is currently on the Storm’s 30 player protected list and could end up at Kenai.

The Bears used the #35 pick overall to take Nathan Colwell who played for the Colorado Thunderbirds U16’s.  The 17 years old 6’2” forward scored 28 points/14 goals in 41 games for the Thunderbirds.

One of the more interesting draft choices at forward is 15 year old August Von Ungren-Sternberg.  If he makes the team, it will be interesting to see how the 1997er progresses over the season.

Kenai’s home ice is Olympic size and coaches will tend to size their team to the additional space going with speed and maneuverability.  The Magicians Richfield Rink is smaller and tends to reflect more of an “old school” hockey game.  Scott Meyer’s may have sized his Magicians reflecting play at Richfield.  That could be one contrast between the two teams when they meet September 28 and 29 at Richfield.  Another one could be Alaska players versus Minnesota players.  Both teams try to fit natives into their rosters.
Regardless of contrasts; the Bear’s coach Geoff Beauparlant is anxious to play the Magicians in front a good size crowd in a smaller arena.  Coach Meyer’s is likely to oblige.

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