Breakway Magazine Vol. 6 Issue 4

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THE OFFICIAL MAGAZINE OF THE CHICAGO WOLVES

VOL. 6 ISSUE 4

ON THE BRINK


C H I C A G O W O LV E S

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All games vs. Milwaukee are Amtrak Rivalry games.

UPCOMING PROMO GAMES JAN. 4,5 & 17: FIRST RESPONDERS JERSEY AUCTION & RAFFLE JAN. 18: GIRL SCOUT NIGHT FEB. 22: FAITH & FELLOWSHIP NIGHT

WESTERN CONFERENCE MIDWEST CHICAGO WOLVES CHI Grand Rapids Griffins GR Iowa Wild IA Milwaukee Admirals MIL Rockford IceHogs RFD

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All games vs. Rockford are Illinois Lottery Cup games.

TRACK THE PACK!

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All times are Central. Dates and times subject to change.

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WEST Abbotsford Heat ABB Charlotte Checkers CHA Oklahoma City Barons OKC San Antonio Rampage SA Texas Stars TEX

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IN THIS ISSUE

1

ON THE BRINK Barely out of his teens, and new to North America, Dmitrij Jaskin is ready to show the hockey world he can hang with the big boys.

EXCLUSIVE AN UNEXPECTED BLIP: COVER SHOOT WITH DMITRIJ JASKIN SEE PAGE 26

03 05 08 11 13 15

LEAGUE WELCOME WOLVES HISTORY OWNERSHIP HOCKEY OPERATIONS BEHIND THE BENCH MAP THE LEAGUE

FRONT OFFICE

Seth Gold Irwin Jann Mike Gordon Wayne Messmer Dana Wildman

OPERATIONS

Courtney Mahoney Bryan Campion Dan Harris John Sherlock Becky Jarosch

HOCKEY OPERATIONS Norine Gillner Mike Nardella

PARTNERSHIPS Jon Sata Greg Sprott Kendele Carney Kristen Keane Mark Iralson Mike Short Dan Zarzynski

Director Director President Senior Executive Vice President Executive Assistant Senior Vice President of Operations Director of Operations Operations Manager Game Operations Coordinator Community Relations Coordinator Hockey Operations Assistant Hockey Operations Vice President of Partnerships Manager of Partnerships Partnerships Client Services Manager Partnerships Client Services Coord. Partnerships Sales Executive Partnerships Sales Executive Partnerships Sales Executive

17 23 31 35 36

MEET THE WOLVES FAST FOUR DARING GREATLY RECORD BREAKERS HOCKEY 101

TICKET SALES & SERVICES Kevin Dooley Eric Zavilla Dave Pawelek Jackie Schroeder Stefanie Starck Aaron Holz Rob Newburg Steve Winner Mike Elliott John Golz Janel James Matt Agase Anthony Krzyzak Cori Giblichman Kevin Nathan Ricky Campione Mike Czopek Pawel Sienko Kayla Yingst Emily Durfey

Senior Executive Dir. of Ticket Sales Exec. Dir. of Ticket Sales & Services Senior Director of Strategic Alliances Director of Ticket Sales & Services Director of Program Development Ticket Sales & Services Coordinator Youth Hockey Coordinator E-Business Specialist Manager of Inside Sales Senior Account Executive Senior Account Executive Account Executive Account Executive Account Representative Account Representative Inside Sales Representative Inside Sales Representative Inside Sales Representative Inside Sales Representative Ticket Services Intern

1-800-THE-WOLVES | CHICAGOWOLVES.COM | THEAHL.COM

COMMUNICATIONS Lindsey Willhite Justin Skelnik Elise Butler

CREATIVE SERVICES Imran Javed Kristen Shilton Troy Mueller Cindy Navarro Kara Konicki Ross Dettman

TV

Ron Storto Sarah Draheim Stephen Fabro Cameron Gibson

TV BROADCAST Jason Shaver Bill Gardner

41 43 45 48

Director of Public Relations Asst. Director of Media Relations Communications Intern Digital Content Manager Digital Media Coordinator Graphic Designer Junior Graphic Designer Creative Services Assistant Team Photographer Executive TV Producer TV Production Manager TV Producer TV Intern Play-by-Play Announcer Color Analyst

FIRST RESPONDERS JERSEY BY THE NUMBERS GAME TIME AUTOGRAPH PHOTO

MEDICAL STAFF

Dr. Scott Logue, MD Dr. Rob Dugan, MD Dr. Jack Morgan, MD Dr. Alan Acierno, DDS Jim Buskirk, PT Jolie Holschen, MD

GAME-DAY STAFF Gordon Scott Jason Svejda

Team Physician/Orthopedics Orthopedics Internist Team Dentist Physical Therapist Emergency Medicine Public Address Announcer In-Arena Host

Deanna Angelini, Jennifer Bachelder, Alida Banh, Kimberly Bart, Emily Boxer, Bianca Bruno, Joe Capozzi, Kelly Carlson, Anthony Chicalace, Sydney Cosentino, Nick Daniels, Nick DiFalco, Dana Goldstein, Heather Hansen, Brittney Hillebrand, Jena Karkos, Samantha Krasinski, Steve Laures, Nikki Lennarson, Ashley Leverenz, Bridgette McGinley, Jenn Myzia, Danielle Nasshan, Seth Novoselsky, Rob Nowak, Geoff Post, Jacqueline Povitsky, Jessica Schubert, Miranda Scott, Brittany Sloat, Lauren Stoeck, Amanda Thomsen, Rene Twardowski, James Wilberschied Breakaway Magazine Editorial Producer: Courtney Mahoney Publication Writer: Kristen Shilton Publication Feature Designer: Christina Moritz Publication Photographer: Ross Dettman Creative Support: Imran Javed and Cindy Navarro

C H I C A G O W O LV E S


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C H I C A G O W O LV E S



WOLVES HISTORY

5

FOUR-TIME CHAMPIONS THE CHICAGO WOLVES FRANCHISE IS DEFINED BY EXCELLENCE. During an 11-year span from 1997-2008, the Wolves reached the league Finals six times and came away with the championship trophy four times. In 1998 and 2000, the Wolves skated away with the International Hockey League’s Turner Cup. In 2002 and 2008, the team hoisted the American Hockey League’s big prize, the Calder Cup. Regardless of which league they’ve played, the Wolves organization has become synonymous with winning. It’s a tradition they carry into their 20th season of competition. Here, we look back at the four most momentous days in Wolves history, all of which have added to the franchise’s illustrious fabric.

JUNE 15, 1998 Backed by 16,701 fans, the second-largest crowd in Turner Cup Finals history, the Wolves shut out the Detroit Vipers 3-0 to capture their first Turner Cup Championship, 4-games-to-3. It was the first sevengame series for the IHL Championship in 13 years, while the shutout set a then-franchise record with two in one postseason. Chicago won the last two games of the series to become only the sixth team in the IHL’s 53-year history to rebound from a 3-games-to-2 deficit in the Finals. Wolves center Alexander Semak walked away with the N.R. ”Bud“ Poile Trophy as the postseason’s most valuable player.

JUNE 5, 2000

JUNE 3, 2002

JUNE 10, 2008

After a scoreless first period, center Derek Plante notched two goals just 26 seconds apart in the second period to eliminate the Grand Rapids Griffins at Van Andel Arena and capture the Wolves’ second Turner Cup Championship in three years. With the victory, Chicago became the 16th team in league history to capture multiple IHL championships (1998 and 2000). Wolves goaltender Andrei Trefilov was awarded the N.R. ”Bud“ Poile Trophy as the Turner Cup Playoffs Most Valuable Player, having led the league during the postseason in both goals-against average (1.35) and save percentage (.950).

The Wolves clinched their third championship in five years when center Yuri Butsayev scored 2:05 into the second overtime to defeat the Bridgeport Sound Tigers 4-3 and capture the Calder Cup Championship, 4-games-to-1, at the Allstate Arena. The Wolves, who played a league-high 105 games, including an all-time American Hockey Leaguehigh 25 playoff games, became the sixth team in AHL history to win the championship in their inaugural season. Goaltender Pasi Nurminen was awarded the Jack A. Butterfield Trophy as the playoff MVP, posting a league-leading and then franchise-high 15 wins. Right wing Rob Brown, who notched three assists in the victory, led the league during the postseason with a then-franchise record 33 points and tied an AHL and team record with 26 assists.

The Wolves clinched their fourth league title in 11 years and second Calder Cup Championship with a 5-2 victory and a 4-games-to-2 series win over the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins at Allstate Arena. Center Jason Krog capped a four-point night with a hat trick and an assist, which earned him the Jack A. Butterfield Trophy as the MVP of the 2008 Calder Cup Playoffs. He matched franchise marks with 12 goals and 26 assists in the postseason and established a new club record with 38 points. Rookie goaltender Ondrej Pavelec collected his 16th postseason win, the most in club history.

C H I C A G O W O LV E S


6

WO LV ES H I STO RY

BEHIND THE LENS FOR 19 SEASONS, CHICAGO WOLVES PHOTOGRAPHER ROSS DETTMAN has been dedicated to chronicling the team’s improbable goals, wild celebrations and memorable fights. Just like a favorite player, certain photos and events stand out among the rest. Here, he shares the images that stick with him season after season.

COLIN STUART BENCH JUMP (2008) That night I knew there was a potential Calder Cup-winning moment to grab. I wanted to be in position to produce as many looks as I could and the bench was going to be the central place where the excitement emanates from. I got a ladder and I was behind the bench and trying to map it out and find a cool angle. I framed it so there were fans in the frame too. When I saw Stewy jumping over the bench I knew: that was going to be a bad-ass photo. It embodied so many things. It’s quite possibly my favorite hockey photo I’ve ever made. You can feel the energy in the building. All the parts of the celebration are happening in those two seconds. The fans, the coaches, the player, the goalie, the dejection; it’s got it all. I knew it was going to be a good photo, but didn’t know it would be that good.

DEREK JOSLIN PORTRAIT (2013) It’s a really strong photograph and I love the light on it. As a photographer I tend to look for things that take us in a different direction. What I liked about this is it captured the intensity of who Derek is. You look at his face and he’s intimidating. When I first saw him I thought I wanted to bring out the textures in his face. We have a challenge to visually stimulate our audience and have it

FANS CELEBRATING IN SILHOUETTE (1996)

still be a Wolves photo, though. The branding component always comes to mind. It’s a challenge.

A lot of what I do is the other side of the glass. This

It’s a dark photo, but it came out as a really

photo was on the second level of the arena. With

beautiful cover. I like the tones of it, how it has a

the configuration of the building, you can make fans

mysterious, brooding feel to it, because that’s who

become silhouettes and frame them against the

Derek is. We hadn’t done a black and white cover

ice. It’s not about who they are, but what they’re

like that before.

doing. I would find a collection of people and I would wait for a goal and the group jumps up and you get the celebration down on the ice and you have the jubilation of the fans. It’s a different frame and I liked it a lot.

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8

OW N E R S H I P

DONALD R. LEVIN (luh-VIN) founded DRL Enterprises, Inc., in 1969. The

DON LEVIN CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD / GOVERNOR

Chicago-based company has holdings in many industries including tobacco processing, aircraft and medical equipment leasing, licensed sports product manufacturing and distribution, and motion picture production and distribution. Levin’s film company has made nearly 20 motion pictures distributed in the U.S. and overseas. His films have featured such stars as Emilio Estevez, Charlie Sheen, Sharon Stone, Rodney Dangerfield, and Chuck Norris. Levin founded the Chicago Wolves with William Buddy Meyers and Grant Mulvey in January 1994 and has served as the team’s chairman of the board throughout. Levin donates his time and serves on the board of directors for several charitable organizations. Levin also supports Chicago’s Department of Animal Care and Control (ACC). The Wolves host the ACC’s Adopt-a-Dog program at several home games each season and encourage fans to bring home an adopted dog after the game. The Adopt-A-Dog program has found homes for 1,080 dogs in its first 13 seasons. Ten years ago, Levin purchased and donated the Animobile -- a mobile adoption unit and a modern clinic staffed by veterinarians and adoption specialists. The Chicago native was recognized at the Boy Scouts of America’s Northwest Suburban Council’s Distinguished Citizens Banquet as its 2005 Honoree. Under Levin’s direction, the Wolves organization has held a scout night for the Northwest Suburban Council at a home game for the last 16 seasons. Levin was inducted into the Illinois Hockey Hall of Fame on Jan. 27, 2013. He was honored as the International Hockey League’s Executive of the Year for the 19992000 season, which concluded with the franchise’s second of four championships. Before beginning his business career, Levin served in the United States Marine Corps, from which he was honorably discharged. Levin and his wife, Kathleen Ann, have a son, Robert, and they live in the northern suburbs. ”QUIETLY (SMILES). I’M NOT A SCREAMER. DO I WANT TO? YES. BUT I DON’T WANT TO START SCREAMING AT REFEREES. I DON’T WANT TO

WE ASKED

BE A BAD FAN. SOMETIMES I WALK OUTSIDE.

HOW DO YOU RELEASE YOUR EMOTIONS DURING THE COURSE OF A GAME?

THAT’S WHEN I’M REALLY MAD. YOU’LL SEE ME WALK OUTSIDE.”

WILLIAM BUDDY MEYERS, a principal owner of the Wolves who founded

WILLIAM BUDDY MEYERS VICE CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD B R E A K A W AY M A G A Z I N E

the team with Don Levin and Grant Mulvey in January 1994, has been involved in the world of hockey for more than 35 years. He is a former certified agent of the National Hockey League Players’ Association and is past attorney for the Soviet Red Army Hockey Team (CSKA). He is a practicing attorney and the principal in the law firm of William Buddy Meyers, Ltd. His concentration is in the areas of worker’s compensation and personal injury litigation. Additionally, he is a member of the Illinois Bar Association, Illinois Trial Lawyers Association, and Illinois Workers Compensation Lawyers Association; a former director of the Better Boys Foundation and River North Association; and a recipient of the Shomrim Society of Illinois’ Man of the Year Award in 2006. He also supports numerous charitable and environmental organizations. Meyers is a graduate of the University of “DURING THE GAME WHEN WE SCORE Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and holds a juris OR ARE WINNING, I WATCH THE FANS. doctor degree from the Illinois Institute of THEIR EXCITEMENT, SMILES, AND Technology/Chicago Kent. He and Jill live in SCREAMING CALM ME DOWN. IF THE the River North area of Chicago and have five GAME IS VERY CLOSE OR WE ARE children between them: Justin, Lindsey, Zak, LOSING, I SOMETIMES WALK THE Brad, and Leslie. HALLWAYS DURING THE GAME TO

RELAX – AND SOMETIMES SEE DON WALKING AS WELL.”




HOCKEY OPERATIONS

WENDELL YOUNG GENERAL MANAGER

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WENDELL YOUNG enters his fifth season at the helm of the Wolves hockey operations department. The team has compiled a .590 winning percentage (167-111-15-19) during his tenure as general manager, which includes capturing the regular-season West Division title in 2009-10 and the regular-season Midwest Division title in 2011-12. The 50-year-old is the Wolves’ all-time leader among goaltenders in games played (322), wins (169), saves (8,467), minutes (17,912) and shutouts (16), and was a member of Chicago’s 1998 and 2000 Turner Cup championship squads. His jersey number “1” was the first number retired by the Wolves on Dec. 1, 2001. The Halifax, Nova Scotia, native, who was inducted into the Nova Scotia Sport Hall of Fame in 2007, is the only man in hockey history to have won all four North American championships: the Stanley Cup, Turner Cup, Calder Cup and Memorial Cup. He captured the Stanley Cup in 1991 and 1992 as a member of the Pittsburgh Penguins, the 1988 Calder Cup with the Hershey Bears, the 1982 Memorial Cup with the Kitchener Rangers and the 1998 and 2000 Turner Cups with the Wolves. He also was behind the bench as a coach for the Wolves 2008 Calder Cup victory. Young played 18 seasons of professional hockey, including 10 in the National Hockey League. He compiled a 59-86-12 record in 187 games with the Vancouver Canucks, Philadelphia Flyers, Tampa Bay Lightning and Penguins. He also served as goaltending coach for the Calgary Flames from 2001-2003.

BILL BENTLEY enters his fifth season as assistant general manager and 20th season with the Wolves organization. One of a handful of people who has been with the organization since the team’s inception in 1994, Bentley has been instrumental in the hockey operations department for more than 17 years, which includes all four championship campaigns. The Chicago native joined the organization as a statistician in 1994 and was promoted to team services manager a year later. The 43-year-old spent 12 seasons as the director of hockey administration, handling team travel, immigration and accounting for the hockey operations department, before assuming the assistant general manager role in August 2009. A graduate of Quincy College, Bentley served as the Director of Media Relations for the Chicago Cheetahs of the now defunct Roller Hockey International during the 1993-94 season.

BILL BENTLEY ASSISTANT GENERAL MANAGER

GENE UBRIACO DIRECTOR OF HOCKEY OPERATIONS

GENE UBRIACO returns for his 17th term as the Wolves director of hockey operations and fifth as senior advisor following a 10-year professional playing career and 26 seasons as a professional coach. Ubriaco has been with the Wolves since the 1994-95 inaugural season when he was the team’s first head coach. That year, he guided the Wolves to a 34-33-14 record and a berth in the Turner Cup Playoffs. He compiled a 61-61-20 head coaching record with the Wolves during a three-year span, including a two-game interim stint during the 1996-97 season. Ubriaco began his coaching career at Lake Superior State University in 1972-73. Four years later, he led the Milwaukee Admirals to the Turner Cup Playoffs, becoming the first International Hockey League coach to lead an expansion team into the postseason. In 1988-89, Ubriaco moved on to the National Hockey League to coach the Pittsburgh Penguins. Under his tutelage, the Penguins shattered several team records that season and advanced to the Stanley Cup Playoffs after a seven-year absence. The Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, native recorded 162 goals, 258 assists and 420 points in 456 AHL games spanning nine seasons, which includes a career-high 42 goals and 86 points during the 1965-66 season with the Hershey Bears. Ubriaco spent his final three years as a player in the NHL with the Penguins (1967-68), the Oakland Seals (1968-69) and the Chicago Blackhawks (1969-70).

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BEHIND THE BENCH

JOHN ANDERSON HEAD COACH

DAVE ALLISON ASSISTANT COACH

SCOTT ALLEN ASSISTANT COACH

13

JOHN ANDERSON enters his 12th season as Wolves head coach after being re-hired to the position on July 16, 2013. Anderson returns to the Wolves with four years of National Hockey League experience, which includes two years as head coach of the Atlanta Thrashers from 2008-10. He served most recently as an assistant coach with the Phoenix Coyotes from 2011-13. The 56-year-old Anderson guided the Wolves to four championships during his first tenure with the Wolves: the Calder Cup in 2002 and 2008 and the Turner Cup in 1998 and 2000. He is the team’s all-time leader in wins (506) and postseason victories (105). Prior to joining the Wolves, Anderson captured the Colonial Cup as head coach of the Quad City Mallards of the Colonial Hockey League. He began his coaching career with the Winston-Salem Mammoths in 1995-96, leading them to the Southern Hockey League Finals and a 30-23-1 regular-season record. Toronto’s first pick (11th overall) in the 1977 amateur draft, Anderson played 12 seasons in the National Hockey League with the Maple Leafs (1977-85), Quebec Nordiques (1985-86), and Hartford Whalers (1986-89). The Toronto native registered five 30-goal campaigns in the NHL, including four straight from 1981-85. Anderson’s most productive offensive season came in 1982-83, when he paced Toronto with 80 points (31G, 49A) in 80 games. Anderson ranks 14th in Maple Leafs history with 189 goals and 20th with 393 points. Overall, he amassed 282 goals and 631 points in 814 career NHL games, along with 9 goals and 27 points in 37 career Stanley Cup Playoff contests. DAVE ALLISON enters his first season with the Wolves after being named assistant coach on July 16, 2013. He brings 18 years of professional coaching experience to Chicago. Allison served most recently as head coach of the American Hockey League’s Peoria Rivermen, where he led the team to a 33-35-5-3 record in 2012-13. Prior to joining the Rivermen, the 54-year-old Allison spent time as a scout with the Pittsburgh Penguins and worked as a part of the player development team with the Colorado Avalanche. Allison has accumulated a 232-214-25-28 mark during his seven seasons and 499 games as an AHL head coach with Peoria (2012-13), Iowa (2005-08), Milwaukee (200102), and Prince Edward Island (1994-96). The Fort Francis, Ontario, native also had a 25-game stint as the interim head coach of the NHL’s Ottawa Senators during the 1995-96 season. Allison enjoyed a 10-year professional career as a defenseman in the AHL, IHL, and NHL. He amassed 119 assists, 144 points, and 1,473 penalty minutes in 452 career AHL games with Nova Scotia, Sherbrooke, Newmarket, and Halifax spanning eight seasons from 1979 to 1985 and 1987-89. He skated in three NHL games with Montreal during the 1983-84 campaign.

SCOTT ALLEN enters his first season with the Wolves after being named assistant coach on July 16, 2013. He brings 17 years of professional coaching experience to Chicago. Allen served most recently as Dave Allison’s assistant with the Peoria Rivermen during the 2012-13 campaign. Prior to joining Peoria, he spent three seasons in the National Hockey League as an assistant coach with the New York Islanders. The 47-year-old Allen entered the coaching ranks as an assistant coach with the ECHL’s Johnstown Chiefs in 1996 and was promoted to head coach of the franchise halfway through the 1997-98 season. He would serve as the Chiefs head coach for four more years before moving to the American Hockey League in 2002. Allen spent two seasons with the San Antonio Rampage (2002-04), where he split time as an assistant coach and then a head coach. He then served as an assistant coach in Lowell, Omaha, and Quad City from 2004-09. The New Bedford, Mass., native spent 10 years as a player in professional hockey as the former center competed in the All American Hockey League, Atlantic Coast Hockey League, Colonial Hockey League, Central Hockey League and the ECHL.

C H I C A G O W O LV E S



MAP THE LEAGUE

WESTERN CONFERENCE

EASTERN CONFERENCE

MIDWEST DIVISION Chicago . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . St. Louis Grand Rapids . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Detroit Iowa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Minnesota Milwaukee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Nashville Rockford . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Chicago

ATLANTIC DIVISION Manchester . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Los Angeles Portland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Phoenix Providence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Boston St. John’s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Winnipeg Worcester . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . San Jose

NORTH DIVISION Hamilton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Montreal Lake Erie . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Colorado Rochester . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Buffalo Toronto . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Toronto Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vancouver

NORTHEAST DIVISION Adirondack . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Philadelphia Albany . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . New Jersey Bridgeport . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . NY Islanders Hartford . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . NY Rangers Springfield. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Columbus

WEST DIVISION Abbotsford . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Calgary Charlotte . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Carolina Oklahoma City . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Edmonton San Antonio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Florida Texas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dallas

EAST DIVISION Binghamton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ottawa Hershey . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Washington Norfolk . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Anaheim Syracuse . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tampa Bay W-B/Scranton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Pittsburgh

15

C H I C A G O W O LV E S


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17

MEET THE WO LV ES

2

CADE FAIRCHILD

D | H 5-10 | W 178 Jan. 15, 1989 Duluth, Minnesota @Caderade0

3

JOEL EDMUNDSON

DAVID SHIELDS

D | H 6-3 | W 205 Jan. 27, 1991 Rochester, New York

MICHAEL DAVIES

13

RW | H 5-9 | W 175 Dec. 10, 1986 Chesterfield, Missouri @MikeGDavies

TAYLOR CHORNEY

D | H 6-4 | W 210 June 28, 1993 Brandon, Manitoba @jedmundson3

7

4 D | H 6-0 | W 201 April 27, 1987 Thunder Bay, Ontario

8 TY RATTIE

RW | H 6-0 | W 183 Feb. 5, 1993 Airdrie, Alberta @TyRattie8

17

SERGEY ANDRONOV

LW | H 6-2 | W 208 July 19, 1989 Moscow, Russia @andronovsa

BRETT PONICH

D | H 6-7 | W 217 Feb. 22, 1991 Beaumont, Alberta @BrettPonich

9 SHANE HARPER

RW | H 5-10 | W 194 Feb. 1, 1989 Valencia, California @Cali_Sharp

ERIC KATTELUS

18

LW | H 6-1 | W 203 June 22, 1987 Traverse City, Michigan

5

JANI HAKANPAA

D | H 6-6 | W 227 March 31, 1992 Kirkkonummi, Finland @JHakanpaa

10 CHRIS PORTER

LW | H 6-1 | W 205 May 29, 1984 Toronto, Ontario @32porterhouse

CODY BEACH

20

RW | H 6-5 | W 195 Aug. 8, 1992 Kelowna, British Columbia @CodyBeach16

6

12 PAT CANNONE

C | H 5-11 | W 193 Aug. 9, 1986 Bayport, New York @PistolPat20

TYLER SHATTOCK

21

RW | H 6-3 | W 200 Feb. 3, 1990 Vernon, British Columbia C H I C A G O W O LV E S


18

M E E T T H E WO LV ES

DMITRIJ JASKIN

22

LW | H 6-3 | W 204 March 23, 1993 Omsk, Russia @ DmitrijJaskin

BRENT REGNER

28

D | H 6-0 | W 190 May 17, 1989 Westlock, Alberta

24

MARK MANCARI

RW | H 6-4 | W 219 July 11, 1985 London, Ontario @Mancari325

KEITH AUCOIN

29

C | H 5-8 | W 167 Nov. 6, 1978 Waltham, Massachusetts @coiner11

25

YANNICK VEILLEUX

LW | H 6-2 | W 202 Feb. 22, 1993 St. Hipolytte, Quebec @YannVeilleux9

30

JORDAN BINNINGTON

G | H 6-1 | W 169 July 11, 1993 Richmond Hill, Ontario @binnnasty

26

NATHAN LONGPRE

F | H 6-1 | W 194 June 16, 1988 Peterborough, Ontario @Longpre9

32

CHRISTIAN HANSON

C | H 6-4 | W 216 March 10, 1986 Glens Falls, New York

EVAN OBERG

27

D | H 6-0 | W 191 Feb. 16, 1988 Forestburg, Alberta @Evan_Oberg

MATT CLIMIE

33

G | H 6-4 | W 215 Feb. 11, 1983 Leduc, Alberta

@Hanson20er

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C A L L 1 . 87 7. 5 4 3 . 376 8 USE REFERENCE CODE: RS20 B R E A K A W AY M A G A Z I N E


THANK YOU WOLVES FANS.

YOU HELPED SAVE

255 LIVES

IN OUR COMMUNITY For more information on how you can help save lives, visit lifesource.org or call 1.877.543.3768


TO PARTICIPATE IN THIS PROGRAM, CALL 1-800-THE-WOLVES OR VISIT CHICAGOWOLVES.COM


MEET THE WO LV ES

JAKE ALLEN

35

G | H 6-2 | W 203 Aug. 7, 1990 Fredericton, New Brunswick @34jallen

COREY LOCKE

36

HENRIK ODEGAARD D | H 5-10 | W 186 Feb. 12, 1988 Oslo, Norway

38

SEBASTIAN WANNSTROM RW | H 6-2 | W 198 March 3, 1991 Gavle, Sweden

21

49

ALEXANDRE BOLDUC C | H 6-1 | W 199 June 26, 1985 Montreal, Quebec @ADuke49

84

C | H 5-9 | W 174 May 8, 1984 Toronto, Ontario @LockeItDown84

HOCKEY OPERATIONS

STAN DUBICKI

GOALTENDING COACH

EVAN LEVY

STRENGTH & CONDITIONING COACH

KEVIN KACER

HEAD ATHLETIC TRAINER

CRAIG KOGUT

HEAD EQUIPMENT MANAGER

KENNY MCCUDDEN SKATING & SKILLS COACH

SHAWN FORNEY

ASSISTANT EQUIPMENT MANAGER

C H I C A G O W O LV E S


©2009 Pace

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23

TITLE FAST FOUR HERE

KEITH AUCOIN

MIKE DAVIES

EVAN OBERG

NATHAN LONGPRE

CENTER

RIGHT WING

DEFENSEMAN

FORWARD

“Homeland”

“Friends”

“Game of Thrones”

“South Park”

Ice Cream

Pineapples

Fruit

Salt & Vinegar Kettle Cooked Chips

WHAT FOOD DO YOU DISKLIKE THE MOST?

Olives

Liver

Mushrooms

Cooked Carrots

WHAT IS THE BEST MEAL YOU CAN COOK?

Pork Chops

BBQ Chicken Legs With Homemade Sauce

Salmon

Pasta & Chicken

WHAT TV MARATHON COULD YOU WATCH ALL DAY? WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE SNACK?

SOCIAL CENTRAL

SOCIAL MEDIA STAR OF THE MONTH JANUARY

Erika Johanna Lind

COME VISIT US AT SOCIAL CENTRAL BEHIND SECTION 104

@Johanna_blonde

Interact with us to be the Social Media Star of the Month! CHICAgO WOLVES PROfESSIONAL HOCkEy | @CHICAgO_WOLVES | #CHICAgOWOLVES

WHEN YOU’RE TWEETING @Chicago_Wolves

INFOGRAPHIC BY CINDY NAVARRO

TWITTER HALL OF FAME Alex Bolduc

Pat Cannone

Christian Hanson

@Aduke49

@Pistolpat20

@Hanson20er

“So much better now, thank you to everyone for all the prayers and well wishes and I’m looking forward to rejoining my team.”

“Just watched Footloose, it’s safe to say I will be dancing eveywhere from now on.”

“I’ve come to the conclusion if I were to ever get chased by mall security on a segway, I’d run up a flight of stairs.”

20%

40%

40%

MORNINGS

AFTERNOONS

EVENINGS

FACEBOOK HALL OF FAME CHICAGO WOLVES PROFESSIONAL HOCKEY WOLVES WIN! The #ChicagoWolves rang up seven goals on the Rockford IceHogs during Friday night’s Illinois Lottery Cup battle, notching three power-play scores en route to a 7-2 victory at Allstate Arena.

C H I C A G O W O LV E S SCinfographic_December(halfpage)_nonumbers.indd 1

12/16/13 4:07 PM


ON THE BRINK Barely out of his teens, and new to North America, Dmitrij Jaskin is ready to show the hockey world he can hang with the big boys BY KRISTEN SHILTON | PHOTOS BY ROSS DETTMAN


FOR A YOUNG ATHLETE ON

THE CUSP

OF STARTING A PROFESSIONAL CAREER, being picked No. 1 overall in an entry draft is about as good as it gets. Unless you’re Chicago Wolves forward Dmitrij Jaskin, in which case being one league’s first selection wasn’t nearly as thrilling as being another’s 41st. “I was drafted with first pick in the Kontinental Hockey League’s 2010 draft (by Siber Novosibirsk) and I didn’t even know,” Jaskin said. “I was at school studying and my father just called me and said I was drafted first overall and I was just like, ‘all right.’ I knew something of the National Hockey League draft when I went the first time (in 2011). I got to Minneapolis the day before the draft, after like 24 hours of traveling, and it was fun and crazy. I hoped I would go in the first round but then I slipped to the second round when the St. Louis Blues took me, but I didn’t care. It was great. I was happy.”

“I WAS DRAFTED WITH FIRST PICK IN THE KONTINENTAL HOCKEY LEAGUE’S 2010 DRAFT (BY SIBER NOVOSIBIRSK) AND I DIDN’T EVEN KNOW.” The 20-year-old Omsk, Russia native has been humming along contently since. An accomplished tennis player in Europe, Jaskin chose to pursue hockey when it became too difficult to do both at a high level. Following his selection by the Blues, Jaskin returned to the Czech Republic for another year of minor hockey with Slavia Praha HC, registering one goal in 30 contests. When that season ended, Jaskin had a choice: leave the country he and his family had lived in since he was eight months old or join the Quebec Major Junior League’s Moncton Wildcats in Moncton, New Brunswick. It wasn’t easy, but Jaskin wanted to do what was best for his career like his father, Alexej, had done before him. “My father got some opportunities to play hockey

in the Czech Republic so our whole family moved from Russia to support that,” Jaskin said. “I lived all my life in Czech and I spent all my time at the hockey rink. I loved it right away. I was probably 2 or 3 when I started playing. I would spend all day at the rink and watch every game. I went to Canada because I figured it was still a pro league and they have a lot of players there, plus I would get to play more. I wouldn’t just be on the ice six minutes a night. The Blues wanted me closer, too, so they didn’t have to fly to Czech all the time. Bottom line, I needed to be on the ice more.” Jaskin got his wish with the Wildcats, exploding for 46 goals and 99 assists in 51 regular season games. Still, despite the game being the same, the Great White North was a major departure for him culturally. When he arrived, Jaskin was fluent in Russian and Czech but didn’t know much English beyond the basics. “I got to Canada, and I was alone,” he said. “Another Russian guy didn’t come for like two weeks. I had to learn as much as I could. I went to school and tried to speak to guys. The others helped me a lot, and the family I lived with helped me a lot. They said we had to go to school so we just went and tried to learn to speak English well. Canada is also a young country. There’s not a lot of history. I was used to a lot of history, coming from Prague and Russia. Everything was so new. The people were really nice and it gave me a chance to just concentrate on hockey and nothing else. There was nothing else to do. I just played hockey and enjoyed life.” With no distractions, Jaskin was free to make the most of his only junior season in North America before St. Louis began getting him acclimated in its system full time. Some things, like playing on a smaller ice surface than he was used to, didn’t faze him. Other challenges gave the year a “sink or swim” feel. “It was a little bit tough for me at first to adjust to how they did things in the QMJHL,” Jaskin said. “It was kind of hard playing hockey and going to school and traveling around this big city. The people there helped me and I was happy to have the opportunity. The people and coaches showed me how much harder I had to work if I wanted to get playing time in juniors. It was a big



turning point for me.” So big in fact, it gave St. Louis the confidence to call up the then19 year old to their American Hockey League affiliate, the Peoria Rivermen, after the Wildcats were bounced from the first round of their playoffs. Jaskin never made it to Peoria, though. Instead he got on a plane to Nashville. “I remember waiting in Moncton and it being really hard because we had just lost and everyone was really sad and I was ready to go home,” he said. “But my agent told me to wait because I was going to sign a contract (with St. Louis) and so I waited for like nine days while they sorted things out with the player visa. I had told (my agent) to buy me a ticket home because I was ready for a vacation and I hadn’t been skating at all but I was finally flown to Nashville where the Blues were playing and joined the team. It was a hard couple of days. They just started trying to get me in shape right away.” Unlike many teenage prospects, Jaskin was thrown directly into the fire with St. Louis, suiting up in two of their final regular-season games. Playing seven or eight minutes in each at the game’s highest level was an exhilarating experience. “I was so nervous in those first games,” he said. “There’s a lot of pressure. You don’t want to make a mistake. I love the crowd, I love all the people around, but you’re on the ice and you can’t make a mistake. That’s the pressure. It was all right. I felt pretty good in the second game at Colorado. We had some good chances. It was a good time and a good experience being with the guys for a month.” When the Blues were jettisoned from the playoffs by the L.A. Kings and the offseason program began, Jaskin began to see how the system worked with NHL clubs and knew he wanted more opportunities to be a contributor.

“I WAS SO NERVOUS IN THOSE FIRST GAMES. THERE’S A LOT OF PRESSURE.” “I spent almost all of last summer in St. Louis,” he said. “I was there for a long time. I was getting ready. Then, about 50 new players were around. It was all about practice and we had to stay on it and show the coaches why you should be in the lineup. I tried my best to do that.” “What makes Dmitrij such a good prospect is he combines being a skill player who can produce points on offense with being responsible on defense,” said Kevin McDonald, assistant general manager of the Blues. “He makes a great second effort and you can count on him not to let his defensive game fall down while he’s out there on a shift. He had a solid showing in the NHL when he was here. Going from junior hockey to the NHL, the thing he understood is that a lot of his success comes through effort and hard work, which shows up in his ability to create turnovers and things like that. He has done that at every level, including his brief time in the NHL.” Jaskin has had to stare down his share of critics along the way. Knocked for his lack of success when going up against bigger, older players, Jaskin takes the criticism in stride and with a good deal of pragmatism. “When people say that about me, it’s probably because the guys who are playing in the NHL used to play at the American Hockey League level, and it’s harder to get on that NHL level to play against them when you haven’t been there much before,” he said. “It’s probably true what they say because I’ve never played against these guys, so it’s going to take some time to adjust. But hopefully I’ll get there. There are different styles of hockey, for sure (between North America and Europe). It’s more offensive and there are more shots taken here. It’s different, but it’s still just everyone out there on the ice. You just have to play.” Two years ago, Jaskin faced every player’s nightmare when he was terrifyingly – but as it turned out, briefly – taken away from the

AN UNEXPECTED BLIP CALL IT AN UNLUCKY BOUNCE. During practice on Dec. 17, the Wolves were working on a tap-in drill, crowding around the net and corralling wayward pucks. When forward Michael Davies took a shot toward the scrum, the puck ricocheted off the crossbar and smacked Dmitrij Jaskin in the face. Fortunately, head athletic trainer Kevin Kacer was nearby. “Dmitrij’s lip was cut basically in half,” Kacer said. ”I stopped the bleeding to see if I could get stitches in there. Dmitrij was in a fair amount of pain. At first he was concerned he was going to lose a tooth because the area was bleeding so badly. When you cut your lip it can look like a much worse injury than it is. So when guys look in the mirror right after a puck to the face, it can be scary.”

“I STOPPED THE BLEEDING TO SEE IF I COULD GET STITCHES IN THERE.” - KEVIN KACER, ATHLETIC TRAINER

While the hit caught him off-guard, Jaskin said the shock wore off quickly. “These things happen in games and practice all the time,” he said. “It’s no big deal. I got 10 stitches in my lip and that was it.” The injury meant Jaskin’s previously planned Breakaway photo shoot had to be shuttered on account of an emergency dentist appointment, and he was instructed to wear a full face mask on the ice to protect the area. Kacer says if all goes well, though, he won’t be left with much of a scar. “When the wound can be closed easily and you can suture straight across, there typically won’t be a scar,” he said. “It’s a highly vascular area of the body so it does a good job of healing itself. Dmitrij will have some sort of scar but nothing major, which is good.”


game. While playing in Prague, Jaskin went one-on-one with another player and came out on the losing end of a corner battle for a puck. “That was a bad thing, the injury,” Jaskin said. “I was playing one-on-one with a guy in the corner and he came in there and just killed me. He took both knees out and my left knee was crushed right away. But that was something that just happens sometimes. It’s hockey. I learned a lot from that too, because you see it happen to others but until it’s you, you don’t know what it’s like. I just had to start again from the bottom. I had surgery and took like a month to (recover) and then I was back practicing and playing again. When a very bad injury happens, you just have to recover and start again.” Coming to Chicago has been a new beginning for Jaskin as well, as he adjusts to higher expectations and the typical growing pains of a player transitioning to a new league. “He’s probably the most talented guy on our team overall,” Wolves head coach John Anderson said. “He hasn’t found everything yet though. His fault is that he likes to hold onto the puck for too long. But he also makes a lot of good plays on his own, so I give him a little bit of that leeway. Because of how he plays he sometimes has to stay on the ice for too long, but he’s in great shape so he can stay out there longer. I think once he gets his shooting where it needs to be, he’s really going to grow as a player.” As he works on that, he’s also getting used to the biggest city he’s ever lived in. If Moncton (population: 64,000) was intimidating for him at first, Chicago was a major departure.

But despite the change of scenery, Jaskin has carried on as before, taking solace in multiple phone calls home a week and his live-in girlfriend, who came from the Czech Republic to keep him company. “I just try to make the most of what time I’m not at practice,” he said. “I watch movies. Sometimes I go shopping. I’ve been down to Chicago a couple times. We went to the Willis Tower and that was cool. I like Twitter. It’s like a newspaper on your phone. You can read about whatever you want and sometimes people write something funny or nice. I spend a lot of time on the phone with my best friends and family back home. I’m getting used to being away from them.” While he doesn’t get much downtime while in season, Jaskin is grateful for the chances he’s been given and lights up talking about what’s on the horizon. As he notes, life has moved quickly so far, but Jaskin knows where it (hopefully) all ends. “I have the same goal as everyone in here, I think,” he said. “I want to get up to the show and just try to work here in Chicago as much as I can and show (the Blues) I’m that guy who is supposed to go up there. The NHL has a big history and I want to play there and stay there as much as I can.” “Our hope is that Dmitrij is an NHL player for a long, long time,” McDonald said. “He’s cutting his teeth now and the experience in Chicago is invaluable because everyone knows how tough the AHL is and how difficult that jump from juniors can be. He’s playing in a lot of different situations now, and that’s the best thing for him. That’s what will help a player be in the NHL for years to come down the line.”

“WHEN A VERY BAD INJURY HAPPENS, YOU JUST HAVE TO RECOVER AND START AGAIN.”

JASKIN SNAPSHOT


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DARING GREATLY It was the first seven-game series for an International Hockey League championship in 13 years. The win made the Wolves only the sixth team in the IHL’s 53-year history to come back from a 3-games-to-2 deficit to win in the Finals. It also put goaltender Wendell Young into the record books. The championship made him the only man in North America to win all five major North American championships – the Robertson Cup, the Memorial Cup, the Calder Cup, the Stanley Cup, and the Turner Cup. Alexander Semak won the Most Valuable Player award after a come-from-nowhere run in the final stretch of the playoffs. All of this was compounded by what happened in the stands from the moment the doors opened. The Horizon was turned up. There was a resonant, powerful atmosphere in the building; a growing tension that multiplied as the clock moved inexorably toward the puck drop.

STEVE MALTAIS (Former Captain) You could tell in warmups what kind of crowd you were going to have. That night there were 8,000 people in the stands already, and the building was warm. You’re like, “OK. Here we go.” It only got louder.

STEVE MARTINS (Former Center) It was the sound of it. How loud it was. I remember starting on the blue line and thinking, “This is amazing. There must be 17,000 people here.” There were 16,701 fans in the building that night, and they were all making noise from the moment they sat down.

JUDD SIROTT (Wolves play-by-play announcer) I thought the whole roof was going to come down.

DON LEVIN (Chairman of the Board) That final game Detroit was absolutely – they were out of their mind. They were expected to win. It was Game 7 and everybody at every level was nervous.

WOLVES ORAL HISTORY

A SEVEN-PART SERIES

31

BY SARAH DRAHEIM

A LOT OF MEMORABLE THINGS HAPPENED AT THE ROSEMONT HORIZON ON JUNE 15, 1998. THE WOLVES SHUT OUT THE DETROIT VIPERS 3-0 TO CAPTURE THEIR FIRST FRANCHISE CHAMPIONSHIP AND THE FIRST OF TWO TURNER CUPS THEY WOULD EVENTUALLY WIN.

Everyone.

BILL BENTLEY (Assistant General Manager) I remember being very nervous. It was a long series and by the time we got to Game 7 anything could have happened – and actually it did happen – before the game.

COURTNEY MAHONEY (Senior Vice President of Operations) The crowds were massive. Like standing room only. We didn’t know what to do; we wanted to get them all in before the game started, but the walk up was unreal and we were not prepared. But then Wendell (Young) helped us out by delaying the game a little bit. After both teams finished their warmup period, a scrum developed at the far west side of the rink. It started with just a few guys from each side who were the last to exit the ice at the end of warm ups. Eventually, both teams piled out of the locker rooms in various stages of undress to fight on the ice and in the tunnel leading to the dressing rooms. Here the story varies a little depending on whom you ask. One thing is almost universally agreed-upon, though: Detroit tough guy Andy Bezeau started it.

SIROTT Bezeau was a guy who liked to stir the pot. He fired a puck into the Wolves net and Wendell took offense and went after him. Then guys started to pour from the dressing room and haymakers were being thrown. A full-out brawl ensued. MARTINS: We had maybe four or five guys left on the ice at the end of warmups. I usually stayed around until the end and, as it happens – at the Horizon – we had to go through their warmup to get off the ice. I see something going on by the boards, so I mosey over, and then one of their enforcers literally grabbed me by the neck and was ready to coldcock me. I’m going, “What did I do? What did I do here?” WAYNE MESSMER (Senior executive vice president) I was sitting down in the corner where the Zamboni rolls in watching. There was already a good buzz going and all of the

sudden we see something happen. Somebody had shot a puck and then the boys start coming out of the locker rooms and you’re going, “Whoa. This is going to be good.” Especially since they weren’t wearing skates. They’re going to be throwing some punches that are going to land. It was one of the best street fights I had ever seen. It was lovely. They were nuts. Nuts.

LEVIN The story I heard is that they shot a puck on our net. Then they started fighting on the ice. That’s when all the guys from the dressing room who had already come off after warmups came back. They were just about naked.

BOB NARDELLA (Former Defenseman) I was in the room already and I just remember running out and that a lot of guys had their skates off. It’s a superstitious thing, but if you’re going to shoot the puck in the other guys’ net then you have to expect to have consequences. WENDELL YOUNG (General Manager) I was injured. Our goalie, Stephane Beauregard, was playing Game 7, and he was trying to get off the ice. But then a bunch of Detroit’s tough guys wouldn’t let him off the ice and three of our guys – me, Stevie Martins, and Dougie Barrault – were left on the other end of the ice, and I’m going, “Dougie, something’s going on down there.”

CRAIG KOGUT (Head Equipment Manager) I was right there. Beauregard, our goalie at the time, always wanted to be the last guy off the ice, so right where he was supposed to come off, Andy Bezeau took a shot and nailed Beauregard. That’s when all hell broke loose. YOUNG I get down there and cross-check Bezeau into the boards. Their trainer was watching and he runs down to their dressing room to yell for all their guys. SIROTT The referee – I don’t think even he was in his full gear at that point – he comes out on the ice. The cops come out on the ice. Emotions had reached a fever pitch. It was Young and Bezeau who were the main C H I C A G O W O LV E S


32

WO LV ES O RA L H I STO RY

protagonists of this story, however, and as it turns out, the fight carried over into the next season.

YOUNG Bezeau and this other tough guy had me in the corner. I still had my blocker on and Bezeau goes, “I’m gonna kill you.” I still have my blocker and even though he’s gonna get me right between the eyes, I’m gonna be able to get one in. I know that. Then Wayne Presley, who I played with in Juniors, slides over. He was their team captain. He told Bezeau to let me go. Bezeau goes, “No, I’m gonna kill him.” Wayne says, “I’m telling you, Bezeau, let him go.” And he does! I go, “Wayne, I owe you one.” That next season, the first game against Detroit, Bezeau slides over and he goes, “You know I’m getting you tonight, right?” I said to him, “Andy, I’m gonna tell you one thing: I’d be very disappointed if you didn’t try.” The whole game, every time I touched the puck, I’d see him coming for me and I’d just get out of the way. He never did get me back for what went on. There’s also Kevin Cheveldayoff’s version of events, a version he tells despite the video evidence and the police presence.

CHEVELDAYOFF Nope, never happened. (Laughs) It did happen, though, and it ended up being a very good thing for the Chicago Wolves.

STEVE MALTAIS Everybody’s out there in flipflops and no gear on, but fortunately nobody got hurt and nobody got tossed. If anything, that just fired the guys up more. We had the extra person in the building – the crowd – and they were into it and loud. YOUNG It held up the game for 45 minutes. That got everyone in the building! We were sitting in the dressing room and guys’ shirts were all ripped and it’s basically like, “Hey, you know what? Let them worry about this.” We wanted to go forward and worry about the game.

NARDELLA I just remember Stephane Beauregard coming into the dressing room and saying, “They should not have pissed me off.” Sure enough, he didn’t let a goal in all game, so whatever they did, it worked against them. MESSMER Everybody was charged and in the right mood after that. When you sing a battle song, you’re ready to do battle. KEVIN KACER I just remember going back to my training room and thinking, “We just won the Turner Cup.” We just won, because they never should have woken the sleeping bear. B R E A K A W AY M A G A Z I N E

It was a wolf. And when it woke, it roared – but for a little more than two periods that day in June at the Horizon, the teams were scoreless.

BENTLEY There was no score the first two periods, and it could have gone either way. We could have had the championship or we could have been crying. They would cry, but only happy tears. After two periods, and two intermissions, Chicago native Bob Nardella tossed a quick pass to Chris Marinucci – who was posted up right in front of the Vipers goal – and suddenly the Wolves had the advantage with less than a period to go.

SIROTT Early in the third period, Bobby Nardella wheeled up the ice. He cut in across the blue line and went to the middle of the ice. There was a rebound. Nardella chased it down to the far corner, and just threw it – maybe a slight look – but threw it to center ice and there was Chris Marinucci, and that was his offense. He was a money player in those situations. You couldn’t move him out of the way and he pounded it home. One-nothing. The place erupted. Absolutely erupted.

KACER It took forever to get that first goal it seemed like. When we did I knew we just iced it. We were going to win a championship. The feelings you have are just so intense. I was laughing. I was crying. NARDELLA I had a semi-breakaway, actually. It was on a line change and I beat the defenseman and I was getting ready to shoot and he dove from behind me and just knocked the puck into the corner. I flung it to Marinucci as quick as I could and their defensemen – they were sleeping for a second and he just tapped it in – I was gliding past the Detroit bench when the puck went in, and they were just – the blood fell out of their face. I knew we won. The clock would disagree. There was still time left, and the Wolves were determined to make the most of it, eventually potting two more goals.

SIROTT Semak and Martins came out. Martins found Semak – who had a monster playoff run that year – he was just a monster. He had this little hook of a stick. Right on the end. Worst curve ever. Semak buried it and it was twonothing less than a minute later. You knew, at this point, that the game was over. This game was absolutely over. That didn’t mean Detroit wasn’t going to come, but they were absolutely staggered at that point. I think we added an empty-netter at the end of the game, and then the celebration was on.

For the first time as a franchise – four years after their inception - the Wolves had a cup to tend to. A cup to lift. A cup to fill, and to drink from. A cup they had fought for; one they had left every piece of themselves on the ice for; a cup they deserved – and they were intent on celebrating its victory.

MALTAIS As a kid that’s what you dream of. You’re asking yourself all of these questions. How heavy is it going to be? What is it going to be like? What is our routine? Who’s getting it next? The first year you play you think it’s going to happen every year, but then you realize that you never really know when you’re going to get that chance.

GENE UBRIACO (Senior Advisor) I think it was probably the biggest celebration we ever had. Wendell was in the dressing room with no shirt on, passing the cup around. I’ll never forget that. KOGUT It was a mess. It took me two days to clean up. Are you kidding me? It was like a bomb went off (in the dressing room), but it was well worth it. SIROTT It was great to get an opportunity to raise the Turner Cup. Here are Don Levin and Buddy Meyers, two guys who brought this team to Chicago with the idea that a lot of people love the game, but at the time there were no tickets to the Blackhawks. They were sold out, and there was a great love of hockey in this town. They started from the ground up. To go from one game over .500 in 94-95 and, by sheer force of will, win a championship in Game 7 before a packed crowd at the Rosemont Horizon four years later - It was a stunning moment. Pulse-pounding. The celebration lasted long into the night, but the next day it was business as usual.

KOGUT You knew what direction Don wanted to take the organization. He was hungry. He wanted to win. And he was going to make sure we had the talent to win. I didn’t think it was going to come that quick, but after it did it was like, “How many more are we going to get?” UBRIACO It was finding a way of getting it done. Then once you’ve done it, boy is it ever something you want to do again. I can remember after we won the Cup, Chevy and I, our first meeting was about starting again, setting a new goal. You never think of the past. I think you look back a short while, but you look ahead forever. They would do it again. Just two years later. This time, they faced another Michiganbased rival in the finals, and they would win in their house.


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GO WOLVES HOCKEY!



35

RECORD BREAKERS

SINGLE-SEASON FRANCHISE RECORDS GOALS ASSISTS POINTS PENALTY MIN. PLUS/MINUS WINS SHUTOUTS

Steve Maltais

60

ALL-TIME POINTS LEADERS 1996-97

PLAYER Steve Maltais

GP

G

A

PTS

PIM

839

454

497

951

1,061

Rob Brown

91

1995-96

Rob Brown

369

157

326

483

483

Rob Brown

143

1995-96

Darren Haydar

342

128

240

368

257

Kevin MacDonald 336

1994-95

Jason Krog

282

98

244

342

106

Brett Sterling

302

167

141

308

384

Arturs Kulda

+47

2009-10

Kari Lehtonen

38

2004-05

Wendell Young Matt Climie

6 6

1999-2000 2012-13

PACK FACTS

Bob Nardella

476

59

239

298

331

Steve Larouche

203

84

144

228

168

Chris Marinucci

240

99

121

220

77

Steve Martins

262

64

129

193

307

Derek MacKenzie

377

83

101

184

441

ALL-TIME WINNING RECORD The Wolves have delivered a winning record in each of the franchise’s first 19 seasons. They have qualified for the playoffs 15 times, appeared in six league finals and captured four championships.

Rob Brown, who donned a Wolves jersey for five seasons between 1994 and 2003, set the franchise’s single-season record for points (143) in 1995-96.

Goaltender Matt Climie set two franchise records during the 2012-13 season: Most road shutouts (5) in a single season and longest scoreless streak (173 minutes, 57 seconds).

During John Anderson’s first stint as Wolves head coach (19972008), his teams set singleSeven-time all-star Steve Maltais holds the Wolves career records for games (839), goals (454), assists (497), points (951) and penalty minutes (1,061). He played with

season franchise records for wins (55 in 1997-98), points (114 in 1999-2000), goals (331 in 200607) and power-play goals (112 in 2006-07).

the team from 1994-2005.

C H I C A G O W O LV E S


36

H O C K EY 1 0 1

BOARDING

CHARGING

CROSS-CHECKING

DELAYED PENALTY

ELBOWING

HIGH-STICKING

HOLDING

Called for any action which causes opponent to be thrown violently into the boards.

Called for taking three or more strides before checking opponent.

Called for hitting opponent with both hands on the stick and no part of the stick on the ice.

Call is made when the penalized team gains control of the puck or upon a stop in play.

Called when using the elbow to impede an opponent.

Called for making contact with an opponent when carrying the stick above the shoulder.

Called for using the hands, arms or legs to hold an opponent.

HOOKING

ICING

INTERFERENCE

MISCONDUCT

ROUGHING

SLASHING

Called for using stick or blade to hook opponent.

Called when a player on his team’s side of the red center line shoots the puck down the ice, it crosses the red goal line at any point (other than the goal) and is touched first by an opposing player other than the goalie.*

Called for having contact with an opponent not in possession of the puck.

Called for an infraction that warrants a more serious penalty than a standard minor or major penalty.

Called for engaging in fisticuffs or shoving of a level that is not worthy of a major penalty.

Called for swinging the stick at an opponent.

SPEARING

TRIPPING

Called for using the stick like a spear.

Called for using the stick, arm or leg to cause an opponent to trip or fall.

UNSPORTSMANLIKE CONDUCT Called for the abuse of an official or other such misconduct.

*Under hybrid icing rules, it’s called when an opposing player (other than the goalie) is the first to reach the face-off dot closest to the goal line.

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HOCKEY 101

HOCKEY RULES

WOLVES FACTS

ICING THE PUCK

AVERAGES & RATINGS (2012-13)

Icing is when a player on his team’s side of the red center line shoots the puck all the way down the ice and it crosses the red goal line at any point (other than the goal). Icing is not permitted when teams are at equal strength or on the power play. When this occurs, play is stopped and the puck is returned to the other end of the ice for a faceoff in the offending team’s zone. Icing the puck is not called: > If the goalie leaves the crease to play the puck, even if he does not touch the puck. > If an official rules an opposing player could have played the puck before it crossed the red goal line. > An official may wave off the icing call if he deems it was an attempted pass.

SHOT ON GOAL

A shot on goal is a shot that would enter the goal if it is not stopped by the goaltender. A shot on goal must result in either a goal or a save.

PENALTIES

Penalties are classified into three categories: minor, major and misconduct. For a minor penalty, players are required to serve two minutes in the penalty box while their team plays short-handed. A minor penalty will expire if the opposing team scores while on the power play. Major penalties require a player to serve five minutes in the penalty box and only expire at the end of that time. Misconduct penalties vary in length.

POWER PLAYS / PENALTY KILL

A team is on the power play when one team has more players on the ice than the other team because a player is serving a penalty. Conversely, the team with fewer players is on the penalty kill.

2.68

AVG. GOALS AGAINST PER GAME

2.72

POWER PLAY GOALS SCORED

51

POWER PLAY RATING

OFFSIDES

A team is offside when any member of the attacking team precedes the puck over the defending team’s blueline. The position of the player’s skate — and not that of his stick — is the determining factor. If both skates are over the blueline before the puck, the player is offside. If he has only one skate over the blueline and one on it, he is onside.

17.1%

PENALTY KILL RATING

80.3%

OVERTIME GAMES PLAYED

17

LEADING AFTER THE SECOND PERIOD Last season, the Wolves won 80 percent of games in which they were leading after two periods.

PENALTY KILL

OVERTIME

Any regular-season game that ends regulation play with a tie score will go into a five-minute sudden-death overtime period. If at the end of that overtime period the game remains tied, the game will then go into a shootout. During the playoffs, there will not be a shootout and overtime periods will be 20 minutes in length.

SHOOTOUT

AVG. GOALS PER GAME

Last season, the Wolves won 61 percent of games in which they did not allow the opposing team to score a powerplay goal.

POWER PLAY Last season, the Wolves won 48 percent of games in which they scored at least one power-play goal and 40 percent of games when they scored two or more.

SCORING FIRST

Any regular-season game that ends overtime play with a tie score will go into a shootout. A shootout is a series of penalty shots in which each team is allowed five attempts to score in alternating fashion. If after five attempts the teams remain tied, the shootout will continue to alternate shots until one team fails to match the attempt of the other. The winner of the shootout will be awarded one goal.

Last season, the Wolves won 62 percent of games in which they scored the first goal.

SHOTS ON GOAL Last season, the Wolves outshot their opponents in 32 of their 76 regularseason games, and won 16 of those games (16-11-4-1).

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C H I C A G O W O LV E S


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FIRST RESPONDERS

41

BY KRISTEN SHILTON | PHOTO BY ROSS DETTMAN

IT HAS BEEN MORE THAN FIVE YEARS SINCE CHRISTINA MORITZ DESIGNED HER FIRST SPECIALTY JERSEY FOR THE CHICAGO WOLVES, but each one is still as carefully and thoughtfully crafted as the last. When she sat down to plan out this season’s First Responders jersey, many elements would eventually make up the whole, with one particularly relevant piece placed prominently on the shoulder. “I put the Chicago flag on the same shoulder of the jersey as Chicago police officers wear it,” Moritz said. “It’s a statement that we are one of Chicago’s professional sports teams. The Chicago flag also pairs well with the four stars, which for us also represent our championships.” Beyond displaying a healthy amount of Chicago – and Chicago Wolves - pride, the patriotic blue jerseys, accented with red and white, were made with each First Responders branch in mind. On the left shoulder of the jersey sit four symbols to represent each one, tied together with the iconic firefighters mark. “The jerseys are classic and clean,” Moritz said. “I wanted them to coincide with the Wolves throwback year and the launch of the alternative 20-year jersey. The reverse name plate keeps us within the same vein as the 20th season, and that’s also a bit of a novelty element as I don’t think any of the other commemorative jerseys have done that.”

Coming up with something fresh year after year is a challenge Moritz relishes. She has creative freedom to take the jersey in whatever direction she chooses and over the years has acquired ample knowledge about the whole process, all the way to how it’s actually created. “Making the design for the jersey definitely gets more challenging every year, but because the commemorative jerseys have a different theme each season, that usually helps with the initial direction,” she said. “Becoming more aware of physical design processes has changed how I go about things too. Learning what’s doable in sewing, sublimation, and embroidery really matters. Those considerations have been the biggest factors in altering the design work through the years.” Most of all, though, Moritz just looks to capture the spirit of the thing so to speak, whatever it may be. “I like to find a unique twist or element to hold on to, which may not always be what first comes to mind,” she said. “It’s become a bit of a game as to what the hidden details are or reasoning behind what is included in the final jersey design. It doesn’t have to be obvious, it just has to represent the theme well.”

C H I C A G O W O LV E S


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BY THE NUMBERS

43

#35 JAKE ALLEN GOALTENDER FREDERICTON, NEW BRUNSWICK

3

YEARS PRO

ALLEN’S CAREER

U-17 TEAM CANADA MIDGET AAA

BROKEN/LOST

5

APPS

0

APPLE PRODUCTS

2

TEXTS PER DAY VIDEO GAMES

HATS

6

DIFFERENT JERSEY NUMBERS

PRO TEAMS

TECH

2

CUSTOM-TAILORED SUITS

15,960

TRAFFIC TICKETS RECEIVED

O

WARDROBE

@34JALLEN

2

60

PREVIOUS NON-HOCKEY JOBS

NUMBER OF SPORTS PLAYED GROWING UP

FOLLOWERS

TRAVEL SHOES

COUNTRIES VISITED

CITIES LIVED

LANGUAGES SPOKEN

6

2 HEALTH 2,000 CALORIES PER DAY

AS OF DEC. 20

4

5

FAMILY 0 BONES BROKEN

2 SIBLINGS

C H I C A G O W O LV E S



GAME TIME

45

WHAT'S THE DIFF? Can you find the 10 differences in the two photos below? Can you find the 10 differences in the two photos below?

HERE’S JOHNNY!

How well doknow you know head coach John Anderson? How well do you head coach John Anderson?

BAMES BY IMRAN JAVED

In 1989-90, John Anderson played What NHL franchise was John a nine-game what of European Anderson thestint headincoach from Country? 2008-2010? a) Russia a) Phoenix Coyotes b) Sweden b) St. Louis Blues c) Italy c) Dallas Stars d) Finland d) Atlanta Thrashers

Johndid Anderson registered more Who John Anderson beat on goals than penalty minutes during his NHL March 22, 2008 to earn his 500th career. or False? victory True as Wolves head coach? a) Milwaukee a) True b) Houston b) False c) Lake Erie d) San Antonio

LITTLE DEBBIE® HOCKEY MOM OF THE MONTH

KELLI HENREKIN HOMETOWN: ELMHURST, IL | CLUB TEAM: CHICAGO HAWKS To nominate a mom for the Little Debbie® Hockey Mom of the Month, visit ChicagoWolves.com/HockeyMom or the Customer Service Booth.

C H I C A G O W O LV E S


46

GA M E T I M E for all thedrawings players belowbelow by lookingby in the grid forward, backward, up, down, Identify Search the player writing in their name,

AM I? number and position. TWENTYWHO IN TWENTY

and diagonally. When you find one, circle it and cross it off the list! Bonus points if you can finish in under twenty minutes!

L I J A S O N K

D T R A I R E D

B Z N C A E S Y

W B R E T T S T

E E D A L L A S

D B N I A T A J

E C G D M A P L

R N A R E A N N

E A R B V L I E

K L E E E L L G

M B L E T E S Y

A E I E S D E O

C L R A T R R U

K Y A R E A B Y

E A Z R V N M I

N R M A E B I O

Z E T S M O T N

I A N Z A B H K

E Y H O R O E J

L E B L T D O Y

L L E K I H A T

B A S E N R E L

E S E I S E D L

E R E J E O N R

S O I L E H C S

S T R A W E T S

L E L L E O D N

R O G S O I

Y N S N A D

E R D D O L

E R L I N G

E A K I N S

A T I N R N

C M Z N W E

S A L O N E

K E R R C N

L B C I T R

B K G O R K

O E A R R D

A U R H N D

M D N E S Y

E A E G C T

O R T A S D

C R E E E H

A E X N T E

N N E I I N

S H L V R S

S A B E D N

N Y Y Y W E

L D M I E B

I A L N Z T

I R H C G D

L R A K R A

I V E K A E

Al Secord Chris Chelios Derek MacKenzie Jason Krog Kevin Doell

ANAGRAM ALIAS

CONFERENCE ROOM

Dan Snyder Rob Brown Kari Lehtonen Darren Haydar Tim Breslin Ondrej Pavelec Bob Nardella Karl Stewart Steve Maltais Dallas Eakins Ray LeBlanc Wendell Young Rearrange Rea nge the letters of the following followi names to spell out Garnet Exelby Steve Martins Brett Sterling

Wol Wolves players.

One of these logos is not like the other! Circle the team that is NOT in the same conference as the Wolves.

DO YOU KNOW A SPECIAL HOCKEY MOM? To nominate a mom for the Little Debbie速 Hockey Mom of the Month, visit ChicagoWolves.com/HockeyMom or the Customer Service Booth.

B R E A K A W AY M A G A Z I N E


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