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Saturday, May 10, 2008

【STARS】Stars Sign Free Agent Fabian Brunnstrom

The Dallas Stars announced today that the hockey club has signed free agent forward Fabian Brunnstrom to a two-year entry-level contract through the 2009-10 season.

"We are very excited to get the caliber of player that Fabian is under contract for the next two seasons," said Co-General Manager Les Jackson. "He is a very good prospect and will definitely be a nice addition to our group of younger players."

The highly-coveted Brunnstrom will join the Stars beginning next season. He reportedly chose the Stars over several NHL teams who were interested in signing him, including Montreal, Detroit and Toronto. Anaheim and Vancouver were also reported to have interest in the talented forward.

"All of the other teams and clubs, like Montreal and Detroit, were good but I just felt that Dallas was a little bit better for me," said Brunnstrom. "I really enjoyed the town and the people around the Dallas organization. I got a chance to visit the practice facility and the American Airlines Center and I thought everything was great."

As he went undrafted as an 18-year-old, the native of Jonstorp, Sweden, was an unrestricted free agent and was free to sign to with any NHL team of his choosing.

"It was a really hard decision for me," he said. "Dallas was the third team that I visited so when I came home I thought about everything. It was a really hard decision for me. The other clubs were really good too. But I just felt that Dallas was a little bit better for me."

Brunnstrom, 23, spent the 2007-08 season with Farjestads BK Karlstad in the Swedish Elite League, recording nine goals and 28 assists for 37 points in 54 games. He led the team in assists and placed fifth in scoring, and added a goal in 12 appearances during the Swedish Elite League playoffs.

Asked if there is anything he needs to work on more to become a full-time NHL player next season, Brunnstrom basically said he needs to continue to work on his overall game.

"Yes, sure there is. I have to work on everything," he said. "But it's hard to say because I have not been there yet and I do not know how it is going to be. But I know I need to continue to work on everything. I know the game is faster and guys are bigger and smarter. I'll have to work a lot."

The 6-1, 203-pound forward skated for Boras HC in Sweden's second division during the 2006-07 season, collecting 73 points (37 goals, 36 assists) and registering a +51 rating in 41 games.

Brunnstrom split the 2005-06 campaign between Jonstorps IF in Sweden’s third division, and Rogle BK, in the second division. He collected 44 points (21 goals, 23 assists) in 38 combined games that season.

Dallas Stars
(
http://stars.nhl.com/team/app/?service=page&page=NewsPage&articleid=363023)


【DRAFT DANDIES】Sbisa happy with decision to give WHL a shot

Luca Sbisa of the WHL's Lethbridge Hurricanes is currently ranked twelfth among North American defensemen for the 2008 Entry Draft.

For elite teenage hockey players in Canada, the drafts for the three Canadian Hockey League circuits -- the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League, the Ontario Hockey League and the Western Hockey League -- are the first taste of big-time hockey.

Those drafts represent the chance for the player to compete for a position at the highest junior level in hockey-mad Canada. That time can be as exciting as the NHL Entry Draft for those involved. It can be a time of celebration or disappointment; a time of reward, of change, and of excitement.

For Swiss-born Luca Sbisa, taken No. 69 out of the 72 skaters selected in the CHL's annual Import Draft -- the draft for non-North American players -- it was nothing more than one heck of a nice surprise.

"I didn't even know that I got drafted," Sbisa said. "My agent found out on the Internet and told me."

Once he was informed he had been selected by the WHL's Lethbridge Hurricanes, Sbisa had a difficult choice to make. He could continue playing in Switzerland, or he could move across the ocean, across most of a continent, to a tiny town in Alberta known as much for its cattle and wheat production as for its hockey players.

Being the fourth-to-last selection of the draft gave him reservations about his chances of succeeding in the new league. But for a young Swiss hockey player who always dreamed of playing in the NHL, it seemed like a necessary risk.

"We thought about it, and I guess the dream was always for me to come to play in Canada," he said. "So I spoke with guys who had done it, Yannick Weber in the OHL, and some others, and they told me good stuff about it."

With the encouragement of his peers, he only needed his family on board to seal the deal; something he wasn't worried about because the family knew how important hockey had become to him.

"My family and I made the decision together and it was almost an easy one to make because I thought it was the best for my development," he said. "If you do something, do it right. You don't do it half way."

Looking back on it now, his decision looks pretty good. He sits atop the defenseman scoring table in the 2008 WHL playoffs with 15 points in 19 outings. That came after putting up 33 points during the regular season and becoming a go-to guy for the Hurricanes, WHL Championship runner-up.

Sbisa's decision was further validated when NHL Central Scouting released its final rankings and Sbisa appeared as the No. 12-ranked North American skater available for the 2008 Entry Draft.

But there was a time -- between the realization he had been drafted to his first ice session in Lethbridge -- that Sbisa didn't know the right path. He simply had to have faith in his abilities, trust the scouts who championed him, and believe in his peers, who, in turn, believed in him.

"I had heard so many good things about this league, but I didn't know how I would fit, and how I would play compared to other guys," he said. "But after the camp and exhibition (season), I got a good feel how to play hockey here. From there, I was pretty much into it. I was surprised at times, but it felt good."

The defenseman likely surprised himself, and more than a few others in the building watching his first game as a member of the Hurricanes, when he started the season with a three-assist performance in his first WHL game. He earned the game's first star and never looked back.

"The first game gave me a lot of confidence, tried to carry through the whole season, moments I lost it but I wanted to keep the game simple," he said.

Was he surprised at his early success? Maybe. But he wasn't about to doubt it. Instead, he tried to use it as a confidence booster, an opportunity for him to learn and to get better.

Sbisa took the advice he received from Weber, his countryman, when he was pondering his future.  Weber's advice was simple: Play your game, your way, and to let the results speak for themselves.

"He just told me to come over here and come here with confidence, don't be afraid or scared to make mistakes," Sbisa said. "He gave me little tips, too. How to play on the smaller ice and some other stuff."

His success was also a validation for the family who supported his love of hockey and his decision to move to western Canada to pursue his dream. That's good because the family has nobody but itself to blame for Sbisa's love affair with the sport.

"I got into hockey when I was like four years old, my parents took me to a hockey game, and shortly after I knew I wanted to play hockey," he said. "So they put me in a hockey school, and I went to all the teams in my hometown, and eventually made the first team."

From there, his love of the NHL and his desire to one day compete as a member of the League grew out of a semi-complete collection of VHS tapes.

"I didn't watch the games because they weren't on TV, but I bought a couple videos of the NHL highlights - videos about Wayne Gretzky, some of the hardest hits and nice goals, and watched those videos many times," he said.

But it was not a defenseman that Sbisa most admired in those early days, watching tapes of the league he eventually wanted to join. Despite Sbisa's obvious ability as a defender, his hero was one of the most-decorated European forwards ever to lace up the skates.

"The Maple Leafs are my favorite team, and Mats Sundin is my favorite player," Sbisa says. 'He was the first player I knew from the NHL, so he became an idol for me. The first NHL jersey my parents gave me was from Mats Sundin."

From meager beginnings as a hockey-mad kid rooting for Sundin, Sbisa has become one of the most sought-afters player in the 2008 Entry Draft, a draft silly with defensemen.

His inclusion in the top 30 would've been a feat, in and of itself; but at No. 12 he is almost guaranteed to go in the first round of one of the deepest drafts in recent memory, a testament to his ability and his hard work.

Now, Sbisa just wants to enjoy -- in person and in real time -- all the excitement that comes with draft day.

"I think it doesn't really matter what team you get picked from, every team will give you the opportunity to play in the NHL. It doesn't matter," he said. "But it would be nice to play for the Leafs."

Brad Holland | NHL.com Staff Writer
(
http://www.nhl.com/nhl/app/?service=page&page=NewsPage&articleid=362959)


【ISLANDERS】Robin Figren Signs An NHL Contract

Robin Figren is the first Edmonton Oil Kings player in modern franchise history to sign an NHL deal.  The 19 year old Sweden native landed a 3-year NHL entry level contract with the New York Islanders.

The 3rd round draft pick from 2006 has been training this summer in his hometown in Stockholm.  The Swedish sniper is coming off a short but sweet season with the Edmonton Oil Kings where he piled up 18 goals and 13 assists for 31 points in just 35 games.  His season was cut short by wrist surgery in February and by about a month for the time he spent with his national team for the World Junior Hockey Championship where he finished with 5 goals and 2 assists placing him in a tie for 8th in the tournament scoring race.

Figren's rookie season with the Calgary Hitmen last year saw him score 27 points in 62 games.

Part of Robin's deal with the Islanders stipulates that he'll play in the Swedish Elite League for the 2008 - 2009 season and then join the Islanders organization the following year with either the parent club in New York or their prime affiliate in the American Hockey League, the Bridgeport Sound Tigers.

Edmonton Oil Kings
(
http://www.oilkings.ca/hm/inside.php?id=272)


【PANTHERS】Panthers Sign Keaton Ellerby

Florida Panthers General Manager Jacques Martin announced today that the club has agreed to terms on an entry level contract with D Keaton Ellerby.

Ellerby, 19, played in 53 games with the Moose Jaw Warriors of the Western Hockey League after being traded from Kamloops, for Panthers prospect RW Brady Calla, 16 games into the 2007-08 season. With Moose Jaw, Ellerby had two goals and 21 assists with a plus-6 rating and 81 penalty minutes. In five playoff games this spring for the Warriors, Ellerby has two assists and 15 penalty minutes.

"Keaton is a young, talented and strong defenseman who skates and handles the puck well," said Martin. "We are very pleased to have signed Keaton and look forward to his continued development and growth into a complete player, who will have the opportunity to compete for a spot on our hockey club."

The 6-foot-4, 188-pound defensemen, played for Team Canada at the 2007 Canada/Russia Superseries and was the Panthers first round pick (10th overall) in the 2007 NHL Entry Draft.

Florida Panthers
(
http://panthers.nhl.com/team/app/?service=page&page=NewsPage&articleid=362857)


【WHL】Spokane Chiefs Capture Ed Chynoweth Cup

The Spokane Chiefs were crowned 2008 Western Hockey League Champions after defeating the Lethbridge Hurricanes 4-1 in Game 4 of the WHL Championship series on Tuesday, May 7th, in Lethbridge, AB.

The victory gave the visiting Kal Tire WHL Western Conference Champion Chiefs a 4-0 best-of-seven series win over the MNP WHL Eastern Conference Champion Hurricanes. As the 2008 WHL Champions, the Chiefs claimed the Ed Chynoweth Cup.

The Chiefs are the first U.S.-Based WHL team to win the WHL Championship in 10 years. The Portland Winter Hawks were the last American team to win the WHL Championship in 1998.

17-year-old rookie Tyler Johnson scored the eventual game-winning goal with his fifth tally of the post-season 3:37 into the second period. Mitch Wahl opened the scoring for the Chiefs in the first period while David Rutherford and Ondrej Roman each notched a goal and an assist in the third period to salt away the Game 4 victory.

Nicholas Hotson scored the only goal for the Hurricanes, who were outshot 25-18 by the visiting Chiefs in the contest.

Chiefs' goaltender Dustin Tokarski made 17 saves to record his 16th victory of the 2008 playoffs. Juha Metsola made 21 stops for the Hurricanes in the defeat.

As the 2008 WHL Champions, the Spokane Chiefs will compete as the WHL representative at the 2008 MasterCard Memorial Cup tournament in Kitchener, ONT.

Rookie Tyler Johnson Named MVP of 2008 WHL Championship Series

17-year-old Tyler Johnson was selected as the Most Valuable Player of the 2008 WHL Championship series, having helped the Spokane Chiefs to the 2008 WHL Championship and the Ed Chynoweth Cup.

Johnson, in his first WHL season, scored three goals with a +2 rating over the four-game series sweep of the Lethbridge Hurricanes in the WHL Championship series, with two of his three goals being game-winners.

The Spokane, WA, product, playing for his hometown team, scored a shorthanded goal which proved to be the insurance marker in the Chiefs' series-opening 4-1 victory over the Hurricanes on Friday, May 2nd, in Spokane. He followed up with the overtime game-winning goal in a 2-1 Chiefs triumph in Game 3 of the series in Lethbridge on Tuesday, May 6th. Johnson capped off his tremendous WHL Championship series performance by netting the game-winner in the Chiefs 4-1 win in the Championship-clinching game on Wednesday in Lethbridge.

Johnson has recorded five goals and eight points in 21 games for the Chiefs during the 2008 WHL playoffs. He tallied 12 goals and 35 points in 69 games during the regular season.

whl.ca
(
http://www.whl.ca/news/?id=9491)



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