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USHL Names Bob Fallen as President and Commissioner

Bob-Fallen-USHLChicago, IL – The United States Hockey League today announced the appointment of Bob Fallen as President and Commissioner.  Fallen follows Skip Princewho led the USHL for six momentous years during which the League experienced significant growth in business and hockey operations, along with achieving record numbers in player development.  Fallen is being formally introduced today during a media teleconference.**

With professional experience spanning nearly three decades in sports marketing, publishing, sales, media relations, and management, Fallen assumed the League’s leadership position on June 1st.  He is just the third Commissioner for the USHL in the past 20 years.

“I am thrilled with the opportunity to lead the finest junior hockey league in the world,” said Fallen. “The foundation built by my predecessors, league owners, and the stakeholders throughout the hockey industry have made the USHL an important step along the developmental path for players, coaches, and officials.  I look forward to working with our staff, aligned partners, and the international hockey community at-large to build upon our success.”

Fallen most recently managed the U.S. trade marketing efforts for Reebok-CCM Hockey – the world’s largest hockey equipment manufacturing company and equipment supplier to many leagues including the NHL, AHL, and USHL.  In his position, Fallen was responsible for executing retail product launches, strategic account planning, media promotion, and maintaining various league alliances.

Prior to his stint with Reebok-CCM, Fallen’s career included several hockey business related endeavors including retail and event venue graphics, magazine publishing, corporate sponsorship, and event management.  His professional experience includes serving as Associate Publisher for USA Hockey Magazine andMinnesota Hockey Journal along with developing the partnership development efforts for Minnesota Hockey and the Hobey Baker Memorial Award – college hockey’s top individual honor.

Fallen has also been heavily involved in hockey at the amateur level.   He served for several years on the USA Hockey Marketing Council, supporting various initiatives in marketing, sponsorship, media, and membership development.  He has also been a board member for the Upper Midwest High School Elite League, a Minnesota-based league for top high school hockey talent that has helped produce a number of players that have moved on to play in the USHL.  Fallen led an effort that significantly increased the Elite League’s sponsorship and media efforts.  In a personal role, he is the Director of Skaters Keep Achieving Thru Education(S.K.A.T.E.), a non-profit organization devoted to promoting academic achievement among youth hockey players.

“Skip Prince did a tremendous job elevating the USHL to where it is today and Bob is inheriting a strong league that is on an upswing,” said Brad Kwong, Interim Chairman of the USHL Board of Directors.  “But the USHL still has much untapped potential, and we are extremely excited that we’ve been able to attract Bob to be the leader that will help us achieve even bigger and better things during our next phase of growth.”

Coming to the USHL marks a return to the Chicago area for Fallen as he is a native of Glen Ellyn, Illinois and began his professional career in the area after graduating from nearby Northern Illinois University.  Early career opportunities encompassed roles for a number of sports management and promotion companies, including International Management Group, Kemper Sports, and Sport F/X, an agency he started which had a client roster that included the National Hockey League, USA Hockey, and United States Hockey Hall of Fame.

Fallen and his wife, Kathy, have two children, a daughter Kelley (25) and son Thomas (23).  Kelley played NCAA hockey at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, MN and was a four-year letter winner, including serving as a captain during her senior season in 2011.  Thomas spent two seasons playing in the USHL for the Cedar Rapids RoughRiders (2009-11) and helped the team capture the regular season Anderson Cup title in 2010-11.  He is now entering his fourth season of college hockey at Yale University and was recently named captain of the Bulldogs for 2014-15.  He was part of the school’s first-ever NCAA Ice Hockey Championship in 2013 and is among the school’s all-time scoring leaders for defensemen.

Bob Fallen takes over the role of President and Commissioner of the USHL that had been held by Skip Prince since 2008.  Prince, along with the USHL Executive Committee, helped lead the national search for the new Commissioner, and he will continue to serve in an advisory role for the League on projects and initiatives.

Storm Take Newell Third Overall In Dispersal

Patrick Newell Tri-City StormKEARNEY, Neb. – The Tri-City Storm got their man in the dispersal draft of Indiana Ice players on Friday morning, selecting forward Patrick Newell of Thousand Oaks, Calif.

The Ice franchise has been granted dormancy for the 2014-15 season and temporary withdrawal from on-ice competition as the organization focuses on development of a new facility and permanent home.

The entire roster, including affiliate list, was divided up amongst the current USHL franchises Friday.

Tri-City had the third overall pick and Newell was the player the Storm coaching staff was looking for.

“We are very excited to add a player of Patrick’s pedigree to our group,” said Storm head coach and general manager Jim Hulton. “He addresses a need as a playmaking, high end center who also brings a wealth of playoff experience following his recent Clark Cup Championship performance. We look forward to seeing Patrick in a Storm jersey!”

Newell played in 59 of the Ice’s 60 regular season games during 2013-14, and was fourth on the team in scoring with 13 goals and 30 assists and a plus-24 rating.

The forward, who is committed to play collegiately at St. Cloud State, also contributed to the Ice’s Clark Cup championship run, scoring four goals and three assists in the team’s 12 playoff games. Two of those tallies were game-winners.

In 91 career USHL games, Newell has 20 goals and 45 assists.

With their second round selection, Tri-City chose forward Karl El-Mir of the Selects Academy. El-Mir spent the 2013-14 season on the Ice’s affiliate list.

The forward is committed to the University of Connecticut and hails from Greenfield Park, Que.

In the third and final round, the Storm chose defenseman Austin Kosack. The blueliner is committed to play at Ferris State and plans on attending school next season.

In 57 games with the Ice this season, Kosack had three goals and 26 assists with a plus-40 rating. He is also an import, hailing from Oakville, Ont.

The Storm will once again head to Las Vegas for tryout camp this summer, and will hold evaluations June 16-21 at the Las Vegas Ice Center.

Storm Select Appleton Third Overall In Phase 2

tcstormKEARNEY, Neb. – The Tri-City Storm used their third overall pick in Phase 2 of the 2014 USHL Draft to select forward Mason Appleton of Notre Dame Academy on Tuesday morning, highlighting a day in which 23 names were added to the team’s Initial Protected List for the 2014-15 season.

Appleton, who hails from Green Bay, Wis., is coming off a big year in which he scored 30 goals and 40 assists in 28 games. Tri-City is hoping he’ll fill a big hole in the middle of the ice, as a big six-foot, two-inch center.

In addition to Appleton and forward Wade Allison, who the Storm signed to a tender on Monday, the team had three second round selections, who they used on goaltender Alec Dillon, forward Andy Sturtz and defenseman Cam Spicer.

Head coach and general manager Jim Hulton said the mandate heading into the draft was to get bigger and be harder to play against, and he felt both of those areas were addressed.

“I think we’re very happy,” Hulton said. “Most teams are optimistic at this point in time after the draft but we had a number of people on our wish list and we emerged from the draft with the majority of them. The broad mandate was to get a little bit older, a little bit bigger, and address some offense, and competitiveness and we think fortunately we’ve covered all areas.”

With Allison, Appleton and Sturtz, Hulton felt that right away, he was able to bring in some more offense with three of his first four Phase 2 selections. He was then in the position to take some other risks with picks that could potentially benefit the team for years to come.

“I think when you look at the player we tendered in Wade Allison who scored 70 plus goals in Omaha, Appleton, who scored 30+ goals, and Sturtz, who’s an older kid that led a pretty good Ottawa district league in scoring with over 100 points, I think those three alone addresses some of the offensive issues,” Hulton said.

With goaltender Hayden Lavigne eligible to return next season, Tri-City added to their netminding talent when they selected Dillon in the second round, 21st overall.

“We’re ecstatic with our goaltending tandem of Hayden Lavigne and Alec Dillon,” Hulton said. “Dillon is a big kid with junior experience in Victoria of the BCHL. He comes highly recommended and is widely regarded in hockey circles. To have two kids that could possibly be drafted in the National Hockey League really solidifies that area and if you can have strength in goaltending and defense no matter what league you’re in, you’re going to be successful.”

In addition to the 23 picks, Tri-City also announced the acquisition of defenseman Bobby Nardella from the Sioux City Musketeers. Nardella serves as the player to be named later in the deal the teams made for Joel L’Esperance on Jan. 20.

In 58 total games for the Musketeers this season, Nardella had two goals and 13 assists. A native of Rosemont, Ill., the blue-liner is committed to play collegiately at Notre Dame.

“It’s finally nice to be able to talk about Bobby Nardella because we had to keep that under wraps for a long time,” Hulton said. “He was a player to be named later and out of respect to Bobby and the Sioux City organization, it couldn’t be announced.

“He was a big part of the Joel L’Esperance trade in addition to Jake Wahlin so we think we’ve got two big pieces of our puzzle. Now when you look at what defensive experience we have returning with Nardella, Dello, Kerr, Schulz, some of the people that we’ve added today and some of the people we’ve already had in our system, we’re extremely excited. We think our back end is going to be amongst the most mobile in the entire USHL next year and I think when you look at the way the game’s played today, if you can have a mobile, puck moving back end, it’s one of the first keys to success.”

The full list of players drafted today is below. It is also viewable on stormhockey.com.

In addition to these draft picks, the Storm have 18 players from the 2013-14 roster that will be eligible to try out for next season’s team.

Tri-City Storm 2014 USHL Phase 2 Draft Selections

1st Round Tender: Wade Allison – Forward – Myrtle, MB – Omaha AAA

1st Round: Mason Appleton – Forward – Green Bay, WI – Notre Dame Academy

2nd Round: Alec Dillon – Goalie – Victoria, BC – Victoria Grizzlies
2nd Round: Andy Sturtz – Forward – Buffalo, NY – Carleton Place
2nd Round: Cam Spicer – Defense – Erie, CO – New Hampshire Jr. Monarchs

4th Round: Cullen Munson – Forward – Edina, MN – Edina High School

5th Round: Andrew Peski – Defense – Orleans, ON – Brockville Braves

5th Round: Mark Petaccio – Forward – Sicklerville, NJ – Pembroke Lumber Kings
7th Round: Jack McNeely – Defense – Lakeville North, MN – Lakeville North High School
9th Round: Johnny McDermott – Forward – Darien, CT – Westminster Prep School
10th Round: Carson Meyer – Forward – Powell, OH – Ohio Jr. Blue Jackets
10th Round: Blake Weyrick – Goalie – Malibu, CA – USA U-18 Team
11th Round: Joel Herbert – Forward – Edson, AB – Whitecourt Wolverines
12th Round: James Gobetz – Defense – St. James, NY – Salisbury School
13th Round: Brian Yoon – Defense – Parker, CO – Colorado Thunderbirds
14th Round: Jordan Kawaguchi – Abbottsford, BC – Chilliwack Chiefs
15th Round: Ryan Cloonan – East Longmeadow, MA – Boston Jr. Bruins
16th Round: Benjamin Israel – Bloomington Hills, MI – New Jersey Hitmen
17th Round: Tyler Busch – Lloydminster, AB – Spruce Grove Saints
18th Round: Guy Roby – Philadelphia, PA – Team Comcast
19th Round: Adam Goodsir – Okemos, MI – Lansing Capitals
20th Round: Kohei Sato – Nishitokio City, Japan – CIH Academy

Tri-City Looks To Future, Drafts 9 In Phase 1

tcstormKEARNEY, Neb. – The Tri-City Storm were able to add talent on both sides of the puck during Phase 1 of the 2014 USHL Draft on Monday night, selecting nine players born in 1998.

With the third overall pick in the draft, the Storm selected forward Cameron Dineen from the New Jersey Rockets program. Dineen, a Toms River, N.J. native, is committed to Yale University.

At 5-foot, 10-inches, Dineen becomes the second straight defenseman taken by Tri-City in the first round of the Phase 1 Draft.

The Storm had two selections in round two, picking forwards Sam Sternschein and Brian Hawkinson.

Sternschein, a Syosset, N.Y. native is committed to Cornell University, while Hawkinson hails from Aurora, Colo. and plays for the Thunderbirds program.

In round three, Tri-City picked up Houston native Brandon Schuldhaus from Shattuck St. Mary’s with the 35th overall selection. The defenseman has great size for his age, at 6-foot, 2-inches.

The team picked 50th overall in round four, selecting Austen Long out of Blane, Minn. Long, a forward who plays for Spring Lake Park High School, is expected to contribute on the offensive side of the puck once he arrives in Kearney.

Rounds five and six both included defensemen in John Sladic and Jack Kelly. Sladic played for the Detroit Bell Tire program this season, while Kelly suited up for Maple Grove High School in Minnesota.

In the final two rounds, Tri-City selected forwards Monte Graham and Joe Abate out of Thayer Academy and the Chicago Fury respectively.

A full list of the team’s selections can be seen below.

The draft continues with Phase 2, starting at 8 a.m. on Tuesday morning.

In addition to these draft picks, the Storm have 18 players from the 2013-14 roster that will be eligible to try out for next season’s team.

Tri-City Storm 2014 USHL Phase 1 Draft Selections

1st Round: Cameron Dineen – Defenseman – Toms River, NJ – New Jersey Rockets

2nd Round: Sam Sternschein – Forward – Syosset, NY – Portledge High School

2nd Round: Brian Hawkinson – Forward – Aurora, CO – Colorado Thunderbirds

3rd Round: Brandon Schuldhaus – Defenseman – Bearspaw, Alta. – Shattuck St Mary’s

4th Round: Austen Long – Forward – Blaine, MN – Spring Lake Park High School

5th Round: John Sladic – Defenseman – Detroit Bell Tire

6th Round: Jack Kelly – Defenseman – Maple Grove, MN – Maple Grove High School
7th Round: Monte Graham – Forward – Hanover, MA – Thayer Academy
8th Round: Joe Abate – Forward – Bloomingdale, IL – Chicago Fury

Storm Preparing For Upcoming 2014 USHL Draft

tcstormKEARNEY, Neb. – With the regular season behind them, the Tri-City Storm have been busy preparing for 2014-15 and will help shape their team when they make selections in the 2014 USHL Draft on May 5-6.

The two-part draft starts with Phase 1 on Monday, beginning at 5 p.m. Phase 1 consists of eight rounds as USHL teams will select players born in 1998.

This portion of the draft allows teams to choose players who are traditionally not ready to play in the USHL the following season, but will continue to develop at lower levels of hockey in preparation for USHL play in future seasons. Based on last season’s final standings, Tri-City will have the third overall pick in the Phase 1 Draft.

Storm assistant coach JB Bittner has been hard at work, scouting, recruiting and evaluating potential draftees that will impact the team for years to come.

“You have try and project where a player’s going to be in 2-3 years and sometimes that’s hard to do,” Bittner said. “I would say the first two rounds are kids that almost every team has high on their list. After that you start getting into other projections and things are less certain. You try and do your homework, and take kids that are going to put in the work to end up in this league.”

Phase 1 will be broadcast live with the USHL Draft Show on USHL.com and FASTHockey, the USHL’s exclusive video network. The voice of the Storm, Jared Shafran, will be contributing to the coverage during the broadcast.

Last season, the Storm used their first round selection to tender defenseman Tory Dello. The Notre Dame commit, who was born in Crete, Neb., appeared in 46 games during his first USHL season, scoring two goals and five assists.

After Phase 1 is completed, the draft continues with Phase 2 the following morning, beginning at 8 a.m. In this phase, USHL teams will select players from multiple birth years who will compete for roster spots for the 2014-15 season.

Phase 2 continues until all USHL teams have 45 players on their Initial Protected List, which is made up of affiliate players from the 2013-14 season and players selected on Monday in Phase 1.

The Storm have one pick in the first round and three selections in the second round during the Phase 2 Draft. Bittner said he is expecting these players to make a big impact right away.

“With our top four picks, we plan on taking four kids that are going to come and play for our team next year,” Bittner said. “We want to have the right character kids. In those top four picks we’re looking for kids that compete and come to work every day, want to get better, show some passion for the game and live the game. They’ll want to be a part of hockey, they’re rink rats, and they hang around the ice and the gym all the time. We want hockey players that want to be here and want to spend hours at the rink getting better.”

A year ago, Tri-City selected forward Chris Wilkie with the second overall pick in Phase 2. In his first season with the Storm, Wilkie led the team with 36 points on 17 goals and 19 assists in 57 games.

In addition to these draft picks, the Storm have 19 players from the 2013-14 roster that will be eligible to try out for next season’s team.

“We want to get kids that are going to come in and be impact players that the fans here in Kearney are going to enjoy watching play,” Bittner said. “We weren’t happy with what happened last year and the way the season went. We want to put a winning team on the ice.”

Tri-city Storm Hockey 2014 Draft Infographic

Wild Beat Avs 5-4 in OT in Game 7 to Advance

Colorado-Avalanche-LogoDENVER (AP) — Nino Niederreiter scored his second goal of the game 5:02 into overtime and Ilya Bryzgalov made a big save filling in for an injured Darcy Kuemper, leading the Minnesota Wild to a 5-4 win over the Colorado Avalanche in Game 7 on Wednesday night.

It’s the first playoff series win for the Wild since 2003.

Mikko Koivu, Dany Heatley and Jared Spurgeon also scored for the Wild, who will face the defending Stanley Cup champion Chicago Blackhawks in the second round.

Nick Holden, Jamie McGinn, Paul Stastny and Erik Johnson scored for the Avalanche.

Roy, Avs Bracing for Game 7 with Wild

Colorado-Avalanche-LogoDENVER (AP) — Patrick Roy was quite calm and even cracked a few jokes as his team went through a light workout. No signs of stress at all.

Of course, the first-year Colorado Avalanche coach has been in a few pressure-packed Game 7 situations as a Hall of Fame goaltender — 13 to be exact.

His players? Not as much experience. A dozen had never been to the postseason before this year.

And yet Roy’s hardly fretting over his team’s emotional state heading into a decisive final game Wednesday night against the Minnesota Wild, with the winner moving on to face the defending Stanley Cup champion Chicago Blackhawks.

On the contrary, Roy’s reminding his youthful team of one simple thing: Enjoy the moment.

Parise Lifts Wild past Avs 5-2, to Tie Series at 3

Colorado-Avalanche-LogoST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — Zach Parise scored early and late on tipped shots, and the Minnesota Wild tacked on two empty-net goals for a 5-2 victory over the Colorado Avalanche on Monday night that sent the first-round playoff series to a decisive Game 7.

Parise and Mikko Koivu each had two assists. The teams will meet again in Denver on Wednesday night, with the winner taking on the defending Stanley Cup champion Chicago Blackhawks in the Western Conference semifinals.

Parise scored just 49 seconds into the game and Mikael Granlund made it 2-0 later in the first period, but a costly turnover by Ryan Suter at the end of a failed 5-on-3 situation led to a game-changing short-handed goal for the Avalanche when Paul Stastny scored for the fourth time in the series.

Avalanche Push Wild to Elimination Situation

Colorado-Avalanche-LogoST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — Twice in five games, the Minnesota Wild have been less than 75 seconds from a victory on the road.

Both times, the Colorado Avalanche got the tying goal late in regulation before winning in overtime.

Now the Wild are facing an elimination situation, with the Avalanche visiting for Game 6 on Monday and leading the first-round playoff series 3-2.

If the Wild are not able to ignore the what-if feelings of frustration from those narrow losses, they’ll be in trouble against an Avalanche team that perked up on Saturday after consecutive flat performances in Games 3 and 4.

But being on the edge might work in the Wild’s favor. They played some of their best games this season while missing key players.

MacKinnon Leads Avs to 4-3 OT Win over Wild

Colorado-Avalanche-LogoDENVER (AP) — Nathan MacKinnon scored 3:27 into overtime after P.A. Parenteau (payr-ehn-TOH’) tied the game late in regulation, helping the Colorado Avalanche rally for a 4-3 win over the Minnesota Wild on Saturday night and a 3-2 lead in the first-round series.

MacKinnon poked the puck past Darcy Kuemper’s glove with two defenders all over him. The rookie also had two assists.

Parenteau scored with 1:14 left after Avalanche coach Patrick Roy pulled goaltender Semyon Varlamov (var-LAH’-mawf) with 2:22 remaining. The strategy worked out yet again.

The series switches back to Minnesota for Game 6 on Monday.

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