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Kane Division

 Welcome to the Kane Division webpage. The Junior Division consists of the '98 and '99 birth years. Check back often for all the updates!

<---- For specific team schedules, click the appropriate team on the left hand side. Rosters will be coming soon.

Right: Elite Prospects Hockey Alumni, Stanley Cup winner, Olympic Silver medalist, EA Sports NHL '09 cover, 1st pick overall 2007 Draft, Pat Kane - Chicago (NHL)

 

Kane Division Standings

Team GP Wins Losses Ties Points
Red 3 3 0 0 6
White 3 2 1 0 4
Blue 3 1 2 0 2
Grey 3 0 3 0 0

Kane Division Upcoming Events

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Kane Division News

Nugent-Hopkins ascends to top of draft rankings

04/20/2011, 12:00pm (EDT)
By By Mike G. Morreale

On the day before he celebrates his birthday, Red Deer Rebels center Ryan Nugent-Hopkins just so happens to be No. 1 in the minds of NHL Central Scouting.

On the day before he celebrates his birthday, Red Deer Rebels center Ryan Nugent-Hopkins just so happens to be No. 1 in the minds of NHL Central Scouting.
 
Nugent-Hopkins, who turns 18 Tuesday, tops Central Scouting's final rankings as the No. 1 North American skater available for the 2011 Entry Draft, to be held at the Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul, Minn., June 24-25.

Nugent-Hopkins tied for third in the Western Hockey League with 106 points, led the league with 75 assists, and his 31 goals (11 on the power play) were third on his team. He also posted a team-best plus-30 rating.
 
The super-skilled Nugent-Hopkins was No. 3 in the mid-term rankings, but based on the strength of his season, he moved ahead of Kitchener Rangers forward Gabriel Landeskog, who was No. 1 in the mid-term rankings but is No. 2 in the final list.

So why did the 6-foot-1/2, 164-pound Nugent-Hopkins earn top honors?
 
"A couple of people high up in the Oilers' organization -- and I'm not naming names -- said Hopkins has the best vision on the ice since No. 99 (Wayne Gretzky)," Central Scouting's Peter Sullivan, who mainly scouts WHL prospects, told NHL.com. "That's the highest compliment you can get, but also another thing is the way Ryan competes. He never takes a night off and he works as hard in his own end as he does in the offensive zone. It takes a special player with special skills to be able to do that."
 
B.J. MacDonald, who also specializes in scouting players from the WHL, agreed.
 
"I think Hopkins will be prolific because he's one of the few this year where he consistently beat players 1-on-1," MacDonald told NHL.com. "He's the only guy in the draft this year who can do it consistently. I always kid other scouts and say he's got the biggest gap in the league because when he swings out of his own zone with that puck, everyone else just backs up because they don't want to get beat by him -- that gives you a little indication of his talent.
 
"As he advances, his learning curve is so fast that he'll be able to elevate his play alongside better players."
 
While Landeskog dropped a spot in the ratings, the scouts at Central Scouting were in agreement that he might be the most NHL-ready player on the list. The 6-foot-1/2, 207-pound native of Stockholm had 36 goals, 30 assists, a plus-27 rating and 61 penalty minutes while also serving as team captain this season.
 
"Landeskog has matured a little more … he played in a higher division in Europe before he came over so he was ahead of the players over here and you can see that on the ice," Sullivan said. "He's more mature than the other top picks right now and he could probably step in and play sooner than the other picks depending on which team takes him. But three years down the road, he may not be the best player. Right now, he's mature enough to play."
 
Saint John Sea Dogs (QMJHL) forward Jonathan Huberdeau is No. 3 on the list, followed by Niagara IceDogs (OHL) defenseman Dougie Hamilton and Saint John defenseman Nathan Beaulieu.

Drummondville Voltigeurs center Sean Couturier is No. 6 on the list, followed by Portland Winterhawks (WHL) forward Sven Baertschi, Niagara forward Ryan Strome, Kitchener defenseman Ryan Murphy and Saskatoon Blades (WHL) defenseman Duncan Siemens.

Hamilton, also the top-rated blueliner in the mid-term rankings, had an exceptional season with Niagara with 12 goals, 58 points, a plus-35 rating and 77 penalty minutes.
 
"I've watched Dougie in the playoffs and he was dominant," Chris Edwards, Central Scouting's chief OHL scout, said. "He was pinning guys down and his puck movement was great. He moves the puck well, is a great decision-maker and he's a top-two defenseman right now … probably will be in the NHL, too."
 
Making one of the biggest jumps from the mid-term rankings was defenseman Jamieson Oleksiak, a freshman at Northeastern University. The 6-7, 244-pounder went from No. 27 at the mid-term to No. 13 in the final rankings after finishing with a team-best plus-13 rating. He was the team's second-highest scoring defenseman with 4 goals and 9 assists.
 
"I think he has unbelievable upside," Gary Eggleston, Central Scouting's Hockey East scout, told NHL.com. "Whoever gets him is probably going to hit a home run with this kid. You could be looking at a 15- to 16-year player in the League, and to get a kid that size who skates that well is not common. He covers a lot of ice in a very short time and it's a long trip around the outside with that wing span of his."
 
Two other players who soared into the top 30 were defenseman Connor Murphy of the U.S. National Team Development Program, who was rated 25th after not being considered at mid-term as a result of limited viewing, and Russian center Alexander Khokhlachev of the Windsor Spitfires (OHL). Khokhlachev, climbed from No. 45 at the mid-term to No. 29, is one of two Russian players competing in the Canadian Hockey League ranked in the top 30. The other is No. 11 Vladislav Namestnikov of the London Knights (OHL).
 
"Namestnikov is aggressive on the forecheck and not shy about getting involved and going to the net; he's a good playmaker," Edwards said. "Khokhlachev will take a hit to make a play. He's not at all afraid. I've seen him get hit hard a few times and he just bounces right back into the play. His energy level is always there, he's always working hard."
 
The highest-ranked player from the U.S. National Team Development Program is power forward Tyler Biggs, who slipped from fifth at the mid-term to No. 22.

Wayzata (Plymouth, Minn.) High School junior Mario Lucia was the first scholastic player on the board at No. 34. Eden Prairie's Kyle Rau, who was named Mr. Hockey as the top senior in the state of Minnesota, was No. 177.
 
There was no change at the top of Central Scouting's final domestic goaltender rankings as John Gibson of the USNTDP and Christopher Gibson of the Chicoutimi Sagueneens (QMJHL) repeated their spots atop the mid-term rankings.

Jordan Binnington of Owen Sound Attack (OHL) is No. 3, followed by Matt McNeely of the USNTDP and Stephen Michalek of Loomis-Chaffee School (Windsor, Conn.).
 
The top three skaters on Central Scouting's final ranking of international skaters all are from Sweden -- No. 1 Adam Larsson, a defenseman with Skelleftea, No. 2 Mika Zibanejad, a center with Djurgarden and No. 3 Jonas Brodin, a defenseman with Farjestad.

Forward Joel Armia of Finnish club Assat Pori is No. 4, followed by right wing Dmitri Jaskin, a right wing with Czech team Slavia.
 
Samu Perhonen, a 6-foot-4, 172-pound netminder with Finnish club JYP, is No. 1 on Central Scouting's final ranking of international goaltenders.
 
Swedish goalie Magnus Hellberg of Almtuna is No. 2, followed by the Czech Republic's Jaroslav Pavelka of HR Kralove; Benjamin Conz of Langnau in Switzerland; and Norway-born Lars Volden, who plays for Espoo in Finland.

"Volden is a Norwegian playing in Finland with the Espoo Blues junior team and he took the team to the finals where they lost to JYP, 3-games-to-2," European Scouting Director Goran Stubb said. "He's already played for the Norwegian National Team."
 
Follow Mike Morreale on Twitter at: @mike_morreale

2011 9th Annual Showcase Begins Thursday

04/12/2011, 11:41am (EDT)
By Elite Prospects Hockey Staff

 Troy, MI: The 2011 Elite Prospects Hockey Showcase is almost underway in Metro Detroit, Michigan. This year marks the ninth annual Elite Prospects Hockey Showcase and the third year at the Troy Sports Center. The showcase will feature five divisions of hard, fast, and competitive hockey.

"I am very excited for this weekend to start. This will be an intense week of hockey and will allow many youth hockey players to  develop while showcasing their talent," stated Elite Prospects Hockey Showcase Director, Don Harkins.

All updated schedules, results, and rosters will be on the Elite Prospects Hockey website. For more information, stay tuned to www.EliteProspectsHockey.com or contact Director of Communications, Dominic Hennig at HennigD@Ferris.edu.

Elite Prospects Alumni, Andy Miele wins Hobey

04/12/2011, 11:36am (EDT)
By Associated Press (AP)

ST. PAUL, Minn. -- Andy Miele scored on his first shift at Miami (Ohio). Four years later, the star forward won the Hobey Baker Memorial Award as the top player in college hockey.

"I never thought I'd win the Hobey," Miele said Friday night. "I'm very lucky."The 5-foot-8, 175-pounder topped the nation in scoring with 71 points -- 24 goals and an NCAA-best 47 assists -- in 39 games. His points total was 11 more than any other player and the most in Division I since 2002-03.

He had at least one point in 33 games and multiple points in 22. He tied a school record with a 17-game points streak from Jan. 8 to March 19."I expected to have a successful season, but to get up over 70 points is not one of the things I thought I'd do," said Miele, from Grosse Pointe Woods, Mich.

"That's what happens when you work hard and you stick to your goals and your dream and you never give up and never get down on yourself."Coach Enrico Blasi wasn't surprised by the numbers."Everything just kind of clicked for him. You could tell in practice that he could do whatever. He was always one of the hardest working guys on our team.

"After leading the Redhawks to their first Central Collegiate Hockey Association tournament title and a No. 1 seed in the NCAA tournament -- where they were upset by New Hampshire -- Miele signed a free agent entry-level deal with the Phoenix Coyotes last Saturday.

"I'm going out to San Jose with them tomorrow, and if nothing can happen in the standings where a win or loss doesn't mean anything to them, hopefully I'll have the opportunity to play," he said.

Miele deftly passes credit for his success to his linemates just as easily as he passes them the puck for goals. Miele played with three different players throughout the season: Riley Smith, Carter Camper and Trent Vogelhuber.

"The click that we had together was unbelievable," Miele said. "We always knew where each other was, we never got down on each other and never doubted each other. We really stepped up when we had to and that's where a lot of the team success came from."

Miele's unselfishness isn't lost on Blasi."When he says he wants to share this with his teammates, that's the truth and that's the way we've created the culture in our program to do it together. When one of our brothers gets an individual award, everybody's getting it."

Boston College's Cam Atkinson and North Dakota's Matt Frattin also were finalists."I always wanted to be the best I can be, whether that be the best player in college hockey or not," Miele said.

"Sitting here with these two guys, they're unbelievable players so it's had to say I'm the best player in college hockey."Frattin led the NCAA with 36 goals, and Atkinson had 31.

Frattin signed a two-year entry level contract with the Toronto Maple Leafs on Friday, a day after the Fighting Sioux lost in the NCAA semifinals.

Atkinson signed a deal with the Columbus Blue Jackets.Miele was selected from a group of 10 finalists by the votes of a 23-member selection committee, along with the results of an online fan ballot.

  • Cup partying in Buffalo

  • 08/19/2010, 2:00am (EDT) , By Dom Hennig
  • Patrick Kane poses for a pic with other Elite Prospects Alumni Ben Kubiak (1998 Cleveland Barons) and Tyler Harkins (1995 Cleveland Barons)
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