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Alex Bilodeau returns to JMSB, fresh of a gold-medal performance in Sochi

You can say Alexandre Bilodeau is Concordia’s most decorated student when he returned to JMSB on Friday afternoon, in front of a crowd of cameras, fellow students, and young children waiting for a chance to talk to one of Canada’s most famous athletes.

The two-time Olympic Gold medalist and Concordia accounting student just came back from his third Olympic Games in Sochi, Russia, which saw him go where no other free-style skier had ever gone before. He became the first moguls skier to win back-to-back gold medals at the Olympics. Bilodeau won his first gold medal at the Olympic Games in Vancouver in 2010, becoming the first Canadian to win a Gold medal on home soil.

On Friday, it was a homecoming of sort for Bilodeau, as a press conference in the atrium of the JMSB building was held to honour the Olympian back to Concordia. He began his studies at Concordia in September 2010, right after the Games in Vancouver. He’s been here part-time ever since, while juggling his training, getting ready for upcoming World Cup events, and eventually, the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi.

Bilodeau almost never went to Sochi, as he contemplated retirement in 2010.

“After Vancouver, I thought, maybe I should retire and finish my studies and move on with my life,” he said. “But [I thought] I was going to retreat not trying to defend my medal. It’s never been done in my sport.”

But going through two Olympic games hasn’t been an easy ride for Bilodeau.

“It was a very hard four years, there were a lot of ups and downs. [Balancing school and training], its something that’s very difficult, obviously,” Bilodeau said. “We’re always three weeks on snow and three weeks off snow [during training camps]. [When you get home,] it’s 9 p.m. It’s so easy to lay down in your bed and watch a television show but at one point you need to open your accounting books. But it’s a discipline that will pay off later on.

“[But] I’m not perfect, sometimes I do watch a TV show,” he added with a laugh.

Bilodeau will be the first to tell you that he couldn’t have won two Olympic goals without his close friends and family, as well as his trainers, coaches, and his teachers at JMSB for helping him with school, even if he wasn’t around much over the last four years.

“No one could pretend to win an Olympic gold alone. I put myself in a position to succeed in Vancouver and I had the right people around me. I’m very grateful for my whole team.”

The press conference concluded with an open session, where people could ask questions and take pictures with Bilodeau and his two gold medals.

 

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Sports

Tough weekend for Stingers’ basketball teams

Women’s Basketball

A third quarter fallout by the Concordia Stingers women’s basketball team led to a 59-48 loss to the Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM) Citadins in the Réseau du sport étudiant du Québec (RSEQ) semifinals on Friday night at l’Université de Laval in Quebec City.

After falling behind 6-4, four minutes into the first quarter, the Stingers scored three straight baskets to quickly take a 10-6 lead. A foul by Stingers forward Tamara Pinard-Devos at the buzzer led to three free-throw baskets by Citadins guard Valerie Gauvin, making it 15-11 Concordia going into the second quarter.

Baskets were few and far between in the second quarter, as both teams combined for just 24 points. The Stingers only scored their first basket halfway through the quarter, with a three-point jump shot by point guard Ashley Clarke, giving Concordia a 18-16 lead. But it was UQAM who took a 26-24 lead at half-time.

The third quarter saw the Stingers only score two points. UQAM scored 16 straight points to open the second half before Concordia scored their first basket with 2:26 left. Centre Jessica Lubin led the charge with five points. UQAM took a commanding 44-26 lead after three quarters.

Concordia had a stronger fourth quarter, but the 18-point deficit proved to be too much for the Stingers. After centre Camille Michaud made it 46-26, 1:40 into the final quarter, Concordia scored eight straight points to close the gap to 46-35. The run was led by guard Kaylah Barrett, who was questionable to play in this game because of a sprained ankle she sustained in the final weekend of the regular season. She had six of the Stingers’ eight points in that run and nine of Concordia’s final 13 points. It wasn’t enough however, as Concordia fell 59-48 in this semifinal playoff game.

 

Men’s Basketball

The Bishop Gaiters men’s basketball team pulled through in the fourth quarter to beat the Concordia Stingers 74-59 in the RSEQ semifinals at  l’Université de Laval in Quebec City on Saturday afternoon.

The first three quarters of the game were back and forth, as both teams traded leads but could not hold on to them for long. The Gaiters held a 10-7 lead midway through the first quarter before the Stingers came up with four straight points to take an 11-10 lead two minutes later. Stingers guard, Jean-Andre Moussignac’s five points helped Concordia grab an 18-14 lead with 1:38 left before Bishop’s came back to tie the game up at 18 before the quarter was up.

The Gaiters found themselves on top two minutes into the second quarter thanks to a layup basket by guard Jona Bermillo. However, halfway through the second quarter, the Stingers found themselves with the lead again, after Moussignac’s three pointer made it 30-29 for the Stingers. Bishop’s narrowly led 36-34 by halftime.

Bishop’s took a four-point lead just 14 seconds into the second half and were able to hold onto the lead for the rest of the third quarter. This was due in part because the Stingers went through long stretches without scoring. Stingers forward Mukiya Post’s free-throw shot made it 42-40 for the Gaiters at 7:42 of the third quarter, but Concordia’s next basket came more than two minutes later. The Stingers were able to close out the quarter with three baskets to reduce Bishop’s lead to 52-49 heading into the final quarter.

Concordia managed just 10 points in the fourth quarter, allowing the Gaiters to run away with it, the game, and the win. Gaiters centre Mike Andrews had nine points and guard Onnex Blackwood added another six as Bishops beat Concordia 74-59 in the semis, ending the Stingers’ season.

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Sports

Tough loss for Stingers in captain’s final game

The Concordia Stingers men’s hockey team saw their season come to an end on Friday night, as they lost their second game of the best-of-three playoff series 8-4 against their cross-city rivals, the McGill Redmen at Ed Meagher arena.

Photo by Brianna Thicke

After falling to the Redmen 3-1 on Wednesday night, the Stingers needed to win this game to stay alive in the playoffs.

The first period was a high-scoring affair. The Redmen were on the board first at 9:06 of the first period, as centre Guillaume Langelier-Parent trickled a shot past the Stingers’ goaltender, Antonio Mastropietro. Seconds later, Redmen left winger, Patrick Delisle-Houde, knocked over Mastropietro after saving a weak shot. This started a small melee in front of Concordia goal before Delisle-Houde was sent to the box for roughing.

The Stingers capitalized on the power play, as defenceman Gabriel Bourret sniped one past McGill goalie, Jacob Gervais-Chouinard, 1:17 into the power play.

With defenceman Adam Nugent-Hopkins in the penalty box with four minutes left in the first period, the Stingers took their first and only lead of the game shorthanded, as left winger Dany Potvin and centre Olivier Hinse erupted on a two-on-one before Hinse potted in the goal for the 2-1 lead.

The lead lasted a mere 30 seconds. Still on the power play, McGill left winger Neal Prokop tied the game at two.

After making a good stop on right-winger Alexandre Comtois, Mastropietro couldn’t hold onto the puck and Comtois buried it on the rebound to make it 3-2 Redmen with just over 1:30 left in the first period.

McGill made it 4-2 with 37 seconds left, when Mastropietro lost sight of the puck and centre Cedric McNicoll scored his first of three goals of the night on the power play.

Concordia jumped out of the gate quickly to start the second period. After centre Kyle Armstrong made it 4-3 1:06 into the middle frame, Gervais-Chouinard gave up a rebound off of a Potvin shot, so captain George Lovatsis, playing in his final game as a Stinger, picked the puck up and potted his team’s fourth goal to tie the game.

Once again, the momentum didn’t stay on the Stingers side for long, as Prokop scored his second of the game to put McGill back on top 26 seconds later. Left-winger Carl Gelinas would add one more half-way through the second period to make it 6-4 McGill.

Two minutes into the third period, McNicoll scored his second of the game from an impossible angle, just high of Mastropietro’s shoulder to give the Redmen a three-goal lead.

McNicoll then snipped his third goal of the game with four minutes left to make it 8-4, putting the nail in the coffin on the Stingers’ season.

The end of the game was an emotional one for Lovatsis who, after five years with the Stingers hockey program, will be graduating from Concordia. His head coach had nothing but good things to say about his captain, despite the disappointing loss.

“Tonight was a night for George Lovatsis. He’s a fifth-year guy and he’s been a team leader and I can’t tell you how proud I am of George tonight,” said Kevin Figsby. “It’s disappointing that our season is over, but I will tell you, I thought our kids competed hard and represented our university well all season long.”

Playing a very strong McGill team wasn’t going to be an easy task for the Stingers either.

“We’re one of the youngest teams in the CIS and they have to draw a top-10 team in the first round of the playoffs,” said Figsby. “We knew it was going to be an uphill battle right from the get-go.

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Music

Montreal: a special place for well-travelled musicians

“You have to be making roads all over the place to be taken seriously,” said Peter Katz. And that’s precisely what he’s been doing as he makes his way back to Toronto from a stop in Ottawa, one among many on his tour.

Photo by Justin Broadbent

The Montreal-born singer-songwriter began playing the piano and the violin at the age of four. As a teenager he started playing guitar, which inspired him to want to start writing his own songs. But it wasn’t until he started studying theatre at Ryerson University in Toronto that he realized music was something he wanted to pursue.

“We were doing a production of The Laramie Project and I had been writing and going to open mic’s and playing songs and the director asked if I’d write a song for the show,” said Katz. “[So], I wrote this song called ‘The Fence.’ That song changed things for me as far as realizing that this was the thing I really wanted to do. [It] was around the same time I saw Glen Hansard play and when I saw him play I was like, ‘oh man, this is what I want to do for the rest of my life.’”

When Katz returns home to Montreal to play at Petit Campus in the Mile End on Feb. 7, he will be bringing a Juno Award nomination, a Canadian Folk Music Award nomination, a CBC Galaxie Rising Star Award, and an album, First of the Last to Know, that debuted at number one on the iTunes singer-songwriter charts, back with him.

Since releasing his first studio album in 2010, First of the Last to Know, he released two more albums in less than two years, Live at the Music Gallery and Still Mind Still, while also performing over 150 shows a year around the world, something he doesn’t think he’ll be doing again.

“It was just a bit too crazy,” he said. “I was in the middle of a Canadian tour, and I was having to pull over the side of the road to listen to mixes and send feedback and looking at album artwork on my iPhone. I don’t regret it, [but] I really don’t want to do that again. I was just in a state of mania for too long.”

Katz is taking things a little more slowly now. He’s working on his fourth album while on his current Canadian tour, but hasn’t set any release dates.

Photo by Thomas Van der Zaag

“I think I sort of did myself a disservice by setting release dates in the past and booking tours and having to have an album done. I don’t want to do that again,” said Katz. “I want to release it because it’s ready to be released. But obviously, this is what I do for a living, so if I don’t keep putting out music, then I can’t survive, but it’s more important that I make something that’s going to make a difference in my life than to just release something.”

Katz has travelled all over the world from Copenhagen to Singapore, to the US and Canada and says he’s experienced some of his best shows in the Netherlands and Denmark.

“A lot of people are like, ‘wow, you get to see all these places,’ and it’s true that I do get to see a lot of places, but I’m certainly not the tourist,” he said. “Every now and then there’s a day off on a tour, and I get to see the cities a bit and I get to go out for a dinner and that’s really nice.”

Despite all the places he’s been to, Katz says there is no place like home.

“Canada is the place where I really want to make an impact,” he said. “I really feel like some of the things [I sing about] are born out of Canada. So, it feels like I would be most understood playing for a Canadian audience, like there’s this extra level and it does feel special. I love touring in the Netherlands, I love touring in Germany, I love touring all these different places, but you want to feel like where you’re from, the people get you.”

“ You have to go to other places too in order for Canada to take you seriously. But I just love to play, and I’ll play anywhere where I could play to an audience that’s willing to listen.”

Coming home to Montreal is still always a special occasion for Katz.

“No matter how long I’ve lived in Toronto, Montreal just feels like me,” said Katz. “Obviously, when I go to Montreal, I get to see my brother and my dad and some of my old friends, that’s always something that I look forward to, personally. There’s a certain spirit to Montreal I think because of the European-French influence, there’s a certain ‘joie de vivre,’ a certain attitude that I just love and I miss and I look forward to every time I come back. I just feel like I’m in my own skin when I come back to Montreal.”

Peter Katz will play at Petit Campus, located at 57 Prince Arthur Est, on Friday, Feb. 7 and will be performing with fellow song-writer and keyboard player Karen Kosowski. Doors will open at 7:30 p.m. with the show set to begin at 8 p.m. Admission is $20, and $10 for students. For more information on how to get tickets visit www.peterkatz.com/shows.

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Sports

Canadian Olympian looks back at historic moment in Vancouver

At the bottom of the ski hill, sitting on the couch, Alexandre Bilodeau’s hands are clenched to his face as he looks up anxiously at the big screen. The last skier is making his final run down Cypress Mountain, and Bilodeau is just waiting and waiting. Finally, France native Guilbaut Colas’ run is over, and fate is left in the judge’s hands.

Press photo

Sixth place, reads the jumbotron. That’s where Colas would finish in the standings, with a score of 25.74 points.

Jolting up from the couch in celebration, a victory party for Bilodeau was underway at the foot of the mountain, while history was being made.

“I knew [Colas] didn’t have the run to win. But I couldn’t believe it still, until I looked at the board and [he finished] number six, and I’m like ‘I’m first, I won the Olympic Games.’ I couldn’t believe it,” recalled Alexandre Bilodeau. “Everybody trains [for]  four years, or all their lives, for that day, and I’m the only one [who] really worked out that day.”

The 26-year-old Rosèmere, Quebec native won Canada’s first of 14 gold medals at the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympic Games that day, and became the first Canadian athlete to win gold at any Canadian Olympic Games held on home soil.

“To be in the Olympics is an amazing experience, but having that chance to compete on home soil is something that not many people [get to do],” said Bilodeau. “I was fortunate to have one of the best performances of my life at the right moment. There’s no word to explain that… it’s amazing. It will stay with me all my life.”

The freestyle skier, who will be competing in his third and final Olympic Games in Sochi, Russia, this coming February, said there isn’t anything that can top that gold medal win in Vancouver.

“Whatever the result will be in Sochi, even if I win, it’s not going to be the same,” said Bilodeau. “The experience in Vancouver was out of this world.”

Bilodeau attributes a lot of that gold medal win to his brother, Frédéric, who suffers from cerebral palsy.

“He’s my everyday inspiration. He has dreams in life, and most of his dreams are not realistic. He doesn’t have the ability to make it happen,” he said. “I need to go after my dreams. I don’t need to realize them, but I at least need to try [because] he lives his dream through me,[and] through my sister.

“To have him on the front stage with me in Vancouver, it was amazing to see his joy, to see how proud he was. It’s crazy how my mom drove me when I was a kid, to all these mountains, to all these competitions, and he was always in the car, waiting for me. He has done as much work as my mom to get me where I am now. He was a big part of that medal.”

As a kid, Bilodeau both skied and played hockey, but at the age of eight, hockey was out of the picture and everything was about skiing.

After watching Jean-Luc Brassard, another Quebec freestyle skier win a gold medal at the 1994 Olympics, Bilodeau was hooked on freestyle skiing.

He eventually chose to focus on moguls which is a branch of freestyle skiing.

In 2006, Bilodeau became the youngest man to win a World Cup event in Federation Internationale de Ski (FIS) history at Mont Gabriel in St. Sauveur, QC. He won five gold medals during the 2008-2009 World Cup season and has now won three gold medals in a row, heading into the Sochi Winter Olympic Games in February.

Despite all of his success in skiing, Bilodeau said that hockey is his “favourite sport for all time,” and like many Montrealers, he cheers for the Habs.

Bilodeau is also a student at Concordia, studying accounting at the John Molson School of Business (JMSB).

He said he chose Concordia because Judith Woodsworth, a former President of Concordia, was the first to convince him that JMSB was the best fit. Although Bilodeau is Francophone, he decided to study school in English because he felt that being fluent in English was important for the business world.

“[JMSB] is an amazing school, great people there, great teachers that helped through these four years,” he said. “It hasn’t been an easy four years for me, always travelling, not there for the mid-term, not there for the final. This December, I wasn’t there for the whole period of the finals and I went to write an exam [in my teacher’s office] close to Christmas.”

Bilodeau added that with his hectic travel schedule during his competitive season, which falls from December until the end of March, he often doesn’t get to travel around and see many of the countries he visits. He will be leaving for Sochi on Feb. 1 after another competition in Norway. So, who will he be cheering for when he gets there?

“Team Canada,” he said with a laugh, adding that he’ll be attending some of their hockey games when he can. He’ll also be cheering for good friend and fellow skier, Erik Guay.

“I wish him the best, he deserves it,” Bilodeau said. “It’s amazing to live the Olympics with people you grew up with.”

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Sports

Lions earn clean sheet against Stingers

The Concordia Stingers men’s hockey team were shutout for the first time this season as they lost 3-0 to the York Lions last Saturday afternoon at Ed Meagher arena.

Photo by Brianna Thicke

The Lions fell into some penalty trouble in the first period but the Stingers failed to score in the opening frame despite being on the man advantage for six full minutes. The first Lions penalty came 1:10 into the period, but the Stingers failed to get momentum early in the game on the power play.

York opened the scoring at 6:48 of the first period when winger Evan Gravenor’s slap shot from one knee beat Concordia goalie, Antonio Mastropietro, giving York a 1-0 lead.

The Stingers were handed their second powerplay of the game when Lions centre Jordan Merante was sent to the box at the eight minute mark of the first period. Four minutes later, Lions centre Tyler McGee’s hooking penalty was York’s third of the period, but Concordia was unable to tie the game up on both power plays. The Lions led 1-0 after one period.

At 4:39 in the middle frame, winger Jesse Messier’s weak shot trickled through Mastropietro to give York the 2-0 lead.

Almost midway through the second period, Concordia centre Hugo Vincent was sent to the penalty box for roughing. Just as the penalty expired, York winger Mike Lombardi gave his team a 3-0 lead when he was left alone on the side of the Stingers net, and potted an easy empty net goal as Mastropietro wasn’t able to get the pad out on time.

The second period was a physical one for both teams, especially after the Lions took the 3-0 lead. With just under five minutes to go in the second period, five players, including three Stingers, received roughing penalties after a fight broke out between Concordia defenceman Gabriel Bourret and York winger Michael Santini.

“I was trying to provoke [playing a more physical game] a little bit because they were skating a lot faster then we were tonight and we needed to do something to slow their speed down,” head coach Kevin Figsby said. “The only way to slow a fast skating team is to try to play them a little more physical along the boards. We weren’t hitting in the first period and that allowed them to execute their game plan, which was getting pucks in deep and skating.”

The third period featured no goals, but Concordia had some chances to get on the board. Early in the third period, Stingers centre Kyle Armstrong had an opportunity to score on an empty net, but Lions goaltender Andrew Perugini was able to move post-to-post quickly to rob Armstrong.

The Stingers once again failed to capitalize on the power play in the third period despite being up two men after York forwards Corey Scott and Troy Barss were penalized a littler more than 12 minutes into the period.

Despite the loss, Figsby said that his young team fared well this weekend overall, after a 9-2 win against Brock University on Friday.

“We played a solid, strong, veteran team today,” Figsby said. “Take a look at that roster, they’re fourth and fifth year vets. They lost 4-1 last night, they came all the way to Montreal and wanted a split on the weekend. A tough loss, yes, deflating, absolutely not.”

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Sports

Bishop Gaiters no match for Stingers

The Concordia Stingers women’s basketball team took a quick and early lead against the Bishop Gaiters and never looked back, winning 66-40 in their home opener last Saturday afternoon.

Photo by Brianna Thicke

The Stingers came flying out of the gate, taking a 5-0 lead 90 seconds into the game. After making it 6-0, Stingers point guard Ashley Clarke stole the ball from Gaiters guard Valerie Tremblay at centre court, leaving her alone for the easy basket, giving the Stingers an 8-0 lead just three minutes into the first quarter.

Concordia took a commanding 17-0 lead before the Gaiters got their first two points near the end of the quarter. The Stingers capped off a strong first quarter with a 20-2 lead.

Despite the Stingers coming out with such a big lead in the first quarter, head coach Kevin Pruden knew his team expected a closer second quarter.

“I expected us to slow down in the second quarter a little bit and we did. It’s really difficult to hold a team to no points in a quarter,” he said.

The Gaiters would score 13 points in the second quarter after scoring just two in the first. They started the quarter with four quick points, reducing the Stingers lead to 20-6. However, Clarke responded with a three-pointer, making it 23-6 for Concordia. The field goal was already Clarke’s 10th point of the game.

With the score 27-15 for Concordia with under two minutes to play in the second quarter, Stingers guard Cynthia Suissa doubled up Concordia’s lead. The Stingers added four more points to end the first half with a 34-15 lead.

Clarke scored her 11th and 12th point of the game on two successful free throws to give the Stingers a 36-15 lead early in the third quarter.

Halfway through the third quarter, Clarke picked up the rebound off Marilyse Roy-Viau’s three-point shot attempt, putting the Stingers up 47-21.

Gaiters forward Jenae Grayer picked up her team’s leading 10th point in the game, making the score 48-25 for the Stingers with just under three to go in the quarter. The Stingers held a 53-32 lead after three quarters, and had yet to fall behind.

Concordia would score the first two baskets of the final quarter, as guard Kaylah Barrett and centre Tina Mpondani each scored two points seconds apart, giving the Stingers a 57-34 lead.

Stingers guard Alex Boudreau’s three-pointer at the end of the game gave Concordia the 66-40 win. Clarke ended the game as the Stingers’ leading scorer with 16 points and she was named the team’s Most Valuable Player of the game.

“I’m much happier today with our effort than I was last week because we showed some energy, we played good defence throughout and we did a much better job executing offensively,” Pruden said. “It was good to see.”

After the loss against UQAM, Clarke said that “this game was huge for us, because now we got our confidence back.” “We came out more aggressive (this game). In our first game (against UQAM), our energy wasn’t there at all,” she added.

The Stingers held on to their lead in the fourth quarter in this game and were able to pull out a win, a big improvement from their season opener against UQAM on Nov. 6, where they blew a fourth quarter lead to lose 53-42 against the Citadins.

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Sports

Bruins Hall of Fame defenseman releases memoir

It’s the moment many hockey enthusiasts across North America have been waiting for, a moment many fans, and even people around the National Hockey League, thought would never happen. Bobby Orr has finally written his long-awaited book, Orr: My Story.

Many books have been written about him, including Stephen Brunt’s Searching for Bobby Orr, without ever having interviewed Orr or his family because the subject never wanted the attention. Thirty-five years after retiring, he finally decided it was his turn to tell his story.

It’s amazing how someone who is arguably the best hockey player to ever play the game can remain so humble. But modesty is the definition of Orr and this book.

Orr: My Story is more than just the former number 4’s “tell-all” of his hockey career. Though he does provide more insight into his ascension in the hockey ranks, the book is dedicated to thanking the people who helped him get there.

For example, Orr had this to say in the book about his first Stanley Cup victory with the Bruins in 1970: “[…] I never really liked individual honors, because they seem to miss the point. No one guy can accept the praise for the statistics he puts up, because it takes all kinds of unacknowledged help to get there. All the coaches in minor hockey and in Oshawa. All the friends and volunteers, teachers and billets. The neighbors who lent a hand at some point, and the teammates’ parents who drove me to the rink.”

In the book, Orr never fails to mention how his family, his teammates and his coaches have made him the player he was with the Bruins, and the person he is now. He even dedicates a chapter to Don Cherry, his coach in Boston and the flamboyant host of the CBC’s Coach’s Corner on Hockey Night in Canada. Orr explains how much Cherry meant to him and his family and almost makes you want to the warm up to him.

Much of Orr: My Story is also advice to parents and younger players, as Orr wanted people to learn from his experiences, good or bad. And if you’ve followed Bobby Orr’s career, you’d know he’s had his fair share of both.

For example, Orr writes that hockey should be played to have fun and if you’re good enough to make a career out of playing, great, but that’s not the goal. Orr says that his best memories involve playing shinny hockey in outdoor rinks in Parry Sound, because of how much fun he had, and that he never stopped having fun, even in Boston. His advice to parents is to let kids play, because the point of playing is to have fun.

Orr also offers his opinion on fighting, that it has place in the game but blind-side hits and hits from behind need to be removed.

Orr also dedicates a chapter to his former agent, Alan Eagleson. In short, he was a fraud and stole from his clients, including Orr. While Orr admits that he trusted Eagleson and should have paid more attention to his finances, Eagleson betrayed him and left him broke after Orr retired. Now, Orr works as an agent, but never handles players’ money, believing that the players need to learn how to manage their own money.

What you get out of this book is that Orr doesn’t see himself as a legend, as he is perceived to be. He proves throughout the book that he was not only a special player, but a special person to know as well.

Orr: My Story was released on Oct. 15 and is available at most bookstores and online retailers.

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Sports

Tough call doesn’t faze Stingers

The Stingers men’s soccer team overcame a 1-0 deficit in the first half to beat the UQAM Citadins 2-1 in their home opener on Friday night.

The Stingers fell 1-0 to the Citadins when UQAM was awarded a penalty kick in the 20th minute, after a foul in the penalty area, resulting in a UQAM player going down. Stingers goalkeeper Remo Taraschi was able to get a piece of the Citadins forward Remi Veilleux’s shot, but it wasn’t enough to stop it, giving UQAM a 1-0 lead.

Photo by Marilla Steuter-Martin.

The Stingers bench wasn’t happy with the call, but head coach Greg Sutton was happy his team didn’t let it affect their play and the score.

“Honestly, it seemed like our goalkeeper got the ball before the player went down, but not according to the referee,” he said of the penalty call. “[But] probably, your guess is as good as mine.

“The guys were able to persevere through all the strangeness, to put it kindly,” Sutton added. “We made some adjustments [at half time] and we were able to break them down and be fortunate enough to get a couple of goals and get a big win for us.”

Veilleux almost got his second goal of the game eight minutes later, when he broke through the Stingers defense and had a wide open net, but a quick sliding play by a Stingers defender prevented Veilleux from taking the shot.

Veilleux was denied yet another goal in the 11th minute of the first half, when a failed clearing attempt by the Stingers after a UQAM corner landed on Veilleux’s foot, but his shot hit the post, keeping the score 1-0 for the Citadins after one half.

A handball in the penalty area in the 25th minute of the second half gave the Stingers a penalty kick and a chance to tie the game. Stingers forward Andrew Bryan capitalized on the opportunity and tied the game 1-1.

With less than five minutes left and the game still tied, Stingers forward Massimo Tartaglia passed it to an open Gabriel Quinn from the side of the field, and his low but hard and accurate shot beat the Citadins goalkeeper Garbard Fénelon, giving the home team a 2-1 lead.

The game ended with a red card given to Stingers forward Amadou Lam after he accumulated his second yellow card of the game.

“We needed to get a win here,” said Sutton. “We had a tough game [against Montreal]. We played well, but the score didn’t dictate that. We were able to bounce back tonight and get a W, which we needed and now we can go into Sunday’s game [with confidence] and get a result against McGill.”

Categories
Sports

Offense explodes at home

The Stingers women’s soccer team rebounded from a tough 1-0 loss to the Montreal Carabins last weekend with a solid 4-2 win on Friday night at home against the UQAM Citadins.

Concordia got their first good chance to score in the 11th minute of the first half when forward Melissa Kedro was sent in by herself but Citadins goalie Valérie Labbé came out to stop the play before Kedro was able to get a shot away.

Concordia file photo.

Concordia took a 1-0 lead in the 33rd minute of play when defender Kayla Myre’s header found the back of the net off of a Stingers’ corner kick.

The Stingers doubled their lead in the 38th minute when defender Philippa Lyttle’s pass from the side fell right to midfielder Alexandra Dragan, who made no mistake and buried it to give her team the 2-0 lead.

The home team came out strong early in the second-half, quickly making it 3-0 from an easy chip in by Kedro in the 6th minute of the second frame.

The Stingers then seemed to take a step back before scoring their fourth and final goal. In the 31st minute, a UQÀM player was sent on a breakaway, which sent Stingers goalie Saby Dagenais way out of her net. The Citadins player was able to beat Dagenais, leaving her a wide open net to score but her shot hit the post. The play led to a penalty kick, taken by Citadins forward Stéphanie Brien-Lejeune, who capitalized and made it 3-1.

Less than five minutes later, the Citadins were given a chance to reduce the Stingers’ lead to one goal when Brien-Lejeune was awarded another penalty kick. However, this time she hit the post, leaving the score at 3-1 Concordia.

The missed penalty kick seemed to revive the Stingers as they started to push for that fourth goal. Soon after the second penalty kick, a perfect pass from Dragan sent Kedro in all alone but her shot went just wide of the net.

In the 24th minute, Dragan had a chance to score into an open net after receiving a pass from Stingers forward Gabriela Padvaiskas, off a free kick, but she chose to pass in front of the net instead. Unfortunately, a UQÀM player got to the ball before her Stingers teammate was able to tap it in.

With three minutes left in the game, Padvaiskas was left all alone in front of Labbé but her shot went just over the crossbar. Seconds later, Padvaiskas redeemed herself when she sneaked one below the Citadins goalie and made it 4-1 Stingers.

The Citadins managed one last goal in extra time, which ended the game with a 4-2 score.

“We had a great week of practice, we knew what we did well in games last week and we knew what we had to do better today,” said head coach Jorge Sanchez. “A lot of the stuff we did in training this week came out in the game. To score four goals is great. I’m a little disappointed about the two goals [against].”

“I think we possessed the ball better and we played intelligent,” said Dagenais. “We practised a lot of our offense because we were struggling to put the ball in the net, so we worked a lot on that and it paid off with four goals.”

The team will play host to Université de Laval on Friday, Sept. 20 at 8:30 p.m.

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Sports

Stingers’ defenceman plans ahead

For many Canadians across the country, Saturday nights begin when the Hockey Night in Canada theme song is heard and Don Cherry’s fluorescent suits fill up their television screens. For many young hockey players, watching those games on the CBC was the beginning of their hockey careers.

Kabbaj was drafted by the Chicoutimi Saguenéens of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League (QMJHL) in 2008 , which brought him one step closer to making it to the NHL. Photo by Keith Race

For Youssef Kabbaj, a defenceman for the Stingers men’s hockey team, things weren’t much different.

“I started playing hockey when I was six years old,” he said. “One day in December of 1997, my dad was watching the Habs. I wanted to watch my cartoons, but he wouldn’t let me. I ended up watching the game with him, which was the first time I watched a full game. From that day on, I fell in love with the game.”

And Kabbaj didn’t look back. After playing most of his novice and atom A hockey in Westmount, he went on to play Bantam BB in Versant-Ouest, Bantam AA in Verdun and Midget AAA in Châteauguay.

It’s every hockey player’s dream to make the NHL. For Kabbaj, it almost became reality when he was 15 and playing Bantam AA.

“It was the first time I was ever considered as being one of the top players of my age in Quebec,” said Kabbaj. “That’s when I started sacrificing vacation time during the summer to workout and get stronger.”

Kabbaj was drafted by the Chicoutimi Saguenéens of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League (QMJHL) in 2008 , which brought him one step closer to making it to the NHL.

“At first [playing in the QMJHL] was surreal,” explained Kabbaj. “You’re treated like a pro, you play with great players and become an idol for kids in the town you play in. It’s a great feeling because you know you’re not that far from the ultimate goal of playing in the NHL. It’s like a tap [on] the back of the shoulder just to say ‘keep it up, you’re almost there.’”

However, the dream took a step back when he returned to the Saguenéens’ training camp the next year.

“My coach in Chicoutimi told me I would not be an important part of his team [thereby] just blocking my dream of making the NHL without me being able to do anything about it, because he would rarely make me play,” said Kabbaj.

He was traded from Chicoutimi to the Shawinigan Cataractes and spent his last year of major junior play with the Gatineau Olympiques. His main role was killing penalties or playing against the opposing team’s top-line players.

Most players are forced to move away from home when they’re drafted at 16. Many players, like Kabbaj, move in with billet parents, families who receive money from the junior teams to care for their players.

“[Living away from home] forces you to become more responsible,” said Kabbaj. “The hardest thing was missing my mom’s cooking! [But] I learned how to be tougher and not to be shy. I learned how to control my emotions to a certain extent and maintain a composed mood.”

Now, having returned home, Kabbaj is entering his second year with the Stingers.

“The NHL was definitely the dream, [but] that faded away a bit after my [18th birthday] when I went undrafted,” he said. “I had to choose between playing in minor pro leagues with no long-term guarantees or a university degree with long-term guarantees. The choice was fairly simple to me.”

Kabbaj chose Concordia after head coach Kevin Figsby showed keen interest in bringing him to Concordia while Kabbaj was playing in Gatineau. He is currently studying political science and plans to attend law school after graduation.

“Hockey-wise, I’m a Stinger for now and proud to be. If I get a crack at the pros then why not [continue playing], but realistically I’m aiming for law school after my degree,” he said. Watch for Kabbaj in the Stingers preseason game against McGill on Sept. 12.

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Sports

No sting in football team’s opening game

Photo by Marilla Steuter-Martin

The Concordia Stingers started their 2013-2014 season in a losing fashion with a lopsided 48-3 defeat to the Montreal Carabins in their home opener on Saturday.

The Carabins opened up the scoring after the Stingers allowed a safety around the sixth minute mark in the first quarter, shortly after Concordia quarterback Reid Quest fumbled the ball.

The Carabins took a 9-0 lead when Antoine Pruneau scored a touchdown on an 89-yard kickoff return at 5:29 of the first.

The Stingers couldn’t muster many points in the first quarter. Slotback Alexandre Hébert’s didn’t complete a pass, keeping Concordia off the board with 2:30 left.

Pruneau almost gave his team a 16-0 lead about 12 minutes into the second quarter, but a penalty cancelled the touchdown.

Soon after, running back Rotrand Sené was sent on a 58-yard run, but what seemed to be a leg injury to offensive lineman, Simon Légaré, caused a lengthy delay. After trainers examined him for a couple of minutes, he was taken off on a stretcher.

Quickly after play resumed, Sené scored a touchdown on the Stingers’ eight-yard line, giving the Carabins a 16-0 lead.

Things heated up after Stingers slotback Jamal Henry got pushed on a kick return play and a mini-brawl ensued between the 20 and 30 yard line, causing several penalties for both sides.

The Stingers gave up another safety with 8:40 left in the second, and went down 18-0. The Carabins widened their lead less than two minutes later with another touchdown, making it 25-0 for Montreal.

Concordia once again failed to score a point in the second quarter, and ended the half with a horse collar penalty, costing them 15 yards.

After sending receiver Mikhail Davidson on a 40-yard run two-and-a-half minutes into the second half, quarterback Pierre-Luc Varhegyi carried the ball over the touchdown line from the one-yard line, giving the Carabins a commanding 32-0 lead.

The Stingers finally got on the board with a field goal by Keegan Treloar at around the 30-yard line with 6:18 left.

By the start of the fourth quarter, the game was out of reach for the Stingers. Just over six minutes into the final frame, receiver Sean Thomas-Erlington sealed the deal for the Carabins with his touchdown, which put his team up 40-3.

After missing a 29-yard field goal attempt with 4:58 minutes left in the fourth quarter, running back Manuel Crisi-Lauzon scored the Carabins final touchdown with 2:36 left in the game.

Despite the loss, Stingers’ linebacker Max Caron and head coach Gerry McGrath said they liked what they saw from the rookies in their first Canadian Interuniversity Sport (CIS) game.

“I’m happy with the way the kids played,” McGrath said, on the Stingers’ website. “They played hard until the end and never quit.”

“Obviously, when you lose a game like that, it’s tough, and there’s a lot that didn’t go our way today, but with a lot of guys starting in their first CIS game, [and] there were definitely a lot of good things to take away from this one,” Caron said. “There was a lot of guys who went out, it was their first CIS experience, they missed a couple of plays, but those are the things we’re going to correct. We just got to work them out and become a better team each week. It’s the first game of the season, and you’re going to have a lot of mistakes, you just got to shore up those mental mistakes and play better next week.”

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