Troy Bruins Hockey Team - Troy, Ohio

 
 
Wooster, Ohio - The Troy Bruins inaugural season came to a heartbreaking end on Saturday afternoon with a upsetting 7-6 sudden death overtime loss to Team Ulysse inside the Alice Noble Arena in Wooster. With the loss, the Bruins inaugural season record is set as 34-15-1 as they return home the 2010 NJHL Knox Cup Runner Up after their 6-2 loss to Knox Cup Champion Wooster Oilers on Friday night.

Saturday afternoon's game would feature a Bruins team firing on all cylinders in the first two periods, propelled by three quick Bruins goals in the first half. Despite their early charge, the Bruins fell on their heals in the final period of regulation, allowing Ulysse to surge for four unanswered goals and forcing a sudden death overtime period.

Overtime would start on a sour note for the Bruins, as captain Willie Boyle suffered a controversial hit into the corner, severely injuring him and leaving the Bruins without one of their most veteran leaders. It wouldn't take long for Ulysse to pounce on a visibly shaken Bruins club, scoring the game-winning goal less than three minutes into the extra frame to end the game.

With the loss, the Bruins inaugural season comes to a bittersweet close. Troy becomes NJHL Knox Cup Runner Up, and now prepares for a busy off season preparing for the 60th anniversary of Troy Bruins Hockey and Hobart Arena for the 2010-2011 season of Bruins hockey. Fans are encouraged to visit www.TroyBruins.com frequently in the coming weeks as the team releases information on next season, including season tickets, sponsorships and more.
 
 
Wooster, Ohio - The first place Wooster Oilers would take an early lead and would never let it go on their way to a less than spectacular 6-2 win over the Bruins in game one of the 2010 NJHL Finals from the sold out Alice Noble Arena in Wooster, Ohio Friday night.

With the standing room only crowd in Wooster cheering on the home team from the start, the Oilers would take the quick lead less than five minutes into the opening period off a deflection past Bruins starting netminder Allan Dowler at the 15:49. Troy would struggle to find their stride as the period continued, with Wooster capitalizing on a centering pass from the far point to blast a slapshot past a stunned Dowler for the 2-0 lead with just over seven minutes showing on the clock. As the time continued to wind down in the opening frame, the Bruins, aided by the generous and boisterous contingent of Bruins fans which made the three hour trek, got on the board with 3:33 to go with a K's Hamburger Shop Powerplay goal by Leonid Kovalev assisted by Egor Pogodin-Alexseev to cut the Oilers lead down to one. Yet, the momentum would remain in Wooster's possession for a scramble goal in front of Dowler while the Bruins were signaled for a delay penalty coming into the zone. The goal, with just 1:41 remaining in the period, would take the hometown Oilers into the intermission ahead of the Bruins 3-1.

In much the same fashion, the Oilers would start the second period with an early goal, this time at the 15:41 mark, off a centering pass through the slot to jump out with a 4-1 lead. Troy would improve in the second period, challenging the Oilers offensively with several quality chances, but would only be able to muster one goal in the middle stanza. Justin Dornhecker would cash in his first goal of the weekend off a tape to tape pass from Pogodin-Alexseev to blast a snapshot past Oilers netminder Alexander Galaysha at 9:33 to lead the Bruins into the second intermission trailing the Oilers 4-2.

The Oilers would take hold of the third period and not look back, scoring twice while holding off the Bruins offense through the final buzzer for the lackluster 6-2 win to take game one of the 2010 NJHL Finals.

Despite the loss, the Bruins continue the weekend with an afternoon matinee against Team Ulysse from Montreal, Canada to challenge for the International Cup championship in addition  to the Knox Cup for the NJHL title. Faceoff against Ulysse from the Alice Noble Arena in Wooster is set for 1pm with the game televised live on postTV at www.TroyBruins.com with the voice of the Bruins JT Szabo handling the call.
 
 
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The Troy Bruins prepare to put an exclamation point on their 2009-2010 Inaugural season with a trip to the 2010 NJHL Finals hosted by the first place Wooster Oilers this weekend.

Finishing in second place in the regular season, the Bruins (34-13-1) eliminated third place Jamestown Jets last weekend inside the Savings Bank Arena in Jamestown, New York with a weekend sweep that saw the Bruins looking like a true championship contender complete with 15 goals throughout best of three series that thanks to a 6-1 Bruins win on Friday night and impressive 9-4 win on Saturday lasted only two games.

With only one weekend remaining in the enormously successful inaugural campaign, the Bruins set their sights on the goal they've had since September...the coveted Knox Cup Championship.

Yet, standing in the Bruins way is in-state rival Wooster Oilers (38-5-3), who after an outstanding first place regular season finish made short work of defending Knox Cup Champions Findlay Grrrowl in their opening round of the playoffs last weekend. In their four year history in Wooster, the Oilers have never won a championship and Oilers head coach Hart Duddy has assembled his strongest lineup to date in order to do just that.

For the second year in a row, the NJHL Championship weekend is hosted by the Oilers at the ten year old Alice Noble Arena in Wooster.

Unlike last year, this year's NJHL Championship weekend will actually feature two titles in one, with Team Ulysse traveling down from Quebec, Canada to challenge the NJHL champion for the inaugural "International Cup", meaning that the Bruins or Oilers can capture both the Knox Cup and International Cup this weekend. Fans in Wooster along with the many Bruins faithful making the three hour trek will have plenty to cheer about inside the comfy confines of the Noble Arena.

This weekend's game times are set as follows:
Friday, March 26 at 7:30pm - Troy Bruins vs Wooster Oilers
Saturday, March 27 at 1pm - Troy Bruins vs Team Ulysse
Saturday, March 27 at 7:30pm - Wooster Oilers vs Team Ulysse
Sunday, March 27 at 2pm - Championship Game (Knox/International Cup)

On The Air
All Troy Bruins games this weekend will be broadcast live from Wooster on www.MiamiCountyPost.com with the voice of the Bruins JT Szabo handling the play-by-play presented by Fox's Pizza Den & Lee's Famous Recipe Chicken. Fans can also watch all the action live by clicking on the "Watch Live Games" button on www.TroyBruins.com with the Bruins pregame show starting ten minutes prior to faceoff each game.

Tickets
A limited number of tickets are reserved for Troy fans making the trip. Friday is expected to be a sell out, as are most other games this weekend, with tickets $8 for Adults and $6 for students at the ANA Box Office. For more information, contact the Wooster Oilers at (330) 345-8686.

 
 
BRUINS ELIMINATE JAMESTOWN, EARNS TRIP TO CHAMPIONSHIPS AGAINST WOOSTER

Jamestown, NY - It would take only two games to eliminate the Jamestown Jets from the opening round of the NJHL playoffs, pulling off an impressive 9-4 road victory inside the Jamestown Savings Bank Arena on Saturday night.

With the clear goal of eliminating the Jets in their minds, the Troy Bruins skated into game two of the NJHL Playoffs opening round picking up right where they left off on Friday night, scoring the game's first goal less than two minutes in. Once again stunning the Jamestown crowd still finding their seats, Egor Pogodin-Alekseev would propel a setup from fellow line mates and countrymen Gleb Luchnikov and Leonid Kovalev to blast a shot past the Jets netminder at 18:05. Yet, for the Russian native and youngest player on the Bruins team, Pogodin-Alekseev wasn't done as he found the puck on his stick off a Jamestown turnover, and was able to cash in for his second consecutive goal of the night at the 9:37 mark. Special teams play would rule for the Bruins on Friday night, and would continue as well in game two with a K's Powerplay goal by Aaron Huber at 7:05 and an additional lamplighter with under five minutes to go in the period to give the Bruins a commanding 4-0 lead heading into the first intermission.

Prior to the game, Bruins head coach Shane Hicke remarked to his squad that the game would need to be won one period at a time, and his club responded in the second with another quick and early goal less than three minutes in at 17:44 thanks to Kovalev scoring from Huber to take a 5-0 lead. Veteran leadership would extend the lead with captain Lee McClure dangling through the slot for his first goal of the playoffs to take the 6-0 lead at the 16:31 mark. Jamestown would come to life on a Jets powerplay to knock a deflection past Bruins starter Allan Dowler at 14:54 to break the shutout 6-1. Both teams would battle offensively as the period wound along, with the Jets cutting the lead to four with a blistering slapshot past Dowler's shoulder with less than six minutes remaining in the middle stanza. With a flurry of action in front of the Bruins net with just seconds to go, Dowler would come up big with a butterfly save to take his team into the second intermission ahead 6-2.

Unlike the previous several periods, the quick goal would actually come off the stick of the Jets offensive machine to cut the lead to three before Troy snapped back into their zone with defenseman Erik Levin sniping a shot from the far point at 13:37 assisted by Huber and Boyle. With regulation slipping away, the Jets would be forced to watch the Bruins add two more goals, first by Luchnikov with 12:47 and then again about a minute later at 11:37 with a surprise goal between the legs of Jets relief goalie Chad Karns by Justin Dornhecker to extend the lead 9-3. Jamestown, seeing their season coming to a close, would muster one final deflection through a screened Dowler, but it would not be nearly enough to challenge the Bruins by the end of sixty minutes of hockey. At the final horn, the Bruins would hold onto the 9-4 final score for the win.

With the win, the Bruins eliminate Jamestown in two games, and now head home to Troy for an intense week of preparation for the 2010 NJHL Championships next weekend in Wooster, Ohio against fierce in-state rival Wooster Oilers. More information on the championship weekend, including start times and broadcast info will be available on www.TroyBruins.com starting Monday.
 
 
BRUINS DOWN JETS 6-1 TO TAKE FIRST GAME OF SERIES

Jamestown, NY- The Troy Bruins would enter their first postseason in team history with a high-energy win over the Jamestown Jets 6-1 on Friday night inside the Jamestown Savings Bank Arena.

With the energy and determination of a seasoned powerhouse, the Troy Bruins opened up their first period of playoff hockey with a definite bang, thanks to newly named captain Willie Boyle setting up veteran forward Aaron Huber for the game's first goal just :11 in, stunning the crowd in Jamestown still coming through the turnstiles. Troy's dominance and control of the puck was noticeable throughout the period, giving Jets starting netminder and former Bruin Chad Karns a thorough workout even before the halfway mark of the opening period. Special teams play would excel for Shane Hicke's Bruins club, and with the help of a two-man advantage, Gleb Luchnikov found the back of the net from a Boyle and Huber pass from neutral ice to make it 2-0 with 12:26 to play in the period. Yet, the Bruins proved to the crowd that even strength hockey can be a forte, with Justin Dornhecker cashing in on a wrister from the slot in front of Karns with less than three minutes showing on the clock. Dornhecker's goal, his first of the playoffs and assisted by Luchnikov, came at the 2:54 mark. Troy skated into the first intermission with a dominating 3-0 lead.

After reacquainting each other throughout the first, the second period would settle down to be an impressive end-to-end hockey game, with both the Bruins and Jets earning good offensive chances on their respective attacking zones. Yet, it would be the Bruins who would draw the only goal of the middle period at the 4:03 mark with Danville, California native Derek McPherson scoring his first postseason lamplighter to lead his Bruins into the second intermission ahead of the Jamestown Jets an impressive 4-0.

Feeling the pressure of playoff hockey, the Jets would come into the third period with a bit more physical aggression towards the Bruins, ultimately capitalizing on a rebound in front of Bruins netminder Allan Dowler less than a minute gone in the final period. The Jets powerplay goal to start the period would also prove to be their last, as the Bruins recaptured the spirit of the game for the remainder. Cushin goals by the Bruins, first at the 4:37 mark by Huber, and then again with 2:30 to go off the stick of Egor Pogodin-Alekseev on the powerplay, would seal the deal and the 6-1 win for Troy.

With the win, the Bruins take game 1 of the three game series, and can eliminate the Jets with a second win on Saturday night.
 
 
Troy, OH - less than one week after finishing their inagural regular season inside the historic Hobart Arena with a pair of wins against rival Findlay Grrrowl, the second place Troy Bruins now prepare for their first playoff series in team history this weekend against the Jamestown Jets.

The Bruins (32-13-1) head to Jamestown New York's Savings Bank Arena for a best of three series against NJHL foe Jamestown Jets, beginning on Friday, March 19 at 7:35pm and continuing on Saturday, March 20 at 7:35pm with the rubber-match if necessary set for Sunday at 2pm.

In the six prior meetings between the Bruins and Jets, Troy has come away the victor in five after dropping their one and only loss to Jamestown 4-1 on the very first matchup back in December. Finishing in third place behind the Bruins, Jamestown hit a winless streak after the newyears which helped solidify the Bruins position at second place early, but like Troy, the Jets have finished the regular season strong hoping to carry that momentum into the first round of the playoffs this weekend.

Old Foe
In net for the Jets to close out the regular season is newly acquired rookie Chad Karns. Karns, a Miamisburg native, started the year with the Bruins but was later waived prior to the trade deadline and picked up by the Jets. He is expected to face his old teammates in the starting position for Jamestown on Friday night.

Veteran Leadership
Veteran centerman Willie Boyle, a native of Winter Garden, Florida, has been named the first Captain in Bruins history by head coach Shane Hicke. "Boyle has the veteran leadership that we've been needing all season, and with his experience winning championships in years past, along with his passion and drive to excel into the higher levels of the game, was the right choice to wear the coveted "C" "noted Hicke on the selection. Current Bruins alternate captains Lee McClure, Justin Dornhecker & Manny Lopez will continue their leader roles on the ice and in the dressing room. "Our four captains each contribute something unique and valuable, and together they will both propel and inspire our younger players and those without playoff experience".

Bruins On Your Phone
Fans can receive exclusive post game score alerts and more directly to their cell phone by signing up for the free Bruins text alert program at www.TroyBruins.com! Standard carrier text rates may apply.

On The Air
This weekend's playoff games in Jamestown, NY will be broadcast live on postTV starting ten minutes prior to faceoff with the "voice of the Bruins" JT Szabo handling the call presented by Fox's Pizza Den & Lee's Famous Recipe Chicken. To Tune into the games, visit www.TroyBruins.com and click on the "watch games live" button or visit www.MiamiCountyPost.com.
 
 
Troy, OH - In the final game of their inaugural season, the Troy Bruins defeated the Findlay Grrrowl in an increasingly exciting game, by a final score of 5-3. 

In a rematch from Saturday night, Troy would take an early lead in the first with an unassisted goal by #15 Lee McClure with 12:09 on the clock.  Play would continue, and little else than sound hockey took place until Findlay took the lead with shorthanded goals with 9:12 remaining by #3 Matt Duvall, assisted by #8 Zach Bachnak and #15 Brian Allen; and with 2:21 remaining by Allen assisted by Bachnak.  Troy battled back hard to stay in the game and retook the lead with two powerplay goals at 1:36 remaining by #17 Egor Pogodin-Alekseev, assisted by #22 Derek McPherson and #27 Justin Dornhecker; and 1:02 remaining by McClure assited by #14 Erik Levin. The teams would head to the locker rooms for the first intermission with Troy leading 3-2.

As the second period was underway the physicality and penalties increased with both teams vying for control of the puck and tempers beginning to flare from the teams facing off against each other several times in the last few weeks.  However, each team would score only once more in the second period. Troy added a goal with 17:26 left in the period by Pogodin-Alekseev, assisted by #9 Gleb Luchnikov and #2 Emmanual Abarca. Findlay posted their only goal on a K's Hamburger Shop powerplay, with :02 remaining by #2 Mike Shanahan assisted by #20 Austin Trychel and #79 Adam Strasser to close the action for the second.  Troy remained in the lead with the score 4-3.

In the third period, aggression would pick up even more when possible, as some questionable penalties and contact took place to push the players' tempers to the edge. The tension would finally erupt into fisticuffs with four simultaneous fights off a face off with 7:33 remaining in the period.  After the officials regained order from the brawl, play would continue with few interruptions as it seemed both teams had received their fill for the afternoon.  Late in the period Findlay would pull their goalie and press a two man advantage on a powerplay to try and tie the game up before time ended.  Fortunately for the home crowd, Troy's defense was impenetrable and their goaltender #31 Allen Dowler impressed the crowd in Hobart Arena with some truly beautiful saves to deny Findlay's offensive effort.  Troy would add one more goal with :31 showing on the scoreboard to seal victory with #10 Willie Boyle, assisted by Dornhecker and Levin, scoring on a shot which bounced over the Findlay goaltenders shoulder with just enough momentum to trickle into the back of the net. The period would end with a final score of 5-3.

Troy ends the regular season holding the second place position in the NJHL with a record of 32-13-1, behind their in state rival the Wooster Oilers. The Bruins open the postseason on the road, as they battle third place Jamestown Jets in Jamestown, New York for a three game series starting on Friday, March19. The players and staff would like to thank all the sponsors and fans which made this inaugural season such a great success. For more information on the Bruins, visit www.TroyBruins.com
 
 
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photos courtesy of lee woolery/speedshot
Eyes on the prize
Bruins remain focused, crush Grrrowl 12-3

By Jim Davis
TDN Staff Writer

It's hard to stay focused with a six-goal lead. But that's exactly what Shane Hicke needed his team to do Saturday. The Troy Bruins' coach got his wish - and then some - in a one-sided 12-3 victory over the visiting Findlay Grrrowl at Hobart Arena.

Derek McPherson notched a hat trick with three goals and 13 different Bruins figured in the scoring as Troy improved its season mark to 31-13-1 heading into this afternoon's regular season finale. "We've clinched where we needed to be, but what we really need is for the guys to be motivated even though we were playing some weaker teams," Hicke said after the win. "We've just got to continue working hard. Our first period showed what we can do with our top three lines."

Justin Dornhecker hit the net twice in the opening frame, while teammates Gleb Luchnikov, Willie Boyle, Leonid Kovalev and Egor Pogodin-Alekseev also scored as Troy jumped out to a 6-0 first-period advantage. The in-state rivals combined for eight goals in a wild second period, but Troy managed to score five of those to carry an 11-3 lead into the final 20 minutes of play.

"In the second period once we were up six or seven goals, we let down a little bit. It's hard to get motivated in a game like that, especially in the second period when you're dominating," Hicke said. "We allowed them to have a couple of goals, and two out of the three goals they did score were when our fourth and fifth lines were out there, which is OK, because they have to learn sometime, some place, because we may need them.

"I just think we have understand that if we're going to be an elite team, we've got to punish other teams when they're down. And we did do that tonight." Captain Lee McClure got the second period started at the 2:17 mark when he took a cross-ice pass from Boyle and buried a shot past Grrrowl goalie Lucas Fournier for a 7-0 lead.


Findlay got on the board at 3:08 when Matt Duvall beat Bruins netminder Allen Dowler, but it didn't take Troy long to answer.
Boyle responded with a goal of his own - his second of the game - on an assist from Huber Heights native Garrett Wall. McPherson added two goals later in the frame, and Kovalev scored his second to help offset two scores by the Grrrowl. McPherson capped the scoring with an unassisted marker at 11:45 in the third period for a 12-3 final. John Rubel, Erik Levin and Luchnikov finished the night with three assists apiece, while Lopez and Pogodin-Alekseev added two each.

Dowler - who shut out the Grrrowl exactly one month ago in a 13-0 whitewashing, finished Saturday's game with 29 stops in goal. With the playoffs just around the corner, Hicke said he's encouraged to see contributions coming from players at both ends of the lineup. "We have a solid group of nine or 10 forwards that can play on anybody's first line, and our four top defensemen are elite players. We're starting to click on all cylinders, and that's what we need going into the playoffs," he said. "Some of the other guys that are developmental players didn't get as much ice time (early tonight), but they sure got it in the second and third. They got opportunities, and some of the guys that are role players did their roles and we had a solid game. "Our biggest thing is we just have to continue to compete, play great in the defensive zone and outwork other teams."

Troy and Findlay close out the regular season today when they take the ice at Hobart Arena for a 1:30 p.m. rematch.

 
 
The Troy Bruins, led my mascot Bucky, visited the Miami Valley Centre Mall in Piqua on Wednesday afternoon to participate in the Salvation Army's annual "mascot golf" contest.

Approximately twenty local and regionally famous mascots, including Bucky, paired up for nine holes of intense indoor miniature golf, with the proceeds from donations throughout the event benefiting the Salvation Army of the Miami Valley, destined to fund their hunger relief efforts locally.

No stranger to Miami Valley sports fans, spending the previous 14 years with the now-defunct Dayton Bombers before joining the Bruins inaugural season, he carried the largest gallery following, yet was unable to vie for a share of the leaderboard after his round was complete. A standout miniature golfer for Acorn High School and later a walk-on at Mascot University, Bucky worked his way up the scoring, but a costly quadruple-quadruple-quadruple bogey on the seventh hole diminished any hope of victory. After the cards were tabulated, it would be the "Piqua Indian" to come away with this year's title. For Bucky, he has already met with the Bruins staff regarding the installation of a practice green at Hobart Arena....but currently plans on sticking with his first love - Bruins Hockey!

 
 
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TDN Photo - Anthony Weber

Hobart welding student skating for Troy team

By Jim Davis TDN Staff Writer

John Rubel knew he'd be wearing a helmet and gloves when he came to Troy late last year, but wearing them on the ice wasn't part of the plan.
A student at the Hobart Institute of Welding Technology since early December, the 19-year-old Flint, Mich. native has been "moonlighting" since early February as a forward for the Troy Bruins Junior-A hockey club.

And doing pretty well at it, too.

Since temporarily trading in his welding mask and gloves for hockey gear and a pair of borrowed skates last month, Rubel has been an instrumental part of the team's success. Through eight games, he's registered 12 points on six goals and six assists - including a four-goal explosion Feb. 12 in a 13-0 shutout of Philadelphia.

"I'm having fun," said Rubel, who was out of hockey for nearly a year when he joined the Bruins. "I had forgotten what it was like (and) I really enjoy it - everything about it - the fighting, playing in front of the fans. All of it."

His offensive production has been a plus for the Bruins as the team locked up a playoff spot in its inaugural campaign. But, perhaps more importantly for Rubel, he's having fun and getting a shot at winning a championship. Which is something that eluded him at every level he's played at.

"I've never won a championship. I went to the high school championships twice (without winning), so this is my last chance to win something," he said. "I'm not the player I used to be, but I'm having fun. I'm playing hockey just for the pure fun of it. "I'm not working to get somewhere, I'm just working to win something and have fun."

Born in Flint and raised in Swartz Creek, Mich., Rubel said he caught the hockey bug early and hasn't been able to shake it. "The first time I picked up a stick and started skating was when I was about 4 years old ... and I got to the point where I was playing street hockey out in front of the house for 12 hours a day," he remembered. "My parents finally just said 'Alright, it's time to get on the ice.'"


Rubel went on to star at Flint Powers Catholic High School, where he was named first team all-state his senior year, then pursued junior hockey in the North American League and Central States Hockey League before getting a little burned out. "I was the captain as a rookie and it just made things hard. They fired the coach ... and I just didn't like it," he said. "I finally got traded to my hometown team in Flint ... and after that I just didn't want to play anymore." That all changed when he got to Troy.

"I was actually on Google and was looking for something to do, trying to learn something about (Troy)," he said. "Something about Troy Bruins hockey came up ... and I found out they had a Junior A team here." Rubel met with some Bruins officials "and I said I'm maybe looking to skate a little, mainly just to practice - or if they needed a player in an emergency situation." He's been more than just an emergency fill-in player. "He's been able to come in and play on a line that has been productive offensively and defensively," said Bruins Head Coach Shane Hicke, referring to the line of Rubel, Justin Dornhecker and Derek McPherson. "He's very good technically and has had a lot of good hockey coaching.

"It's just funny that he (comes to town), hears that there is a team and kind of finds us," he continued. "He was interested in possibly playing hockey while he was in town, and at that time we were looking for someone. He was one of the guys that fit the bill."

While playing hockey has helped make his stay in Troy enjoyable, Rubel said pursuing a career in welding remains his priority. 'I want to get into pipe welding to be a pipe fitter, like my buddy," said Rubel, who attends class seven hours a day, five days a week through August. "It flies right by. I enjoy it so much it feels like I'm there only two hours a day. I look forward to going there every day."

For now, Hicke is just glad he's able to bring some of that energy to the ice as the Bruins strive for a league crown. "He's created that passion to play hockey again ... and he's been a great addition for us," he said. "It's been a win-win situation."

For more information about the Troy Bruins, visit www.troybruins.com.