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Hometown Hockey visits the home of the Big Stick

Cowichan hosts Rogers broadcast and accompanying festival
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Kevin Rothbauer/Citizen Rogers Hometown Hockey co-host Tara Slone drops the puck for a ceremonial faceoff between Cowichan Valley Capitals captain Troy MacTavish (right) and Alberni Valley Bulldogs captain Mitch Oliver prior to Saturday night’s BCHL tilt. Rogers Hometown Hockey co-host Tara Slone drops the puck for a ceremonial faceoff between Cowichan Valley Capitals captain Troy MacTavish (right) and Alberni Valley Bulldogs captain Mitch Oliver prior to Saturday night’s BCHL tilt. (Kevin Rothbauer/Citizen)

Thousands of local hockey fans attended the Rogers Hometown Hockey festival in the Cowichan Valley last weekend, and the rest of Canada got to see what the region is all about during a national broadcast on Sunday evening.

According to Rogers, between 8,500 and 9,000 people attended the event outside Duncan’s Island Savings Centre on Saturday and Sunday, enjoying activities and games, live music, giveaways and encounters with former NHL stars like Brendan Morrison and Geoff Courtnall and Hometown Hockey hosts Ron MacLean and Tara Slone.

According to Ernie Mansueti, North Cowichan’s director of Parks, Forestry and Recreation, and one of the point men in bringing Hometown Hockey to the Cowichan Valley, the Rogers crew was thrilled with Cowichan’s contributions to the event and broadcast. One crew member, in her third year travelling across Canada with Hometown Hockey, emailed Mansueti afterward to say that “without a doubt, it was one of the most memorable” tour stops for the crew.

The Cowichan Valley is certainly not among the larger communities to have hosted Hometown Hockey, but it was the “personal touches” that made it stand out, Mansueti said.

“We did all the little things they just loved,” he added.

Rogers crew members took part in the annual ALS hockey tournament at the Island Savings Centre on Friday night, and also attended a pub night at the Craig Street Brew Pub, where Slone — a former singer with Juno-nominated band Joydrop — performed on stage with scheduled artist Lance Lapointe. The tournament raised more than $6,200 for ALS research, and the pub night generated more than $7,000 for KidSport Cowichan.

“For me, I was very proud of the Cowichan people, and the way they presented the area, not only to Ron and Tara, but to the whole crew,” Mansueti said, noting the contributions of groups from all over Cowichan.

Cowichan Tribes was represented in the Hometown Hockey Opening Ceremonies by the Tzinquaw Dancers, and Coun. Craig George presented a Cowichan sweater to MacLean and a vest to Slone. Robert George and Fred Roland also arranged for Slone and two crew members to experience a sweat lodge.

School involvement included 450 students attending events on Friday, where they skated, heard from Cowichan Paralympian Richard Peter, and enjoyed entertaiment from Paz the Hockey Circus Clown and two DJs. Teams from Maple Bay, Alex Aitken, Bench and Lake Cowichan schools also took part in ball hockey tournament finals at the festival site.

Minor hockey teams from the Cowichan Valley, Kerry Park and Lake Cowichan associations also played ball hockey at the festival, helped with clean-up, and took part in the Parade of Champions. More than 700 hockey players participated in the Parade of Champions, surpassing Rogers’s previous record by about 200.

The Sunday-evening broadcast, centered around the Vancouver Canucks’ road game against the Winnipeg Jets, also showcasing many aspects of the Cowichan Valley, going well beyond hockey. One segment showed Slone kayaking with former NHLer Doug Bodger in Ladysmith, while another paid tribute to former LPGA star Dawn Coe-Jones, who grew up in Lake Cowichan. Other segments included former NHLers and Cowichan Valley products Greg Adams and Robin Bawa, as well as Cowichan Valley Capitals defenceman Simon Chen, who has ambitions with the Chinese Olympic team, and his father, Caps owner Ray Zhang.

The broadcast wrapped with local minor hockey players Rhys Mazurenko and Brooklyn Paisley announcing the three stars, and Slone also swapped out her Cowichan vest for a burgundy Cowichan Secondary School hockey hoodie.

“For me, to have a free event of that size and magnitude, that was very important to me,” Mansueti said. “For people to feel they got something out of it and it made them feel pretty special, that was cool.”



Kevin Rothbauer

About the Author: Kevin Rothbauer

Kevin Rothbauer is the sports reporter for the Cowichan Valley Citizen
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