Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Montreal: Flood of prospects try to make cut

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Montreal: Flood of prospects try to make cut

    The Gazette (Montreal, Quebec)
    June 19, 2004 Saturday Final Edition

    Flood of prospects try to make cut: 1,500 show skills CBC reality TV
    show offers shot at NHL

    by: JOHN MEAGHER

    A 30-year-old pharmacist by day and a beer-league goalie by night,
    Dikran Karlozian is one of 1,500 NHL longshots attending the Bell
    Making The Cut Tryout Challenge this weekend at the 4-Glaces arena
    complex in Brossard.

    "This is a once-in-a-lifetime chance," said Karlozian, who was hoping
    to survive yesterday's round of cuts and eventually earn one of six
    coveted invitations to an NHL training camp in 2005.

    The three-day Montreal tryout camp is the last of seven stops in
    a nationwide search for Canada's best unsigned hockey players. The
    public won't know which skaters have been selected until the Making
    The Cut reality television show airs this September on CBC and RDS.

    While the odds of ever reaching the NHL are stacked against him,
    Karlozian is taking an optimistic approach to his one and only kick
    at the can.

    "A 1-in-10,000 shot at the NHL is better than none at all," he said.

    "I'm looking at this as more of a chance to gauge myself against
    better players out there. I honestly don't actually expect to make
    much of an impact unless I actually get some help from the hand of God,
    or something."

    Since the Montreal camp began yesterday, legions of NHL wannabes
    like Karlozian have gladly paid the $55 registration fee to be put
    through their paces by a coaching staff headed by Scotty Bowman and
    Mike Keenan. Assisting them will be Jacques Demers, Alain Vigneault
    and Pierre McGuire.

    A whittled-down group of players - or "survivors" - will be asked to
    stick around for a series of contact 3-on-3 games in the afternoons.
    Coaches and the scouting staff will then compare notes from the other
    tryout camps held recently across the country, before issuing 68
    invites to next month's main tryout camp, to be held at an undisclosed
    location.

    >>From that shortlisted group, six eventual winners will be selected
    to report to one of Canada's NHL franchises: the Canadiens, Ottawa
    Senators, Toronto Maple Leafs, Calgary Flames, Edmonton Oilers and
    Vancouver Canucks.

    Wesley and Shawn Scanzano, identical twin brothers from Dorval, also
    headed to Brossard in hopes of some day landing a dream job in the NHL.

    Last season, the undrafted Scanzano twins toiled in the minors for
    the Tulsa Oilers of the Central Hockey League.

    Wesley, a 23-year-old winger, has previously attended the NHL training
    camp of the Phoenix Coyotes, but never caught on. He is viewing this
    weekend's tryout camp as another crack at an NHL career that's eluded
    him since his junior days with the Quebec Remparts, where he played
    alongside future NHLers Mike Ribeiro, Simon Gagne and Eric Chouinard.

    "I've nothing to lose," he said. "I'm just going there to do my best
    and hope something good happens. If not, we'll move on."

    Scanzano says making the NHL is as much about timing as talent. "You
    have to be in the right place at the right time. I've spent the past
    couple of years trying to make the NHL, so I thought this might be
    my last shot."

    Shawn Scanzano has tasted success before, but never at the NHL level.
    As a rugged junior defenceman in 2000, he won a Memorial Cup with
    Brad Richards and the Rimouski Oceanic. Richards won the Stanley Cup
    this year with the Tampa Bay Lightning and was named the Conn Smythe
    Trophy winner as playoff MVP.

    Karlozian is a late bloomer who has improved with age.

    A Montrealer of Armenian decent, he didn't start playing organized
    hockey until he was 16. He has spent much of the last 14 years making
    up for lost ice time.

    "Hockey has already changed my life," said Karlozian, who was obese
    as a child, weighing 260 pounds at age 12.

    Now a more solid 230 pounds, he says his beer-league goaltending
    skills give him the confidence to reach for the NHL.

    "I just want to take my shot and have a little piece of mind at the
    end," he said. "If I make it, great. If I don't, well, at least I
    took my shot.

    "Who knows? If I make a couple of big saves, I might catch the eye
    of somebody important.

    "But I'm not going to cry if I don't make it, because I have very
    good career to fall back on."

    [email protected]

    GRAPHIC: Photo: GORDON BECK, THE GAZETTE; Goalie hopeful Charline
    Labonte, hoping to make the cut for the CBC reality series Making
    The Cut, gets encouragement from NHL coaching greats Scotty Bowman
    (left) and Mike Keenan at 4-Glaces Arena in Brossard.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X