Halla regains the top spot – Asia Pro League

By Samuel Kim

Anyang Halla was once again fantastic against the best team in Japan.

Ho-Sung Son made 26 saves, and Byung-Chun Jung, Geon-Ho Kim, Woo-Sang Park scored in the Halla’s 3-2 victory over the Oji Eagles on Saturday night in Tomakomai, Japan.

“It was a huge win.” Head coach Eui-Shik Shim said. “We already have 4-5 regulars out for this game, but rest of our boys stepped up and played strong defensively.”

Halla did not have their forward Brock Radunske due to the mild concussion. Won-Jung Kim, Kyu-Hyun Kim all returned to Korea due to the injuries. Jon Awe is still recovering from sports hernia. Centre Patrik Martinec was not 100% as he is battling with lower body injury.

Winger Geun-Ho Kim played in top line with Martinec and Dong-Hwan Song, while Min-Ho Cho played with Woo-Sang Park and Ki-Sung Kim for second. All Cho, Park and Kim played together at the 2007 World Championship in Austria.

“Since Radunske was out tonight, we had to find Asiathe right chemistry.” Assistant Justin Bae said. “Things worked out well and they looked good together.”

Halla are now back in top spot with 42 points. On this Hokaido road trip, Halla are 3-1-1(W-SOW-OTL), collecting respectful 12 points. Halla now have only have a game left tomorrow before returning home to Korea.

Jung opened the scoring at 16:19 in first as he fire the shot to beat backup netminder Ogino on stick side. Geun-Ho Kim made it 2-0 on power play in second, as he was able to put it in when the puck was bounced from the backboard.

Park made it 3-0 in third with beautiful pass from rookie Min-Ho Cho beating Ogino’s shoulder. The Eagles didn’t give up as they started to fire up with three minutes to go before the end of the game. Ogawa scored in power play and Domeki was able to beat Son’s five hole to make it 3-2. Halla called time out and was able to settle down and focus for the rest of the third.

Eagle outshot Halla 28-18 and Son made 26 saves tonight while Ogino made 15. Halla went 1/7 on power play and Eagles were 1/6.

Halla and Eagles will play the final game of three-game series in Tomakomai tomorrow afternoon.

Off to Japan for the big test!

Anyang Halla captain Woo-Jae Kim. A former Jokipojat (Finland) defenseman is looking to lead his club for crucial road trip starting this weekend to Japan.

Anyang Halla captain Woo-Jae Kim. A former Jokipojat (Finland) defenseman is looking to lead his club for crucial road trip starting this weekend to Japan.

Anyang Halla Hockey Club is ready for real challenge starting this weekend. A 12 day road trip to Japan.
Halla, who won the “Domestic Championship” last week, is now focusing on upcoming Asia league games against the two most dangerous teams from Japan, Cranes and Oji Eagles for a three-games series each. The club is scheduled to fly to Hokaido, Japan on Thursday morning from In-Cheon airport, Korea. Cranes are from Kushiro, Japan and the Eagles are from Tomakomai, Japan.
“We all know how important this road trip is.” The general manager Seung-Jun Yang says. “They have always been a good team since they joined Asian League. Currently we are enjoying eight-game winning streak, but it was all against teams with a record under 500. This will be a real big test.” he adds.
After a mediocre start, Halla is rolling with 8-0 record in last eight games played. All victories were earned from High1, Nikko Icebuks, China Dragon and Tohoku Freeblades. This will be first time facing Cranes and Oji this season.
“This will be a very important road trip, but at the same time, it will be fun.” Assistant coach Justin Bae said. “After the road trip, we will find out if we are for real.”
Halla’s first opponents are the Cranes, who are 8-3-3 (W-L-SOW) with 30 points. Cranes’ are sitting in second place in AL standings, and who have lost the last two games against Icebucks and Freeblades. Eagles, with 9-2-2-1(W-L-SOW-SOL) with 32 points, are currently sitting in the top spot in the AL standings. Halla, 9-1-1-1(W-L-OTW-SOL) with 30 points are currently sitting in third, but have shown no signs of slowing down.
Eui-Shik Shim, the head coach of Halla who flew to Japan along with Bae to watch two games at Yokohama last weekend, knows that this will be a tough series. “These six games will eventually decide the AL standings. If we can prepare and stay focus, we will be fine. But if we don’t, things will not go the way we want. Cranes lost two games recently and they could come out hard against us. “Our best players have to be at their best”, Eui-Shik says.
Halla struggled with 1-5 record against Cranes last season, including 2 overtime losses and 1 shootout loss and a win came from Kushiro arena. Since the inception of the AL, Halla is 5-22 in all-time games against Cranes including 2 overtime loss and 1 shootout loss. Halla has not had much luck in their building, showing a poor 3-10 (includes 1 OTL) records.
The Eagles, Halla’s next opponent, has a record of 13-2-9(W-T-L) including 1 shootout win and 1 overtime loss against Halla but Halla did dominated the 2008-2009 campaign, going 5-1(W-SOL). The fast skilled Eagles 2009-2010 season will mark first time without any imports on the roster. Kamloops, B.C. native defenseman Aaron Keller has two passport. The club failed to re-sign centre Shane Endicott and Swedish veteran defenseman Ricard Persson in off-season.
Halla, a quick, young, and balanced team, surprised the Asia Hockey league last year with their impressive style of play that ended with a game seven loss to Cranes in the Asia League Semi-Finals last season. They carved a hard-working identity while exceeding expectations, and will be a hunted group as they are expected to again sit among the ALIH pacesetters in 2009-10 along with Cranes and Eagles.
Top six forwards including former Edmonton Oilers draft pick Brock Radunske, veteran Patrik Martinec, ‘Korean Rocket’ Dong-Hwan Song are expected to lead the club up front. Halla also look to get some help again from winger Yu-Won Lee, Geun-Ho Kim, Won-Jung Kim and rookie centre Min-Ho Cho. The blueline looks solid as Woo Jae Kim-Wood for the top while former Carolina Hurricanes defenseman Brad Fast will play with rookie Hyun-Mok Hong again.
In the meantime, No.1 netminder Ho-Sung Son and backup Sung-Je Yo are all expected to wear their brand new goalie masks against Cranes starting this Saturday.

To the far east of the world – ASIA PRO LEAGUE

Korea

Now entering its seventh season of operation, the Asia League of Ice Hockey (ALIH) is a professional hockey league based in East Asia, with four teams from Japan, two from South Korea and one from mainland China. The league and its franchises have undergone frequent changes over the course of its existence, and the upcoming 2009-10 season will see some major changes take effect.

The NHL’s San Jose Sharks will no longer be affiliated with the Chinese entry in the league after a dispute with the government-run Chinese Ice Hockey Association. The team will be known as the China Dragon and split its home games between the cities of Harbin and Shanghai.

The China Dragon will be coached by Andrei Kovalev, a former national Belarusian national team player who also played in the American Hockey League and ECHL. In addition to running the China Dragon bench, Kovalev will also coach the Chinese national team (which largely mirrors the club team squad) at least until April 2010. He will be assisted by Chinese coaches.

The 43-year-old Kovalev ended his playing career in 2007 after playing in eight IIHF World Championships and two Olympics for Team Belarus. Much of his playing career was spent in Germany, where he suited up for 13 seasons, most notably for the Krefeld Penguins. After retiring, he worked with Belarusian team Yunost Minsk before becoming an assistant coach with HK Vitebsk.

In an effort to make the perennial cellar-dwelling Chinese team a little more competitive, the ALIH will permit the Dragon to use a total of seven import players for the 2009-10 season. However, the team reportedly does not intend to maximize the number of foreign players that it brings in, planning instead to give experience to as many Chinese national team players as possible.

In addition, rather than bringing in former NHL talents such as goaltender Wade Flaherty, the team will sign players from the leagues in Belarus and Kazakhstan. The team has already announced the signing of 42-year-old Igor Andryushchenko, a former teammate of Kovalev’s.

The Chinese Ice Hockey Association takeover of the ALIH team marks a continuation of what has so far been an extremely bumpy ride for pro hockey in China. At one time, there were three Chinese-based teams in the league (Harbin, Qiqihar and a foreign-operated entry). An early Russian venture in the league was aborted after one season. In 2005-06 season, the Scandinavian-owned Nordic Vikings joined the league and based its operations in Beijing.

The Nordic Vikings team consisted of young Scandinavian players as well as six players from Qiqihar and Harbin. For the 2006-07 season, the Qiqihar franchise moved to Changchun, and the Harbin franchise moved to Beijing. The Nordic Vikings franchise left the league due to mounting financial losses and proposed sponsorship deals falling through. In 2007-08, the remaining China-based teams were merged to become the Beijing-based China Sharks.

Elsewhere in the ALIH, the circuit will introduce a new Japanese team, the Tohoku Freeblades, following the economic decision by the owners of the Seibu Prince Rabbits to fold the team despite its longtime success on the ice. At least on paper, the new club figures to be reasonably competitive for a first-season squad. Among its signings are former AHL defensemen Brad Farynuk and Steve Munn former ECHL forwards Jon Smyth and Bruce Mulherin.

Despite the Asia League’s stormy history, the caliber of play has been bolstered by the participation of a handful of former NHL players. Those who have played – or are still playing – in the league, include the likes of Yutaka Fukufuji, Greg Parks, Esa Tikkanen, Chris Lindberg, Tavis Hansen, Shjon Podein, Jason Podollan, Derek Plante, Steve McKenna, Jarrod Skalde, Joel Prpic, Tyson Nash, Chris Allen, Jamie McLennan, Shane Endicott, Wade Flaherty, Brad Tiley, Ricard Persson, Kelly Fairchild and Brad Fast.

Last season, fellow import players Brock Radunske (a former AHL and ECHL forward) and Jon Awe spearheaded a breakout season for Korean team Anyang Halla. All three players will be back on the ice for Anyang this season. During the 2008-09 campaign, the club staged a wire-to-wire run atop the standings but ended in disappointment after losing in a seven-game series to the Nippon Paper Cranes in the playoff semifinals.

Radunske won four individual trophies last season, including regular season MVP, Forward of the Year, most goals (29) and most points (57 in 36 games). He also scored five goals in the series against the Cranes. The 26-year-old former Edmonton Oilers draft pick signed a three-year contract extension with the club in February.

Awe, a defenseman, is expected to be paired with team captain Woo-Jae Kim, who once played for Finnish minor-league team Jokipojat Joensuu. Fast will be paired with Japanese import Takayuki Ono. Awe, a 6-foot-4, 240-pound rugged defenseman from the United States, scored 12 goals last season, which tied him with former NHL blueliner Ricard Persson (then with the Oji Eagles) for most goals among defensemen in the league.

Last but not least, the league is adopting several rule changes for the 2009-10 season. Until last season, five teams made the playoffs. Starting this season, only four teams will make it. In the semifinals, the top- and fourth-seeded teams, and second- and third-seeded teams will play a best-of-5 series (rather than best-of-7). The finals, for the first time, will also be decided in a best-of-5 series.

For the second straight year, the league will use a shootout when games are still tied after five minutes of overtime. Three players from each team will shoot. If nothing is decided, the next goal would be the winning goal. If nothing is decided after the seventh shooter, the same player can take the shot until the winning goal is scored. For the 2009-10 season, the ice will no longer be resurfaced before a shootout and teams will no longer change sides after the third shooter.

The league has also adopted NHL-style rules for faceoffs. All faceoffs must take place on one of nine designated dots and the first faceoff of a power play will take place deep in the defensive zone of the offending team. The league has also barred pre-faceoff line changes by the team that commits an icing.

Under a new regular-season point format, a regulation win is worth three points, an overtime or shootout win is worth two points, an overtime or shootout loss garners one point and a regulation loss fails to earn a point. There will be a total of 36 regular-season games per each club during the 2009-10 (same as last season). The regular season runs from Sept. 19 to Feb. 7. The playoffs begin March 11, and will end no later than March 28. The league will take an Olympic break from Feb. 8-28.

Article by: Bill Meltzer

Anyang Halla 7-1 over China Dragon’s

2009-2010 ASIA PRO LEAGUE

Woo-Sang Park scored pair of goals and Ho-Sung Son played solid Sunday as Anyang Halla won 7-1 against home team China Dragon on Sunday night. Halla sweep three-game series in Shanghai. Halla beat Draon 8-1 in first game and 8-0 second game yesterday.

Ki-Sung Kim scored third game straight and Brock Radunske scored his second game stright for the Halla.

“As for three-game series, I thought we played well over all but I wasn’t too happy with our team’s effort.” head coach Eui-Shik Shim said. “I want our players to put full effort for every single game and every single shift. We are about to face tough Japanese teams soon.” he adds.

Geun-Ho Kim open up the scoring at 2:10 in first period when he took the pass from Min-Ho Cho. ‘Korean Rocket’ Dong-Hwan Song made it 2-0 at 11:17 with beautiful backhanded shot.

Second year pro centre Woo-Sang Park scored pair in second period at 2:06 and 6:29. Right winger Mikhail Nemirovsky scored lone goal for Dragon.

Brock Radunske made it 5-1 when he took the long pass from former college teammate defenseman Brad Fast on breakaway. Ki-Sung Kim made 6-1 at 12:35 after teammate Won-Jung Kim failed to score on breakaway during the short-handed.

Rookie Cho scored at 19:09 to make it 7-1.

Halla will fly back home on Monday morning and will prepare for the next three-game home series against Tohoku Freeblades at Anyang Sports Complex Arena starting on Thursday evening at 7 pm.

Article by: Sam Kim