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FunTeam Benefit Games comes through for Foodbank

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The Drumheller FunTeam Hockey Club continued its tradition of supporting The Salvation Army Food Bank at this annual Christmas Benefit Games.
There were five games were played on Sunday, December 4 in an effort for the Drumheller FunTeam Hockey Club to give back to their community. The Rookie Dragons took on the Rookie Miners, the Rookie Canucks played the Rookie Avalanche in the Junior Category, it was the Battle of Alberta as the Jr. Flames hosted the Jr. Oilers.
In Varsity the Chinook challenged the Freeze and to end the night The Intermediate Hurricanes played the Sr. Avalanche.
Games were won and lost but the real winner was the Salvation Army as the players and spectators donated 635 lbs of food and $100 cash towards a very worthy cause.
Part of the Drumheller FunTeam Hockey Program is not only to teach our youth hockey skills but also to promote citizenship and encourage how they can give back to our community. This past year that included the Salvation Army Christmas Hamper program, Alberta Highways Clean Up program, donation to Midland Community Hall Outdoor Rink project and a donation to the Grace House Society.


Dragons' streak broken at eight games

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The Dragons extended their winning streak to eight games last Friday, but it came to an end the next night as they dropped two in a row.
The Dragons have been playing inspired hockey and on Friday, December 2, they hosted the Olds Grizzlys. Olds was leading by two goals early in the second period when Jacob Goudreau put the Dragons on the scoreboard. It was followed up by Ty Whitford three minutes later and then Coy Pighin. Suddenly the Dragons were up 3-2. The Grizzlys tied it up and took the lead, but Ty Daneault scored his 20th of the season to tie the game at four each after two periods.
In the third period, Kai Matthew put the Dragons up, but the Grizzlys tied it up again with 7:59 remaining Noah Danielson scored the winner to make it 6-5.
On Saturday, December 3, the Dragons hosted Canmore. The Eagles had just come off taking the Brooks Bandits to overtime the night before and were motivated. Within the first 15 minutes, the Eagles were up by three goals and the Dragons retired goalie Garrett Fuller.
The Dragons got on the score board early in the second with a goal from Wil Christian, but the Eagles scored two more, ending the second period up 5-1. The Eagles went up 6-1, six minutes into the third. Sam Simard and Vann Yuhas each found the net as they battled back, but it was too little too late as the Dragons had their winning streak snapped by the Eagles, 6-3.
The weekend wasn’t over for the Dragons as they headed to Blackfalds to take on the Bulldogs. Blackfalds came out scoring and went ahead by two goals. Daneault scored with 1:27 left in the first period.
The rest of the game tilted in the Bulldogs’ direction as they scored two in the second and one in the third to win 5-1.
This weekend, the Dragons are on the road on Friday, December 9 to take on the Sherwood Park Crusaders, and then in Okotoks on Saturday, December 10 to take on the Oilers.

Titans Provincial Tier IV champs

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The Senior Drumheller Titans achieved their goal of winning the Tier IV provincial championship, and it was a nail-biter from beginning to end.
The Titans battled their way to the top and the honour of playing in the Alberta Bowl. As did the St. Paul Lions.
They met on the field in Calgary on Friday, November 25.
The two teams, while different, were well-matched. At no time did either team lead by more than a touchdown.
“They were huge, and they brought the heat early on offence. They were trying to take away our ability to set up and make passes and routes, and they were doing a good job of it,’ said Coach Ken Fournier. “They were doing a really good job of taking away passing lanes. And of course, when they got the ball they could run it. Their full-back has to be 260 pounds.”
Because of this, the Titans had to make some adjustments on the fly. The team showed composure.
“As part of our game plan, we knew we had certain areas to attack on the run. We used those early,” explained Fournier.
“The first half went how we wanted it. We made some adjustments at halftime, and so did they. What it meant was they had such a strong running attack for us to be passing a lot, it was very dangerous. If we would have stalled out on one or two drives in that second half, the way they could chain together first downs, it would have been over.”
The Titans decided to fight fire with fire and kept the ball on the ground and eliminated the Lions’ ability to have the ball.
“It's not pretty, but when you are already down two runningbacks, and we took another injury. So we were down some key personnel. The boys knew what they needed to do to get it done, and they did it.”
The Titans were leading down the stretch, but St. Paul scored with seven minutes left and then converted for two points to tie the game at 21. The team showed discipline and controlled the ball for six minutes on their drive.
Battling to the 10-yard line, the Titians opted to punt through the end zone for a single point.
It was enough for the 22-21 victory.
“Taking just under seven minutes off the clock and kicking for a single point, and then letting the defence do what defence does on a long field, that paid off for us,” said Fournier. “I never thought going into that game that we would be winning it by a rouge. But we did plan for it before that drive. When St. Paul called their last time out, we talked to the boys about it.”
Coach Fournier says the victory speaks to the team’s character and preparedness.
“Of course, the receivers and the quarterback want to throw the ball more but there is risk involved with that, and missing key guys, everything changes. Our guys settled into the game, making sure they were taking care of business when they needed to,” said Fournier.
“The biggest part of a championship game like this is the guys being able to show up and be prepared. We always tell them being a champion is the decisions you make every day, not the banner at the end of the year, and that is the mentality they have to carry throughout the season to get to that.”
The team is losing 10 Grade 12 players come next season, however, Fournier is confident they will have a solid squad on the field when it fills a handful of key spots.
“Next year we will be in good shape,” said Fournier.
He is also appreciative of the Titans family that has supported the team, from the volunteers, to the association and the fans.
On Saturday night the team was honoured at the Drumheller Dragons home game.
“It was awesome for them to go from winning and coming home, and then have the community recognize them,” said Fournier. “We have been very lucky to have the community support and the volunteers we have had for so long.”
“The team really enjoys playing in front of a Drumheller crowd, that is a big part of it, and the guys feed off that stuff and it is awesome to see.”


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