Androscoggin Bank Colisee - Firland Management https://icerinks.com Ice Rink Consulting Fri, 19 Oct 2018 13:36:41 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 https://icerinks.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/cropped-firlandfavicon-32x32.jpg Androscoggin Bank Colisee - Firland Management https://icerinks.com 32 32 Firland Owned NA3HL Team, The L/A Nordiques’ Chauvin and Ouellette a Dynamic Blue Line Duo https://icerinks.com/firland-owned-na3hl-team-the-la-nordiques-chauvin-and-ouellette-a-dynamic-blue-line-duo/ Mon, 15 Oct 2018 12:39:04 +0000 https://icerinks.com/?p=2599 Cole Ouelette has 22 points in just 12 games played for the undefeated Nordiques. By Tom Robinson, usahockey.com Cameron Robichaud knows other coaches may choose a different approach. Blessed with two high-scoring defensemen —...

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Cole Ouelette has 22 points in just 12 games played for the undefeated Nordiques.

By Tom Robinson, usahockey.com

Cameron Robichaud knows other coaches may choose a different approach.
Blessed with two high-scoring defensemen — the two highest scoring in the entire North American 3 Hockey League (NA3HL) — the Lewiston/Auburn Nordiques coach chooses to play them together on a regular basis, not just in power-play situations.
J.P. Chauvin and Cole Ouellette have made that strategy pay off for the Maine-based team, which has won its first dozen games to rank on top of the standings for the Coastal Division and the 36-team NA3HL while also leading the entire league in goal differential and ranking second in goals scored.
“Typically you’ll see a lot of teams will split up their offensive defensemen and stick them with a defensive D,” Robichaud said. “I’ve gone with them together. At times, they may get caught because they are so offensive, but they have such good skating that even when they get caught, they’re able to get back, no problem.
“At times, I get a little upset and say to them, ‘You can’t have two defensemen jumping,’ but then they don’t get scored on because they get back.”
Any risks the approach takes have been offset many times over by the rewards in the offensive zone during the 12-0 start.
Chauvin and Ouellette not only rank first and second among NA3HL defensemen in scoring, but they are also 1-2 in the league in plus-minus. Chauvin is at plus-34 with seven goals and 17 assists. Ouellette is plus-33 with three goals and 19 assists, seven of which have come on the power play.
They get help from the more conventional defensemen on the team in keeping the Nordiques’ goals against per game at 1.75, the third-best figure in the league.
“We have some veteran leadership in our defensive corps, besides Ouellette and Chauvin,” Robichaud said. “We have two ’98 [birth year] defensemen, Donovan Tehan and Andrew McCormick, who are kind of more defensive and really kind of shut down the back end and allow some space and opportunity for us to be offensive.”
Chauvin, a 20-year-old from Massena, New York, dates back to the Nordiques’ predecessor when he played for the Lewiston/Auburn Fighting Spirit in 2016-17, prior to changes in ownership and management.
“His strength is the offensive side,” Robichaud said. “I’m not going to try to change it.”
There were other changes in the team, however.
The Fighting Spirit missed the playoffs in 2017. The Nordiques went 32-11-3-1 last season and finished second in the division in both the regular season and playoffs where they won a first-round series.
“Last year was our inaugural season,” Robichaud said. “We had a pretty strong season and we lost in the Coastal Divisional finals.
“When I had built the team last year, it was kind of a two-year plan. We have a lot of returning guys and I was able to bring in guys at the end of the season last year that I wanted for this year. So, we have 15 or 16 guys who, whether it was for a full season or just five games, wore a Nordiques jersey last year.”

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Junior hockey: Nordiques to skate in Lewiston again https://icerinks.com/junior-hockey-nordiques-to-skate-in-lewiston-again/ Tue, 07 Mar 2017 17:14:47 +0000 http://atsites8.site/?p=2125

Firland Management purchase NA3HL Hockey Team

From the Sun Journal

JUSTIN PELLETIER, Managing Editor Nights/Sports

 

Local Sports |

Tuesday, March 7, 2017 at 10:00 pm

LEWISTON — Same team, same location, new name — one that is the same as an old, well-known and time-honored name in Lewiston-Auburn hockey lore.

HOCKEY FANS, MEET YOUR LEWISTON/AUBURN NORDIQUES.

Androscoggin Bank Colisee owner and operator Jim Cain has confirmed his purchase of the L/A Fighting Spirit of the North American 3 Hockey League, a team he will rebrand under the Nordiques banner once the current season is over.

The purchase ends a tumultuous couple of months for Cain and his Firland Management enterprise. Fighting Spirit owner and head coach Rod Simmons was looking to divest himself of the team after enduring a personal loss this winter, Cain was looking for a buyer while simultaneously looking at different league options.

“After a lot of discussion among my family and the rest, where we had entertained the notion of selling off a piece of the Colisee to someone else in return for solidifying junior hockey here, we looked again at the opportunity of buying the Fighting Spirit,” Cain said. “We’ve done that now, and we’re going to rebrand under the L/A Nordiques banner, which is very suitable for this market, it’s something people can identify with, it has a long history here.”

The Maine Nordiques were a professional team that operated within the old North American Hockey League from 1973 to 1977, based at the Central Maine Youth Center, now the Colisee. The Nordiques served as a farm club for the Quebec Nordiques of the World Hockey Association.

Forty years later, the Nordiques name — and logo — will make its return to the cities.

The team itself will continue playing in the NA3HL, a Tier III junior league with a footprint that includes teams from Montana to Maine.

The league, Cain said, is familiar to him and his company.

“I went through the second of three interviews with the league now, and we’ve passed muster every time,” Cain said. “I’ve been around this league for a long time now, almost 20 years, and so it’s not as if it’s new to us as a company.”

And, like the past few years, the Nordiques will continue to use billet families in its pay-to-play model.

“We’re still going to use the traditional billet model, where players will be housed in the community,” Cain said. “We think that’s valuable for both the team and its reputation, its depth in the community and its service to the community.”

The Nordiques will also retain a big piece of this year’s coaching staff — former local standout Cam Robichaud, who cut his teeth coaching in the New Hampshire Junior Monarchs program after finishing his playing career.

“We’ll be retaining Cam Robichaud, who I believe is both solid as a coach and in character,” Cain said. “I think he can grow this business here in a sustainable way, and it makes a lot of sense for us.”

“I’m definitely excited,” Robichaud said. “It’s a perk to be able to continue coaching in my hometown, where I played before my own junior career.

“I’m real excited not only to have the team right here in Lewiston, but to be able to work with Jim himself. He’s a well respected, highly connected person in hockey communities, and he’s been a mentor for me, and we chat daily.”

Even with three games remaining as the Fighting Spirit, like any coach in hockey, Robichaud already has an eye on the future of the organization.

“Cam has identified some very, very good young men who are in the local market, meaning in New England, who can help us out,” Cain said. “(Robichaud) spent six years with the Monarchs’ organization, which is a very, very good coaching organization, and he comes with a lot more skill than many people recognize, and we’re really pleased that he’ll be able to use his leadership skills to move on.”

“You never really stop recruiting,” Robichaud said. “You’re always kind of keeping your eyes and ears open, and as soon as I caught wind that I would be the head guy, I started doing a little bit more on the recruiting side, getting in touch with some of my contacts with the Eastern League, guys that I’ve developed relationships with over the years.”

The Fighting Spirit’s final home game of the regular season is Friday against the Biddeford-based Maine Wild at 7 p.m. They are locked in a battle with the Northeast Generals for the fourth and final playoff position in the Coastal division.

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