"Two years ago today, Brayden Camrud looked around the dressing room at the Elgar Petersen Arena in Humboldt, Sask., and he could see there was no quit in him or any of his teammates. Two days earlier, the Humboldt Broncos had lost 6-5 in overtime to go down 3-1 in their playoff series against the Nipawin Hawks, three games after they had lost in double overtime in Game 1. They were that close. As they packed their hockey bags for the two-hour bus ride northeast on Highway 35 to Nipawin, he stopped in front of rookie Logan Hunter’s stall. As Hunter was loading his hockey bag, Camrud asked Hunter if he was going to score a goal that night. “He said, ‘I’m scoring two,’ ” Camrud recalled. “And I said, ‘That’s what I like to hear.’ Logan was phenomenal. He had an amazing shot, he had a super bright future ahead of him. He was going to be playing Division I hockey someday.” Two years ago today, Brayden Camrud opened his eyes and took his earbuds out. As the Broncos team bus was approaching the intersection of Highway 335 for the final stretch into Nipawin, it was time to tuck the shirts in, straighten the ties and make themselves presentable. It was almost showtime. Teammate Evan Thomas was running his fingers through his hair, then he gave Camrud a wink. Then, in that blink of an eye, everything changed. When Camrud came to on the frozen ground, chaos surrounded him. So did teammates who had died in the Humboldt Broncos bus crash, kids who just moments prior to that were just like him, chasing their hockey dreams. Two years ago today, Brayden Camrud was flying to a hospital in Saskatoon with his father by his side in an air ambulance. The first thing he asked about the condition of Broncos coach Darcy Haugen. “I said, ‘Son, I’m not quite sure, I don’t know, but I don’t think it’s very good,’ ” said Curtis Camrud. “ ‘I don’t think he made it, but you need to relax. And he said, ‘If he didn’t make it, what about those two little boys? They’re going to grow up in this world without a father, Dad.’ And it broke him.” It’s late February and Brayden Camrud is in an arena in Tempe, Ariz., of all places. He came early to chat before practice with the University of Alaska-Anchorage Seawolves. Camrud is a freshman with the Seawolves and this weekend, they’re preparing to play a weekend series against Arizona State. Camrud’s great-grandparents, grandparents, parents and two brothers are in town for the game, which represents a welcomed respite from the February chill in Alaska and Saskatchewan. Camrud looks good. Really good. He has that perpetual sleepy look of a kid who’s trying to juggle elite athletics and school. The glasses give him a scholarly air. It’s hard to tell whether the messy hair is deliberate or a casualty of a lack of attention. And he’s bigger and stronger, much bigger and stronger than he was when he left Humboldt after last season. He cuts an impressive figure in his Seawolves golf shirt and khaki pants. The Arizona State games would be the last two games he would play this season. Camrud would sit out the Seawolves final four regular-season games and their two playoff losses. It has been a long, difficult season for Brayden Camrud, for a whole host of reasons. The Seawolves went 4-25-7 this season and of those 36 games, Camrud missed 15 of them. He finished the season with three goals and five assists. It was a 42-hour drive to Anchorage from Saskatoon and Camrud missed his family, his support system, desperately. “He’s struggling a little bit,” Curtis said. Curtis is just looking forward to getting his son back home this summer to heal his body, his brain and his mental health. He thinks the night of the bus crash that killed 10 of his son’s teammates and six others in the organization, his family had a guardian angel watching over it. Because without his son, Curtis has no idea how his family would have held together, the way the 16 other families have in the two years since the accident. “We are very, very lucky because without him we’d be in deep trouble,” Curtis said. “Our family would be in deep trouble. We wouldn’t know what to do. We’d be lost without him.”" "From the time Brayden Camrud hit the ice for his last season with the Broncos in 2019-20, he did so with a sense of purpose. He was intent on playing for the memories of those who no longer had that privilege. They had hockey dreams and dreams that went beyond the game. He might have been the luckiest person on the bus that day and is one of only a handful who are still playing, the only one playing at a level as high as Division I. “For a lot of the guys who aren’t here, this was the path they wanted to pursue,” Camrud said. “I feel like I’m doing a pretty good job of living my best life and living it through them.” But carrying around the hopes and dreams of so many people can be a heavy burden to bear sometimes it weighs heavily on him. When the Broncos lost the first game of the season in 2018-19, Camrud said he felt as though he had let everyone down. It’s difficult, particularly when the lingering effects of the concussion he received in the crash come back to bother him. “A couple of weeks ago he had a real tough week,” Curtis Camrud said between periods of the first game against Arizona State in February. “He phoned and said, ‘I don’t know how or why, but I started breaking down in math class.’ The hard part for him is he’s playing so far away in Anchorage and his coaches aren’t – and you don’t expect them to – they’re not going to pat his bum.” The Seawolves have a promising sophomore group that endured a lot of growing pains this season. They’re hopeful times will get better. The Seawolves and Camrud decided to shut things down after the Arizona State games because he was playing through injuries and they both thought it would be best if he healed and came back stronger next season. Camrud was brought to Alaska to be a skilled playmaker who could skate and shoot well and bring energy to the lineup, “and he did all of those things,” said Seawolves coach Matt Curley. “Overall, we were thrilled with his performance and we fully expect him to be a big part of what’s going on here and in the future.” But that future is uncertain. Camrud will take stock of his game and his frame of mind over the summer and make a decision on his future. In a year that has been full of ups and downs, there have been some wonderful moments. One of them came in the first series of the season when the Seawolves travelled to Maine. They were blown out 7-1 in the first game, but came back the next night and lost 2-1 in overtime. A young girl, whose parents have been season-ticket holders for 12 years, was wearing a Humboldt Strong T-shirt. Camrud gave her the thumbs up and sought her out after the game to give her his stick and an autograph. The girl and her parents had a tearful moment with Camrud and they embraced. “I know that if I leave this Earth tomorrow,” Curtis Camrud said, “I’ll know I’ve done a pretty good job raising a good young man.” The background on Brayden Camrud’s cellphone is a picture of the Broncos celebrating a goal in their first-round series against Melfort, just weeks before the accident. In the photo, Camrud is embracing with Conner Lukan, Broncos captain Logan Schatz and Bryce Fiske. Half of the players in that celebration, Lukan and Schatz, died in the crash. The goal came on a 4-on-3 and Camrud hit Lukan for a back-door pass, which Lukan tapped in. Camrud always smiles at that picture because when they came together to tap helmets together after the goal, Camrud butted his head in early and hit Schatz in the mouth, chipping his front tooth. “We come out of the huddle and all of a sudden, I hear, “F—! Camo, what the f—! You hit me in the mouth, you (expletive)!’ ” Camrud said. “It reminds me of why I’m in Alaska, why I continue to play hockey and why I’ve got to push myself to be the best person and player I can be.’ ” The novel coronavirus forced Camrud to return home early. Under normal circumstances, he probably would have still been in school, likely writing his final Business Management exams. But he’ll be with family for the second anniversary, which is probably for the best for him. “I get to think about how super thankful for where I am, talk to my family and tell them how much I love them,” Camrud said. “How fortunate and blessed I am to be alive. And if anybody needs to have a conversation, if they need me to just listen, if they want to just sit on the phone and neither of us talk…just to make sure that we’re doing OK.”"
"When you don’t have first-rounders, you have to find your talent elsewhere. Even though the Toronto Maple Leafs already have some of the most exciting youngsters in the NHL on their squad, the pipeline of the future must always be fed and recently, the organization made a spate of free-agent signings from the college and junior ranks. One of the more intriguing names is Bobby McMann, the erstwhile captain of NCAA Colgate and the Raiders’ leading scorer the past three seasons. McMann had previously attended a couple rookie camps with the Nashville Predators and had multiple offers from other NHL teams this spring for an AHL deal, but Toronto (specifically, the Marlies) won out for his services. “It’s such a great hockey market and I wanted to go somewhere that fit my game,” McMann said. “They really liked my game and the speed I can bring; they want to play up the ice with a lot of speed and they thought I would fit well there.” McMann popped onto my radar last summer when I dropped in on Joe Quinn’s Power Edge Pro camp in Toronto. McMann has been in the PEP system for the past six years and came to the Toronto week on recommendation from one of Quinn’s instructors out in Wainwright, Alberta, where McMann hails from. “He was super-impressive,” Quinn said. “He’s got the whole package, lots of skill. He fit right in with our top players, like Jack Hughes and Connor McDavid.” Other PEP participants include Quinn Hughes and Dylan Larkin, so you know the competition level is elite. For McMann, the experience was illuminating. “That was really cool,” he said. “I had a couple camps in Toronto with the NHL guys and another one in Kelowna. You get to see the elite level they play at, how quickly they make decisions, how skilled they are with the puck. More than anything, how intense they are in their practises and in wanting to get better. That drives me to elevate my game, work hard and hopefully be at that level pretty soon.” Before Colgate, he had played in the Alberta Jr. A League with the Bonnyville Pontiacs, where he was named AJHL player of the year in 2015-16. That’s when a bunch of NCAA teams came calling, but McMann stuck to his previous commitment to the Raiders. “They were one of the first to reach out and similar to Toronto, they liked my game,” he said. “More than anything, they were going to give me a great opportunity there. I really liked the coaching staff and I got a chance to get a great education, too. It was the whole package.” Playing for a low-scoring Colgate program, McMann didn’t put up gaudy numbers in college, but playing that hard ECAC schedule did force him to adapt his game. “It was definitely tough to generate offense,” he said. “It taught me where you need to be at specific times and how to get to the front of the net, because that’s where goals are scored. It’s an older league, so it’s harder to play in and I hope that translates to the pros for me.” During his four-year tenure with the Raiders, McMann got a chance to put some more detail into his game, as well. “I would say decision-making was the biggest change,” he said. “The difference between junior and college is so many guys are strong and you have to pick your spots. If you think you’ll skate through everybody – that’s never gonna happen.” There are always reasons why some players get drafted into the NHL and others find their way later on. McMann clearly honed his game at Colgate and with his speed and skill, it’s obvious why Toronto wanted to bring him into the fold. “Sometimes players fly under the radar,” Quinn said. “Maybe a bit of a late-bloomer, but he got lots of development over the years. Sometimes all the elements come together and he has been maturing as a player. When you reduce his space, he’s got that extra gear down low where he can make quick decisions, he can react, he can move pucks to space and he’s got a quick release. He’s a real find.” This year’s edition of the AHL Marlies was rather depleted of high-end skill, simply because a lot of the top guys had graduated to the Maple Leafs, or were called up due to injury for stretches. McMann may not have been a known name to the average hockey fan, but Quinn has seen him go shot-for-shot with Connor McDavid in PEP drills – so there’s definitely something there to be intrigued by – and the Marlies hope to reap the benefits next year." "U.S. President Donald Trump spoke with commissioners and presidents from 13 major pro sports on a Saturday call, which addressed the future outlook of resuming play in the various leagues once the COVID-19 pandemic is contained. Among the league bosses present on the call was NHL commissioner Gary Bettman. Trump’s outlook was optimistic. He expressed that he believes the NFL season will still start on time in September, and the stance applied to other sports, too. As reported by ESPN’s Adam Schefter, “Donald Trump also told commissioners that he hopes to have fans back in stadiums and arenas by August and September.” That sounds exciting, but what matters more is the second half of that Schefter tweet: “though it is currently unclear if medical experts find that to be a realistic timeline amid the current coronavirus pandemic.” It’s understandable if the fan bases across the various major sports, from Major League Baseball to the NBA, start dreaming of seeing their favorite athletes compete again, and there’s a case to be made that at least a little bit of hope must be sprinkled into our brains during these terrifying times to keep the despair at bay. But once we’re done dreaming briefly, we have to return to reality, and nothing Trump expressed on Saturday’s call moves the needle at this time. This is the same world leader who predicted the virus was “going to disappear” a few weeks earlier. The truth is the outlooks for every sport will not change until the qualified medical experts make their rulings on when it will be safe to resume play. NBA commissioner Adam Silver reportedly had the right idea by indicating his league would “would love to lead the way in starting the economy once there was an ‘all clear’ from world health officials,” as reported by ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski. Forget fans back in stadiums: the return to sports will follow the COVID-19 societal shutdown in reverse order. Large group gatherings were the first things ruled out, as they were the most obviously unsafe, and they’ll therefore be the last to return. What we’ll see first is what had been cooked up as the last-gasp idea before the major sports leagues shut down: telecasts from empty venues. And even those appear to be months away. In North America, most experts are indicating that April will be the peak month for COVID-19 cases. Sports will thus remain on the back-back-back burner. Whenever sports resume, the NHL has maintained the position it wants to finish the 2019-20 season. Recently tabled scenarios even indicate the NHL will consider neutral-site playoff series, played in North Dakota or New Hampshire, with no fans and designed purely for television broadcasts. The games could be staggered the same way they have been at international tournaments like the Olympics. As far-fetched as these resolutions sound, they remain much more realistic than seeing 20,000 fans watching playoff games in their home cities by August. Sooner or later, however, the league will have to decide if delaying the end of the 2019-20 season to squeeze in the playoffs and award the Stanley Cup does too much damage to the 2020-21 season – not just the start of it, but the off-season preceding it, including the draft and free agency. Theoretically, one would have to think the league will set a deadline for a decision on cancelling the season. But, as NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly told The Hockey News via email Monday, the league isn’t there yet. “It depends on how the situation continues to unfold,” Daly said. And we can assume “situation” in this case does not refer to Trump’s proclamations. The situation will be dictated by the pandemic and what health professionals deem safe behavior. It’s fine to feel hopeful about the return of sports, but we have to walk the line between fantasy and reality. The CDC’s recommendation of not holding any events of more than 50 people for at least eight weeks made late May to early June the best-case scenario for sporting events to resume, and that recommendation was three weeks ago, which may as well be an eternity. We’re looking at July or August now – if you’re an extreme optimist."