Bryan Phelan - Wawatay News

Lac Seul Obish wins Northern Bands tournament

Create: 12/01/2015 - 19:25

Different Lac Seul team, different town and tournament, same result.
A day after Lac Seul Eagles won the Northern First Nations Hockey Tournament in Sioux Lookout for the third time in a row, another Lac Seul team played for a tournament title down the highway in Dryden.
Lac Seul Obish and the Sandy Lake Chiefs were the last two of 23 teams standing Sunday at the revived, week-long Northern Bands Hockey Tournament, which hadn’t been played for several years.

Lac Seul Obish win Northern Bands

Create: 12/01/2015 - 19:25

Different Lac Seul team, different town and tournament, same result.
A day after Lac Seul Eagles won the Northern First Nations Hockey Tournament in Sioux Lookout for the third time in a row, another Lac Seul team played for a tournament title down the highway in Dryden.
Lac Seul Obish and the Sandy Lake Chiefs were the last two of 23 teams standing Sunday at the revived, week-long Northern Bands Hockey Tournament, which hadn’t been played for several years.

Islanders outlast Hawks in C-side thriller

Create: 12/01/2015 - 19:25

Halfway through the game it looked like the Kasabonika Islanders would cruise to an easy victory over the Weagamow Hawks.
Turns out it wasn’t so easy.
Centreman Billy Tait opened the scoring for Kasabonika and by the end of the first period the Islanders were up 3-0 in the C-side final of the Northern First Nations Hockey Tournament.
When Kasabonika’s Elijah Begg scored his second goal of the game to make it 4-0, it seemed the game would be a rout.

Lac Seul wins third straight title

Create: 12/01/2015 - 19:25

The Northern First Nations Hockey Tournament ended early last weekend but not just because it featured fewer teams than usual.
Seventeen teams entered the Sioux Lookout tournament this year, down from the normal 32 because of a competing Northern Bands tournament in Dryden.
Still, matchups for the Sioux tournament’s grand finale – Saturday instead of Sunday, with the lower number of teams – had fans as excited as ever.
After all, both the A- and B-side championship games featured rematches of two of the best preliminary games played earlier in the March break week.

March tournaments shooting for more teams

Create: 12/01/2015 - 19:25

Harvey Kakegamic of Sandy Lake helped resurrect the Northern Bands Hockey Tournament, held in Dryden during March break.
Kakegamic, a Sandy Lake band councillor, served on the tournament’s organizing committee, just as he did for the first Northern Bands played more than 30 years ago. He skated in that first tournament too, alongside Max Kakepetum and other Sandy Lake Chiefs teammates.
Co-ordinated by Kakepetum, the Northern Bands enjoyed its heyday in Sioux Lookout during the 1980s and ’90s before moving to Thunder Bay for a few years, then shutting down.

Rhoda Tait: Most Valuable Baker

Create: 12/01/2015 - 19:25

Rhoda Tait is 75 years old, her hands are gnarled from rheumatoid arthritis and she walks with the help of a cane.
Still, she could be considered the Most Valuable Player for the Weagamow Hawks hockey team … or at least its Most Valuable Baker.
After all, profits from Elder Tait’s bake sales bought the Hawks’ home and away jerseys, covered their entry fee to the recent Northern First Nations Hockey Tournament and even outfitted a couple of the team’s players with new skates.

Conservatives endorse mining tax royalties for First Nations

Create: 12/01/2015 - 19:24

Ontario Progressive Conservatives say a share of the mining tax royalties should go to First Nations and other communities that build and support new mines.
Tim Hudak, the PC leader, introduced a policy “white paper” outlining his party’s position on the north during a visit to Thunder Bay on Sept. 17.
“The Ring of Fire is the greatest mining discovery of a lifetime but the project has gone nowhere,” Hudak stated in the introduction to the policy paper, Paths to Prosperity: A Champion for Northern Jobs and Resources.

Lac Seul vision of events centre becomes reality

Create: 12/01/2015 - 19:23

In Lac Seul, the community’s vision for a healthy future can be seen in its newest and largest building.
Community members celebrated the grand opening of the Lac Seul Events Centre on Aug. 23. Located in Frenchman’s Head beside the school and across the main road from the band office, it’s also where they hope future dreams of their youth will take shape.
The massive building houses a 1,300 seat arena with an NHL-size ice surface, along with a conference centre, restaurant and convenience store.

Celebrating business success, inspiring new generation

Create: 12/01/2015 - 19:23

Brian Davey, executive director of Nishnawbe Aski Development Fund (NADF), congratulated the entrepreneurs in front of him for their vision and “doing what you need to do to succeed.”
When the news conference in the Timmins hotel ended, the entrepreneurs moved to the ballroom for a gala dinner celebrating them as NADF Business Award winners.
Some award recipients were missing from the Oct. 17 event, however – too busy doing what they need to do.

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