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    <title>Brandon Wheat Kings - Feed</title>
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                  <title>Harrington takes his game up a level</title>
        <link>https://chl.ca/whl-wheatkings/article/harrington-takes-his-game-up-a-level</link>
        <pubDate>Tue, 19 May 2026 13:24:29 +0000</pubDate>
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        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<em><strong>BY PERRY BERGSON
</strong><strong>BRANDON SUN</strong></em>

A year ago, Nate Harrington wouldn’t have imagined he would be selected in the Western Hockey League draft.

Fast forward 12 months, and the 14-year-old defenceman from Edmonton is looking forward to attending his first training camp with the Brandon Wheat Kings in August.

“It was definitely very cool because of where I was last year,” Harrington said. “I wasn’t very good last year so it’s definitely cool to see my name up there.”

Brandon grabbed Harrington in the sixth round with the 130th overall pick last Thursday.

Harrington spent his minor U15 season with the South Side Athletic Club’s U15 AA squad, posting six goals, 17 assists and 40 penalty minutes in 32 games. He also was called up for a pair of games to the AAA SSAC Lions.

Instead of returning to SSAC for his major season, he made the jump to prep hockey at OHA Edmonton.

“Definitely transferring to an academy team and all the good players there pushed me to be better,” Harrington said.

The five-foot-11, 140-pound, left-shot defenceman had eight goals and 16 assists in 30 games in his prep debut in the Canadian Sport School Hockey League, with 12 penalty minutes.

He also had a goal in four games as a call-up to the U17 prep squad.

As he played, he did his best to put the WHL scouts off his mind, instead focusing on the game.

Harrington has a good sense of the league after attending Oil Kings games as a youngster. In addition, his 23-year-old step-brother, goalie Blake Lyda, suited up for 21 games with the Everett Silvertips and Seattle Thunderbirds over two seasons.

That planted a seed in the teenager, who also would like to play in the Dub one day.

“It’s a pretty big goal,” Harrington said. “It’s a hard goal to achieve but it’s probably one of my main and biggest goals.”

The 14-year-old defenceman, who turns 15 in June, said he was happy with his season, noting he got better and better as the year went on. The biggest improvements came in his speed, competitiveness, work ethic and skill level, the youngster noted. He wasn’t the only person with that opinion.

Brandon Wheat Kings director of hockey operations Chris Moulton said after the draft Harrington is a player on the rise.

“He’s a well-rounded, puck-transition guy who had a great second half to the season,” Moulton said. “He moves the puck really well, gaps up really well, has a great stick defensively, transitions the puck. He plays within himself and doesn’t turn over a lot of pucks.”

Harrington sees himself the same way, while noting he has to get bigger, stronger and faster.

“I’m a two-way defenceman who can move pucks quick and has a good gap,” Harrington said. “I can play good in the defensive zone and the offensive zone.”

On draft day, he was with his father Trevor and then went golfing to put the draft out of his mind. He got the call just after he finished up that the Wheat Kings had picked him 25 spots after they grabbed his OHA Edmonton teammate Austin Rideout.

“It was pretty cool,” Harrington said. “We’re pretty close buddies and hang out lots. It was pretty cool we both went to Brandon.”

Rideout texted Harrington after he was picked and the pair later met up at school. They also played against Rylan Edwards and Marko Malbasa in Brandon’s draft class, so they have some familiarity with them as well.

For Harrington, the road to the WHL draft has been on the blue-line.

The born-and raised Edmonton product began to skate at age four and started to play a year or two later. He’s always lined up on the back end.

“I like being behind the play and getting to see everything in front of me,” said Harrington, who also golfs a lot and does a little bit of mountain biking.

Harrington said his parents Trevor and Kira did everything right as he was growing up in hockey.

“They put me into hockey very early and gave me all the tools I needed to get better, and encouraged me,” Harrington said. He is planning to play U17 prep at OHA next season.

He has never been to Brandon before, but is looking forward to the experience, calling it a big step up that will allow him to meet some new people. And at the same time, he now has a good sense of what’s next.

“I’m very relieved that I got drafted and it’s over with,” Harrington said. “I’m very happy that I went to Brandon.”]]></content:encoded>
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                  <title>Rideout brings grit, skill to Wheat Kings</title>
        <link>https://chl.ca/whl-wheatkings/article/rideout-brings-grit-skill-to-wheat-kings</link>
        <pubDate>Sat, 16 May 2026 13:07:35 +0000</pubDate>
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        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<strong>BY PERRY BERGSON
</strong><em><strong>BRANDON SUN</strong></em>

If you’ve never been drafted by a Western Hockey League club, it’s impossible to understand what it must feel like.

But even Austin Rideout has a hard time explaining it, and the Brandon Wheat Kings grabbed him in the fifth round with the 105th overall pick in the annual draft last Thursday.

“It’s shocking, honestly,” Rideout said. “There are a lot of draft rankings but I was trying to get my mind off that because they don’t really matter that much. When I saw my name up there, I was beyond happy. I can’t even explain with words.”

Rideout, who turned 15 in February, was born and raised in Fort McMurray, Alta., but spent last season with OHA Edmonton’s under-15 prep team. Happily, he was able to live with his grandparents in the Alberta capital.

On draft day, he was in his bedroom in Edmonton sitting at his computer — his grandparents were in the living room — with his immediate family all home in Fort McMurray.

“When I finally got drafted I went out and celebrated with my grandparents,” Rideout said. “I called my mom and my dad and all my friends that wanted to call me.”

Rideout’s journey began at age three when he first got on skates, and then began to play soon after. He took his turn in net early on but was always a forward otherwise.

Rideout said his parents Troy and Alisha have been incredible as he’s grown up in hockey.

“My parents have sacrificed a lot to put me through where I’ve gone,” said Rideout, who is also a good golfer. “All the money they spent and all the time, they always come and see me and adjust their schedule to be with me.”

“I would like to thank everyone in my family for supporting me and being through the hard and good times with me,” he added. “And obviously my coaches and teammates supported me all the way through it.”

His progress was turbocharged this year as he made the decision to jump from the U15 AAA Fort Saskatchewan Rangers to OHA Edmonton. In 29 games, he had 12 goals, 16 assists and 32 penalty minutes on a team that included assistant coach Neithan Salame, the perpetually upbeat former Wheat Kings defenceman.

“I was fairly happy,” Rideout said. “Coming into the year, I was not as good as the other guys obviously because they’ve played at the academy before so they’ve had much better development. I feel like I became a way better player and the points came through and made me very happy.

“I worked hard for it.”

At the prestigious John Reid tournament in Calgary, Rideout had three goals and four assists in five games and he had three assists in five games at the Alberta Cup, a pair of events that are traditional measuring sticks for players against their age groups.

The five-foot-11, 178-pound forward success stems from an ingredient that seems to be in much shorter supply now than it was decades ago.

“I’m a very physical player who also has a very skilled side,” Rideout said. “I’m a two-way forward who likes to finish checks, make plays and will do anything for his team.”

Brandon Wheat Kings director of hockey operations Chris Moulton agreed. “He plays the game hard,” he said after the draft.

“He is as tough as nails, he likes to be an agitator, likes to get in the opposition’s face, loves to bring physicality, but in the same breath, can skate and create offence. He’s a well-rounded guy who can do a lot of things but the biggest thing I think he brings is keeping the opposition honest.”

In 2021, Moulton used many of the same words to describe Carter Klippenstein, who proved to be a valuable contributor over his three years with the Wheat Kings. Klippenstein, a Minnesota Wild prospect, recently committed to Providence College and won’t be returning for an overage season.

Incredibly, the league hasn’t been on Rideout’s radar for too long.

“I’ve only known about the WHL for about four years,” Rideout said. “My first couple of years I was still in U13 so I wasn’t really worried about it then because I had a lot of years left, but as my years came closer to the WHL draft, I started taking it really seriously. I really wanted to get drafted.”

As a player in the Canadian Sport School Hockey League, Rideout was well aware he and his teammates were being watched by scouts like Moulton. While that could be a source of pressure, Rideout was determined to ignore the extra attention.

“It all starts before the game with your preparation,” Rideout said. “When you’re going out on the ice, you just have to think, not that no one is there, but no one that important is there that you have to show off. You have to keep your mind clear and keep resetting and just play your game.”

And that’s what made getting drafted so sweet. The youngster who felt like he was behind everyone else at the start of the year ended up being selected by Brandon with one of his teammates, defenceman Nate Harrington.

“It’s a big relief, honestly,” Rideout said. “If I didn’t end up getting drafted, I would still push and work hard, but looking forward, I wouldn’t know where I was going. It makes me easier for me and my parents to see where I’m going in my future.”

Rideout, who wants to improve his puck work along the boards in tight areas and be better at protecting the puck and escaping quickly, also knows Marko Malbasa and Rylan Edwards from the 2026 draft class. He thinks having familiar faces at training camp in late August will be a great bonus.

“It’s going to be real helpful,” Rideout said. “With people you know, you’re going to get comfortable way faster and you’re going to have a better start to everything and you’re probably just going to enjoy it more with your buddies.”

And that’s just part of the appeal of making his first-ever trip to Brandon.

“I’m very excited to see what the town is all about and what the team is all about,” Rideout said. “I’m excited to see the new guys. I feel like I’m going to fit in because I’m very easy to make friends with.

“That makes everything exciting.”

&nbsp;]]></content:encoded>
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                  <title>Corkish set to make his mark in Brandon</title>
        <link>https://chl.ca/whl-wheatkings/article/corkish-set-to-make-his-mark-in-brandon</link>
        <pubDate>Fri, 15 May 2026 13:00:29 +0000</pubDate>
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        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<em><strong>BY PERRY BERGSON
BRADNON SUN</strong></em>

&nbsp;

When Mason Corkish visited Brandon for the first time in 2023, it was because his brother Owen was a Wheat Kings prospect.

The next time he comes, it will be all about him after Brandon grabbed the younger Corkish in the third round with the 67th overall pick in the annual Western Hockey League draft last Thursday.

“It’s going to be awesome,” said Corkish, who grew up in Cottage Grove, Minn., a city of about 40,000 located a 10-minute drive south of St. Paul. “It’s going to be very different from the first time that I went up there because now I’m with the team instead of my brother and I get the inside vision of it. It’s going be cool knowing what’s it like on the inside and the outside.”

Happily for the younger Corkish, there is also a major impediment out of the way. The entire hockey landscape shifted in November 2024 when major junior players were welcomed by the NCAA, so now Mason is playing in a new world.

Owen was on Brandon’s 50-man list prior to the NCAA rule change, and when it looked like he was going to play college hockey instead of coming to the WHL, the Wheat Kings dropped his rights. Owen was subsequently picked up by the Prince Albert Raiders, and is now skating in the WHL final against the Everett Silvertips.

“It’s definitely changed a lot,” Corkish said. “The boys down here want to go up there and play now instead of going to the USHL or different junior leagues. It’s definitely going to have an impact on the WHL and make it a better league hopefully.”

The 15-year-old Corkish comes by his athletic ability honestly.

His family also includes father Jeff, mother Laura and sister Addison.

Jeff is a product of Wawota, Sask., who played in the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League and spent four seasons of Division III college hockey in the early 1990s at Concordia College in Moorhead, Minn.

“My dad has been my coach for almost my entire life,” Corkish said. “This is the first year he wasn’t my head coach. He gave it up so I could learn to play with different coaches. He is now the head coach with our high school team so he’ll be there for me for the next three years or whenever I’m done. He’s always been a big support and helped me with film and getting better.

“He built me an outdoor rink for the first 14 years of my life and I’ve played on it every winter. That was big in my career as a player.

“My mom has just always been there for me, driving me to the rink and watching all my games. She was also a great athlete, played basketball and track, so she’s had a big impact on my life.”

Corkish added his sister might be the best athlete of all of them. She is a standout softball player who is also active in hockey and other sports.

Mason first got on skates at a year old — “Right after I learned how to walk, my dad put me on skates right away” — and was playing by age three.

He also active in baseball and soccer when he was younger, and still golfs.

On the ice, he began as a forward, played defence for a couple of years, and then moved back up front for good.

“It’s the compete,” Corkish said. “You get to go in corners. Defence is boring. I felt like I just watched the game.”

The five-foot-11, 158-pound prides himself on those tough elements of the game. On his best nights, he said he’s physically engaged.

“When I’m having a good game, I feel like I’m fast,” Corkish said. “I feel quick on the ice, I compete hard in the corners and everything is just clicking on the ice, I’m tough and I feel like nobody can stop me. I’m physical.”

His goals are to improve his size and strength, and is also working on his hands, his vision and his skating.

“My skating could be way better,” Corkish said. “Mainly everything.”

In their draft year, the western Canadian kids always have a sense the scouts are watching, but Corkish knew where one of them was every game. Wheat Kings scout Kori Pearson, formerly of Neepawa, was an assistant coach on his team, something Corkish deadpans may have helped him get noticed.

It’s clear Pearson and the Wheat Kings found plenty to like. Brandon Wheat Kings director of hockey operations Chris Moulton said after the draft that Corkish has a nice blend of finesse and sandpaper.

“He’s a skilled guy with compete,” Moulton said. “Mason has the ability to find the back of the net and make plays and create offence, but on top of that, he is strong on the puck and isn’t afraid to play the game the right way. He plays 200 feet and also has the ability to win battles.”

Last season, he had six goals and 10 assists in 11 games with the Minnesota Moose 14U, the only stats tracked by eliteprospects.com. On draft day, Corkish was in school but at lunch. He was monitoring the proceedings online when he saw Brandon picked him. Pearson texted him shortly after.

“He said ‘ARE YOU WATCHING THIS?’ in all caps,” Corkish said. “It was great. All my buddies were watching it and they all congratulated me. It was really cool.”

It proved to be a popular fit for everybody involved.

Owen’s time with the Wheat Kings built a relationship between the team and the family, and they didn’t hesitate to draft him. Of course it didn’t hurt that his grandmother still lives in Wawota, which is 84 kilometres straight west of Virden.

“We love the Wheat Kings,” Corkish said. “My grandma lives an hour-and-a-half away from Brandon so it feels close to home.”

Not only has the college-major dilemma been solved, Corkish has a good sense of what’s involved with the WHL after watching his brother with the Raiders. In fact, the family was in Everett on the weekend for Games 1 and 2, and it’s given him a whole new appreciation for major junior hockey.

“It was a great experience,” Corkish said. “It just showed me how good of a league it is. The USHL is a great league but it doesn’t come close to the WHL and how good the players are, and the coaching and the teams.”

Now Mason’s goal is to join Owen in the Dub. He is planning to spend his 15-year-old season at Park High School in Cottage Grove, and will have his first chance to crack the roster for the 2027-28 season.

The Wheat Kings can rest assured he won’t be sitting on his laurels until then.

“It was really cool for the draft part but I’m not on the team yet,” Corkish said. “I have to keep working and grind every day to make that team and keep on getting better.”]]></content:encoded>
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                  <title>Malbasa works hard to pay a debt</title>
        <link>https://chl.ca/whl-wheatkings/article/malbasa-works-hard-to-pay-a-debt</link>
        <pubDate>Thu, 14 May 2026 13:00:16 +0000</pubDate>
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        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<strong><em>BY PERRY BERGSON
BRANDON SUN</em></strong>

Marko Malbasa won’t just be playing for himself when he suits up for the Brandon Wheat Kings one day.

The 14-year-old defenceman, who turns 15 on Saturday, was grabbed by Brandon in the second round with the 42nd overall pick in the annual Western Hockey League draft last Thursday.

Now he’s determined to pay back his parents Mat and Nelia for all they did to put him in a position to succeed.

“All the sacrifices they made motivated me to make the best of what I was doing,” said Malbasa, who has an older brother, Mateo. “The end goal is to play at the highest level that I possibly can and it starts here now.”

Malbasa is from near Winnipeg in St. Andrews. He began to skate around age five when his father got him into it, and he started to play a year later.

He skated up front until he was eight, and in his first year of spring hockey, dropped back to the blue-line. It proved to be a popular decision.

“You get more ice time because we were running four D only back when we were younger so I liked being out there a little more than others,” Malbasa said.

When he was younger, Malbasa also played soccer and baseball but set both aside. Now he golfs and also played ball hockey for Team Manitoba last summer.

A common refrain from ice hockey players who try ball hockey is they lose the ability to glide. That means their feet have to always be in motion to move, which isn’t the case in skates.

“You need great conditioning for that,” Malbasa said. “It’s a very tough sport. I’d say it’s almost harder than hockey, minus the skating.”

But the ice will always be No. 1, and that starts close to home.

He said his parents have done everything they could to help him succeed.

“They’ve obviously spent time driving me to practices and games and taking extra days off work just to take me to tournaments and stuff like that,” Malbasa said. “And all the money they’ve spent on me to send me to Rink, and especially my grandparents, they’ve also taken lots of time to drive me to practices and games.”

The drive to one day be a junior player came from a number of sources.

His father played games with the WHL for the Moose Jaw Warriors and Regina Pats, but spent most of his junior career in the Manitoba Junior Hockey League. In addition, his cousin’s boyfriend is former Wheat Kings forward Dawson Pasternak.

The youngster also went to quite a few Winnipeg Ice games prior to the franchise’s move to Wenatchee, and he was friends with Conor Geekie’s billet family, so he would go to their house and see him.

That also gave him some insight into what was coming.

Since he was in his major U15 season and playing with a high-end program in Rink Hockey Academy Winnipeg’s U15 prep squad, he knew the scouts were out there. Fortunately, he intuitively understood he couldn’t be thinking about them.

“I just blocked it out and played my game and kept it simple out there,” Malbasa said. “I didn’t worry about what’s outside the glass and kept my mind between the glass.”

The six-foot-one, 155-pound defenceman showed a mixture of offensive ability with 31 points and sandpaper with 56 penalty minutes.

He also served 10 minutes in the penalty box in a pair of callups to the U18 squad.

“I was pretty happy,” Malbasa said of his season, which ended when they lost all three games in the playoffs. “Our team progressed over the year and I thought the way things ended was kind of unfortunate but it was a fun year.”

After that, it would have been natural for his thoughts to turn to his future WHL destination. On draft day, he was in class with some of his Rink teammates monitoring their phones, and when his name was called, all the RHA guys came over to congratulate him.

“It was pretty awesome,” Malbasa said. “You dream of those moments and to finally see it happen is pretty cool.”

“My parents and grandparents and pretty much all my family is happy with it,” he added. “They can come out to games and were pretty pumped.”

So were the Wheat Kings.

Director of hockey operations Chris Moulton said the team had Malbasa ranked as the best player in Manitoba and they were thrilled to get him.

“Marko is just a well-rounded guy,” Moulton said on draft day. “He can play with some skill, he can play with physicality. He’s engaged, he moves the puck, he transitions the puck well, he defends well, he will be a top-two defencemen in our league at some point. He has the ability to play in every situation.”

Malbasa said on his best nights, there are certain things to watch for.

“You would see me take control of the game, always playing physical and finishing every check,” Malbasa said. “I’ll be playing defence first and jumping up into the play, making hard first passes, making smart plays and quick decisions.”

At the same time, he understands he’s a long way from the finished product. That’s why his to-do list is just as long.

“Right now it’s definitely getting quicker with my first three strides,” Malbasa said. “It’s a high pace at the next level and I’m just trying to prepare myself. Also, it’s just getting stronger in general in the gym and putting on weight because everybody is bigger and stronger at the next level.”

He is planning to skate with the U18 prep at RHA Winnipeg next winter, noting it will be nice to have the draft pressure off and just be able to play.

But before he begins his next prep season, he has his first Wheat Kings camp ahead of him in August. He has been in Brandon many times in the past, but this visit will be different.

Malbasa hasn’t played with any other members of this Wheat Kings draft class, but has skated against a number of the 2026 and 2025 players who were selected by the club, so it will be nothing but fresh faces.

“I’m very excited to see everybody and make new friends and new connections with other people,” Malbasa said. “It will be exciting to meet the coaching staff and see what how everything is going to lay out for me when I get there.”]]></content:encoded>
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                  <title>Edwards eager to make next step</title>
        <link>https://chl.ca/whl-wheatkings/article/edwards-eager-to-make-next-step</link>
        <pubDate>Wed, 13 May 2026 17:50:58 +0000</pubDate>
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        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<em><strong>BY PERRY BERGSON</strong></em>
<em><strong>BRANDON SUN</strong></em>

&nbsp;

The path Rylan Edwards took to the Brandon Wheat Kings started with a short walk from his house.

The 15-year-old forward, who Brandon took with the 18th overall pick of the Western Hockey League draft on Wednesday, was on the ice by age two and playing a year later.

It came with the support of father Troy, mother Joely and older brothers Ethan and Logan.

“My dad brought me into hockey,” Edwards said. “He built me a rink right beside our house and flooded it every winter, and during the summer I shot pucks out there every day. That was awesome.

“My mom spent lots of time driving me to rinks, watching practices, just supporting me in everything I do. It’s helped me a lot.”

Edwards, who was born in Medicine Hat but grew up in Regina, comes by his talent for the game honestly.

His father played a pair of games with the Regina Pats during the 1983-84 campaign and then spent three seasons with the Moose Jaw Warriors. After playing games in the American and International hockey leagues, he skated for two seasons with the University of Regina Cougars.

In addition, Rylan’s cousin, Matthew, played with the Vancouver Giants and Spokane Chiefs for three seasons before he finished his junior career in the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League, while cousin Colby Williams skated for four seasons with his hometown Regina Pats.

On top of that, he was raised in a WHL city, so the league means a lot to him.

“Growing up watching the Regina Pats, you always dream about playing there,” Edwards said. “I’m super honoured to get selected by Brandon. It’s a great organization and I’m super excited.”

Edwards who was always a forward, was into a variety of sports growing up, from soccer and football to baseball and golf.

After a pair of seasons with the Regina Aces under-15 AA team — Saskatchewan doesn’t have AAA at the U15 level — he made the decision to head west after putting up 72 points in 27 games as a minor during the 2024-25 campaign.

It was a season of transition for the teenager, who was moving from Saskatchewan to Alberta to play with the highly touted Northern Alberta Xtreme program. The NAX academy operates in Devon, a short drive southwest of Edmonton.

To further complicate matters, former Wheat Kings defenceman Ayrton Nikkel took over as head coach just before the season from Adam Stuart, who moved into the U18 job at Edge in Calgary.

“At the start, it was hard coming into a new town and you don’t really know anyone on the team or the coaches, new school,” Edwards said. “Our coach actually left right before the season so it was a completely new coach and that was hard. We had adversity and the coach didn’t know who you were so you had to battle for ice and PP and work in practice.

“That made me a better player.”

In 28 games with the NAX U15 prep squad, the five-foot-six, 145-pound forward had 17 goals and 26 assists, with 10 penalty minutes. The right-handed shot then added eight points in four playoff games.

He also scored once in three games as a callup to the NAX U18 team, which contained Wheat Kings prospects Cruz Jim, Ahmad Fayad and Levi Ellingsen.

“I played a couple of games with the U18 team,” Edwards said. “They’re awesome, they’re great kids. They were super inclusive to me when I came up.”

The Canadian Sport School Hockey League has become an increasingly important source of players in recent years. Fourteen of the 23 picks in the first round were prep players, with three from the NAX U15 squad alone.

That means a lot of eyes were on him all season, although the teenager said he was able to put the scouts out of his mind.

“I just tried to put it to the side and play my game and not worry about it too much,” Edwards said. “I just tried to focus on the game.”

That changed on Wednesday.

Edwards had just been down in Philadelphia at the 15U World Selects Invitational, a prestigious annual event that draws the top players in the age group.

“We flew in and got home at 2 o’clock,” Edwards said. “We had some food and got ready and sat by the TV. We obviously didn’t know if I was going to go but we were hoping. On the TV, we saw my name after I got picked and were super excited.”

Brandon actually traded down and still got the same guy.

The Wheat Kings sent a fifth-round pick, 102nd overall, and the 15th pick in the first round to the Saskatoon Blades to acquire the 18th overall pick and the 67th overall pick. Brandon didn’t have a third-round pick because it was included in the deal a year ago that saw defenceman Charlie Elick sent to the Tri-City Americans for forward Jordan Gavin and defenceman Merrek Arpin.

Edwards interviewed with Brandon during the winter but noted teams keep their cards pretty close to their chests, calling it a little bit of a surprise when they took him. But that didn’t diminish his excitement.

“I was the first one to see it,” Edwards said. “I was on the WHL website and saw I just got selected by Brandon. I jumped up, my parents were super excited. I was in shock for a bit but super pumped and super honoured to be select by Brandon. it’s a great organization and I can’t wait to play for Marty and the rest of the staff.”

His friends and a number of Brandon veterans reached out to congratulate him after the pick was announced.

He doesn’t know any of the other Brandon draftees personally but had a number of friends and teammates selected around the league.

Edwards is staying home next winter, choosing to skate with the powerhouse Regina Pat Canadians, who have won bronze and gold at the Telus Cup the last two years.

Two Wheaties prospects played there this year, defencemen Ethan Young and Logan Dosenberger, while Wheat Kings rookie forward Chase Surkan played there the year before. Edwards knows all three, and will also have the three NAX guys at camp when he arrives in August.

“It’s awesome,” Edwards said. “Just to add a few familiar people is going to be good.”

He has been through Brandon over the years but is now very keen to make his next trip to the Wheat City. Other players have told him about the facilities, including the remodelled dressing room, and he is eager to set foot in the facilities and see them for himself.

“I’m super excited,” Edwards said. “They told me about it on the phone and I’ve seen some photos and it looks awesome. I’m super pumped. I can’t wait to get there and meet the boys at camp. I’m super pumped.”

No doubt Brandon’s staff is too. Brandon Wheat Kings director of hockey operations Chris Moulton, who led at the draft table, said Edwards combines skill with an incredible tenacity.

Edwards agrees with that assessment, saying there are things to watch for when he’s having a good night.

“I’m a highly offensive player who likes to control the game and play with lots of pace,” Edwards said. “I’m super competitive, winning all my battles, making sure I’m supporting my teammates on the bench and playing at the top of my level. I’m playing with lots of pace and making good plays and scoring lots of goals.”

At the same time, he knows he’s far from being the finished product. Edwards has a number of skills he’s trying to improve.

“I like to nitpick on stuff,” Edwards admitted. “I have to work on my defensive zone, and this summer we’re getting a couple of guys here to go over film with me and give me tips in the defensive zone.

“Obviously I want to work on my backtracking, and nitpick at everything else, like my skating, work a lot on my shot just to get an elite-level shot.”

If Edwards can accomplish all that, he’ll be ready sooner rather than later to make the jump to major junior. And even though he’s happy he’s been picked, he understands he can’t rest on his laurels now.

“It’s an honour,” Edwards said. “I worked super hard growing up and this past year I worked hard, and I’m just super excited I got drafted to Brandon, a great organization.

“The work doesn’t stop. It actually starts here and now I have to prepare myself to have a great year in U18 and hopefully play with Brandon as a 16 year old.”

In an annual Brandon Sun tradition, all the players newly drafted by the Wheat Kings will be profiled over the next couple of weeks.]]></content:encoded>
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                  <title>Wheat Kings enter new-look prospects draft in position of strength</title>
        <link>https://chl.ca/whl-wheatkings/article/wheat-kings-enter-new-look-prospects-draft-in-position-of-strength</link>
        <pubDate>Tue, 05 May 2026 22:00:55 +0000</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>chlwebproduct</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">https://chl.ca/whl-wheatkings/article/wheat-kings-enter-new-look-prospects-draft-in-position-of-strength</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[]]></description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<section class="content-header template-image_above">
<div class="feature-info">
<div class="ch-detail text-sm"><em><strong><span class="sc-author">By Rob Mahon
Q COUNTRY</span></strong></em></div>
<div></div>
</div>
</section>
<div class="sc-sidebar-wrapper  sidebar-align-right" data-hascontent="true">
<div class="sc-content"><article class="mainArticle">If you’ve ever wondered how excited scouts and management groups get for events like the WHL Prospects Draft, many scouts will refer to the draft as everything from their Super Bowl to Christmas Day.

That’s no different in the Brandon Wheat Kings office, where Director of Hockey Operations Chris Moulton and Head Coach and GM Marty Murray preside over a mountain of scouting reports and a bevy of screens connecting them to members of their staff across the hockey world. Draft day is quite a production, as befits the culmination of so much work, but it can also be a fun day as well.

“When you’re in the rinks from September to April, enduring good rinks and bad rinks, cold rinks and warm rinks, all that work comes to fruition over two days,” Moulton said. “All the work gets us to where we want to be, and all the kids we’ve liked, we get to pick seven to ten of them and that’s always exciting.”

The draft will be split into two days once again, with the first round of the draft taking place on the night of Wednesday, May 6 and the remaining rounds beginning at 11:00 AM the following day. The Wheat Kings hold the 15th overall pick in the first round.

“Everybody has a judgement early and a judgement late, and usually everybody gets players they like,” said Moulton. “On the top end of the draft, there are a lot of good players. I would say there might not be the depth on the back end, but the exciting part is just seeing what arises, and this year will be different than others. We’re excited for what will happen early.”

Perhaps a draft with no standout strengths at any one position is just the thing for the Wheat Kings, whose prospect pool excelled at all positions this past season. Up front, a long string of young forwards put together impressive seasons, while on defense the Wheat Kings had numerous players up for league awards.

“We’re going to go for the best player available,” Moulton said. “We feel we have an even amount of depth in our prospect pool, both at forward and on defense, and even goaltending. We’re going to take best player as much as we can. We’ll have to have a balance, but going into the draft, there’s no specific area of need other than adding the best players possible.”

“Three of our defensemen, two won the defenseman of the year for their league and one was a finalist,” he added. “The numbers some of our forward prospects put up, we’re grateful that the kids are doing their part. We’re excited and proud that we have a bright future in the immediate future.”

This year’s prospects draft does promise to be different in some ways outside of the players being selected. First and foremost, the U.S. Priority Selection (which netted the Wheat Kings Levi Ellingsen first overall last year) is no longer taking place. The U.S. and prospects drafts have merged into one.

“We didn’t know how good we had it when we won it (the U.S. lottery) last year,” Moulton said. “We knew we’d gotten someone special moving forward, but man is it ever crazy to think we won a lottery and got the best player for us and now this year they’ve combined them, so no more American draft. They’re thrown right in with the Western Canadian kids. There are some teams that will utilize that more than others, that’s fine too. Our biggest thing is we’re going to take the best players.”

Moulton added that while the first round and the remaining rounds being split up makes for good publicity for the league and makes it easier to turn the draft into a more widely viewed event, it doesn’t change his job too much once the draft begins.

</article></div>
</div>]]></content:encoded>
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                  <title>WHL Draft Day Eve</title>
        <link>https://chl.ca/whl-wheatkings/article/whl-draft-day-eve</link>
        <pubDate>Tue, 05 May 2026 15:11:17 +0000</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>chlwebproduct</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">https://chl.ca/whl-wheatkings/article/whl-draft-day-eve</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[]]></description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[The Wheat Kings have 15 draft spots in this years 2026 WHL draft.
<ul>
 	<li>Pick 15</li>
 	<li>Pick 42</li>
 	<li>Pick 102</li>
 	<li>Pick 105</li>
 	<li>Pick 130</li>
 	<li>Pick 153</li>
 	<li>Pick 176</li>
 	<li>Pick 193</li>
 	<li>Pick 199</li>
 	<li>Pick 222</li>
 	<li>Pick 245</li>
 	<li>Pick 268</li>
 	<li>Pick 291</li>
 	<li>Pick 314</li>
 	<li>Pick 337</li>
</ul>
&nbsp;

Last year the Wheaties drafted 10 new faces to the organization while also acquiring over-agers Luke Mistelbacher and Grayson Burzynski via a trade with Swift Current.

2025 draft picks:

Cruz Jim, 1st Round (12th Overall)

Ahmad Fayad, 2nd Round (38th Overall)

Joffrey Chan, 4th Round (83rd Overall)

Logan Olsen, 5th Round (107th Overall)

Mark Munday, 7th Round (146th Overall)

Logan Dosenberger, 7th Round (153rd Overall)

Brayden Watt, 8th Round (176th Overall)

Liam Green, 10th Round (222nd Overall)

Tristan Will, 11th Round (245th Overall)

Taren Anderson, 12th Round (268th Overall)]]></content:encoded>
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                  <title>Young channels record-breaking season into motivation for massive offseason</title>
        <link>https://chl.ca/whl-wheatkings/article/young-channels-record-breaking-season-into-motivation-for-massive-offseason</link>
        <pubDate>Thu, 30 Apr 2026 14:00:03 +0000</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>chlwebproduct</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">https://chl.ca/whl-wheatkings/article/young-channels-record-breaking-season-into-motivation-for-massive-offseason</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[]]></description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<em><strong>BY ROB MAHON</strong></em>
<em><strong>QCountry</strong></em>

&nbsp;

The last twelve months have been a whirlwind for Ethan Young, and before he knew it, the Regina-born defenseman was the voice of experience.

That experience has come quickly after a year in which he accomplished more than many players will their entire careers. After winning the TELUS Cup with the Regina Pat Canadians last season, Young was back at the tournament again this spring after smashing his previous offensive totals (and everyone else’s for that matter) and getting into his first WHL games with the Brandon Wheat Kings.

“Before we left, all of our rookies, guys who hadn’t went before, guys who were in their first year of AAA, they were asking tons of questions about what it was like, what to expect, what was the competition like,” Young said. “To have that experience meant a lot because I knew everything that was going on.”

The experience showed on the ice. Not only was Young a physical force (something he noted his entire team picked up on with relish), he set new TELUS Cup records for points by a defenseman both in a single tournament (14 in seven games) and all-time (19 in 14 games). It’s an impressive pair of records, but not ones the rising star on the blueline wanted to focus on while the tournament was in progress.

“I don’t like hearing about records, because I feel the pressure when I hear a record is beatable,” Young explained with a chuckle. “Usually I’m pretty good with pressure, but sometimes you just like to play your game. My dad told me after one of the games that I was three points away and I thought, ‘Ah, I didn’t want to hear that, I was doing so well.’ I’m more of a team guy, personal stats don’t really matter to me.”

For someone who dislikes hearing about records, however, Young was certainly setting a lot of them. His 74 points in 41 games were the most by a defenseman in the Saskatchewan U18 AAA ranks in the modern era (the last defenseman to post more points did so at a time where the league played nearly twice as many games). He finished his 16-year-old season with more than quadruple the 18 points he posted in his 15-year-old campaign, and that was a perfectly respectable total to begin with.

“My confidence went up drastically,” he said. “The first five games of the season, I felt way faster. The coaches could trust me, they put me on the ice in almost every scenario, and it helped my confidence so much. I knew I had put tons of hours into hockey in the summer, but I didn’t actually expect it to help me as much as it did. A lot of points is one thing, but being around the guys when you’re putting up numbers and winning games, that’s most important.”

The season with the Pat Cs wasn’t the first indication that Young had taken a gigantic leap forward. He raised eyebrows aplenty in his training camp with the Wheat Kings, a standout in both his physical play and his poise with the puck. He carried that momentum into the exhibition games, where his steady play continued.

“I heard from a few dads and scouts, ‘You’re having an unreal camp, just keep doing what you’re doing.’,” Young said. “That’s obviously a confidence booster when you hear stuff like that. Coming out of training camp and the Black and Gold game, I realized I actually had a chance of cracking the roster.”

Young said it was disappointing at first not to make the roster, but in hindsight he adds it turned into the best thing for him. Not only did his offensive confidence grow by a leap and a bound, he also made his WHL debut anyway, joining the Wheat Kings for their longest road trip of the season and collecting an assist in his very first WHL game.

“The best thing about calling me up and giving me that opportunity to get my toes was just practicing those good habits,” said Young. “Even in morning skates, they practice way differently than we do in AAA. It reminded me to keep practicing those good habits every time you’re on the ice. The ultimate goal is to make the team next year, so I needed to build those good habits.”

In hindsight, making the Wheat Kings at 17 instead of at 16 (he turns 17 on June 2) looks to have been just the right thing for Young on several levels. The developmental side is apparent (one look at his stats tells you much, though not all, of that story) but Young comes away from 2025-26 with a plethora of fond memories.

“This season was one of the best years of my life,” he said. “I had so much fun. The guys were all great in the dressing room, it was a blast. TELUS Cup, not many people get to do that in their lives, and to get to go twice is so special. I’m really glad I got to go for one last go-around. Obviously it wasn’t the outcome we wanted but it’s still an opportunity that I understand not many people ever get, which is really cool.”

Young came home from his second TELUS Cup with a bronze medal to go along with the gold medal he won last year, which will look good in a trophy case that also includes back-to-back Saskatchewan U18 AAA titles and the league’s defenseman of the year award for 2025-26. It might seem like Young has a spot with the Wheat Kings sewn up for next season, but he’s not approaching his next training camp with that mindset.

“Not many things in life are given to you, and I just keep thinking that there’s a chance I might not make that squad,” he said. “That’s what motivates me through every workout and every skate. Thinking there’s a chance you might get sent back home, I don’t want to ever feel that feeling, especially when I have high goals for myself.”

Young added he’s focused on adding some muscle to his 160-pound frame, which means a lot of meals and a lot of time in the weight room over the offseason while still working on his skating and shot.]]></content:encoded>
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                  <title>Wheaties’ Jacobson scores twice, Canada bags second-straight shutout at 2026 IIHF U18 World Championship</title>
        <link>https://chl.ca/whl-wheatkings/article/wheaties-jacobson-scores-twice-canada-bags-second-straight-shutout-at-2026-iihf-u18-world-championship</link>
        <pubDate>Mon, 27 Apr 2026 13:12:48 +0000</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>chlwebproduct</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">https://chl.ca/whl-wheatkings/article/wheaties-jacobson-scores-twice-canada-bags-second-straight-shutout-at-2026-iihf-u18-world-championship</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[]]></description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<strong>Trencin, Slovakia- </strong>Western Hockey League skaters combined for eight points as Canada routed Norway 8-0 in their third match of the 2026 IIHF U18 World Championship.

Canada’s second-youngest player, Brandon Wheat Kings star Jaxon Jacobson, came up big with two goals in his first appearance of the tournament, and OHL standout Dima Zhilkin netted a hat trick.

Beckett Hamilton (Saskatoon, Sask. / Red Deer Rebels) scored the first of the game- and his first-ever goal for Team Canada- after kicking a pass from Ryan Lin (Richmond, B.C. / Vancouver Giants) to his stick and lofting it past the Norwegian netminder.

The 5-foot-11, 173-pound winger is ranked 33rd by NHL Central Scouting in the agency’s final list ahead of the 2026 NHL Draft.]]></content:encoded>
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                  <title>Wheat Kings Prospects Shining at Telus Cup</title>
        <link>https://chl.ca/whl-wheatkings/article/wheat-kings-prospects-shining-at-telus-cup</link>
        <pubDate>Fri, 24 Apr 2026 14:10:50 +0000</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>chlwebproduct</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">https://chl.ca/whl-wheatkings/article/wheat-kings-prospects-shining-at-telus-cup</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[]]></description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[The Regina Pat Canadians are once again back in the Telus Cup after winning Western Regionals over the Winnipeg Bruins, Moose Jaw Warriors, and Thunder Bay Kings. The Pat Canadians have a couple of familiar faces on their roster with Ethan Young and Logan Dosenberger, two Brandon Wheat Kings prospects.

&nbsp;

Ethan Young currently is leading all defenceman in points and is 2nd only to Maddox Schultz in tournament scoring. Ethan suited up in a couple games this year for the Wheat Kings where he achieved his first ever Western Hockey League point.

Logan Dosenberger currently has yet to make the score sheet but his presence is always known on the ice with his 6'1 172lb frame on the ice.

&nbsp;

The Telus Cup will conclude on Sunday, April 26 in Peterborough, ON.\

&nbsp;

&nbsp;

Questions about 2026-27 BWK Tickets visit <a href="https://www.bwktickets.com/">https://www.bwktickets.com/</a>]]></content:encoded>
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