American Hockey League, Calgary Wranglers Jonathan Willcott American Hockey League, Calgary Wranglers Jonathan Willcott

Wranglers fall 5 to 2 in Bakersfield as Condors surge late for home victory

The Calgary Wranglers opened strong but dropped a 5 to 2 decision to the Bakersfield Condors on Tuesday night. Martin Frk and William Strömgren scored for Calgary while Josh Samanski and Isaac Howard led Bakersfield’s offense. Calgary outshot the Condors but could not close the gap in the third period.

CALGARY -- The Calgary Wranglers could not turn early momentum into a road win on Tuesday night, falling 5 to 2 to the Bakersfield Condors in a game that slipped away during a tough second period. Calgary opened the scoring and traded goals through forty minutes, but Bakersfield’s depth and timely finishing took over late as the Condors pulled away with two empty netters to seal the result.

Martin Frk opened the scoring for Calgary just over four minutes in, finishing a touch pass from Matvei Gridin, the 2024 first round pick who continues to show poise and creativity. Bakersfield answered quickly and the teams went into the intermission even.

William Strömgren restored the lead for the Wranglers early in the second period on the power play, set up by Frk and goaltender Ivan Prosvetov who earned his first assist of the season. But Bakersfield surged with two goals in just over a minute, including a power play strike from Quinn Hutson, shifting the game’s momentum for good.

Josh Samanski, the German Canadian forward who joined the Edmonton Oilers organization in 2025, added a goal and an assist to lead the Condors. Isaac Howard scored twice, including an empty netter, while Roby Järventie also hit the vacant cage to put the game out of reach. Calgary outshot Bakersfield 27 to 26 but could not solve the Condors’ structure in the third period.

Gridin continued to be a bright spot for the Wranglers, building on the strong start to his AHL career as a Flames first round pick. Frk added a multi point night, and Strömgren’s power play goal marked another important step in his development.

The Wranglers now look to regroup as they continue their road stretch and aim to tighten their defensive details heading into their next matchup in San Diego on Saturday night.

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International Junior Hockey Jonathan Willcott International Junior Hockey Jonathan Willcott

Canada Defeats Finland 3–0 to Claim Bronze at the 2025 Hlinka Gretzky Cup

BRNO, Czechia — Team Canada is bringing home another medal. Powered by scoring from three different skaters and a shutout performance in goal, Canada blanked Finland 3–0 in Game 17 of the 2025 Hlinka Gretzky Cup bronze medal match at Winning Group Arena. The result secures medals for Canada in seven straight HGC appearances.

Canada struck first just over five minutes into the opening period when Cooper Williams (Calgary, WHL/Saskatoon Blades) buried the opener at 5:27. Colin Fitzgerald (Peterborough, OHL/Peterborough Petes) and Daxon Rudolph (Lacombe, WHL/Prince Albert Raiders) collected the assists. Finland’s early penalties blunted their response and kept Canada ahead after 20 minutes.

The Canadians extended their advantage in the second period. Ethan Belchetz (Oakville, OHL/Windsor Spitfires) scored at 14:44, with helpers from Landon DuPont (Calgary, WHL/Everett Silvertips) and Keaton Verhoeff (Fort Saskatchewan, WHL/Victoria Royals). The goal came less than half a minute after Finland’s Wilmer Kallio was penalized for tripping, swinging momentum firmly toward Canada.

Down 2–0 late, Finland pulled the goalie with 2:30 remaining, but Canada iced the game. Daxon Rudolph (Lacombe, WHL/Prince Albert Raiders) scored into the empty net just 15 seconds later, assisted by Mathis Preston (Penticton, WHL/Spokane Chiefs), putting Canada up 3–0 and securing the bronze.

Canada’s Gavin Betts (Toronto, OHL/Kingston Frontenacs) was flawless, stopping all 22 shots he faced for the shutout. Finland’s William Gammals (Helsinki, FIN/HIFK U20) battled to keep his team alive, making 27 saves on 30 shots for a .900 save percentage.

With the win, Canada extends its medal streak to seven consecutive Hlinka Gretzky Cups. And while attention now turns to the 2026 World Juniors — set for December 26, 2025 through January 5, 2026 — TSN’s Gord Miller noted during the broadcast that many of these U18 skaters are projected to feature in the 2027 and 2028 World Juniors. This bronze-medal clash was not just about the present, but a glimpse into the future of international hockey.

The 2026 edition of the tournament will return to Canadian ice, with Rogers Place in Edmonton set to host.

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