logo
Bill Peters not returning as Lethbridge Hurricanes head coach

Bill Peters not returning as Lethbridge Hurricanes head coach

CTV News15-05-2025
Bill Peters will not be returning as the head coach of the Lethbridge Hurricanes.
The team announced Thursday that Peters chose not to renew his contract for the 2025-26 season and will be seeking new opportunities.
Peters was the head coach of the squad for the past two seasons and led them to the postseason both years.
'It's the right time to turn the [coaching job] over to somebody new, and whoever they elect to pass it on to, it will be in more than capable hands,' Peters said.
'When I took over [here], they talked about leaving the jersey in a better place, and I think we are doing that. I think the culture here [in Lethbridge] is very strong.'
The Hurricanes finished the 2024-25 season with a 42-21-3-2 record and made it to the WHL's Eastern Conference Championship before getting swept by the Medicine Hat Tigers.
Peters, originally from Three Hills, Alta., finishes his tenure with a total regular season record of 75-49-10-2, for a .551 win percentage.
'We are very proud of the work that Bill accomplished in his two seasons with the Hurricanes. Our players, our coaches and our entire organization got better with Bill here,' Hurricanes general manager Peter Anholt said.
'Bill was a key part of continuing to grow the positive culture that our organization has built and making sure it's a healthy environment for our players.'
Peters, a former Calgary Flames head coach, has had several jobs in junior and professional hockey over the past 17 years, including with the Spokane Chiefs, the Rockford IceHogs and the Carolina Hurricanes.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How Blue Jays fans are getting screwed by Apple TV at the most exciting time in close to a decade
How Blue Jays fans are getting screwed by Apple TV at the most exciting time in close to a decade

National Post

timean hour ago

  • National Post

How Blue Jays fans are getting screwed by Apple TV at the most exciting time in close to a decade

It has been without dispute one of the most successful and energetic stretches of Blue Jays baseball in the past nine seasons, re-awakening the passion of tens of thousands of fans of the team. Article content Coast-to-coast, viewers have been captivated by the team's four-game winning streak — including three in a row over the New York Yankees heading into Thursday's series finale — a run that has given them a share of first place in the American League East with the Bronx Bombers. Article content Article content There is still an afterglow from Tuesday's brilliant Canada Day show that not only resulted in a resounding 12-5 win over the Yankees, but featured the piece de resistance renaissance of George Springer, who hit two home runs, including a grand slam, and drove in seven. Article content So what better way to welcome the first true weekend of summer by tuning in to Friday night's first of three against the Los Angeles Angeles, right? Surely Sportsnet, the home of the majority of Jays broadcasts is reading to feast on one of its highest ratings of the year, right? Article content You guess it, Friday is the Jays first intrusion of Apple TV of the second half of the season, a blight that Toronto fans tend to take harder than other markets around the league. Article content Article content This will be the Jays third appearance on Apple TV, a semi-regular annoyance for not only the Jays fan base — which blessed with a coast-to-coast audience draws significantly bigger audiences than every team in baseball for its regular telecasts — but for Sportsnet itself. Article content Remember Rogers Communications owns both the Jays and the network, a synergy that is an ideal mix for both parties as the baseball team regularly draws more than a million viewers. With the team taking a 48-38 record into Thursday's against the Yankees, they've suddenly renewed the optimism that dominated in the summer of 2015 and 2016 when the team was such a hot commodity. Article content Article content It's the second occasion this season that the Apple TV show will roll into town at a terrible time for Sportsnet. The first was just three games into the season and denied the network of its first prime time telecast of the season. Article content It's not a stretch to suggest that Friday's contest against the Angels would be one of the most anticipated of the season, given the weekend slot and the events of the last week and more. Article content Remember that once we move through July 1, Canada becomes a captivated nation of baseball fans. The Stanley Cup has been awarded, NHL's free agent frenzy season is mostly in the past and it's baseball time.

Calgary Flames prospect Cullen Potter brings mom's hockey heritage with him
Calgary Flames prospect Cullen Potter brings mom's hockey heritage with him

CTV News

timean hour ago

  • CTV News

Calgary Flames prospect Cullen Potter brings mom's hockey heritage with him

Cullen Potter, middle, stands with Hall of Fame forward Lanny McDonald, left, and NHL commissioner Gary Bettman after being drafted by the Calgary Flames in Los Angeles on Friday, June 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes) Some say he has his mother's hands. Jenny Schmidgall-Potter was among the first women to combine motherhood and elite hockey when she twice gave birth to children and returned to the U.S. women's team. The four-time Olympian and a competitor at 10 world championships had daughter Madison in 2001 and son Cullen in 2007. Cullen Potter was a first-round pick, 32nd overall, in this year's NHL draft by the Calgary Flames. 'Cullen has unbelievable hands,' said his mom. 'People always say, 'Jenny, you had great hands' … it's just something you work on.' Schmidgall-Potter and the U.S. claimed the first Olympic gold medal awarded in women's hockey in Nagano, Japan, in 1998. She also won four world titles with the Americans. She ranks fifth all-time in points at the worlds for the U.S. with 61 in 50 games. Schmidgall-Potter retired from the national team in 2013 when Cullen was six and inducted into the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame in 2020. There is a photo of a three-year-old Cullen on the ice with Jenny at the 2010 Olympic Games in Vancouver. He held his mom's silver medal in his small hands. Cullen has hazy memories of his mom's playing days. 'Just a little bit … some of them are definitely a little fuzzy,' he said this week at the Flames' development camp in Calgary. 'I remember going out on the ice and kissing the medal. I've seen that picture a lot. So I remember some things, not everything. I was pretty young. 'Some people that have watched her play say I mimic her a little bit.' Cullen was walking at five months and skating as a one-year-old, but Jenny and husband Rob didn't put him in organized hockey until he was 11. Cullen also played lacrosse and swam. He learned hockey playing on outdoor rinks in Minnesota with his parents, who run a business training players. 'Cullen always had a knack for coming up with the puck,' Jenny said. 'Rob and I, our love for hockey is definitely an influence on him and he saw the passion we have for the sport.' His sister Madison also played hockey and competed in swimming for Notre Dame. 'I did just about every sport you could think of,' Cullen said. 'From the second I touched the ice, I think that's just something I knew I loved and haven't looked back since. 'My mom playing in the Olympics and my dad playing college, they just know a lot about the game. They've helped me through the hard times and the good times.' The five-foot-10, 172-pound centre produced 13 goals and nine assists in 35 games as an 18-year-old freshman at Arizona State this past season. He added nine goals and 13 assists in 35 games for the U.S. development team in 2023-24 before joining the Sun Devils. 'I'm super proud of him,' Jenny said. 'He's matured a ton over the last year, going to college, playing with older guys and being around older players. 'I know what it takes to commit yourself on a daily basis and forgoing summer vacations or things that you miss out on because you're wanting to accomplish your goals. 'He's always been a worker and has some genetics, of course, but you know a lot of it's just through the hard work that he's done with my husband and with us as parents to get to where he is now. 'I can say I love hockey, I've had so many great moments in winning a gold medal and world championships, but I still think the best thing in my life are children.' The 46-year-old still keeps an eye on a U.S.-Canada rivalry in women's hockey she helped fuel for many years. 'The rivalry is still strong and true. Go U.S.A.,' she said, before adding: 'Cullen's in Canada, so I guess maybe I'm going to have to support them just a little bit.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 3, 2025. Donna Spencer, The Canadian Press

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store