Wednesday, 30 December 2015

Cambridge sports hall of fame is located in a mall

Check out the food court at Cambridge Centre Mall to view that community's sports museum

Just like Woodstock, Cambridge began its sports hall of fame in 1996

By Mark Schadenberg
While Christmas Shopping in Cambridge about 10 days ago I decided double duty was my desire, so I stopped by the Cambridge Centre Mall on Highway 24 (Hespeler Road) for ideas, ideas and more ideas.
Holiday shopping – check
Discovering the Cambridge sports hall of fame (CSHF) in a mall which also features an open-space arena inside the food court – check.



(With the Woodstock Recreation Advisory Committee creating a new look for the Woodstock Sports Wall Of Fame, there are 2 posts here describing the Brantford and Cambridge models to honour their community's best-ever athletes and teams) 

I did, however, forget my camera, but was quite impressed with all the glassed-in displays of biographies, photographs, artifacts, newspaper stories, and other items of recognition. Not quite as impressive as the Brantford hall of fame, but certainly very impressive.
In the accompanying mall layout picture you will note the shopping destination also includes a multi-plex movie theatre, but the mall itself is smaller than both White Oaks or Masonville in London.
I wasn’t exactly sure on the layout of the mall upon my arrival, but a directory map indicated I should walk down quite an ordinary hallway of storefronts -- with a Yankee Candle and a Laura Secord shop competing for aroma senses -- and end up in this large open space which covers the bases for a sports fan (like myself) because there is a New York Fries, hockey arena and sports hall of fame all in one spacious room.
Cambridge inductees range from baseball’s Rob Ducey to hockey’s Jody Hull (Plus the legendary Hilda Ranscombe, and NHLers Kirk Maltby and Jim Schoenfeld) to speed skater Cindy Overland to curler Ann Dunn to golfer Ian Leggatt. With Woodstock’s great figure skating coach Kerrie Leitch becoming famous at the Preston skating club, it’s easy to see why he has been recognized by the Cambridge sports shrine as Cambridge is the combination of communities Preston, Galt and Hespeler. 
Leitch most certainly belongs (in my opinion) on the Woodstock wall, but that story will be covered when nominations are invited for the re-vamped Woodstock sports 'wall'.
Kerrie Leitch


For $49.95 you can also purchase a book as compiled by David Menary. The book is about 450 pages and should be as the Cambridge sports hall has inducted close to 150 athletes (48 from hockey), builders, historic figures and teams. That’s an impressive array of honourees considering their hall started in the same year as Woodstock in 1996.
I should plan a Saturday, May 7th  visit to Cambridge, which has been announced already as its next induction ceremony. I will invite Steve Gilbert and the rest of the recreation advisory committee from the City of Woodstock, and the gas and New York Fries will be directed to the Woodstock budget.
Cambridge History
The famed Galt Arena could be confused as being a museum due to the history in its walls. The Shade Street rink is billed as the world’s oldest operating arena as it was opened in 1914 and is still home to the Junior B Cambridge Winter Hawks. Quite honestly, it’s a larger version of the old Perry Street Arena (1908-1996) in Woodstock.
GALT ARENA

The Cambridge sports hall started out modestly as a sports honour role and its inducted membership were recognized in the foyer of the Galt Arena, which had been recently renovated at the time. The hall web site, which is noted below, describes how and when the hall moved to the Cambridge Centre mall in 2001 thanks in part to the Waterloo Regional Heritage Foundation and a grant from the Ontario Trillium Foundation.
It is interesting to note, the CSHF is also coincided with an established foundation created to therefore accept monetary donations for tax refunds and at the same time contribute to scholarships for graduating high school athletes.
You have likely seen other posts in my blog about museums in general, such as Woodstock, Beachville, Norwich, Ingersoll and Tillsonburg’s Annandale House. I enjoy history and sports, so why not have an admiration for sports history. 
       
LINKS:

Mark Schadenberg, Sales Representative
Senior Real Estate Specialist (SRES designation)
Royal LePage Triland Realty Brokerage
757 Dundas St, Woodstock
(519) 537-1553, cell or text
Email: mschadenberg@rogers.com
Twitter: markroyallepage
Facebook: Mark Schadenberg, Royal LePage Triland

Discussion . . . Direction . . . Determination . . . Destination

Brantford Sports Hall of Recognition is an impressive museum

Wayne Gretzky Sports Centre lobby is home to terrific collection of artifacts and biographical material
Naturally, a good portion of this sports hall of fame is dedicated to career  of 'The Great One' 

By Mark Schadenberg
People in Brantford know how great the Wayne Gretzky Sports Centre is, but soon even more visitors from around the province will admire the unique 4-arena complex, which also features an amazing aquatics facility.

(With the Woodstock Recreation Advisory Committee creating a new look for the Woodstock Sports Wall Of Fame, there are 2 posts here describing the Brantford and Cambridge models to honour their community's best-ever athletes and teams) 

The Gretzky centre, which is already the home to the Brantford 99ers (who are struggling in the lower half of the OHA Midwestern Junior B loop), from Feb 1 - 7, the stunning facility will host the Ontario Tankard -- aka the Ontario men's curling championships.
John Epping, who is a previous team member of the Brantford-based Nick Rizzo team, will be competing at the provincials as the Peterborough native earned a bye through the playdowns as runner-up in 2015. (The current Ontario championship team of Mark Kean from Innerkip dispersed after the '15 season).


More on Epping in a minute, but the Gretzky complex is certainly a bright spot for the city of about 100,000. It features a great location too as it's visible from the 403 highway.
The four arenas include a main ice pad with capacity over 1,000, while the other three surfaces have seating for just over 350 apiece. With four rinks under one roof, the Gretzky sports centre is ideal for minor hockey tournaments at all levels.
The main ice pad is very airy in its design as there is a running track around the arena with a foot-friendly surface.
Many Woodstock minor hockey parents are familiar with the Gretzky centre as local players competing at the Alliance 'AAA' level will have Brantford as its home.
During the Ontario Tankard for curling this main arena will be transformed into four curling sheets, but the other three ice pads will still be set up for hockey as the curling banquet area will be inside the equally-impressive Brantford Sports Hall Of Recognition.



It may be too obvious to state, but the sports hall for Brantford features about one quarter of its floor space to honour Wayne, but there are also closed-in glass cases with memorabilia of many Brantford area athletes in countless sports, they have an interactive recording machine which permits participants to do play-by-play of famous sports events.
The important discovery for my visit was to check out the large touch screen. The recognition hall certainly features a photo of each previous inductee, but most importantly the centre point is a touch screen monitor which can access by sport or in alphabetical order an impressive biography on all those previously honoured.
Gretzky items range from Oilers to Indianapolis Racers to Team Canada to replica NHL trophies to a jersey Wayne wore as a Brantford novice player.
The sports hall includes autographed baseballs and countless other important keepsake items from boxing to lacrosse, and track to football and figure skating, as borrowed from its inductees. Each item has been carefully categorized and catalogued, so it can be later returned to its rightful owner. 
By the way, the display created to highlight the current-year honourees includes badminton player Mike Beres, who was not only a world ranked badminton player, but also a long-time member of the Woodstock Badminton Club because of the quality facility our city has for that racquet sport.
As for track and field, I have followed the career of long-distance runner Kevin Sullivan in recent years from the Bell City.
You can check out a virtual tour of the sports recognition hall on the facilty’s website.
They also have a video board set up so you can challenge your friends to a trivia game.
A few weeks ago I chatted with Gretzky centre manager Sandy Jackson and toured the complex to learn about all the facilities amenities because as chair of the Woodstock recreation advisory committee it is important to visualize what other areas in the vicinity have created whether it be an equal size city such as Stratford or St Thomas or a larger municipality like Brantford, Sarnia, Kitchener-Waterloo or Cambridge.
Touch Screen Monitor

The Gretzky centre has undergone massive renovations in recent years and continues to maintain its focus on the arenas, but also aquatics with six different pools. That’s correct – six pools under one roof, including one which is long enough to host competitive meets and a rather large therapeutic pool as well. Kids will love the 150-foot water slide, and the community as whole can enjoy countless possibilities in teaching and recreation of swimming. 
The Southside Aquatic Centre in Woodstock is a nice facility for our local population base, but I was thoroughly impressed with all the aqua-fit avenues in Brantford.


The Gretzky complex also includes a large fitness centre. I can understand now why the City of Woodstock leased out a portion of the community complex here for an outside entrepreneur to run a fit club in Woodstock. The Gretzky centre’s weightlifting and cardio space combines with a ‘Zumba-like’ studio to create an overall club – with paid memberships to the city and not an owner – which compares to any fitness club.
When the provincial curling championships arrive in Brantford on Feb 1, the Brant Curling Club will be host committee, but for curling fans in Woodstock it’s a short drive down the 403 to the Gretzky centre. By the way, a one-week pass is just $99 and it’s not a three-ring circus as during the round robin The Tankard is an eight-ring circus.

 Curling team of John Epping (far right)
LINKS:


Mark Schadenberg, Sales Representative
Senior Real Estate Specialist (SRES designation)
Royal LePage Triland Realty Brokerage
757 Dundas St, Woodstock
(519) 537-1553, cell or text
Email: mschadenberg@rogers.com
Twitter: markroyallepage
Facebook: Mark Schadenberg, Royal LePage Triland

Discussion . . . Direction . . . Determination . . . Destination

Tuesday, 29 December 2015

Lots of reasons to look back at 2015 -- locally and beyond

My Blog publishes real estate stats and lots of buying / selling hints
I'm a Realtor who sells homes, but also my community

By Mark Schadenberg
A car is the sum of its parts.
Any sports team winning a championship will talk about the role each and every person played from the athletes to the trainers.
At the chamber of commerce awards banquet last month, every winning company talked about its employees and the people power it takes for success in the business world.
Real estate and the community you live in are no different. Everyone plays their role in creating a home – whether that is the house or the municipality you reside in.
I most certainly do my part through the Lions Club of Woodstock, Relay For Life for the cancer society, and the city’s recreation advisory committee.
As a Realtor, I believe it’s equally important to sell the fantastic Woodstock I live in just as important as finding you the correct house in the neighbourhood you want to reside in, and also possess knowledge about real estate stats in the marketplace, school zones, local history, local sports associations, and . . . current events such as city budgets, new subdivisions and parks, emerging local industries, and plans for the future.

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       "Individual commitment to a group effort--that is what makes a team work, a company work, a society work, a civilization work." --Vince Lombardi

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    "Alone we can do so little, together we can do so much." --Helen Keller

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Mattie Stepanek (Died from from a rare form of muscular dystrophy at age 13 back in 2004)

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I write about these topics and much more right here at: www.markroyallepage.blogspot.com
As 2015 evaporates and everyone shares excitement for a new year, I’d like to look back quickly at some topics I have covered on my blog. It’s a recap, but it’s also proof positive in all the glowing comments I have already made about why I should be the Realtor you contact when it’s time to buy and/or sell anywhere in Oxford County.
In just about every month I have posted the latest sales stats, but the numbers always include additional analysis such as average sales prices, the number of current listings and historical background on years previous. My totals usually date back to 2005 because that can always be used as a benchmark calendar as Toyota (TMMC) announced that year it would be building a massive manufacturing facility in Woodstock. The factory began driving cars outs off its assembly line in the fall of 2008.
Real estate trends, my listings, Royal LePage news, and my thoughts on items ranging from CMHC fees to interest rates to reverse mortgages to preparing your home for the market to the importance of hiring a competent and effective inspector as condition of your home purchase.  
I also like to discover interesting area real estate stories as anything happening for residential growth in London or Kitchener has an overall effect on real estate in Woodstock and Oxford County. It’s also interesting to follow such ‘coffee shop stories’ like a golf course in Cambridge which goes out of business and a developer purchases the acreage to convert the lands into a subdivision, or the conversion of a Pan-Am Games athletes’ village to a condo complex in Toronto.
Here is a summary list of a few additional topics I wrote about in 2015:
  LOCAL EVENTS

Relay For Life (Several times leading up to event in June)
Cowapolooza (August)
CP Holiday Train in Woodstock (December)
Big Night Out for Big Brothers (November)
Terry Fox Run (August and September)
Canada’s Outdoor Farm Show (September)
WCI High School Reunion (June)
Annual Rec & Leisure Fair (March)
Doors Open Oxford (May)
Ingersoll’s Canterbury Folk Festival (July)
Tillsonburg’s Turtlefest (June)

  LOCAL BUILDING PROJECTS
Sierra Construction residential 5-storey project (November)
Tri-Car apartments in Woodstock (October)
New apartment building at Nellis & Lansdowne planned (June)
Claysam Homes is now Holmes On Homes approved (October)
Unique construction called TiltWall in Woodstock (February)
  LOCAL NEWS
Development Office members and mayor visit Japan (November)

Northeast Woodstock recreation centre under construction (October)
Sports Wall Of Fame (December)
Woodstock hospital update (May)
Subsidized housing projects in Oxford County (March)
Habitat For Humanity (May)
Theatre Woodstock stage (March)
Woodstock working hard to attract new businesses (January)
  LOCAL FACILITIES
SouthGate Centre (November)
Local Legion is listed for sale (August).
Former Beer Store listed for lease (August)
WDDS in middle of expansion plans at facility (January)
  LOCAL HISTORY
‘Klondike’ Joe Boyle (September)

James ‘Tip’ O’Neill (August)

Oxford Remembers – a look back at two world wars (June)
Importance of fire trucks to local economy historically (August)
Woodstock Skating Club celebrates 80 years (February)
  GENERAL CONSTRUCTION UPDATES
Renovations planned at 24 Sussex in Ottawa (October)
Why Kitchener-Waterloo is growing so quickly (June)
Woodstock’s Sierra Construction to re-develop McCormick’s in London (July)

Re-developing SoHo district in London (March)
Re-vitalizing Thames River neighbourhoods in London (October)
  NATIONAL HISTORY
John A Macdonald’s 200th birthday (January)
150 years (2017) since Confederation (April)
Canada’s Walk of Fame (March)






Saturday, 26 December 2015

Carey Price is the best of the best in hockey in 2015

Canadiens goalie wins Lou Marsh Trophy as Canada's top athlete & Lionel Conacher award too 
Montreal loses again today; struggle with starting goalie injured

By Mark Schadenberg
The greatest goalie currently in the NHL is the Habs’ Carey Price.
Without Price in the lineup, the Montreal Canadiens have just one win in their past 11 starts.
I actually will go one farther in my assessment of Carey Price. When he is healthy, he’s the best player in the National Hockey League – ahead of Jamie Benn, Alex Ovechkin, Drew Doughty and even Patrick Kane.
There really is no debate and when Carey Price was named the Lou Marsh winner this year as Canada’s top athlete that news simply solidified the notion. He is the first goalie to be voted to that honour – named after a former sports editor of The Toronto Star newspaper. 
As the 2015 calendar winds down, arrives news that Price is also Canada's top male athlete in voting for the respected Lionel Conacher Award.
Price won the Hart Trophy as the NHL’s MVP last season and also earned the Vezina Trophy as top goalie, and earned the Jennings Trophy with the lowest goals against average (GAA). When the NHL players voted for the most valuable player in their collective opinions, Price was also then named the Ted Lindsay Award winner.


I’m not a Montreal fan and actually I would list the Leafs, Kings, Capitals and Penguins on my list of favourites, and the Canadiens would have difficulty making my personal top 25.
Why has Carey Price won me over?
Remarkable career stats, including getting better and better with a lifetime goals against average of 2.43, but he’s at 2.06 this year and earned a remarkable 1.96 GAA last season with nine shutouts and a .933 save percentage. He also averages more than 55 starts per season. This year, he is 10-2 in 12 appearances.
The Habs, who don’t play at home until Jan. 6 and have a crazy road schedule including the Winter Classic in Boston on Jan. 1, have struggled lately with six straight losses and just one victory in their past 11 starts since Dec. 1. Their only win this month was 3-1 in Montreal over Ottawa on Dec. 12. Montreal is not scoring with just 16 goals in those dozen contests, but their confidence evaporated when Carey Price was placed on the injury list.
There’s a bucket full of pucks in listing reasons to say Price is the best goalkeeper in the world, but the top one would be who he is and where he came from.
Price has climbed the ranks from a difficult beginning and quite truly a remarkable Canadian story.
Price grew up in Anahim Lake in northern British Columbia. His mother Lynda is a former Ulkatcho First Nation chief on the reserve the family calls home. Carey Price – like a lot of Canadians – grew up skating on a pond, but it’s the true lack of minor hockey structure in his hometown, which makes his rise to the top such an inspiring story.  
Price and his dad Jerry would travel several times a week to Williams Lake for minor hockey practices and games – a mere 3-hour drive each way. Jerry Price, by the way, was drafted in 1978 by the Philadelphia Flyers, but according to www.hockeydb.com only reached as high as the Milwaukee Admirals, which today would be equivalent to the ECHL.  
This past off season, Price made a significant contribution to the school in Anahim Lake as a way to give back. The links below include the video aired on CBC and Hockey Night In Canada. In an interview with Peter Mansbridge, Price talked about learning about his First Nations heritage from his mother and grandmother.

Peter Mansbridge
Reaching the NHL was also difficult for Price because of the distance he played in the WHL away from home as he spent four seasons with the Tri-City Americans based in Kennewick, Washington.  
The WHL star (He was CHL goalie of the year in 2007) was drafted fifth overall by Montreal in 2005 (Sidney Crosby was first overall that year). In his 2004-05 season with Tri-City, Price made 63 appearances in the regular season and had a 2.34 GAA.
Price’s impressive resume also includes world Juniors Gold in 2007 with Team Canada in Sweden (6-0 with a 1.14 GAA and IIHF tourney top goalie), winning a Calder Cup AHL crown with the Hamilton Bulldogs in 2007, and Gold at the 2014 Sochi Russia Winter Olympics. In the Olympic finals, Price earned a 24-save shutout as Canada topped Sweden 3-0. His numbers in the Olympics were more than outstanding – 5-0 with 2 shutouts and just 3 goals against with a 0.59 GAA and .972 save percentage.


When the World Cup of Hockey is contested in 2016, I’m sure the 28-year-old Price will be Canada’s starting netminder.
A true Canadian, who competed in rodeo in his youth, and travels to northern B.C. every summer to spend hours upon hours with nature and a fishing rod. Growing up in a remote area, he now donates to the local school breakfast program in Anahim Lake and Williams Lake, and provides hockey equipment to the youth there.
As a hockey fanatic, my eyes are focused closely to the TV at this time of year to watch the World Juniors – this year with the tourney in Finland. The end of the calendar is a great time to look back, reminisce about the last 12 months and honour the best of the best in 2015. In hockey – the best of the best is Carey Price.  

LINKS:
http://www.sportsnet.ca/hockey/nhl/canadiens-price-wins-lionel-conacher-award-as-canadas-top-male-athlete/
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/canadiens-goalie-carey-price-a-country-boy-at-heart-peter-mansbridge-1.3014918
Mark Schadenberg, Sales Representative
Senior Real Estate Specialist (SRES designation)
Royal LePage Triland Realty Brokerage
757 Dundas St, Woodstock
(519) 537-1553, cell or text
Email: mschadenberg@rogers.com
Twitter: markroyallepage
Facebook: Mark Schadenberg, Royal LePage Triland

Discussion . . . Direction . . . Determination . . . Destination