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THE MOJ: Late September offers its usual cornucopia of great sports stories

From Blais to the A鈥檚 and Manny Rugamba鈥檚 inspirational story
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Canucks forward Sammy Blais talks to the media after a recent practice, Blais is trying to make the roster on a PTO. Canucks.com photo

There are so many random things rattling around in this old brain at times that we just feel like writing about them all. This is one of these times.

Blais off to slow start in an effort to crack Canucks roster

When you are a good hockey club, there aren鈥檛 too many roster spots that are available.

That鈥檚 the dilemma that Sammy Blais is facing.

The 28-year-old is with the Canucks on a PTO and is trying to stick with the club as a depth forward.

It鈥檚 uncharted territory for Blais, who has seven NHL seasons under his belt and a Stanley Cup ring with the St. Louis Blues to his credit.

鈥淚t鈥檚 kind of new coming to a new team on a PTO. I鈥檓 just trying to be myself out there. It鈥檚 been a little nerve-wracking but I鈥檝e been around the NHL a long time and I know what to do to be successful. If I just play my game, I鈥檒l be fine,鈥 Blais told reporters earlier this week.

Blais suited up for the Canucks first two pre-season games but failed to register a point and wasn鈥檛 overly impressive in either the 3-1 win over Seattle or the 4-3 victory against Calgary.

鈥淚 really want him to elevate and fight for a position. I think he has to elevate his fitness a little more so he can be faster out there but we are going to give him a chance. We need him to be that forechecker who is a heavy guy. We are going to keep working with him,鈥 said Canucks head coach Rick Tocchet after the Seattle game.

Blais will get another opportunity this week when the Canucks travel to Seattle and Calgary for a pair of games on Friday and Saturday respectively.

Lions Rugamba is an amazing story

During this week鈥檚 edition of 鈥楤.C. Lions on Tap鈥 鈥 which airs every Tuesday at 10 p.m. on CKNW 980 鈥 our guest was Lions halfback Manny Rugamba.

Rugamba was born in a refugee camp in Zambia after his family fled war-torn Rwanda. The family moved to Chicago when Manny was two and sports became a big thing for Manny and his siblings.

In fact, Rugamba came into the game of football more by chance than design.

The youngest of 11 children, Rugamba watched his older brothers play basketball and was set to register for a local youth league in the Chicago area.

One small problem.

鈥淲e went through the paperwork of registering at a local rec centre and found out I wasn鈥檛 old enough. I was nine and you had to be ten. I started to cry because I wanted to play basketball with my brothers. So were driving out of the rec centre and there was a big sign 鈥 Trojans football 鈥 so my mom signed me up,鈥 recalled Rugamba.

His journey in the game of football took him to the University of Iowa, Miami of Ohio, a Cleveland Browns training camp and now to B.C.

Through it all, Rugamba鈥檚 experiences in life have kept things in perspective.

鈥淚t makes football not so hard. It鈥檚 like I鈥檝e already done the hardest thing I鈥檓 going to do in my life which is survive. Every day out of that refugee camp is profit because I鈥檝e had family members that didn鈥檛 make it out and have passed,鈥 Rugamba told us.

A鈥檚 long history with baseball in Vancouver

The Oakland A鈥檚 3-2 victory over the Texas Rangers on Thursday night marked the end of their 57-year run in the Bay Area with the team moving to Sacramento next season and eventually to Las Vegas.

I 鈥 like many others 鈥 am upset that it got to this but that鈥檚 another story for another time.

The history of baseball has always appealed to me and when looking at the Athletics over the years, you鈥檇 be hard-pressed to ignore their connection to Vancouver.

Did you know that the A鈥檚 organization has deep ties to baseball in Vancouver that spans over sixty years?

The Pacific Coast League Vancouver Mounties pre-dated the A鈥檚 move to Oakland from Kansas City in 1968 and was the organization鈥檚 Triple-A farm team from 1965 to 1968. Players such as Joe Rudi, Blue Moon Odom, Paul Lindblad and Sal Bando 鈥 all of whom would play key parts of the A鈥檚 three consecutive World Series championships from 1972 to 1974 - played in Vancouver. Future Hall of Fame manager Tony La Russa also suited up for the Mounties during this time.

The Mounties left in 1969 but Pacific Coast League baseball returned in 1978 in the form of the Vancouver Canadians and it was the A鈥檚 who stocked the team for that first season. The affiliation would return for the final season of Triple-A baseball in Vancouver in 1999.

That team would win the Pacific Coast League title and the Triple-A World Series. It saw the A鈥檚 future 鈥楤ig Three鈥 of starting pitchers Mark Mulder, Tim Hudson and Barry Zito all spending time in Vancouver as well as future A鈥檚 stars Eric Chavez and Ramon Hernandez.

When the Triple-A franchise moved to Sacramento the following season, the Northwest League version of the Canadians came to Vancouver and that team would be affiliated with Oakland as well.

That run lasted 11 seasons with future major leaguers like Nelson Cruz, Nick Swisher, Andre Ethier and Dallas Braden honing their craft at Nat Bailey Stadium.

UBC Hockey Alumni continue with solid support

The UBC Thunderbirds hockey team is coming off an extremely successful season having won its first Canada West championship in 53 years and a big reason why head coach Sven Butenschon鈥檚 squad has had success is because of the support they are receiving from alumni.

This week the UBC Hockey Alumni held their annual golf tournament at Marine Drive Golf and Country Club in Vancouver on Sept. 23 with over 150 golfers taking part. The entire UBC team was also on hand as the program tries to get their players to network with alumni.

鈥淚t鈥檚 almost like the recent alumni involvement has directly translated to what鈥檚 happening on the ice. Of course, there鈥檚 a lot that goes into it such as recruiting, player development and school support but the alumni are the backbone and foundation of all that. They鈥檝e allowed us to become one of the top teams in Canada,鈥 explained Butenschon.

The Thunderbirds open their 2024-25 season at the Doug Mitchell Thunderbird Sports Center on Oct. 4 against the University of Calgary and will be raising their championship banner that night.

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