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Ice Hawks forward mourns the loss of his former Humboldt coach and teammates

It's been a tough few days for Jordan Bogress who began the junior hockey season in Humboldt and will finish it at this week's Cyclone Taylor Cup in Richmond
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Jordan Bogress got to escape the tragic news of his former team for at least a couple of hours on Saturday as he practiced with the Delta Ice Hawks at Minoru Arenas.

Jordan Bogress will be playing in this week’s Cyclone Taylor Cup in Richmond with a heavy heart.

The 18-year-old Delta Ice Hawks forward began the season in the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League as a member of the Humboldt Broncos. On Friday, 15 team members were killed and 14 more injured in a horrific bus crash en route to a semi-final playoff game against the Nipawin Hawks.

Bogress spent three months in Humboldt before returning home and re-joining Delta. He initially learned of the tragedy on social media then some of his Ice Hawk teammates reached out to him as well.

“I didn’t really know what had happened so I looked further into it. I was in disbelief. I’ve been trying to keep it out of my mind but (the news) is all-around us now,” said the Ladner native.

The victims include Broncos head coach Darcy Haugan and team captain Logan Schatz. It was through the advice of a coach at Trinity Western, Haugan scouted Bogress and convinced him to bring his career to the small hockey crazy town of just under 6,000 people.

“Darcy was a great players coach. He was always concerned about how you were doing. How was it going with your billet family. Hockey was important to him but he was also a very caring person,” said Bogress.

“They were just a good group of guys who had played together before and Schatz was a great leader as well. It’s just brutal to see something like this happen.”

Bogress decided to return home for personal reasons that included plenty of urging from his Ice Hawk teammates. He had been slowed with injuries but did manage five points in nine games, including a pair of goals. He was billeted with the family of the team’s chaplain and certainly was there long enough to know how much the Broncos mean to the community.

“I could tell right off the bat just how tight of a town it was. It’s the same idea as here but Ladner also has so much else around it. In Humboldt, all that matters is their hockey team. They have a nice rink and everyone came to the games,” he said.

Bogress had rode on the same bus that was involved in the accident. He says it was a typical team atmosphere for those road trips with “guys watching movies and just trying to get comfortable.”

He was happy to escape the tragedy for at least a couple of hours Saturday afternoon as he trained with his Delta teammates at Minoru Arenas. “It’s good for me to be in an environment like this right now.”

The Cyclone Taylor Cup starts  Thursday and also includes Kootenay International Junior Hockey League champion Kimberley Dynamiters, Vancouver Island champion Campbell River and the host Richmond Sockeyes.  The four-team tournament concludes with the medal games on Sunday.