Prairie pride: Local coaches watch as Winnipeg goalie Joel Hofer leads Canada to gold - Action News
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Manitoba

Prairie pride: Local coaches watch as Winnipeg goalie Joel Hofer leads Canada to gold

"He was a big part of the team and I thought he held his emotions really well," Daniel Ferguson, who coaches Joel Hofer in the off-season,said about the goaltender's performance in Sunday's gold-medal game.

2 Manitobans on golden team that beat Russia 4-3 in Sunday's world junior finals

Joel Hofer takes a shot off the mask during the semifinal game against Finland on Saturday. (Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press)

For some hockey fans, Winnipeg goalie Joel Hofer's standout performance in his first-ever start for Canada on Monday might have come as a surprise.

But for Hofer's former coaches, it was only a matter of time before the 19-year-oldgot his turn in the spotlight.

One of his off-season coaches caught the last two periods ofSunday's unpredictable gold-medal matchat the annual under-20 tournament held in the Czech Republic.

"It was great," said Dan Ferguson, who watched the game from Winnipeg. "He was a big part of the team and I thought he held his emotions really well."

Hofer took two pucks to the throat to protect the netas Russia funnelled pucks his way,Fergusonsaid.

Canada's goaltender Joel Hofer celebrates after defeating Russia 4-3 in the gold medal game at the World Junior Hockey Championships on Sunday. (Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press)

One of two Manitobans on the 2020 team, the younggoaltender helped secure the podium's top spotfor Canadaat the world junior hockey championship, battlingRussia's 38 shots in a 4-3 win.

"In a gold medal game it can be emotional, there's lots of pressure. And I thought he looked like himself, very calm," Ferguson said.

Fergusonsaid he knows how much big wins along the waymust have meant to the goalie particularly a 5-0 triumph against Finland in the semi-finals on Saturday.

"A shutout is nice, but I think for him, being able to help his team win here is what he's going to be most proud of," said Ferguson. "Just to bring his team on to the gold medal game will be very important."

Joel Hofer with off-season coach Dan Ferguson when Hofer played with the Swift Current Broncos in the Western Hockey League. (Submitted by Dan Ferguson )

Ferguson said there couldn't be a player more deserving than Hofer of all the praise he's been getting during the tournament.

"Joel's a team guy and he's a leader," he said. "We're all proud of him and we wish him all the best."

Talented anddetermined

"He's a fantastic goalie," said Mike Morden, who coached Hofer when he played on the minor bantam St. James Canadians AA team.

"He was easily the best game goalie that I'd coached in a long time. Best game goalie, period."

Winnipeg goalie Joel Hofer's former hockey coaches say the 19-year-old is a calm, strategic player and a strong leader. (Submitted by Dan Ferguson)

Morden said watching Hofer play at the world junior level, he still seesthe same calm, strategic player he remembers coaching as a 13-year-old. "[He] knows what he's doing, knows what he wants to get done [and] expects a lot of his players because he puts a lot into it as well," he said.

Morden said Hofer wasn't always the top goalie when he was selected for the AA St. James team, it was after being cut from AAA tryouts. The former coachsaid Hoferstill had some things to learn, but he never stopped trying to improve.

Winnipeg goalie Joel Hofer's former hockey coaches say the 19-year-old is a calm, strategic player and a strong leader. (Ryan Remiorz/Canadian Press)

"He just took it upon himself, and their family, just to not give up and to explore every opportunity that's available to them," he said. "He just kept with it, knowing that his talent and determination would get him there."

Watching how far Hofer has come, Morden said he feels proud knowing that young goalies will look up to someone he knows is a strong leader who persevered to achieve his goals.

"It's pretty cool for these kids to be on TV, to be somebody that these kids are going to look up to for the next 10 years. It's pretty awesome that it happened here in Winnipeg," he said. "He's a real good kid that's put in the hard work and gotten to where his dreams want him to be."

Prairie pride

Another 19-year-old Manitoban is making his home provinceproud on the ice.

In a tweet following Sunday's championship, Brandon Mayor Rick Chrest boasted his pride aboutCalen Addison, who hails from the Prairie city with a population of about 48,000.

APittsburgh Penguins prospect, Addison currently represents the Lethbridge Hurricanes in Canada'sWHL.

With files from Sam Samson