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2025 centennial cup sijhl kam river

Road to the 2025 Centennial Cup: Kam River Fighting Walleye

The SIJHL champions clamped down defensively to book a second trip to the national championship in three years

Jason LaRose
|
May 5, 2025
|

Defence wins championships.

It’s cliché, but the Kam River Fighting Walleye are living proof the old adage still applies.

The Fighting Walleye earned their second Superior International Junior Hockey League (SIJHL) title in three years largely on the back of a stifling defence, allowing less than two goals a game on their 14-game playoff run.

Ironwood managed just four in a four-game sweep in the quarterfinals, Thunder Bay had nine in a four-game semifinal sweep and the Dryden Ice Dogs scored 13 in a six-game defeat in the league final as Kam River booked its spot at the 2025 Centennial Cup, presented by Tim Hortons.

Add it up, and that’s 26 goals against in 14 games.

Not surprisingly, goaltender Ashton Sadauskas was the top netminder in the postseason, fashioning a 1.77 goals-against average and .935 save percentage while playing every second for the Fighting Walleye.

That follows a regular season that saw Sadauskas lead the SIJHL in wins (25), GAA (2.39) and save percentage (.926) as Kam River allowed only 118 goals across its 50 games. And don’t think you’ll be more successful on the power play; the Fighting Walleye killed penalties at an 85.1% clip, 12th-best among the 118 teams that comprise the Canadian Junior Hockey League.

This is not to say the Fighting Walleye are one-dimensional. Far from it. Kam River led the SIJHL with 236 goals scored in the regular season and added 54 in the playoffs, averaging almost four goals a game.

Daxton Lang (35-51—86) and Jett Mintenko (30-52—82) ran away atop the league scoring chart, with Mintenko finishing 16 points ahead of third place.

Now comes the journey from tiny Oliver Paipoonge to Calgary, where the Fighting Walleye will look to improve on their last-place finish from the 2023 Centennial Cup in Portage la Prairie, Manitoba.

HOW THEY GOT TO CALGARY

Superior International Junior Hockey League
Quarterfinal: defeated Ironwood Lumberjacks 4-0 (5-1, 6-2, 6-0, 4-1)
Semifinal: defeated Thunder Bay North Stars 4-0 (5-3, 3-2 OT, 2-1 OT, 4-3 OT)
Final: defeated Dryden Ice Dogs 4-2 (6-2, 1-2, 3-2 OT, 2-0, 3-4 OT, 4-3 OT)

REGULAR SEASON

Record (W-L-OTL): 39-13-1 (2nd in SIJHL)
Goals for: 236 (1st in SIJHL)
Goals against: 118 (1st in SIJHL)
Power play: 50 for 197 (25.4% – 4th in SIJHL)
Penalty killing: 194 of 228 (85.1% – 2nd in SIJHL)
Longest winning streak: 7 (Feb. 21-March 14)

Top 3 scorers:
• Daxton Lang – 35G 51A 86P (1st in SIJHL)
• Jett Mintenko – 30G 52A 82P (2nd in SIJHL)
• Kaden Goodwin – 25G 41A 66P (4th in SIJHL)

PLAYOFFS

Record: 12-2
Goals for: 54
Goals against: 26
Power play: 12 for 49 (24.5%)
Penalty killing: 50 of 60 (83.3%)

Top 3 scorers:
• Jett Mintenko – 8G 9A 17P
• Kaden Goodwin – 8G 7A 15P
• Daxton Lang – 3G 12A 15P

NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY

2023 – Kam River Fighting Walleye | 10th place | 0-4 | 6GF 25GA

COLLEGE & UNIVERSITY COMMITMENTS

None

CJHL TOP 20 RANKINGS

Sept. 30 – not ranked
Oct. 7 – not ranked
Oct. 14 – not ranked
Oct. 21 – not ranked
Oct. 28 – not ranked
Nov. 4 – not ranked
Nov. 11 – not ranked
Nov. 18 – not ranked
Nov. 25 – not ranked
Dec. 2 – not ranked
Dec. 9 – Honourable Mention
Dec. 16 – not ranked
Dec. 23 – not ranked
Jan. 6 – not ranked
Jan. 13 – Honourable Mention
Jan. 20 – not ranked
Jan. 27 – Honourable Mention
Feb. 3 – 20th
Feb. 10 – 20th
Feb. 17 – 20th
Feb. 24 – 20th
March 3 – Honourable Mention
March 10 – Honourable Mention

For more information:

Esther Madziya
Manager, Communications
Hockey Canada

(403) 284-6484 

emadziya@hockeycanada.ca 

Spencer Sharkey
Manager, Communications
Hockey Canada

(403) 777-4567

ssharkey@hockeycanada.ca

Jeremy Knight
Manager, Corporate Communications
Hockey Canada

(647) 251-9738

jknight@hockeycanada.ca

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