Search

2025 centennial cup sjhl melfort

Road to the 2025 Centennial Cup: Melfort Mustangs

Runners-up a year ago, the SJHL champions have battled all the way back for another shot at the National Junior A Championship

Jason LaRose
|
May 6, 2025
|

They were so, so close.

One year ago, the Melfort Mustangs won their way all the way to the championship game at the 2024 Centennial Cup, presented by Tim Hortons. Just a single win separated the Mustangs from immortality.

Noah Pak and the Collingwood Blues had other ideas.

Pak made 23 saves, and a power-play goal from Jack Silverman proved to be the game’s only scoring as the Blues captured Canada’s National Junior A Championship with a 1-0 victory.

Twelve months later and Melfort has reloaded for another shot at a national title in Calgary.

Thirteen players are back from the 2024 roster, although two skaters – Zac Somers and Tao Flory – combined to play just one game in Oakville, and goaltender Kristian Coombs got into just one in support of standout starter James Venne.

This time around, Somers led the Mustangs in playoff scoring (8-9—17 in 14 games) and Coombs is the unquestioned No. 1 between the pipes, posting a 1.33 goals-against average and .942 save percentage across 12 postseason starts.

Melfort cruised to the top of the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League (SJHL) during the regular season, winning 46 of 56 games to finish 13 points clear of second-place Flin Flon.

The Mustangs led the SJHL in goals for (221), goals against (123), power play (25.0%) and penalty kill (85.3%), and put together a 17-game win streak from Nov. 13 to Jan. 4.

They were rarely tested in the playoffs, earning a five-game win over the Kindersley Klippers and a sweep of the Yorkton Terriers before winning the final four games of their five-game final against the Weyburn Red Wings to repeat as SJHL champions – with Coombs recording three shutouts. In all, they allowed only 19 goals in 14 playoff games.

Now comes a second chance at glory.

History is not necessarily on Melfort’s side; since the tournament went back to a one-game final in 1985, only two teams have lost in the final and won the national championship the following year – the Penticton Knights (1985-86) and South Surrey Eagles (1997-98).

HOW THEY GOT TO CALGARY

Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League
Quarterfinal: defeated Kindersley Klippers 4-1 (5-2, 6-1, 4-3, 2-3 OT, 5-2)
Semifinal: defeated Yorkton Terriers 4-0 (6-1, 3-0, 4-3, 3-1)
Final: defeated Weyburn Red Wings 4-1 (1-2, 3-0, 1-0, 5-1, 3-0)

REGULAR SEASON

Record (W-L-OTL): 46-8-2 (1st in SJHL)
Goals for: 221 (1st in SJHL)
Goals against: 123 (1st in SJHL)
Power play: 64 for 256 (25.0% – 1st in SJHL)
Penalty killing: 232 of 272 (85.3% – 1st in SJHL)
Longest winning streak: 17 (Nov. 13-Jan. 4)

Top 3 scorers:
• Reilley Kotai – 39G 38A 77P (1st in SJHL)
• Logan Belton – 27G 34A 61P (8th in SJHL)
• Ashton Hutchinson – 18G 34A 52P (15th in SJHL)

PLAYOFFS

Record: 12-2
Goals for: 51
Goals against: 19
Power play: 14 for 64 (21.9%)
Penalty killing: 52 of 57 (91.2%)

Top 3 scorers:
• Zac Somers – 8G 9A 17P
• Reilley Kotai – 7G 10A 17P
• Logan Belton – 7G 3A 10P

NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY

1996 – Melfort Mustangs | runners-up | 5-1 | 35GF 10GA
2015 – Melfort Mustangs | 4th place | 2-3 | 12GF 19GA
2024 – Melfort Mustangs | runners-up | 5-1 | 20GF 12GA

COLLEGE & UNIVERSITY COMMITMENTS

Zac Somers – University of Maine (2025-26)
Nolan Roberts – University of Guelph (2025-26)

CJHL TOP 20 RANKINGS

Sept. 30 – 7th
Oct. 7 – 10th
Oct. 14 – 16th
Oct. 21 – 8th
Oct. 28 – 12th
Nov. 4 – 9th
Nov. 11 – 14th
Nov. 18 – 10th
Nov. 25 – 8th
Dec. 2 – 7th
Dec. 9 – 3rd
Dec. 16 – 3rd
Dec. 23 – 2nd
Jan. 6 – 2nd
Jan. 13 – 2nd
Jan. 20 – 2nd
Jan. 27 – 3rd
Feb. 3 – 6th
Feb. 10 – 6th
Feb. 17 – 6th
Feb. 24 – 5th
March 3 – 5th
March 10 – 5th

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

Recent News
Most Popular
Photos
Videos
2025 U18MWC: CAN 3 – CZE 2 OT (Quarterfinals)
Reschny scored twice—including the overtime winner—for Canada.
2025 U18MWC: CAN 8 – NOR 1 (Preliminary)
Roobroeck’s four-point performance helped Canada power past Norway.
2025 TELUS Cup: Day 7 (Sunday, April 27)
The Pat Canadians won the TELUS Cup, while the Flyers earned the bronze medal.
2025 U18MWC: CAN 5 – FIN 1 (Preliminary)
Ivankovic made 39 saves as Canada beat Finland at U18 Men’s Worlds.
Schedule