
Cinderella has arrived to the ball.
While they have certainly earned their place at the 2025 Centennial Cup, presented by Tim Hortons, the Northern Manitoba Blizzard would have to be considered the most unlikely of the 10 national title contenders in Calgary.
Northern Manitoba finished the regular season with the sixth-best record in the Manitoba Junior Hockey League (MJHL), getting to the finish line with losses in three of its last five games.
Among the 118 teams in the Canadian Junior Hockey League, the Blizzard ranked 45th in points percentage (.612) and had the 43rd-best goal differential (+38). The power play was 35th (23.4%) and the penalty kill was 62nd (79.7%).
But when the postseason began? Northern Manitoba was an entirely different team.
The Blizzard eased past the Neepawa Titans in five games, winning four in a row after dropping the opener, and stunned the first-place Winkler Flyers – the defending MJHL champions – with a four-game semifinal sweep.
That set up a league final against the Dauphin Kings that went to the absolute wire, and beyond.
After Northern Manitoba opened up a 3-1 series lead (with the lone blemish a triple-overtime loss in Game 2), the Kings rebounded to force a deciding Game 7.
It took more than 104 minutes of hockey, but Quincy Supprien was the hero late in the third overtime period, sending the Blizzard to Canada’s National Junior A Championship for the first time since they were runners-up as the OCN Blizzard in 2002.
Miguel Bouvier was the offensive star for Northern Manitoba, finishing second in MJHL scoring in the regular season with 74 points (37-37—74), while Taye Timmerman starred between the pipes in the playoffs, posting a 1.68 goals-against average and .937 save percentage while playing every second.
This year marks the 10-year anniversary of the last MJHL team to win the national title, when the Portage Terriers hoisted the trophy on home ice.
HOW THEY GOT TO CALGARY
Manitoba Junior Hockey League Quarterfinal: defeated Neepawa Titans 4-1 (2-3, 4-1, 5-4, 3-2 2OT, 3-2) Semifinal: defeated Winkler Flyers 4-0 (4-2, 3-1, 3-1, 2-1 OT) Final: defeated Dauphin Kings 4-3 (4-0, 3-2 3OT, 4-2, 5-2, 0-3, 1-2, 2-1 3OT)
REGULAR SEASON
Record (W-L-OTL): 35-22-1 (6th in MJHL) Goals for: 188 (8th in MJHL) Goals against: 150 (T-3rd in MJHL) Power play: 54 for 231 (23.4% – 5th in MJHL) Penalty killing: 141 of 177 (79.7% – 8th in MJHL) Longest winning streak: 7 (Dec. 14-Jan. 11)
Top 3 scorers: • Miguel Bouvier – 37G 37A 74P (2nd in MJHL) • Quincy Supprien – 26G 30A 56P (12th in MJHL) • Marlen Edwards – 24G 20A 44P (35th in MJHL)
PLAYOFFS
Record: 12-4 Goals for: 47 Goals against: 30 Power play: 10 for 59 (16.9%) Penalty killing: 43 of 49 (87.8%)
Top 3 scorers: • Marlen Edwards – 5G 10A 15P • Tyler Dahms – 3G 12A 15P • Quincy Supprien – 7G 6A 13P
NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY
2002 – OCN Blizzard | runners-up | 3-3 | 2GF 21GA
COLLEGE & UNIVERSITY COMMITMENTS
Keegan McNeill – Fredonia State University (2025-26) Brett Ward – Fredonia State University (2025-26)
CJHL TOP 20 RANKINGS
Sept. 30 – not ranked Oct. 7 – Honourable Mention Oct. 14 – Honourable Mention Oct. 21 – not ranked Oct. 28 – Honourable Mention Nov. 4 – not ranked Nov. 11 – not ranked Nov. 18 – not ranked Nov. 25 – not ranked Dec. 2 – not ranked Dec. 9 – not ranked Dec. 16 – not ranked Dec. 23 – not ranked Jan. 6 – not ranked Jan. 13 – not ranked Jan. 20 – not ranked Jan. 27 – not ranked Feb. 3 – not ranked Feb. 10 – not ranked Feb. 17 – not ranked Feb. 24 – not ranked March 3 – not ranked March 10 – not ranked
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