Oklahoma
Who are Oklahoma Warriors? NAHL team has brought high-level hockey back to OKC
Blazers Ice Centre, on the east side of I-35 near the I-240 interchange, is an unassuming building. Thousands pass by it every day on their morning commutes, not realizing that some of the best 16 to 20-year-old hockey players in the nation, and from around the world, are inside skating up a sweat.
The Oklahoma Warriors of the North American Hockey League (NAHL) are the most interesting team you’ve probably never heard of.
“There’s a lot of people that still don’t know we’re here,” Warriors coach Nate Weossner said Wednesday after a morning practice.
Two seasons ago, the team’s inaugural year in Oklahoma City after relocating from Wichita Falls, Texas, the Warriors won the NAHL Robertson Cup. The Warriors were crowned champions of a 35-team league stretching from Anchorage to Amarillo and Shreveport, Louisiana, to Lewiston, Maine.
At 7 p.m. Friday, the Warriors, who wear orange and black, will open season No. 3 in Oklahoma City with a game against the Amarillo Wranglers at Blazers Ice Centre.
Oklahoma City has been a hockey desert since the Barons left town a decade ago, and the city hasn’t truly embraced hockey, been energized by it, since the CHL days. The Blazers were the biggest show in town, playing in front of raucous crowds at the Myriad.
Oklahoma City has since joined the big leagues with the Thunder and plenty of other entertainment options, but for fans who miss the Blazers, who want to see high-level hockey, the Oklahoma Warriors are hoping to fill that void, albeit on a more intimate scale.
“There’s beer, there’s fights, there’s everything we had with the Blazers, just a little bit younger,” said assistant coach Mick Berge, who grew up in Oklahoma City.
The NAHL is a Tier-II junior hockey league that’s been around for 50 years.
For the uninitiated, junior hockey isn’t what it sounds like.
“For people that aren’t in it, it is difficult to understand,” Weossner said. “Like, what are these guys? Because you look at ‘em and you’re going, ‘They’re pretty f—–’ good.”
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What is NAHL junior hockey?
We’re well acquainted with the path the best football players take from the preps to the pros. We know all about high school hoops, the AAU circuits, college basketball and professional leagues around the world. In baseball, some future big-leaguers turn pro after high school. Others go to college.
Hockey is different. Junior hockey is a level without a parallel in other sports.
“Nobody really understands what level we’re at,” Berge said. “I try to let them know how good this hockey is.”
The USHL is the top junior hockey league in the country. The NAHL, which the Warriors play in, is one tier below.
Think of junior hockey as a developmental level between high school and college. Most junior hockey players have graduated high school while others are still finishing up. Those still in school are likely taking their classes online.
A lot of college hockey players enter their freshman year at 21, having spent several years in junior hockey before aging out at age 20.
While the players are unpaid, the Warriors operate like a professional franchise. They scout players, sell sponsorships and make money off gate proceeds and concession and merchandise sales. George Chalos, a Utah-based attorney, owns the team.
Berge, whose parents moved from North Dakota to Oklahoma, lived the junior hockey life. After two years at Putnam City High School, Berge left home at 16 to pursue hockey.
He spent a year in Dallas and then three years in Lincoln, Nebraska, where he graduated high school and finished his junior hockey career.
From the USHL, Berge played four years at Minnesota State University in Mankato. Hockey is in his blood. His dad played at the University of North Dakota and was drafted by the Philadelphia Flyers. His brother also coaches.
Weossner, the Warriors’ head coach and general manager, played junior hockey in Canada. Weossner, from Bemidji, Minnesota, played college hockey at Minnesota-Crookston.
Last season, 340 NAHL players committed to play college hockey. According to the NAHL, 77% of those players were Division-I commits.
“These guys are all capable of playing in the NCAA,” Weossner said, looking out onto the ice, where some of his players were getting in work after practice.
And after that?
“They wanna play in the NHL,” Weossner said.
He didn’t back down from the lofty goal. Only 45 players with NAHL ties have been selected in the last nine NHL drafts, according to the NAHL.
“We want guys who want to play in the NHL,” Weossner said. “Now, are they all going to make the National Hockey League? No. But will some of them? Maybe. And we want guys who want that. We want guys that are intentional, that come with a compete level that is driven toward that goal.”
Weossner pushes his guys.
“Let’s not be casual,” he said during a lull in practice. “We’re not a casual team.”
Weossner shares a motto with his team: “We’re gonna figure out how we’re going to do something rather than worry about why we can’t.”
“We want people that are intentional, and we want guys that are gonna drive our game plan and drive their goal setting,” Weossner said. “And if we have those types of guys, the hockey takes care of itself.”
More: Mussatto: Don’t call it a trap game. OU football is not good enough to overlook Tulane.
Who are the Oklahoma Warriors?
The Warriors have a 25-man roster. One player is from Oklahoma. One is from Russia. Three are Slovakian.
The rest are from places you might guess. Like Watertown, Massachusetts, the hometown of Warriors captain Ollie Chessler.
This is Chessler’s second season with the Warriors.
“It’s obviously a lot different being from the East Coast and moving down here, but it’s been awesome,” Chessler said.
Chessler, like a lot of Warriors, lives with a host family.
“These families open up their homes, open up their hearts to have us,” Chessler said. “It’s an awesome experience all around.
“Those people are the lifeblood of our team,” Weossner added. “It’s an unreal experience for both them and the players. You’re bringing somebody into your home and you basically become part of their family. A lot of these guys will carry that relationship for a long, long time.”
This will be Chessler’s last season with the Warriors. He’s committed to play at Union College in Schenectady, New York.
Chessler has enjoyed his time in Oklahoma City. He’s been to Thunder games and even an OU football game.
“Obviously there’s a bunch of people who don’t know that there’s a hockey team here, but I think as we keep getting better and we keep winning games and putting a good product on the ice, the word is getting out,” Chessler said.
Berge has taken it upon himself to get the word out.
The Warriors are the only NAHL team in Oklahoma. They play in the South Division, which also includes teams from Colorado, Louisiana, New Mexico and Texas.
“We’ll have scouts in this barn a lot,” said Berge, who expects capacity crowds of a couple thousand fans. “A lot of colleges come to watch to recruit these kids, professional scouts will be here, NHL scouts will be here to watch. It’s just a different dynamic compared to any other sport, so it’s very hard to explain until you get in the door and see it.”
Berge invited legendary Blazers coach Doug Sauter to do the ceremonial puck drop before the season opener Friday.
Having grown up here, coaching the Warriors has taken on extra meaning for Berge.
“It’s my dream,” he said.
When the Warriors are on the ice, Blazers Ice Centre is filled with dreams.
“To watch them know how hard it is, discover how difficult it is, really learn what it’s like to compete and watching them go through that process” Weossner said, “it’s the best feeling in the world.”
Joe Mussatto is a sports columnist for The Oklahoman. Have a story idea for Joe? Email him at jmussatto@oklahoman.com. Support Joe’s work and that of other Oklahoman journalists by purchasing a digital subscription today at subscribe.oklahoman.com.
Oklahoma
No. 14 Oklahoma Rallies for Win Over Oral Roberts Behind Willits’ Grand Slam
NORMAN — The Sooners were behind the eight ball for much of Tuesday’s game against Oral Roberts.
But one swing of the bat got them in a more favorable position.
Shortstop Jaxon Willits blasted a grand slam in the sixth inning to give No. 14 Oklahoma its first lead before eventually winning 7-6.
The Sooners trailed by as many as five runs before they rallied late.
In the first inning, Oral Roberts’ Cooper Combs hit a two-out grand slam to give the Golden Eagles a comfortable cushion. OU infielder Deiten Lachance got the Sooners on the board in the second inning with a solo home run, but ORU responded with a solo shot of its own in the next frame.
The Golden Eagles made it a 6-1 run game in the top of the fourth, and they appeared to be on cruise control. But in the bottom of that frame, OU’s rally began.
Dasan Harris made it a four-run game again with a sacrifice fly in the bottom of the fourth before Camden Johnson hit a sacrifice fly of his own in the fifth.
Then, in the sixth, the Sooners took their first lead of the game.
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Harris singled before Kyle Branch and Connor Larkin walked to load the bases. Willits then swung at the first pitch he saw, sending it well over the right-center field fence.
Neither team scored after Willits’ home run, as OU relief pitcher Xander Mercurius retired nine ORU batters in a row to seal the Sooners’ one-run win.
Michael Catalano started on the mound for Oklahoma, but his outing was short-lived — he gave up four earned runs on two hits and five walks in 1 ⅓ innings.
After coach Skip Johnson relieved Catalano in the second inning, six different OU arms entered the game. Reid Hensley collected the win, while Mercurius got the save.
OU improved to 28-12 overall with the win, while Oral Roberts dropped to 23-15. The Sooners are 7-3 in midweek games this season, and they clinched the season sweep of the Golden Eagles on Tuesday.
Next, the Sooners will hit the road for a three-game series against Auburn. The Tigers, ranked No. 11 by D1Baseball, are 10-8 in SEC play and took two of three games against Florida over the weekend.
The series will open on Friday, and first pitch is scheduled for 6 p.m.
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Oklahoma
Did Oklahoma Stay Atop the Polls After Tumultuous Week?
NORMAN — After an up-and down week that saw Oklahoma drop the lone Bedlam match of the season, and then split two tight games with Arkansas before blowing out the Razorbacks on Sunday, the Sooners remained No. 1 in the NFCA/Go Rout coaches’ poll released Tuesday.
But there’s far from a consensus.
Oklahoma received 12 first-place votes — the same total they had last week — but five other teams received first-place votes.
Texas Tech remained No. 2 with four four-place votes and Alabama No. 3 with seven. Nebraska moved up two spots to No. 4 with four first-place votes, followed by Florida with two and UCLA with two.
Texas is No. 7, followed by Tennessee, Arkansas and Florida State.
Texas A&M, the Sooners’ opponent for the final regular-season weekend in two weeks, comes in at No. 11.
Other SEC teams include Georgia at No. 15, Mississippi State at No. 17 and LSU at No. 20.
OU hosts the Georgia Bulldogs in a three-game series beginning Friday.
Other Sooners’ opponents this season in the polls include No. 14 Duke, No. 18 Oklahoma State, No. 19 Arizona, No. 24 Arizona State and No. 25 Washington.
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Oklahoma also remained in the top spot in the D1Softball poll, with Alabama No. 2 there followed by Texas Tech, Nebraska at Texas.
The Sooners dropped a spot in the Softball America poll, with Nebraska elevating to No. 1 behind the two-way stardom of former OU standout Jordy Frahm (formerly Jordy Bahl).
Frahm is 13-4 with a 1.36 ERA and 157 strikeouts in 118 2/3 innings in the circle and hitting .440 with 16 home runs and 42 RBIs. Another former Sooners player, Hannah Coor, is among the Cornhuskers’ regulars as well.
The Sooners have 158 home runs, just three away from tying their own season record in the category, but UCLA has closed the gap in a major way, sitting just four behind Oklahoma.
OU freshman sensation Kendall Wells leads the nation with 34 home runs, three ahead of UCLA’s Megan Grant. Wells tied Jocelyn Alo‘s program record for home runs in a season with her home run in Sunday’s win.
The Sooners host Arkansas-Pine Bluff at 6 p.m. Tuesday in their final non-conference game of the season before opening the series against Georgia at 6:30 p.m. Friday at Love’s FIeld.
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Oklahoma
Putnam City West moves to virtual learning after student incident
Putnam City West High School will shift to virtual learning on Tuesday after an incident involving two students prompted an investigation by the district and Oklahoma City police, according to Putnam City Schools.
District officials said administrators were alerted near the end of the school day Monday to an altercation involving two students in the school’s arena area.
Officials said the students left campus, and the case was turned over to Putnam City Campus Police and the Oklahoma City Police Department for investigation.
District officials said no students or staff were harmed and there is no ongoing safety threat related to the incident.
What we know
Putnam City West sent the following email to all families and staff at the school:
All PCW students and staff will transition to virtual learning for Tuesday, April 21st.
Today, an isolated serious incident involving two students occurred on school grounds. Near the end of the school day, administrators were alerted to an altercation between two students in the arena area. The individuals involved quickly left campus, prompting an initial fact-finding response by school administrators before the matter was turned over to Putnam City Campus Police and the Oklahoma City Police Department for further investigation. Because this is an active investigation involving students, no further information will be released at this time.
We understand this information may be concerning to students, staff, and families. Please know we are committed to maintaining a safe, secure, and positive learning environment for all students. At Putnam City Schools, student and staff safety remains our highest priority. Therefore, out of an abundance of caution and to allow for a thorough investigation, all PCW students and staff will transition to virtual learning for Tuesday, April 21st. Students will need to check Google Classroom for updates from teachers.
Thank you for your understanding and continued support of PC West.
Putnam City Schools
All students and staff at Putnam City West will transition to virtual learning on Tuesday, April 21, while investigators continue their work, according to the district.
Students were told to check Google Classroom for instructions from teachers.
The district said it is withholding additional details because the case involves students and remains under investigation.
School officials have not said what triggered the incident or whether any arrests have been made.
This is a developing story. Updates will be added as more information becomes available.
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