OHL Alumni Central
Find Out Where Your Favourite OHL Grads Are Playing
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Aug 16
For Ontario Hockey League grad Rob Schremp, 2010-11 seemed looked like the year he’d finally crossed the mountain and became a full-fledged National Hockey League regular. However, Schremp has left the NHL and North America behind to play for MODO of Sweden’s Elitserien for the 2011-12 season.
Schremp played four season in the Ontario Hockey League from 2002-03 to 2005-06. He began his career with the Mississauga IceDogs and won the Emms Family Award as OHL rookie of the year in his first season, playing along side fellow American born player, Patrick O’Sullivan.
In 2003-04, after just three games with the IceDogs in which he average two points per game, Rob was traded to the London Knights. He scored 28 goals and totalled 90 points with London that season. The following year, he increased his point total to 90 on 41 goals and added another 29 points in the playoffs as the Knights won the Robertson Cup and Memorial Cup.
2005-06 was by far Schremp’s most productive in the Ontario Hockey League. His 57 goals, 88 assists and 145 points in just 57 games were all league highs. He won the Eddie Powers Trophy as the league’s top point-getter but was denied the Red Tilson Trophy as MVP which went to Wojtek Wolski of the Brampton Battalion.
In both his final two seasons in the Ontario Hockey League, Schremp played for Team USA at the IIHF World Junior Hockey Championships. In both years, USA was denied the podium, taking fourth place in both tournaments.
Rob was taken by the Edmonton Oilers in the first round of the 2004 NHL Entry Draft, 25th overall. In his first pro season, he played just one regular season with the Oilers while spending the rest of his time in the AHL with the Wilkes-Barre Scranton Penguins. The following season, he doubled his total of NHL games with two. He was the ninth leading point-getter during the 2007-08 season, contributing 67 for the Springfield Falcons.
2008-09 saw him double his NHL games from the previous season again. He played four games for the Edmonton Oilers, registering his first NHL points with three assists. A trade to the New York Islanders organization in saw him finally play a significant amount of games with 44. He produced 25 points for the Islanders, including seven goals in those 44 games.
This past season, Schremp started out with the Islanders, playing 45 games. He finished the season with the Atlanta Thrashers, playing 18 more games.
Tagged as: atlanta thrashers, eddie powers trophy, elitserien, emms family award, london knights, memorial cup, mississauga icedogs, MODO, new york islanders, Ontario Hockey League, rob schremp, robertson cup, SwedenComments Off -
Jun 22
Ontario Hockey League European imports are typically limited to players from the Czech Republic and Russia. However, every once in a while, a Swede finds his way to the OHL. Anton Hedman played two seasons in the Ontario Hockey League, 2005-06 and 2006-07. In his first year, he played 60 games with the Sudbury Wolves, scoring 18 goals and totaling 34 points. He was the 37th overall pick by the Wolves in the 2005 CHL Import Draft. The following season, he split his time between the Owen Sound Attack and Guelph Storm.
The Stockholm, Sweden native came to the Ontario Hockey League already a prospect of the NHL’s Boston Bruins. Hedman was taken by Boston in the eighth round of the 2004 NHL Entry Draft, 255th overall. Anton played a season in Sweden’s under 20 SuperElit league with Djurgarden before coming to Canada.Things didn’t pan out in North America and Hedman returned to Sweden for the 2007-08 season. He played three years with various teams in the Allsvenskan (Sweden’s tier 2 professional league) before stepping up to the Elitserien with MODO this past season, 2010-11.
In his first season at the elite level, Hedman played 48 of MODO’s 55 regular season games, scoring five goals and contributed a total of twelve points. The team finished dead last in the twelve team Elitserien and narrowly escaped relegation. MODO is just a few years removed from winning the league championship, having won in 2007.
Many familiar names have played for MODO through the years before their big breaks in the NHL, including: Anders Hedberg, Tomas Gradin, Anders Kallur, Bo Berglund, Lars Lindgren, Tomas Jonsson, Lars Molin, Markus Näslund, Peter Forsberg, Niklas Sundström, Anders Eriksson, Mattias Timander, Per Svartvadet, Hans Jonsson, Henrik and Daniel Sedin, Samuel Påhlsson and Mattias Karlin.
Check out Anton Hedman’s profile page at the MODO official website.
Tagged as: anton hedman, boston bruins, elitserien, guelph storm, MODO, Ontario Hockey League, owen sound attack, sudbury wolves, SwedenComments Off -
Mar 28
Dan Hinote had a respectable 503 game NHL career from 1999-00 to 2008-09. The Oshawa General alumnus moved on to play in Sweden for the 2009-10 season. MODO was the team that took him in during the 2004-05 NHL strike season and they were the ones that took him back this season.Dan was an Oshawa General for the 1996-97 and 1997-98 seasons, although his final season was split between the Generals and the AHL’s Hershey Bears. In his first season, Oshawa was play-off champions but would not find success at the Memorial Cup.
Dan played with the Colorado Avalanche, the team he was drafted by, from 1999-00 to 2005-06. His time in Denver was highlighted by a Stanley Cup victory in 2001.
Hinote played his final three seasons in the NHL with the St. Louis Blues before heading over to Sweden. MODO, unfortunately, finished 9th in the 12 team league during regular season play and did not qualify for the playoffs.
You can view Dan Hinote’s profile page at MODO’s official website by clicking here.
Tagged as: colorado avalanche, dan hinote, MODO, ohl, Ontario Hockey League, oshawa generals, sel, st. louis blues, Sweden



