Watch highlights from Game 4 of the second round series between the Saskatoon Blades and Red Deer Rebels – April 17, 2024 ...
Anaheim Ducks prospect Egor Sidorov netted a hat trick as the Blades forced the Rebels to the brink of elimination. For the latest ...
Watch highlights from Game 2 of the second round series between the Saskatoon Blades and Red Deer Rebels – April 14, 2024 ...
Watch highlights from Game 1 of the second round series between the Saskatoon Blades and Red Deer Rebels – April 12, 2024 ...
Frantisek Formanek's first goal of the series would stand as the game-winner as the Rebels eliminated the Tigers in five games.
First-round highlights from Game 4 action between the Medicine Hat Tigers and Red Deer Rebels - April 3, 2024. For the latest ...
Carson Latimer scored twice and Samuel Drancak buried in overtime to seal a 4-3 OT win for the Red Deer Rebels. #WHLPlayoffs ...
Highlights from Game 2 of the 2024 WHL Playoffs between the Red Deer Rebels and Medicine Hat Tigers - March 30, 2024.
The Medicine Hat Tigers are a junior ice hockey team in the Western Hockey League who play out of Medicine Hat, Alberta, Canada. Established in 1970.
The Red Deer Rebels are a Western Hockey League junior ice hockey team based in Red Deer, Alberta, Canada. A "Name the Team" contest ran in Red Deer from October 7 to 17, 1991.
Co-op Place is a 7,100-seat indoor arena located in Medicine Hat, Alberta, Canada. It opened on August 22, 2015 as the new home of the Medicine Hat Tigers of the Western Hockey League, replacing the Medicine Hat Arena.In late September 2017, Canalta Centre General Manager Peter Jelinski was let go after few events reached capacity and the new facility failed to reach many of its targeted goals.
"Cool Places" is a 1983 new wave song recorded by American pop band Sparks in collaboration with the Go-Go's rhythm guitarist and backing vocalist Jane Wiedlin. It was the second single of the band to enter into the Billboard Hot 100.
Corseyard Farm, known locally as the Coo Palace and now marketed under that name, is an architecturally unusual dairy farm near Kirkandrews in Scotland, built between 1911 and 1914 and since converted into holiday accommodation. Erected for the Manchester businessman James Brown as part of a series of flamboyant improvements to the Knockbrex Estate, which he had bought in 1894, it was designed in the Gothic Revival style to resemble a fortified castle with battlemented rooves, arrowslit windows and arched entrances.