Before joining the Fort William North Stars, Lund played all of 2007-08 (his 17-year-old season) and the first 19 games of 2008-09 with the Columbia Valley Rockies of the KIJHL. It's a Junior B league, but most would agree it's a step above most Junior B circuits and close to, if not on par with, the quality of the SIJHL.
Lund wore an A with Fort William last season when they won their second straight league championship.
Eliteprospects.com has him listed at 6'3" and I'd say he's closer to that than the 6'0" indicated on the North Stars' site.
I mentioned that he's closer to home now and he joked that he's "only" nine hours away.
Here's what Cody had to say about the difference between the SIJHL and SJHL:
The play is different, but in the end everyone puts the knee pads on the same. You just gotta go out and play and do what you do best.
Did the trade come as a surprise?
Yeah, a little bit. But I’m here now, a lot of good people here and I’m really enjoying myself. Hopefully it'll be like this the rest of the year. It's been good.
Would he agree he's been brought in to be a gritty shutdown guy?
That’s the role that I’ve gotta play here, and I hope to do here for the rest of the season.
On whether he made a good first impression:
Yeah, I guess so. But it is a team game - it’d be nice to win. We got a road trip coming up this weekend, so hopefully we can go and get four points.
On how big of a role he'll play:
I think that’ll come as time progresses and (Wintoneak) sees me a little bit. We’ll just play it by ear.
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Here's an update on some of the kids we saw in training camp and how they're doing with their respective midget clubs.
Patrick Johnson, G (Saskatoon Contacts) - 5-0, 2.20, .918
Johnson's Contacts are the talk of the SMHL so far. They are undefeated through eight games and have scored 50 goals over that stretch. Johnson isn't seeing a ton of rubber - opponents are firing an average of 26.8 shots at him - and that's not such a good thing for a midget netminder. His save percentage ranks seventh in the league, although four of the guys ahead of him have played only two or three games.
Brennen Bosovich, C (Prince Albert Mintos) - 6-4-9-13
Tanner Kissick's former teammate is on fire to start the season. He has spent some time leading the league in scoring (currently tied for fourth) and was listed by the Tri-City Americans earlier this month. He also earned a one-game suspension last week for a hit from behind in the last 10 minutes of a game Oct. 10.
Nick Eliason, D (Saskatoon Contacts) - 8-2-5-7
Eliason, 17, almost surely would have made this team had he decided to make the jump. He is currently sixth in scoring among midget AAA defencemen, and the Contacts are simply blowing the league away at this point. The Outlook native isn't the highest-scoring blueliner on his team, though; that distinction falls to Cody Pettapiece, whose 17 points have him third in the scoring race.
Colby Daniels, F (Battlefords Stars) - 8-3-3-6
Daniels had a great training camp for someone who had turned 16 barely a month earlier. Five of his points came in two games early in the year, and he is pointless in his last three. He's tied for second in Stars scoring.
Tanner Tyndall, LW (Saskatoon Contacts) - 8-2-3-5
Tyndall, 17, was one of the first cuts from this year's camp. From what I can find, this looks to be his first season in the league, and he's off to a solid start. He had three points in the season opener and has piled up 26 penalty minutes so far.
Austin McDonald, RW (Beardy's Blackhawks) - 8-2-2-4
McDonald has a ton of talent packed into his small frame. He had a great camp, but there was never any question of him going back for his last midget season. Brother Justin has moved on and Austin looks good to shatter last year's 12 points.
Jeff Olson, LW (Battlefords Stars) - 6-1-2-3
The Kindersley native is a late 1993 birthday. He also has a suspension under his belt this year, getting a two-game ban for a gross misconduct during a game against the Yorkton Harvest Oct. 2. He responded with two points in his first game back in Prince Albert.
Cody Thiel, D (Battlefords Stars) - 8-0-2-2
Thiel is another player who voluntarily went back to his midget team. He did crack the team out of camp, but that was before the additions of David Haaf and Cody Lund. The ex-forward is off to a bit of a slow start offensively, but then, the Stars are too at 2-5-1.
Mitchell Schwark, C (Saskatoon Blazers) - 11-1-2-3
Schwark impressed at Klippers camp with his physical play for a 16-year-old. His lone goal so far came on the power play Oct. 9. The Blazers are in a bad funk with one win in their first 11 games - Schwark's three points actually have him tied for fifth in team scoring.
Kindersley defenceman Kadin Schmaltz, a 16-year-old Klipper auto-protect, has played two games with the Swift Current Legionnaires. He played for the West Central Wheat Kings last season, and they do not have a midget team this year.
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