Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Dan Weaver

This individual is no longer an employee with The Spokesman-Review.

All Stories

Sports

Chiefs Power Past Tri-City

Mike Babcock asked for more out of his power play Saturday night and the Spokane Chiefs gave it to him. All night long. Five times, the Chiefs went on the power play and three times they came back to the bench with goals, climaxed by Sean Gillam's blast from the right point through a Jason Podollan screen. The goal - with 2:58 left - was the difference in a 4-3 win over the Tri-City Americans.
News >  Nation/World

Playfair Opening A Long Shot In ‘96 Citing $1 Million Losses, Management Won’t Seek Race Dates This Year.

Citing losses of more than $1 million during the last four years, the general manager of Playfair Race Course will not seek a 1996 season when the Washington State Horse Racing Commission meets today. The decision all but assures Spokane of no on-site horse racing for the first time since the sport was suspended for the duration of World War II. General manager Dan Hillyard of Playfair Racing Inc., said Tuesday that if the track is dark in '96, more than 1,000 jobs in the Inland Northwest - mostly seasonal - will be lost.
Sports

Moose Jaw Center Object Of Attention

The asking price for center Curtis Brown is the question of the day as Western Hockey League general managers gather for meetings capped by tonight's All-Star game in Prince George, British Columbia. It's no secret that Brown, a second-round draft choice of the NHL Buffalo Sabres, is on the trading block. His club, the Moose Jaw Warriors, are out of playoff contention in the WHL East. The trading deadline is Thursday.
Sports

Ex-Chief To Take Look At College

Chad Gans beat the Spokane Chiefs to Medicine Hat by a week, but it wasn't the homecoming he'd hoped for. The Chiefs released the 19-year-old left wing Friday. Gans, acquired Nov. 21 from the Moose Jaw Warriors, is back home in Medicine Hat, where the Chiefs play the Tigers on Saturday night.
Sports

Chiefs Mow Over Kamloops, Earn First-Place Tie

Here's how good it's going. The Kamloops Blazers - THE Kamloops Blazers, the reigning champions of junior hockey - went up by a goal in the first period Saturday night and Mike Babcock hardly noticed. What the coach of the Spokane Chiefs was seeing at the time was domination, a one-sidedness from the start that marked the Chiefs' 4-1 win before 10,528 at the Arena.
Sports

Chiefs’ Rivals Make Trades For Stretch

Two Western Hockey League contenders acquired players this week in hopes of mounting stronger stretch runs in the tightly bunched West Division. The Tri-City Americans picked up right wing Mike Dubinsky Wednesday from the Brandon Wheat Kings for center Dorian Anneck and a second-round pick in the 1997 bantam draft. The Kamloops Blazers on Thursday added former Spokane Chief Dean Kletzel, a 19-year-old center who played 55 games here during the '92-93 season.
Sports

Four Chiefs Worthy Of All-Star Status

Although rosters for the Jan. 23 Western Hockey League All-Star game won't be announced until this morning, the educated guess here is that as many as four Spokane Chiefs could play for the West Division. As the league's No. 1-rated goaltender, David Lemanowicz is a shoo-in. Right wing Jason Podollan is another lock. Spokane's Dmitri Leonov, the division's player of the month for December, is expected to make the cut as well. Another worthy of an invitation is Sean Gillam, the Chiefs' defenseman/captain who had hoped to make the Canadian World Junior tournament team.
Sports

Persistent Rebels Tip Chiefs In Last Minute

In a developmental setting such as the Western Hockey League it's sometimes hard to tell the front-runners from the stragglers, so quickly do fortunes change. The young Red Deer Rebels sputtered through the first half of the season while the Spokane Chiefs, stocked with veterans, came out smoking.
Sports

Leeb Brothers Skate On Opposite Sides Tonight

It'll be brother against brother tonight in the Arena when the Spokane Chiefs take on the Red Deer Rebels. Greg Leeb will be at left wing for the Chiefs. At right wing for the Rebels will be his younger brother Brad, a 16-year-old rookie who'll suit for the first time since breaking his wrist on Nov. 22.
Sports

It Takes A Pro To Win Races Playfair Champ Speaks Out For Area Owners, Trainers

1. Thoroughbred trainer Bruce Wagar, left, and his assistant, his daughter, Annette, want to see racing survive at Spokane's Playfair Race Course. Photo by Christopher Anderson/The Spokesman-Review 2. Trainer Bruce Wagar was out of his field when he invested in Playfair Race Course, but he and his daughter, Annette, hope racing has a future in Spokane. Photo by Christopher Anderson/The Spokesman-Review
Sports

Playfair Seeks Answers For 1996 Track Gm Says It Won’t Be Successful Year

Operators of the state's three major race tracks are discussing ways to salvage a 1996 horse racing season in Spokane, the general manager of Spokane's Playfair Race Course said Thursday. Dan Hillyard, Playfair GM, will meet again today with Ron Crockett, president of Emerald Downs, the new track in Auburn that opens in June. The goal is to formulate long-range solutions to Playfair's declining on-site attendance and parimutuel wagering, Hillyard said.
Sports

Fast Start Paves Way For Chiefs

The Spokane Chiefs worked out a new wrinkle on the old hat trick Saturday night. It's the Medicine Hat trick - you score three goals in the first 3 minutes then take the rest of the night off.
Sports

Gillam Puts Chiefs Close To Top Spot

Sean Gillam's three-point night included the game-winning goal Wednesday night as the Spokane Chiefs moved to within two points of the lead in the Western Hockey League West. The Chiefs assumed sole possession of second place - two points behind the division-leading Kamloops Blazers - with a 4-3 win over the Swift Current Broncos before 4,315 at the Arena. Trent Whitfield had a pair of goals after John Cirjak scored for the Chiefs, who took advantage of a Swift Current's manpower shortage with a barrage of power-play goals.
Sports

Hope Dims For Return Of Chiefs’ Talented Center

The Spokane Chiefs appear to have lost a promising talent for the balance of the year. Center Jared Hope, who has suffered two concussions this season that have limited him to five games, will return Monday to his Edmonton home where he'll stay until his situation improves, Chiefs general manager Tim Speltz said Tuesday. "It looks more and more like he won't be back this season," Speltz said, "unless things improve."