| Dean Bertoia shakes hands with Kent Kowalski, right. |
On Thursday during a news conference at the Gordie Howe Sports Centre building on the Gordie Howe Sports complex grounds, five athletes, three builders and one team were named to the 2026 class for the Hall. The Hall also named the Saskatoon 60+ Hockey League as the Sports Organization of the Year. The official induction dinner will take place on Saturday, November 7 at 5:30 p.m. at Prairieland Park.
The Huskies alums entering the Hall in that athletes category include Dean Bertoia in track and field, Terry Johnson in wrestling and Kent Kowalski in soccer. The lone team inductee for the 2026 class is the 2003-04 Huskies Men’s Volleyball Team that captured Canada West Conference and U Sports championships. Back in 2003-04, U Sports was known as Canadian Interuniversity Sport.
Kowalski played five seasons as a keeper for the Huskies Men’s Soccer Team from 1988 to 1992 picking up one second team all-Canadian all-star award and one first team all-Canadian all-star nod. Following his Huskies playing days, Kowalski has served as an assistant coach for the Huskies soccer program for most of the last 25 years. He was pumped to find out he was going to be part of the 2026 class for the Saskatoon Sports Hall of Fame.
“It is a great honour,” said Kowalski. “If you look at a lot of the faces and names that are in the Hall, it is nice to be considered as part of that group.
“Saskatoon has had so many great athletes over the years. I’m just happy to be considered. It is always an honour to be recognized for your past achievements.”
The 2003-04 Huskies Men’s Volleyball Team will get to have their third big reunion in the last four years. In 2023, they were inducted to the University of Saskatchewan Athletic Wall of Fame, and they entered the Saskatchewan Sports Hall of Fame in 2024. Brian Gavlas, who is the head coach for the 2003-04 Huskies squad, said everyone with that team was pretty happy to get the nod to join the Saskatoon Sports Hall of Fame.
“It is a great honour,” said Gavlas. “There are a lot of outstanding athletes, builders and teams that are in the Hall.
“Being able to join that group and then also to join some of the groups that have been successful in our sport as well, I think it is a good honour and something that all of our guys and our team and hopefully the university is very proud of.”
Kowalski had a lengthy playing career in soccer that wrapped around his time with the Huskies. He played in the 1989 Canada Summer Game as a keeper for Saskatchewan’s provincial team.
| Bob Reindl shakes hands with Brian Gavlas, right. |
In 2012 at age 41, Kowalski played his final game as a keeper at the Canadian’s men’s amateur soccer championship helping the Huskie United Soccer Association of Saskatoon win bronze. Those experiences created a tone of lasting impressions.
“My biggest memories were with the Huskie days just getting lots of work and action,” said Kowalski. “The team at that time was so critical to development.
“I certainly remember some of the games in the Canada Games, because that was sort of a launching point for me in my career. My first start in the Canadian Soccer League I’ll always remember more than any other game in my career. And then, honestly, the final game at age 41 at nationals and playing it.
“I’m not sure I had the skills at that point, but they believed in me enough to play me, and it was a good way to finish my career.”
In the Fury’s CSL championship season in 1992, Kowalski backed up Pat Onstad, who is a member of the Canadian Soccer Hall of Fame. The Fury faced the Vancouver 86ers in a two-game series in the CSL final.
In Game 1 in Winnipeg, the Fury posted a 2-0 victory, and they sealed the series win with a 1-1 draw in Game 2 in Vancouver. Kowalski holds that campaign close to his heart.
“I was fortunate at the time I came through to be on that team,” said Kowalski. “Those first two years there were a little bit rougher.
“Then halfway through that 92 season if you look back at the quality of that team, I’d say the majority of those players ended up playing for Canada’s national team and were part of that Gold Cup winning team (in 2000). Even if you watch a lot of the Canadian soccer games now, a lot of those players are still mentioned. It was incredible, and to beat Vancouver at home in that final (home) game, it is hard to overlook having that opportunity at that age.”
The 2003-04 Huskies Men’s Volleyball Team was playing in an era where they were constantly battling the University of Manitoba Bisons and the University of Alberta Golden Bears for top spot in both Canada West and U Sports as a whole. The Huskies finished third in the Canada West regular season standings with a 14-6 mark behind both Alberta and Manitoba.
| The Saskatoon Sports Hall of Fame presser attracted a good gathering. |
At the U Sports Championship Tournament hosted by the Universite Laval in Quebec City, the Huskies downed Universite de Sherbrooke Vert et Or 3-0 in a quarter-final and took down the Spartans 3-0 in a semifinal. That set up a gold medal match against the Golden Bears.
In the championship final, the Huskies prevailed 3-2 by set scores of 27-25, 25-21, 19-25, 22-25 and 16-14. In the fifth set, the Huskies closed out the match scoring the championship point on a monster block from middle Darren Dove and outside hitter Adam Ens.
Ens took home honours at the U Sports Men’s Volleyball Player of the Year and was named the BLG Award as the U Sports Male Athlete of the Year.
Outside hitter Andrew Lockhart claimed the Dale Iwanoczko TSN Award for commitment to academics and the community. Outside hitter Joel Ens, who is Adam’s brother, was named the MVP of the U Sports Championship Tournament.
“It is a good memory,” said Gavlas. “The previous year with very close to the similar team we lost a tough semifinal in five sets to Manitoba.
“The guys who returned came back pretty hungry. The biggest joy I have out of that group is the knowledge that four of our starters were red shirts (at one point in their careers), so that means that they weren’t real great coming in. They had to develop.
“They had to get better and to compete with the best in the country was a really tough task. The fact that those guys did that and evolved and developed and were able to succeed is a significant accomplishment. The fact that we had probably the best player in the country at the time didn’t hurt either.”
When the 2003-04 Huskies were inducted into the University of Saskatchewan Athletic Wall of Fame in 2023, Gavlas told his players they might have the chance to get together for a couple of more induction ceremonies.
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| Part of the 2026 Saskatoon Sports Hall of Fame class sits together. |
“We were a pretty good team, a group of Saskatchewan kids that played pretty hard and evolved,” said Gavlas. “We’re looking forward to getting together again, and hopefully, we get a good turnout and have a bit of a reunion again.”
Also heading to the Hall in the athlete category are Colin Coben in golf and Rob Scheller in softball. The three builders in the 2026 class include Gabriel Brecht in bowling, Bob Haver in rowing and Gary Loy in ringette.
Regier, Wildeman featured in “Howe
Happenings”
| Sam Regier takes part in pole vault at the SSSAD championships. |
The Grade 12 students from Aden Bowman Collegiate have committed to joining the University of Saskatchewan Huskies Track and Field program in the fall. On Tuesday, I went live with new content for the “Howe Happenings” blog that supports the Gordie Howe Sports Complex. I put together a feature on Regier and Wildeman, who have been regulars training at the Track and Field Track on the Complex’s grounds as members of the Saskatoon Track and Field Club.
Regier missed pretty much all of his Grade 11 year with a hamstring injury. He returned to write a memorable conclusion to his high school career.
At the Saskatoon Secondary Schools Athletic Directorate’s Bob Adams City Track and Field Championship that ran May 27 to 28 at the Track and Field Track, Regier captured gold in the senior boys’ 100-metre hurdles and silver in the shot put and pole vault.
At the Saskatchewan High Schools Athletic Association Track and Field Championships that ran last Friday and Saturday at the Track and Field Track, Regier picked up a pair of silver medals. He took second in the senior boy’s pole vault with a vault of 4.15 metres and second in the 100-metre hurdles with a time of 13.93 seconds.
| Charlotte Wildeman won four high school provincial titles in pole vault. |
Wildeman’s biggest highlight came when she took home gold in the pole vault with a vault of 3.00 metres. That marked the fourth straight year that Wildeman won a gold medal in pole vault at a Saskatchewan high school provincial championship meet. The victory gave Wildeman a special wrap up to her high school career.
The piece on Regier and Wildeman can be found by clicking right here.
I also put together a photo roundup that is anchored by images from the Saskatoon Berries WCBL home opener and has pictures from all sorts of outdoor sports. The photo roundup can be found by clicking right here.
If you have any comments you would like to pass along about this post, feel free to email them to stankssports@gmail.com.
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