
Stace Page
Walk into the Gordon Alcott Arena at the Mold-Masters SportsPlex in Georgetown on any given game night, and your eyes will eventually find the north wall at ice level. Four jerseys hang there — honoured, retired, preserved. They tell the story of the Georgetown Raiders’ greatest players. One of them belongs to Stace Page. This spring, that jersey will tell an even bigger story, as Page is set to be inducted into the Ontario Junior Hockey League Hall of Fame in 2026 — deserved recognition for one of the most prolific offensive players the league has ever produced. Born on September 2, 1980, in Brampton, the left winters career with the Raiders was nothing short of extraordinary. Over four seasons wearing Georgetown’s colours, Page racked up 341 points and worked his way up to the captaincy — the “C” stitched to his jersey a testament to the respect he’d earned from teammates and coaches alike. If there is one campaign that crystallizes what Stace Page brought to the ice, it is the 1998-99 season. A teenager finding his stride in the OJHL, Page lit up scoreboards across the league, finishing with an astonishing 124 points — a number that announced him, loudly and without ambiguity, as one of the most dangerous offensive forces in Ontario junior A hockey. But even that benchmark proved not to be his ceiling. By the time the 2000-01 season arrived, Page was a seasoned OJHL veteran, a captain and the kind of player opposing coaches built game plans around. He responded by scoring 54 goals in just 49 games. It was his second 50-goal campaign of his Raiders career, a feat so rare it places him in exclusive company in league history. His jersey hangs alongside Mike Knoepfli, Ryan Busby and Dave Bouskill in the Georgetown arena. Following his time with the Raiders, Page’s hockey journey took him south of the border to Canton, New York, and St. Lawrence University, where he played four seasons for one of the most storied NCAA Division I programs in the country.