Brandon Sutter 'happy' to attend Oilers training camp on journey back from long COVID detour

It's been almost 50 years since a member of the Sutter family first pulled on a National Hockey League jersey, but Thursday marked the first time Edmonton Oilers colours were donned by someone from the clan originally hailing from Viking, Alta., just 125 kilometres away.
Brandon Sutter spoke of growing up a Calgary Flames fan following his father Brent's retirement from his NHL playing career, living at Sylvan Lake and watching his dad and most of his uncles work in various capacities with the Oilers' provincial rival.
"At school, I noticed everyone was either wearing Flames stuff or Oilers stuff, so I said 'All my uncles coached the Flames, so I'll be a Flames fan," recalled Sutter, who at age 34 is in Oilers training camp on a professional tryout in an attempt to restart an NHL career that's been on hold the past couple of years. "(At the time) that was Brian and then there was Darryl and my dad coached there. Ronnie worked there, Duane worked there, so we were always Flames guys."
And while he's gotten a little ribbing from extended family -- six of the first-generation Sutter brothers played in the NHL followed by six of their offspring being drafted into the league -- Brandon says he's simply glad for the chance to try to make the Oilers roster.
"I got a couple of texts from my cousins when I got the tryout here, but everyone's pretty happy for me and getting the opportunity," said Sutter, who's logged the most NHL games of his hockey-playing cousins with 770, most recently with the Vancouver Canucks. "I'm just happy to be anywhere and I'm just happy to be here."
Players on the ice for Edmonton Oilers training camp on Sept. 21, 2023, at Rogers Place. (CTV News Edmonton)Sutter has been out of on-ice action the past two seasons because of long COVID. He had been under contract with the Canucks when he first missed action due to the respiratory illness, sitting out the 2021-22 NHL campaign, and wasn't re-signed for last season.
"The hardest part was just figuring out for the longest time what was actually wrong," said Sutter, who is one of three players in Oilers camp on a tryout deal. "Once I got that ... I was able to work through it. It just took a long time to get there. The last six to eight months was when I started noticing a difference, sort of feeling like myself again.
"I got my breath back. I had this horrible shortness of breath for about two years. Once I was able to get that back, I started training again and just kept improving and improving."
Oilers general manager Ken Holland said Wednesday the Oilers are looking for veteran help at centre, and the right-handed-shooting Sutter fits the bill -- as long as he can work his way back to the level he was at before long COVID shut him down.
"(If he's) anywhere close to where he was when he was 28 or 29, he's exactly what we need," Holland told media at Rogers Place, ticking off Sutter's desirable traits including winning draws (49.8 per cent career success rate), being defensively minded and his 6-foot-3, 191-lb. frame, while "pitching in with some offence."
Sutter, who agreed to the tryout in early August, said he has been feeling stronger heading into camp.
"Over probably the last month, every day, every week, I just feel better and better," he said. "I'm still working through some things, but I'm able to compete and work out hard. It's not really holding me back at all."
With files from CTV News Edmonton's Sean Amato
CTVNews.ca Top Stories

U.S. assassination attempt charges 'confirm' Trudeau's claims about India had 'real substance,' former national security advisers say
The indictment of an Indian national for the attempted assassination of a Sikh separatist and dual U.S.-Canadian national 'validates' Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's allegations that the Indian government may have been involved in the killing of a Canadian citizen as having 'real substance,' according to two of Canada's former national security advisers.
7.6 magnitude earthquake strikes off the southern Philippines and a tsunami warning is issued
A powerful earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 7.6 struck Saturday off the cost of the southern Philippines island of Mindanao and Philippine authorities issued a tsunami warning.
BREAKING Bonnie Crombie wins Ontario Liberal leadership after 3 rounds of voting
Ontario Liberals have selected Bonnie Crombie, a three-term big city mayor and former MP who boasts that she gets under Doug Ford’s skin, as their next leader to go head to head with the premier in the next election.
Search for runaway kangaroo in Ontario continues
The search continues for the kangaroo that is hopping around somewhere in Ontario after it escaped zoo handlers from a transport truck Thursday night.
What was a hospital like in medieval times? Researchers analyzed 400 skeletons to find out
In medieval times, hospitals took care of the 'poor and infirm,' but how were inhabitants selected and what were their lives like? Researchers analyzed 400 skeletons to find out.
Hoopla expected to hit new heights as Sinclair's farewell game in Vancouver nears
Canada's lopsided 5-0 win over an experimental Australia side in the rain Friday at Starlight Stadium and the hoopla surrounding it provided a taste of what is to come in Christine Sinclair's farewell game at B.C. Place Stadium.
'Big, dark canvas of despair': Rick Hansen speaks on how his mindset changed after being paralyzed
Rick Hansen's life changed the day he was told he'd never walk again, but instead of letting his disability stand in his way, he became an advocate for accessibility rights and a Paralympic Athlete. Here's how that happened.
'Every tool at our disposal': Lawyers submit amended application to challenge Sask. pronoun legislation
LGBTQ2S+ advocates are not backing down in their legal fight against the Sask. Party’s Parents’ Bill of Rights, submitting an amended application against the legislation on Friday evening.
Amid housing crisis, jail seen as preferable to living on the street
Michael Keough has to pause in the middle of his phone call from Newfoundland and Labrador's largest jail to cough and wipe his eyes -- there's black mould on the wall where the phones are, he explains, and it irritates him after a while.