THIS WEEK IN
GIANTS HOCKEY
Jamie Tucker snows under
the
WinterHawks on Sunday night
VANCOUVER BC – The Vancouver Giants posted a 3-1
record this week, finally falling from the ranks of the undefeated in
regulation on Remembrance Day versus the Chilliwack Bruins, but finishing
the week strong with back to back wins over Division Rivals, the Kelowna
Rockets, before taking care of teh Portland WinterHawks on Sunday night.
This past Tuesday, The Vancouver Giants took 18 games
to do what every other WHL team has already done at least four times this
season...lose in regulation. The Chilliwack Bruins ended their run of
futility against the Giants by hanging on for a 3-2 decision before a
holiday crowd of 4631 at Prospera Centre.
The Giants started out once again guns a blazing, as
Garry Nunn was able to convert an Evander Kane turnover into a top shelf
goal past the startled Bruins goaltender Mark Friesen, just 1:35 into
the opening period. For Nunn, it was his fourth of the season as he has
now scored in back to back games. For Evander Kane, the lone assist extends
his point streak to 18 games, tops in the WHL. Kane's marker also allowed
him to jump into first place in the WHL scoring race.
After a great start, the Giants found themselves in penalty
trouble. Over the past nine road games, the Giants had been outstanding
on the penalty kill, successfully killing off 50 of 53 opportunities against
and being successful nearly 95% of the time. Tonight would not be a night
that followed form on the PK, as newest Bruin Andy Smith was able to find
a loose puck behind the Vancouver goal and beat Tyson Sexsmith on the
wrap-around to tie the score at 1-1, 9:29 first period.
The tie wouldn't last for long, as just 1:32 later; the
Bruins would have their lead. Andy Smith with his second of the night
would convert a Randy McNaught feed to give the Bruins a 2-1 lead. Before
the period was complete, the Bruins would double their lead. With the
Giants again in the penalty box, Swedish forward Alexander Wiklund would
pounce on a loose puck and on his second chance would bury his fifth goal
of the season behind Sexsmith. Despite being outshot 14-6 by the Giants
in period number one, the Bruins would go to the locker room with a 3-1
lead.
The second period was like the first for Vancouver, except
they kept the puck out of their own goal. Despite relentless pressure
and an onslaught of 19 shots in the second period, only Adam Basford was
able to beat Friesen to cut the lead to one. In the dying seconds of the
period, with Chilliwack scrambling in front of their net minder, Basford
was able to shovel the puck past Friesen for his third of the year. At
19:51 of the second, Basford cut the lead to one.
In the third period, the Bruins were able to hold off
the continuous Giants pressure to secure the victory. The best chance
of the period belonged to Evander Kane, who found himself all alone out
front after a brilliant play by Jonathon Blum. Unfortunately for Kane,
the puck rolled off his stick as he shot, bouncing the puck wide.
The Bruins post their first ever regulation victory against
the Giants while the Giants fall for the first time in 18 games this season,
their record falling to 14-1-0-3.
On Wednesday, the Giants would have an immediate chance
to rectify the situation, but it wouldn’t be easy against the Kelowna
Rockets. You knew that over the course of a season, your goaltender is
going to win you a few games...tonight was one of those games.
Giants goaltender Tyson Sexsmith was superb, stopping 36 of 37 shots faced
and leading the Vancouver Giants to a 3-1 win over the Kelowna Rockets.
Sexsmith made countless Kelowna scoring opportunities look tame, turning
what had to be at least a dozen high quality scoring chances on the night
into routine saves. There wasn’t a weak link in the Vancouver net
minder’s game on Wednesday, and the Giants needed every one of those
saves to pull out a victory.
The first period saw the Kelowna Rockets come out flying after a week
off. The continuous pressure and physical play led to a pair of back to
back penalties against the Giants. After a bench minor for a too many
men penalty followed by a Brendan Gallagher tripping penalty, the Giants
found themselves down two players for over a minute midway through the
period.
Enter Sexsmith...who dazzled with three or four enormous saves, allowing
the Giants the opportunity to kill off the penalties and get on a power
play late in period one. Brent Regner took a pass from Evander Kane and
snapped a shot from the top of the right faceoff circle. Rockets rookie
Adam Brown had the Regner shot clip the top of his glove and flip up and
over his shoulder into the net. 1-0 Vancouver on Regner’s third
of the year from Kane and Casey Pierro-Zabotel at 16:53.
On the very next shift, the Rockets would strike back. Mitchell Callahan
would track down a blocked shot out of his own zone and race away on a
breakaway. Callahan would skate in a top speed and beat Sexsmith with
a wrist shot glove side to tie things at one, just 27 seconds later at
17:20. The Rockets would outshoot the Giants 14-8 and had many of the
great chances.
The second period would remain scoreless, once again thanks to the play
in the crease of both Sexsmtih and Brown. Both clubs had some nice opportunities
to take the lead, but neither net minder would budge. Shots on goal again
favoured the Rockets, this time by a 11-9 margin.
In the third period, the Giants started to get their game on track and
that led to a penalty by the Rockets Lukas Matejka. Matejka would get
whistled for tripping Craig Cunningham and the number one ranked power
play would get to work. In the late stages of the power play, some nifty
passing from Craig Schira and James Wright would end up on the stick of
Slovakian forward Andrej Kudrna. Kudrna’s quick shot would deflect
off a defender and past Brown to give the Giants the lead at 7:03. Kudrna
now has 9 goals on the season and has been great on a line with James
Wright over the past few games.
Brendan Gallagher would double the lead a few minutes later...but what
a strange goal! Gallagher would take the initial shot from the top of
the slot. The shot was tipped high into the air by the stick of Kelowna
defender Tyler Myers and looked to be an easy basket catch save for the
goaltender Adam Brown. Not so fast! The other defenseman on the play for
Kelowna, Aaron Borejko, would attempt to bat the puck out of harm’s
way with his glove. What ensued was a scene out of the Bad News Bears
as Brown and Borejko, looking like they were a couple of outfielders that
didn’t call each other off to make the catch, come together and
have the puck bounce off the glove of Borejko and into the back of the
net...unbelievable! Gallagher would get his fourth goal of the season
and that would turn out to be the final nail in the coffin for the Rockets,
as they would have no answer for the two Giants third period tallies.
The Giants would be outshot in a game for the first time all season by
a 37-24 margin. Tyson Sexsmith was outstanding and takes the win for the
Giants with 36 saves on 37 shots. Adam Brown would take his first WHL
loss, falling to 7-1 on the season as he would make 21 of 24 saves in
the loss
The Giants would make it back to back against the Rockets, with a 5-3
victory at the Pacific Coliseum on Friday night. Vancouver returned to
the Pacific Coliseum and also returned to 60 minutes of hard work, defeating
the Kelowna Rockets for the second straight game in front of the largest
home crowd of the season.
The 11,555 fans were treated to a solid home showing by the G-Men, who
led throughout once they opened the scoring at the 17:21 mark of period
one. After taking a pass from Garry Nunn at the left point, Regner smartly
snapped a shot past the screened Adam Brown of the Rockets and the Giants
were in business 1-0.
Regner’s fifth goal of the season was a lot like his previous four;
taking advantage of what the opposition was offering. Just 1:10 later,
the Giants would take advantage of what Kelowna offered again. On the
power play, Andrej Kudrna was able to get two or three whacks at the puck
before his last effort careened off a hard charging James Wright and into
the net. Wright’s tenth goal of the season quickly turned a one
goal lead into two, at 18:31. The period would end 2-0 with the Giants
outshooting the Rockets by a 13-5 margin.
The Giants exhibited the same tenacity in period two. Great fore-checking,
hard work along the wall and crisp passing led to a number of decent scoring
chances, but no goals...until late in the period. Garry Nunn was once
again involved, starting a three man rush that led to Evander Kane getting
off a nice shot in the deep slot. Rockets goalie Adam Brown was able to
kick out his right pad to make the save, but put the rebound right on
the stick of Misha Fisenko. Fisenko would bury his fifth of the season
and the Giants were on their way 3-0 at 17:07 of the second.
Late penalties by the Rockets in the second stanza would lead to power
play opportunities in the third for Vancouver. Just one minute into period
three, Evander Kane would add a goal to his earlier assist, with a wrist
shot from down low, to the left of the goalie that seemed to fool Brown.
Brown lets the Kane shot in and the Giants were now in a runaway at 4-0,
one minute into the third period...or so they thought.
Back came the Rockets, led by Buffalo Sabres draft pick Tyler Myers. The
6’6” behemoth from DeWinton, Alberta was able to open the
scoring for the Rockets with a shovel shot through a goal mouth scramble
that made the score 4-1 at 5:15. Myers would add an assist at 13:01 of
the third, as he and Tyson Barrie teamed up to feed Jamie Benn on the
doorstep to cut the lead to 4-2. Just over a minute later, Myers was at
it again, this time with a slick feed to Dylan Hood. Hood’s one
timer past Giants goalie Tyson Sexsmith made the score 4-3 at 14:11 and
the Giants now had a fight on their hands.
The fight, however, was short lived as Garry Nunn was able to steal the
puck from Rockets captain Colin Long and find the empty net from long
range at 18:57 to seal the deal for Vancouver. For Nunn, three points
on the night and a well deserved goal after a night of hard work.
To finish the week the G-Men handled the Portland WinterHawks 5-2. The
Vancouver Giants overcame a stubborn Portland Winterhawks team with goals
by Brent Regner, Jonathon Blum, Garry Nunn, James Henry and Evander Kane
scored goals for the Giants in the victory while Killian Hutt and Radim
Valchar scored in a losing cause for the WinterHawks.
Hutt opened the scoring for Portland mid-way through period one, converting
a pretty feed from Cole Reddin and firing a shot that beat Giants goalie
Jamie Tucker high, glove side. Brent Regner was able to tie things up
before the end of the period, going coast to coast before beating Hawks
keeper Keith Hamilton with a snap shot, blocker side. Regner tied it up
1-1 after one.
In the second period, both teams were locked in a tight checking battle.
Midway through this well played period, the Giants were able to get the
go ahead goal. Jonathon Blum launched a rocket through traffic from the
right point. A power play goal and the Giants had the lead, 2-1 heading
to the third period.
Vancouver was able to take advantage of a tired Portland team early in
the third period. Garry Nunn was able to use his speed to create an opportunity.
Nunn sped around the Portland defence, in behind the goal and beat Keith
Hamilton on a wrap around to the far post. For Nunn, it was his second
goal in as many games, and it gave the Giants some insurance at 3-1. Moments
later, on a WinterHawks power play, James Henry was able to block a pass
and sprang himself on a partial breakaway. With the Portland defence bearing
down, Henry was able to fire the perfect shot, high glove side on Hamilton
and the Giants were on their way at 4-1. Radim Valchar was able to cut
the lead to two late in the period, but then Evander Kane was able to
close things out...Kane took a lead pass at centre ice and with Travis
Ehrhardt doing everything he could to stop him, Kane was able to win the
battle and slide the puck into the empty net for a 5-2 win. Kane’s
goal extended his WHL leading point streak to 21 games.
Jamie Tucker stays undefeated in regulation, stopping 18 of 20 shots in
the victory, while Keith Hamilton surrendered four goals before the empty
netter and takes the loss for Portland.
Vancouver finishes the week off with a 3-1 record and continues on a torrid
pace. The Giants are now 17-1-0-3 on the season and have opened up an
eleven point lead on second place Kelowna in the BC Division and a six
point lead on second place Spokane in the Western Conference. Vancouver
still has two games in hand on the Rockets and one game in hand on the
Chiefs.
Notes:
• After this week of play, the Vancouver Giants
(17-1-0-3) once again have the best regulation loss record in the entire
CHL. Vancouver stands alone with just one regulation loss while the Moncton
Wildcats (QMJHL), previously undefeated before the week as were the Giants,
suffered two losses to fall to 18-2-2. The Windsor Spitfires (OHL) are
also in the two loss category at 21-2.
• Evander Kane is now on a 21 game point streak. This past week,
Kane was able to score twice and add three assists for five points. Kane
continues to lead the WHL in points with 37 in 21 games, while Brett Sonne
is second in scoring just one point behind, Kane has played in five fewer
games than his Calgary counterpart.
• Tyson Sexsmith and Jamie Tucker continue to get it done between
the pipes for the Giants. Sexsmith is now 11-1-0-2 with a 2.00 GAA (4th)
and a .904 save percentage (12th). Jamie Tucker has a 6-0-0-1 record with
a 1.52 GAA (1st) and a .932 save percentage (2nd).
• This defence never rests! The Vancouver Giants continue to get
valuable contributions from their d-corps. The Giants defence has so far
contributed 22 goals and 62 assists for 84 points and they are a combine
+84! To break it down further, the Giants defence has scored 21.3% of
the goals so far this year, they have 36.4% of all the assists and 30.7%
of the points. Brent Regner is now a +21 on the season and leads the team.
What the score sheet isn’t telling you...
The Giants are on a phenomenal run. Including last season,
the Giants in their last 43 games, the Giants are 34-6-0-3. In their past
72 regular season games, the Giants have 53 wins, 14 losses and 5 shootout
losses, which would give them 111 points over that stretch.
This time last season, the Giants were 14-5-1-1 for 30
points...they are currently seven points ahead of last year’s pace
which saw them post 49 wins and 106 points.
STANLEY CUP LEGENDS WEEK
The year was 1915…The Vancouver Millionaires, led
by the Legendary Fred ‘Cyclone’ Taylor, swept the Ottawa Senators
for Vancouver’s one and only Stanley Cup. At the time, it was the
farthest west that a team had captured Lord Stanley’s Cup, and today
it is still the only time in Vancouver’s sport’s history that
the Holy Grail of Hockey can be called Vancouver’s.
NOW…93 years later and one year removed from their 2007 Memorial
Cup Championship, THE VANCOUVER GIANTS are set to bring the Stanley Cup
back to Vancouver and the Pacific Coliseum for what will surely be one
of the most memorable nights in Vancouver Hockey History!
On Friday, November 21, 2008 the Giants will host the Kamloops Blazers
at 7:30pm and will celebrate Stanley Cup Legends Night by wearing Vancouver
Millionaires jerseys and honouring the following Stanley Cup Winners who
will be here in person for a special pre-game ceremony:
• Dave “The Hammer” Schultz (2 Cups)
• Gerry Cheevers (2 Cups)
• Johnny Bower (4 Cups)
• Steve Shutt (5 Cups)
• Yvon “Roadrunner” Cournoyer (10 Cups)
The first 5,000 fans through the doors will receive a commemorative poster
featuring the Millionaires’ famous team photo and a collage of the
Stanley Cup Legends in attendance. Also, 100 random fans will win the
chance to get autographs from all five Legends!
And of course the night wouldn’t be complete without having the
Stanley Cup on display!
Stanley Cup Legends Night is proudly presented by Save-on-Foods, Maple
Leaf Foods, and Global Television.
Special thanks to VM Sports Ltd for their participation.
Visit www.vancouvermillionaires.com
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