WHL Eastern Conference final tied at 1-1
heading to the Hat
| Markus Ruck (#26) is all smiles after scoring the Tigers third goal. |
On Friday, the Tigers opened the WHL Eastern Conference Championship Series by getting trampled 8-3 by the host Prince Albert Raiders at the storied and historic Art Hauser Centre. Since Willie Desjardins first joined the Tigers before the start of the 2002-03 campaign, it became common for the Medicine Hat franchise to quickly get over what happened in a bad loss and roar back with a sound victory.
In Game 2 of the series on Saturday played before another sellout crowd of 3,299 spectators at the Hauser, the Tigers rolled to a 5-0 victory and silenced the Raiders faithful for long stretches of the contest. The win allowed the Tigers to even the best-of-seven series at 1-1.
| Markus Ruck had one goal and one assist for the Tigers. |
“It is a big win for sure,” said Tigers star left-winger Markus Ruck, who had one goal, one assist and a plus-two in the plus-minus department. “We knew coming in it is a really tough rink.
“To get that one is huge. We knew coming into it we had to
get this one.”
The teams started off playing fairly even as the shots on goal were tied 4-4 after the first 11 minutes of the opening frame. Momentum changed when Raiders defenceman Linden Burrett was given a roughing minor with eight minutes remaining in the frame.
| Jordan Switzer made 30 saves to earn a shutout win. |
While the Raiders got the kill, the Tigers had a tonne of momentum they would carry through to the end of the second period. Raiders star 20-year-old right-winger Brayden Dube said you could feel that momentum was on the side of the visitors after that power-play chance.
“They got lots of shots and lots of good looks,” said Dube. “They got a jump in their step.
| Michal Orsulak makes one of his 36 saves in goal for the Raiders. |
Before the first ended, the Tigers went back on the power-play after Raiders standout 16-year-old defenceman Brock Cripps was called for holding with 2:07 remaining in the first. Right after that power play expired, Tigers star defenceman Jonas Woo threw a puck from a bad angle at the right boards by the icing line to the front of the Prince Albert net.
The puck appeared to deflect home off Tigers standout centre Noah Davidson into the Prince Albert goal to give the visitors a 1-0 lead with 5.9 seconds remaining in the frame. Woo, who missed Game 1 of the series with an undisclose ailment, was given credit for the goal. The Tigers exited the first holding their 1-0 advantage and a 16-6 edge in shots on goal.
| Jonas Woo was credited with two goals on Saturday. |
The Tigers continued to come hard at the Raiders in the second holding a 17-9 edge in shots on goal for the frame. Medicine Hat finally got a second goal past Orsulak with 3:47 remaining in the stanza while working on the power play.
Ruck swooped down the right wing with the puck and made a backhanded pass to the front of the Prince Albert net to his twin brother Liam Ruck. Liam blasted home his sixth of the post-season to push the Tigers advantage out to 2-0.
“It is pretty cool,” said Markus Ruck about the power-play goal. “I was kind of just wheeling in the zone, and I kind of popped up and saw him there.
| Alisher Sarkenov and the Raiders had no luck around the net. |
In the third, the Raider came with a big push forcing Tigers netminder Jordan Switzer, who turned 19-years-old in January, to stand on his head. The Raiders would outshoot the Tigers 15-8 in the third but were unable to put a puck past Switzer, who was making his first start of the series.
“In our room, we knew they were going to battle hard there,” said Switzer. “I think it was only 2-0 for a bit.
“I think we did a good job shutting them down, weathering the storm and then we got a couple in the end.”
With 7:11 remaining in the third, Markus Ruck came up with a dagger goal. Tigers right-winger Carter Cunningham sprung Ruck down the left-wing on a contested breakaway. Ruck lasered home a shot to the short side on Orsulak to give the visitors a 3-0 advantage.
| Aiden Oiring of the Raiders jets away from Cam Parr of the Tigers. |
“This is a hard barn to play in, especially in playoff time,” said Switzer. “It is a sold out rink.
“All the fans are all over us, but I think we handled it good tonight, didn’t get rattled and stuck to our game plan.”
Orsulak turned away 36-of-40 shots to take the setback in net for the Raiders. Switzer stopped 30 shots to pick up the shutout win in goal for the Tigers, which was also Switzer’s first clean slate in post-season play.
| Noah Davidson had a strong game for the Tigers. |
“The first period the shots were a little lopsided there from a couple of power-play situations,” said Raiders head coach Ryan McDonald. “I didn’t mind our start.
“I thought we created some opportunities and didn’t get some bounces and got away from it in the second period and started turning some pucks over and feeding into their transition and making it real hard on ourselves. In the third period, we got back to our game and getting pucks in behind and created some opportunities for ourselves. Again, you have to tip your cap to them.
“They played hard. Again, we need to match that intensity and match that level.”
| Liam Ruck scored a power-play goal for the Tigers. |
The Tigers, who are the defending WHL champions, finished second in the Eastern Conference, captured the Central Division title and finished third overall in the WHL during the regular season with a 50-10-5-3 mark. They were rated fifth in the final CHL Top 10 Rankings.
The Raiders and Tigers met four times in the 2025-26 regular season. Each side claimed two regulation time wins including one victory at home and one the road. Each side scored 16 goals in those four head-to-head contests.
| These two traveling fans enjoyed the Tigers win on Saturday. |
“I thought we played a little better tonight,” said Desjardins. “I thought the first game they kind of took it away on us.
“We had a really good start and then got on our heels a little bit. They got some power-play goals. Tonight, we got one on the power play.
“One just went in at the end of two (minutes), so that was probably the difference.”
| Niilopekka Muhonen had the Tigers final goal on Saturday. |
“We just have to wipe this one and play our game,” said Dube. “Today, we were trying to do too much I think.
“We’re at our best when we are playing fast, just getting pucks deep and on our forecheck.”
As for the Tigers, Ruck said everyone on his squad is pumped to continue the series at their home rink.
“Going back 1-1 in the series, we know our fans are going to be awesome,” said Ruck. “We can’t wait.
“Hopefully, we continue what we just had today.”
NOTES – The
Raiders had another huge 50/50 pot for Saturday’s game with online sale
combined with sales in the building. The take home prize was $98,540 and will
go to the person with ticket number C-124720.The Tigers celebrate their win on Saturday.
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