Prince Albert takes 2-0 lead in first round post-season series
| The Raiders celebrate a short-handed goal from Daxon Rudolph (#10). |
On Saturday, the Prince Albert Raiders found themselves being thwarted on numerous scoring opportunities by Red Deer Rebels star rookie netminder Matthew Kondro in the first third of Game 2 of a WHL best-of-seven first round playoff series. The teams exited the first period locked in a scoreless tie with the Raiders holding a 13-3 edge in shots on goal.
Just 1:37 into the second period, Raiders 16-year-old skilled rookie defenceman Brock Cripps scored a power-play goal on an end-to-end rush. From that point, the host Raiders added four more goals in the second to push their advantage out to 5-0. They would finish off the contest cruising to a 6-0 victory to the delight of a jubilant standing room crowd of 2,997 spectators at the 2,580 seat storied and historic Art Hauser Centre.
With the win, the Raiders, who were rated fourth in the final CHL Top 10 Rankings, take a 2-0 lead in the series. Going back to the regular season, they have won eight straight games.
“You know what, we have a game plan,” said Raiders head coach Ryan McDonald. “We have a process that we stick to.
“It hasn’t wavered all year no matter who we’re playing. The guys did a great job going out there executing the game plan tonight.”
During the first period, it appeared the Raiders might get snake bitten around the net for the night. Star centre Braeden Cootes had a backhand shot chance in close that was turned away by a paddle stop by Kondro.
Late in the frame, Raiders star defenceman Daxon Rudolph had a partial breakaway, but he fanned on his shot. The fanned shot was still a chance Kondro had to make an alert stop on.
The host side’s luck changed around the net, when Cripps scored on his end-to-end rush. On that play, the puck disappeared from sight underneath Kondro’s pads, but referee Adam Bloski was positioned behind the net and made the call of a good goal on the ice.
Following the goal call, the play went to a view review that lasted for about five minutes. After the review, the officials ruled the call on the ice stands.
“You look at the entry, the speed that Brock (Cripps) possessed getting into the zone, it was a great move to get around the stand,” said McDonald. “He took the puck right to the net and got rewarded.”
Just two minutes after Cripps’ goal, the Raiders pushed their advantage to 2-0, when 16-year-old rookie right-winger Ben Harvey fired a shot from the front of the net to the top right corner of the Red Deer goal. Harvey converted a sweet setup feed from Rudolph.
“Dax (Rudolph), obviously, made a nice play coming down the wall and found me in the middle,” said Harvey. “I kind of just popped up and tried to get it past the first layer there, and I don’t think their goalie saw it.”
Just under five minutes later, the Raiders picked up a short-handed tally from Rudolph to push their lead out to 3-0. Cootes sent a smart pass to Rudolph to spring the rearguard into the Red Deer zone on a rush. Rudolph charged to the front of the net and ripped home a shot to the top right corner of the goal.
With 3:52 remaining in the second, Raiders sophomore centre Riley Boychuk potted home a loose puck during a net scramble for a power-play goal that made the Raiders lead sit at 4-0. With 2:05 remaining in the second, Raiders 20-year-old right-winger Brayden Dube sniped home a power-play marker from inside the right faceoff circle in the Red Deer zone to give the Raiders a 5-0 edge.
Prince Albert’s momentum proceeded to carry over to a right between rookie 16-year-old left-winger Connor Howe and Rebels 17-year-old defenceman Cameron Dillard. The bout was a spirited one that ended with Howe, who stands 5-foot-6 and weighs 155 pounds, getting the take down on the much larger Dillard, who stands 6-foot-4 and weighs 218 pounds. The Art Hauser Centre faithful rained down thunderous applause for Howe, who is a hometown product.
“Everyone is just playing
the right way,” said Harvey, who had an assist to go with his goal. “We’re just
sticking to our game and playing fast.
“It is just eventually
they’re going to come.”
Dube proceeded to score
his second of the contest taking a drop pass from Cootes and wiring home a shot
from the right faceoff dot in the Red Deer zone to round out the 6-0 final
score in favour of the Raiders.
“I was just in the right
spot at the right time it felt like,” said Dube. “It was nice to get a couple.”
Following Dube’s second
tally, the Rebels elected to pull Kondro. Kondro took the loss in the Red Deer
net turning away 30-of-36 shots sent his way. Peyton Shore played the rest of
the way in the third in relief turning away all four shots sent his way.
Overall, Dube was pleased
with his team’s effort and thought it was a good follow up to their 4-1 victory
over the Rebels in Game 1 on Friday at the Hauser.
“I think we played
similar to yesterday,” said Dube. “The goals didn’t come that quick, but I
think we wore them down.
“They started making
mistakes, and we capitalized on them.”
Raiders star 18-year-old import
rookie netminder Michal Orsulak stopped all 13 shots sent his way to pick up
his first career post-season shutout in the WHL. He also had an assist on
Cripps’s goal.
While the Raiders had the
Rebels pinned in their own zone for a large part of Saturday’s game, Orsulak
had to come up with a huge sprawling glove save on a Rebels left-winger Poul
Andersen inside the final seven minutes of the third to preserve his shutout.
“He was sticky and tidy
when called upon,” said McDonald. “It was just a real solid night from him
tonight.”
Rudolph finished with a
pair of assists to go with his goal and a plus-three rating in the plus-minus
department. Cootes had a plus-two rating to go with his two helpers.
The Raiders were without
breakout star centre Max Heise, who was injured after being hit into the boards
by Rebels right-winger Owen DeWitt early in Game 1. McDonald said Heise is
listed as day-to-day when it comes to possibly returning.
The series between the
Raiders and Rebels now shifts to Red Deer. Games 3 and 4 will be held Tuesday
and Wednesday respectively at 7 p.m. local time on both nights at the Marchant
Crane Centrium. In looking forward to those contests, Dube said his Raiders
need to keep doing what they have been doing so far in the series.
“I know they’ll be better in Red Deer,” said Dube. “We just have to stick to our game and clean some things up that we can work on and just keep it going.”
If you have any comments you would like to pass along about this post, feel free to email them to stankssports@gmail.com.
-------
If you like what you
see here, you might want to donate to the cause to keep independent media like
this blog going. Should you choose to help out, feel free to click on the DONATE
button in the upper right corner. Thank you for stopping
in.