WHL squads once gain face “Curse of the Drop”
The Kelowna Rockets managed to stay afloat for 51 minutes until the dam burst.
On Friday playing before a sellout crowd of 6,007 spectators at Prospera Place, the Rockets opened play at the Memorial Cup taking on the OHL champion Kitchener Rangers. Kelowna is the host squad for the event that crowns a CHL champion.
In Friday’s preliminary round clash, the Rangers took a 2-0 lead into the final 10 minutes of the third period. Kitchener proceeded to fire home a surge of three goals to claim a 5-0 victory.
The Rockets came into this contest as sizable underdogs. They finished third in the WHL’s Western Conference and seventh overall in the WHL’s regular season standings with a solid 38-21-6-3 record.
Kelowna swept the rival Kamloops Blazers 4-0 in a best-of-seven first round series in the WHL Playoffs. The Rockets then fell 4-1 in a Western Conference Semifinal Series to the eventual WHL champion Everett Silvertips. Before Friday’s clash with the Rangers, the Rockets last outing was a 2-1 overtime loss to the Silvertips at the Angel of the Winds Arena in Everett back on April 17.
The Rockets are making their first appearance at the Memorial Cup since last winning the WHL championship in the 2014-15 campaign. They made it to the Memorial Cup tournament championship game held in Quebec City falling to the OHL champion Oshawa Generals 2-1 in overtime.
The Rangers topped the OHL’s Western Conference and finished second in the OHL’s regular season standings with a 47-14-5-2 mark. Kitchener motored through the OHL Playoffs posting an impressive 16-2 record to win their first league title since the 2007-08 campaign. The Rangers were rated seventh in the final CHL Top 10 Rankings.
Kitchener had a little bit of a rest coming into the Memorial Cup. The Rangers closed their sweep of the OHL Championship Series on May 12, when they downed the Colts at the Sadlon Arena in Barrie 4-2.
During Friday’s opening contest of the Memorial Cup, Rockets 18-year-old star netminder Harrison Boettiger put in a gallant performance to keep his squad in the game by turning away 34 shots in the loss. Rangers 19-year-old rookie netminder Christian Kirsch stopped all 24 shots fired his way to pick up the shutout win.
Dylan Edwards and Jack Pridham each had one goal, one assist and posted a plus-two rating in the plus-minus category for the Rangers. Defenceman Alexander Bilecki had a pair of assists and was a plus-two.
Edwards opened the game’s scoring at the 4:38 mark of the opening frame. He received a positive bounce off the board behind the Rockets net and got possession of the puck close in at the left side of the Kelowna goal. Edwards, who is a star 20-year-old left-winger, popped the puck home off Boettiger to put the Rangers up 1-0.
With 6:24 remaining in the opening frame, Rangers defenceman Jared Woolley took on Rockets left-winger Dawson Gerwing in a short bout. The fight was short with Gerwing ending the affair by tackling Woolley to the ice.
Woolley would hit the scoreboard offensively with 2:27 remaining in the second. Pridham had the puck behind the Kelowna net and passed the puck to Woolley at the left side of the goal. Woolley quickly fired home the puck to push the Rangers lead out to 2-0.
Just 2:30 into the second, spirited fight took place between Campbell and Rockets defenceman Nate Corbet. The bout occurred shortly after Campbell nailed overage Rockets offensive-defenceman now turned utility player Mazden Leslie in the open ice just inside the Kitchener zone. Campbell and Corbet traded heavy shots until the official broke the battle up.
While the Rockets got an energy boost for a short moment, it didn’t stop the Rangers from putting the contest away.
With 8:28 remaining in the third, Pridham scored off a breakaway to increase the Rangers advantage to 3-0. Just 82 seconds later, star centre Sam O’Reilly, who has a signed NHL entry-level contract with the Tampa Bay Lightning, scored to make the Rangers lead sit at 4-0. Just 80 seconds after O’Reilly scored, centre Haeden Ellis tallied to round out the 5-0 final in favour of Kitchener.
For the superstitious types, the Rockets and the WHL
champion Everett Silvertips are trying to overcome the “Curse of the Drop” at
the Memorial Cup. That
event took place on May 25, 2008 after the WHL champion Spokane Chiefs downed
the host Rangers
in Kitchener
4-1 in the Memorial Cup tournament’s championship game. After receiving the
trophy, Chiefs captain Chris Bruton had the Memorial Cup fall apart in his
hands as he attempted to give it to veteran defenceman Trevor Glass.
Since
that drop, the WHL has only won the Memorial Cup once coming with the Edmonton
Oil Kings win in 2014. In 2014, Edmonton captured the WHL and CHL titles that
year playing to honour the memory of former player Kristians Pelss, who was
with the Oil Kings 2012 WHL championship team and passed away in
June of 2013 due to a recreational diving accident.
In
the championship game of the 2014 Memorial Cup tournament played in London,
Ont., on May 25 of that year, the WHL champion Oil Kings downed the OHL
champion Guelph Storm 6-3. At the moment, that marks the last time a team from
the WHL has won the Memorial Cup to become CHL champions. The WHL is currently
in its longest drought as a league when it comes to winning the Memorial Cup.
The preliminary round of the Memorial Cup continues on Saturday at Prospera Place as the Silvertips face the QMJHL champion Chicoutimi Sagueneens (7 p.m. Saskatchewan time, TSN).
The Silvertips topped the WHL regular season standings, the Western
Conference and the U.S. Division with a 57-8-2-1 record and were rated first in
the final CHL Top 10 Rankings. Everett’s 57 wins and 117 standings points are
team records. The Silvertips motored through the WHL Playoffs posting an
impressive 16-2 to capture their first league title in team history.
The Sagueneens finished second overall in the QMJHL’s Eastern Conference and second overall in the QMJHL regular season standings with a 49-10-3-2 mark. They advanced through the QMJHL Playoffs posting a stellar 16-4 mark to win their first league title since the 1993-94 campaign.
The Sagueneens last played in the Memorial Cup tournament back in 1997, when the event was held in Hull, Quebec. Chicoutimi went to the Memorial Cup as the QMJHL finalist. The host Hull Olympics won the QMJHL title and the Memorial Cup championship in that campaign.
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