Saskatoon falls 3-0 in WHL Eastern Conference
final opener
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Ben Zloty scoring the winning goal for the Ice on Friday. |
When you go almost three months between playing games
head-to-head, a great team’s underrated players can catch a strong foe off
guard.
In Game 1 of the WHL’s Eastern Conference Championship
Series, Winnipeg Ice offensive-defencemen Ben Zloty and Carson Lambos reintroduced
themselves to the Saskatoon Blades. Zloty and Lambos each had a goal as the Ice
blanked the visiting Blades 3-0 on Friday before 1,613 spectators at the Wayne
Fleming Arena to open the best-of-seven Eastern Conference final.
Friday’s encounter marked the first time the two sides met
since February 4, when the Blades posted a 3-2 regular season victory over the
Ice at the SaskTel Centre.
When one looks at the Ice roster, it is easy to be memorized
by the talent in the club’s forward group consisting of the likes of Zach
Benson, Matthew Savoie, Connor McClennon, Conor Geekie, Owen Pederson and Zack
Ostapchuk. With that noted, the Ice are at their best when their defence is
quarterbacking the contest.
Zloty and Lambos rank among the top defenders in the WHL,
because they can do it all. Their strong play in the defensive zone often gets
overlooked, because they are so strong at the offensive side of the game.
When either Zloty or Lambos gets the puck even if it is deep
in their own zone, it seems they have command with a presence of what the
Winnipeg side wants to do on offence like Tom Brady quarterbacking the New
England Patriots and Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the NFL.
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Carson Lambos scored the Ice’s third goal on Friday. |
It should come as no surprise that Zloty, who turned
21-years-old in late February, led the WHL in defencemen scoring during the
regular season. In 64 regular season appearances with the Ice, Zloty posted 81
points coming off 13 goals and 68 assists to go with a plus-67 rating in the plus-minus
department.
Lambos, who has a signed NHL entry-level contract with the
Minnesota Wild and turned 20-years-old in January, had a strong campaign
posting 48 points coming off 12 goals and 36 assists to go with a plus-60
rating in 61 regular season appearances with the Ice.
The poise of Zloty and Lambos seems to run off on the rest
of the Ice’s defensive unit including solid 19-year-old veterans like Graham
Sward and Karter Prosofsky and 16-year-old dynamo Jonas Woo. Sward, Prosofsky
and Woo can all motor up ice fearlessly with the puck. If they are on the ice
with Zloty and Lambos, the supporting trio seamlessly looks after the defensive
end allowing the team’s main point producing defenders to look after the
offensive end.
Woo and Zloty teamed up to account for the Ice’s first goal
at the 14:39 mark of the first period. Woo got the puck to Zloty at the left
point in the offensive zone and allowed Zloty to go to work from there.
Zloty circled with the puck to the top of the right faceoff
circle and put home a backhander through a screen to give the Ice a 1-0 lead. The
tally was the first of the post-season for Zloty to go with 15 assists to sit
second in defenceman scoring in the WHL Playoffs with 16 points.
With 4:28 remaining in the first, the Blades went on the
power play after Benson took a minor infraction for hooking. Early in the power
play, Blades star import right-winger Egor Sidorov got a prime scoring chance
wiring a shot on goal from the right slot, but he was robbed by the glove had
of Ice netminder Daniel Hauser.
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Egor Sidorov had a good chance to score on a first period power play. |
Shortly after that scoring chance, the Ice had a huge
scoring opportunity with 3:55 remaining in the first when Ostapchuk had a
short-handed breakaway. As Ostapchuk
closed in on the Saskatoon goal, he was hacked by Blades star centre Trevor
Wong on the backcheck.
The officials awarded Ostapchuk a penalty shot. On the
penalty shot, Ostapchuk wire home a shot blocker side on Blades netminder Ethan
Chadwick to push the host side’s advantage out to 2-0 for the rare short-handed
penalty shot marker.
While the Ice had a 2-0 lead going into the first
intermission, the opening 20 minutes was played fairly evenly with the hosts
holding a 10-8 edge in shots on goal.
The Ice came out of the gates controlling play in the second
period. At the 7:45 mark of the second, Savoie got the puck top Lambos at the
left point. Lambos carried the puck just inside the blue-line of the Saskatoon
zone and floated home an off-speed point shot to put the hosts up 3-0.
The tally was the first of the post-season for Lambos, who also has four assists to go with a plus-10 rating in 11 contests.
The Blades would get two power play chances before the
second period came to a close, but the visitors weren’t able to find a traction
goal. Early in the third period, the Blades went on the power play for the
fourth and final time of the contest but still weren’t able to put a puck past
Hauser.
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Ethan Chadwick made 25 saves in goal for the Blades on Friday. |
The Ice had one power-play chance in the game, but the
Blades were able to kill that penalty off. In the post-season the Blades have currently
killed off 12 consecutive opposition power plays.
With three minutes to play in the third, the Blades pulled
Chadwick for an extra attacker. The Ice appeared to get an empty-net goal with
28.3 seconds remaining in the third from import right-winger Vladislav Shilo.
The goal was waved off after a video review after it was determined the Ice
were offside on the rush into the Saskatoon zone.
Hauser stopped all 16 shots he faced to pick up his first
shutout of the current post-season. Chadwick turned away 25 shots to take the
setback in net for the Blades.
The Blades were without 20-year-old defenceman Blake
Gustafson and 18-year-old rearguard Ben Saunderson on Friday as they were both
injured in the team’s second game Eastern Conference semifinal series win over
the Red Deer Rebels. Black ace Morgan Tastad, who turned 17-years-old in
January, dressed for his first career WHL post-season contest to allow the
Blades to have six defencemen.
Tastad played most of the 2022-23 campaign with the
Saskatoon Contacts under-18 AAA team. In 41 regular season appearances with the
Contacts, Tastad had three goals and 24 assists.
Gritty right-winger Justin Lies returned to the Saskatoon
lineup after serving a league imposed three-game suspension. Lies was suspended
for a head shot he threw on Rebels star left-winger Kalan Lind in the Blades
4-2 win in Game 4 of that series.
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The Ice got to enjoy a Game 1 win over the Blades. |
The Ice’s biggest scratch was 19-year-old defenceman Wyatt
Wilson. Winnipeg elected to dress 17-year-old rookie rearguard Ashton Cumby for
his second career post-season contest.
The Ice topped the WHL regular season standings with a
57-10-1 mark and were rated third in the final CHL Top 10 Rankings. The 57 wins
and 115 standings points are new franchise records for the Ice. The Blades
finished fourth in the overall WHL regular season standings with a 48-15-4-1
record and were rated 10th in the final CHL Top 10 Rankings.
The series resumes on Saturday with Game 2 at the Wayne
Fleming Arena for a 4 p.m. start local time. In that contest, we will see if
the Blades are able to adjust to the Ice defence led by Zloty and Lambos who
love to activate and get into the play offensively.
T-Birds, Blazers to open Western Conference
final, other notes
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Brad Lambert leads the Thunderbirds in post-season scoring. |
The Seattle Thunderbirds and Kamloops Blazers are set to get
it on.
The two powerhouse clubs open their best-of-seven Western
Conference title series on Saturday at 7 p.m. local time at the Accesso ShoWare
Center in Kent, Washington. Game 2 of the series is slated for Sunday at 6 p.m.
at the Accesso ShoWare Center.
The Thunderbirds and Blazers met in last year’s Western
Conference Championship series. That series went to a deciding Game 7, and it
was claimed 3-2 by the Thunderbirds at the Sandman Centre in Kamloops. The
Blazers led the series 3-2, before the Thunderbirds closed the set out with two
straight wins.
Seattle went on to fall in the WHL Championship Series in
six games to the Edmonton Oil Kings.
The Thunderbirds topped the Western Conference and finished
second overall in the WHL’s regular season standings with a 54-11-1-2 record.
The U.S. Division champions were rated fourth in the final CHL Top 10 Rankings.
Seattle’s 54 wins and standings points total of 111 points are new regular
season club records.
The Blazers, who are hosting this year’s Memorial Cup
tournament, finished second overall in the Western Conference and third overall
in the WHL regular season with a 48-13-4-3 mark. The B.C. Division champions
were rated ninth in the final CHL Top 10 rankings.
Seattle swept away the Kelowna Rockets 4-0 in a
best-of-seven first round series and the Prince George Cougars 4-0 in a
best-of-seven WHL Western Conference semifinal series. Kamloops swept the
Vancouver Giants 4-0 in the first round and the Portland Winterhawks 4-0 in the
other Western Conference semifinal series.
The Thunderbirds have been off since April 19, when they
closed out their series with the Cougars with an 8-2 victory in Game 4 of that
series in Prince George. The Blazers have been off since April 20, when they
close out their series with the Winterhawks with a 10-4 victory in Game 4 in
Portland.
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Jared Davidson topped the Thunderbirds in regular season scoring. |
Centre Jared Davidson topped the Thunderbirds in regular
season scoring with 82 points coming off 38 goals and 44 assists to go with a
plus-41 rating in the plus-minus department in 60 appearances. Centre Brad
Lambert leads the Thunderbirds in post-season scoring with 16 points coming off
two goals and 14 assists to go with a plus-nine rating in six appearances.
Star centre Logan Stankoven topped the Blazers in regular
season scoring with 97 points coming off 34 goals and 63 assists to go with a
plus-36 rating in 48 appearances. Stankoven and star defenceman Olen Zellweger
share the Blazers team lead in post-season scoring at 21 points in the team’s
eight playoff outings.
Stankoven has recorded his 21 points on 10 goals and 11 assists
to go with a plus-12 rating. Zellweger has his 21 points coming off seven goals
and 14 assists to go with a plus-17 rating.
The star netminders for both sides have had strong
post-seasons. Thomas Milic has played every minute of the playoffs in goal for
Seattle winning all eight of his starts posting a 1.13 goals against average, a
.953 save percentage and one shutout. Dylan Ernst has played every minute in of
the playoffs in goal for Kamloops winning all eight of his starts posting a
1.80 goals against average, a .927 save percentage and three shutouts.
If the Blazers win the series against the Thunderbirds, the
winner of the Eastern Conference Championships Series between the Winnipeg Ice
and Saskatoon Blades will earn a berth to the Memorial Cup tournament.
The Blazers last appeared in the WHL Championship Series in
1999 falling in five games to the Calgary Hitmen.
- When the Saskatoon Blades
fell 3-0 to the host Winnipeg Ice on Friday in Game 1 of the WHL Eastern
Conference Championship Series, it marked the first time long time Blades
play-by-play voice Les Lazaruk called a game in a conference final. He has
been the Blades play-by-play voice since the start of the 1994-95
campaign. Lazaruk’s hometown is Winnipeg, and he had a lengthy sports
broadcast career there before becoming the Blades play-by-play voice.
- The Blades purchased a
billboard on Pembina Highway in Winnipeg welcoming Lazaruk back to his hometown.
A couple of others on social media added that the welcome home billboards
for Lazaruk are up in a couple of other locations in the city.
- Four WHL officials will
work the upcoming International Ice Hockey Fedaration World Championship,
which will run May 12 to 28 in Tampere, Finland, and Riga, Nevada. The
four WHL officials heading to worlds include referees Adam Bloski and Mike
Langin and linespersons Brett Mackey and Tarrington Wyonzek.
- The Saskatoon Blades
appearance in this year’s WHL’s Eastern Conference Championship Series
marks the first time they’ve gone this far in the WHL post-season since
1994. In 1994, the Blades took the best-of-seven Eastern Conference
Championship Series 4-1 over the Brandon Wheat Kings. The Blades fell in
the WHL Championship Series in seven games to the Kamloops Blazers, who
went on to win the Memorial Cup. In 1994, the Swedish group Ace of Base
had the best selling album in the United States that year with “The Sign.”
The album’s title track “The Sign” was the best selling single in the
United States in 1994.
If you have any
comments you would like to pass along about this post, feel free to email them
to stankssports@gmail.com.
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