Rebels’ Lind released from hospital after taking cheap head hit
Brandon Lisowsky celebrates his winning goal for the Blades. |
On Wednesday, the Blades went into Game 4 facing elimination in their WHL Eastern Conference semifinal series against the host Red Deer Rebels. The visitors fell behind 2-0 before rallying for a 4-2 victory.
With the win, the Blades cut the Rebels lead in the best-of-seven series to 3-1. They will get to host a Game 5 on Friday at 7 p.m. back at the SaskTel Centre.
Normally, this would be a contest that would be remembered for a heroic comeback script. Instead the contest will be remembered for an early incident that cast a pall over the night’s proceedings for the 4,702 spectators in attendance at the Peavey Mart Centrium.
Justin Lies is public enemy #1 in Red Deer. |
As Lind started to continue up ice, he was felled by a vicious blindside elbow to the head from Blades 19-year-old right-winger Justin Lies. The impact of the hit set Lind’s helmet flying though the air. Immediately, Rebels star centre Kai Uchacz came out to challenge Lies, but the officials jumped in quickly to ensure nothing else escalated.
Lind was laid out on the ice for seven minutes being attended to by the medical staffs of both clubs. He was stretchered off to an ambulance and taken to Red Deer Regional Hospital. At night’s end after Wednesday’s game was complete, the Rebels announced that Lind had been released from hospital.
Rebels C Kai Uchacz (#19) challenges Blades RW Justin Lies. |
At first, it appeared the Rebels were going to rally around their fallen teammate. Uchacz, who hadn’t record any points for the first three games of the series, looked like he was going to play the role of hero for the host side.
On the ensuring five-minute power play after Lind went down, Uchacz, who was the Rebels leading scorer in the regular season, gave the Rebels a 1-0 lead scoring with the man advantage at the 6:27 mark of the frame. The De Winton, Alta., product popped home a loose puck during a net scramble around the Saskatoon goal.
Kai Uchacz scored twice in the first to put the Rebels up 2-0. |
When the first period came to a close, the Rebels looked like they were going to live up to their romantic image of honour that has been a part of the team since Brent Sutter bought the franchise before the start of the 1999-2000 campaign. The romantic image sees the Rebels as gritty, skilled hardworking, well mannered and well dressed team that never quits, and if one of their players goes down to a cheap hit, they never lose that game.
In the second, it appeared they were going to have ample opportunity to bury the Blades.
Kai Uchacz celebrates his second goal for the Rebels. |
Despite having the four minute power play, the Rebels weren’t able to add to their lead. After that kill, it seemed the momentum of the contest was starting to turn.
At the 12:09 of the second, the Blades got further traction when captain Aidan De La Gorgendiere fired home a power-play goal from the point through a screen to cut the Red Deer lead to 2-1. While the Rebels had a 15-9 edge in shots on goal in the second, it felt like the Blades had the better period.
Jace Isley brings the puck up ice for the Rebels. |
Just 43 seconds later, the Blades were able to get the jump on the Rebels by finally getting a stretch pass to work. From deep in his own zone, Blades 18-year-old defenceman Ben Saunderson sprung Lisowsky on a breakaway connecting with him on a stretch pass at the Red Deer blue-line.
Lisowsky snapped a shot to the top left corner of the Red Deer goal to give the Blades a 3-2 lead.
Ethan Chadwick made 34 saves to allow the Blades to rally. |
At that point, Chadwick slammed the door on the Rebels. With 5:16 remaining in the third, Chadwick made a key stop on a close in backhand shot on Rebels 19-year-old left-winger Jace Isley.
That was the Rebels second shot on goal in the frame. They would pepper the Saskatoon net with 10 more shots before the third came to an end, which included the Rebels having pulled Kelsey for an extra attacker for most of the final 2:39 of the stanza.
The Blades celebrate an Aidan De La Gorgendiere traction goal. |
Chadwich ultimately made 34 stops to pick up the win in goal for the Blades in his first start of the series. Kelsey turned away 20 shots to take the setback in net for the Rebels.
It was expected that this would be a tight series going in. 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 Rebels finished fifth in the overall WHL standings and topped the Central Division with a 43-19-3-3 mark.
Frustration
did show from the Rebels at times with some scrum action once the Blades had
taken a two-goal lead. At one point before the Rebels pulled Kelsey, it looked
like Red Deer captain Jayden Grubbe was going to nail Wiens with a hard hit,
but it seemed the Rebels skilled centre thought better of it creating a near
miss situation at the last moment.Jayden Wiens (#9) scored the equalizer for the Blades.
When the
contest ended, the Rebels fans excited the Peavey Mart Centrium with the sober
tonne of seeing the bad guy wrestler win a title belt in a WWE live event.
Still both
teams showed great composure for the rest of the game. Had something like the
Lies hit on Lind happened 20 years ago in WHL, the contest would have likely been
a fight filled one the rest of the way. Instead, both teams moved on and got
focused on the task at hand.
The Blades acquired
Lies in a trade with the Vancouver Giants before the current season began back
on August 31, 2022. With the Blades, Lies has been the model teammate and a
gritty hard working player that plays tough but within the rules.Tanner Molendyk scored a key insurance goal for the Blades.
In 56
regular season games with the Blades, Lies posted career highs in goals (nine),
assists (14), points (23) and the plus-minus department (plus-six). In his
previous three seasons with the Giants, Lies was suspended twice for a total of
six games, and that could play a part in the WHL’s disciplinary ruling for his
hit on Lind.
There could
potentially ill will between the two clubs as the series carries on. Still,
both teams moved on to focusing on the game at hand on Wednesday when play
resumed after Lind’s hit.
In the
current era of the game of hockey, usually nothing lingers on and things blow
over pretty quick. Plus, the likelihood is high one of the WHL top executives
will be on hand in Saskatoon for Game 5 on Friday to make sure everything goes
smoothly. That often means WHL vice-president of hockey Richard Doerksen will
be on hand to make sure everyone plays nice.Blades D Blake Gustafson (#3) skates the puck out of trouble.
Coming
under the ownership of the Priestner family before the start of the 2013-14
campaign, the Blades have pretty much always carried the image of being the
good guys like Bret “the Hitman” Hart.
In a weird
twist, they were the bad guys like Roman Reigns for a one-night aberration, and
it resulted in them getting a win to keep their season alive.The Blades celebrate their win on Wednesday night.
When the
dust settled, it felt like everything that happened on Wednesday night was
hollow until news came out that Lind was released from hospital. That was the
true victory on the night.
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.