|
| |
|
|
|
Rare road win in comeback fashion |
|
|
|
Written by JIM SWANSON, Citizen Sports Editor
|
|
Sunday, 16 November 2008 |
If ever there was a time and place for the Cougars to mount -- and, surprisingly -- complete an impressive comeback, that was it. First, it was on the road, where so little success has been found all season. Second, it was in Chilliwack, against a Bruins team that is in the same neck of the woods at the tail end of the Western Conference standings. And, third, it was one night after a hard-to-swallow loss to the much-improved Portland Winter Hawks. The Cougars were behind 3-0 in the third period of Saturdays game in Chilliwack, gamely battling back to force overtime and win 5-4 on Parker Stanfields marker less than a minute into the extra session. Im proud of how they stayed with it and kept taking the play to them, said Cougars head coach Drew Schoneck, pleased with the dexterity his club showed after Fridays 4-1 defeat in Portland. We got the engine going after a bit of a slow start. It really felt like it was a matter of time for us to break out after their goaltender made some big-time saves to keep the early score where it was. Jadon Potter had two goals for the Bruins, one in the first period and another to build a 3-0 Chilliwack lead in the third, with Randy McNaught adding to the total. The Cougars were dead and buried with less than 13 minutes remaining in regulation. Or so it seemed. Jeff Regier, in his first night back from a concussion, scored his first goal as a Cougar, and super rookie Brett Connolly followed that power-play goal with another 3:25 later. Greg Fraser tied the score with 7:24 to play, only to see Andy Smith take advantage of Dana Tyrells minor penalty, giving the Bruins a 4-3 lead. Tyrell atoned, leaving the box and scoring his 17th of the season to end the regulation scoring, his goal coming with 5:04 to go in the third. Stanfield gave the Cougars two points, the overtime goal assisted by Brian Matte -- who scored the OT winner in September when the Cougars won their first away game of the season. Away from CN Centre, the Cats (10-13-0-1) are 3-11-0-0 this season. Our big line played well, but Stanfield and Matte were good for us, said Schoneck. A guy who had a good game was Colby Kulhanek, who was very good against his former team. Cody Hobbs had one of his better games in awhile. Our back end kept things simple and Jeff Regier had a good game coming back from the injury and had an important goal to get things going. Rebounding from the Friday loss showed character, the coach said. In Portland, we werent particularly strong there -- we had chances there in the first period and didnt bury them, then took some bad penalties, said Schoneck. There have been some things that havent helped us on the road, and one of them is taking too many penalties. That means your best players are playing too much on the penalty kill and dont have enough when its five-on-five. We have to have better starts, when you look at our road games we havent come out of periods with a lead in many games. We have to come out with more conviction. Netminder Kevin Armstrong didnt have his best game of the season, but did earn the win on 22 saves. The Cats fired 25 shots at Bruins goaltender Marc Friesen, including the only shot of overtime. KITTY LITTER: The Cougars are in Kamloops on Wednesday, then welcome the high-flying Kelowna Rockets on the weekend. C Corey Tyrell (knee) is set to return, and LW Marek Viedensky could be back on the weekend, so a move is possible to reduce the number of bodies in the dressing room. The Cougars have 25 players on the roster, with D Colin Scherger (broken hand) still a few weeks away... P.G. native Ryan Howse suffered a bruised leg on Saturday and didnt play Sunday as the Bruins won on the road in Kamloops, 5-2... To absolutely no ones surprise, Connolly has been named to Team Pacific for the upcoming World Under-17 Challenge in Port Alberni.
|
|
Last Updated ( Sunday, 16 November 2008 )
|
|
|
Who's Online
We have 286 guests and 12 members online
|