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with some slick passing. Price denied Fraser but w

in Here is your first Forum Wed Oct 23, 2019 1:44 pm
by sakura698 • 1.245 Posts

CHARLOTTETOWN -- The Charlottetown Islanders have a new name and a winning start to the Quebec Major Junior Hockey season. Nike Air Max Plus Tn Nere . Charlottetown scored four times in the third period en route to a 5-2 win over the defending champion Halifax Mooseheads on Friday. Alexandre Goulet scored twice while Matej Beran, Jack Nevins and Kameron Kielly added singles for Charlottetown (1-0-0), which changed its name from the P.E.I. Rocket in the off-season. Daryl MacCallum stopped 26 shots for the Islanders. Andrew Ryan and Danny Moynihan scored for Halifax (0-2-0), while Kevin Darveau made 40 saves. --- Titan 4, Screaming Eagles 1 BATHURST, N.B. -- Jacob Brennan made 34 saves as the Titan rolled past Cape Breton. Adam Stevens, Riley Scott, Alexandros Soumakis and Rafael Lafontaine scored for Acadie-Bathurst (1-0-0). Rafael Corriveau opened the scoring for Cape Breton (0-1-0), while Maxime Lagace stopped 30 shots. The Screaming Eagles power-play unit still has work to do -- they went scoreless in six opportunities while the Titan went 2 for 5. --- Sea Dogs 5, Wildcats 3 MONCTON, N.B. -- The Sea Dogs offence exploded for four goals in the third period to rally past the Wildcats. Noah Zilbert, Michael Abbott, Nathan Noel, Kelly Bent and Stephen Anderson each scored for Saint John (1-0-0). Conor Garland, Ivan Barbashev and Christophe Lalonde replied for Moncton (1-1-0), while goaltender Alex Dubeau allowed four goals on 24 shots. Sea Dogs goalie Antoine Landry meanwhile made 33 saves. --- Tigres 4, Cataractes 1 VICTORIAVILLE, Que. -- The Tigres offence swarmed Shawinigan for an early lead and their defence did the rest in the third period. Angelo Miceli, Michael Rheaume, Gabriel Gagne and Mathieu Ayotte each scored for Victoriaville (1-0-0), which took a 4-0 lead into the third. Frederick Gaudreau scored for the Cataractes (0-1-0) in the third as his team outshot the Tigres 14-10. Steven Veilleux made 24 saves for Victoriaville, while Marvin Cupper stopped 25 for Shawinigan. --- Sagueneens 4, Remparts 3 (OT) CHICOUTIMI, Que. -- William Gignac scored in overtime to lift the Sagueneens past Quebec. Gignac scored 2:29 into OT against Remparts goaltender Callum Booth after Chicoutimi rallied to force extra time. Loik Leveille, Thomas Gobeil and Samuel Roussy, with the game-tying goal in the third period, also scored for the Sagueneens (1-0-0), while Julio Billia made 27 saves. Raphael Maheux, Brent Turnbull and Fabrice Herzog replied for Quebec (0-0-1) and Booth finished with 30 saves. --- Oceanic 5, Drakkar 4 BAIE-COMEAU, Que. -- All Rimouski had to do was show up for the second period in a win against the Drakkar. Rimouski scored five goals in the second while firing 13 of their 22 shots of the game against Baie-Comeau. Zachary Fortin made 30 saves for the Oceanic (1-0-0), who got goals from Samuel Courtemanche, Michael Thibault, Simon Fortier, Michael Joly and Guillaume McSween. Gabriel Verpaelst, Alexandre Chenevert, Campbell Pickard and Alexis Vanier scored for the Drakkar (0-1-0), while Simon Lemieux allowed four goals on nine shots before being replaced by Philippe Cadorette. --- Armada 5, Phoenix 2 BOISBRIAND, Que. -- The Armada needed a period to find their offence in their home opener. After being outshot 9-7 in the first, Blainville-Boisbriand replied in the second with three goals while outshooting the Phoenix 16-6. Emil Aronsson, Julien Bahl, Christopher Clapperton, Frederic Bergeron and Marcus Hinds scored for the Armada (1-0-0). Mitchell Lundholm and Jean-Francois Plante scored for Sherbrooke (0-1-0). Samuel Montembeault had an easy night in the Armadas net with 15 saves, while at the other end Francis Desrosiers stopped 26 shots. --- Voltigeurs 6, Huskies 3 DRUMMONDVILLE, Que. -- The Voltigeurs capitalized on a penalty filled game to beat the Huskies. Nikolas Brouillard, Joey Ratelle, Matthew Boudens, Jeremy Auger, Guillaume Gauthier and Olivier Caouette each scored for Drummondville (1-0-0), which scored five of 12 with the man advantage. Steven Mercier, Marcus Power and Mathieu Lemay scored for Rouyn-Noranda (0-1-0), which failed to score on seven power-play opportunities. Joe Fleschler made 20 saves for the Voltigeurs, while Carl Hozjan stopped 32 for the Huskies. --- Olympiques 5, Foreurs 2 GATINEAU, Que. -- Jean-Simon Deslauriers scored twice to help the Olympiques win their first game of the season. Simon Tardif-Richard, Vaclav Karabacek and Jake Coughler also scored for Gatineau (1-0-0). Maxime Presseault and Guillaume Gelinas replied for Val-dOr (0-1-0). Olympiques goaltender Robert Steeves made 21 saves. Keven Bouchard, meanwhile, allowed four goals on 18 shots in net for the Foreurs. Nike Air Max Saldi Online . Portland won Game 4 Sunday night at the Moda Center and are now up 3-1. The last time the Blazers won a playoff series came in the 2000 Western Conference semifinals against the Utah Jazz. Scarpe Air Max2 Light Scontate . -- J.R. Sweezy was the one part of the Seattle Seahawks offensive line that had avoided injuries or having to change positions this season. http://www.airmaxitaliascarpe.it/scarpe-air-max-tn-scontate.html . TSN Hockey Insider Bob McKenzie tweeted on Monday that Hemsky will be going to market as an unrestricted free agent on July 1.BOSTON -- Boston coach Claude Julien said the Bruins had more in their tank and they showed it Saturday night. The Bruins got their power play going and got under the Canadiens skin as they won 4-2 to push Montreal to the edge of a playoff precipice. Boston was crisp from the get-go and scored power-play goals 32 seconds apart early in the second period to build an insurmountable 3-0 lead. "I dont think you can look at tonight and say all of a sudden we found our game." said Julien. "I think we were better tonight but theres another game to win and, Im being honest here, its not going to be easy." Game 6 of the second-round playoff series is Monday in Montreal with the Canadiens needing a win to remain alive -- undoubtedly regretting the Game 4 overtime loss at the Bell Centre that rejuvenated the Bruins. Montreal, which outshot Boston 31-30, has trailed Boston three games to two five times before and come back to win three of those series. After a five-year post-season drought with the man advantage against the Habs, Boston broke the power-play hoodoo through back-to-back strikes by Reilly Smith and Jarome Iginla. Tomas Plekanec was in the penalty box for both goals. "I thought we were intent when we started the game but their power play gave them a lot of momentum and confidence," said Montreal coach Michel Therrien. Boston was 0-for-10 in the series on the power play and amazingly had not scored in 39 tries with the man advantage against Montreal in the post-season since Game 2 of their 2009 Conference quarter-final. "Our power play was due," Julien said by way of understatement. After the first period, the talk was of the need for more intensity, winning more battles and making stronger plays on the power play. It worked and Boston had the rare luxury of playing with a lead. The Bruins led for 46 minutes 40 seconds Saturday, some four times the 11:39 they were ahead during the first four games of the series. The Canadiens have held the lead for 106:11 of the series. Carl Soderberg and Loui Eriksson also scored for the Bruins, who got a strong physical game from Milan Lucic. The hulking winger cruised the ice like a shark, looking for someone to take a piece out of. A late P.K. Subban goal made the score closer than the game actually was. Brendan Gallagher also scored for Montreal. Goalie Carey Price said the Habs are up for the elimination challenge. "You back any animal into a corner, its going to be desperate," he said calmly. "I think were going to be a desperate hockey club coming into next game and I think were excited for the challenge." Game 7, if needed, would be next Wednesday in Boston. The Canadiens will need to take a deep breath before the puck drops at the Bell Centre with their season on the line. "Frustration or not, weve got to make sure we play with some more composure," said a tight-lipped Therrien. Subban complained after the game of being sprayed with water twice from the Boston bench late in the game. After raising the issue in his post-game scrum, he tried to downplayed the antics but it clearly bothered him. "It hit me in the visor. I couldnt even see the last minute and a half out there," he said. "So I was pretty upset about that ... Im sure if that was me that did it, it would be a different story. Id probably be on the news for the next three days." Therrien, who looked like he had sucked a lemon prior to taking the podium, had little to say about hockeys version off Watergate. Air Max 270 Scontate Uomo. "Yeah, we saw that," he said when asked about the water spraying. "I dont want to comment on that," he added when pressed on the matter. Julien said he didnt see it and wouldnt condone it. After two games that features a total of five penalties, the referees remembered to bring their whistles with them Saturday and called 11 penalties. Montreal was 2-for-5 on the night with the man-advantage but was 0-for-3 in the first period. "I strongly believe that if we would have gotten a goal on one of those first power plays, it could have been the difference in the game," said Subban. Therrien, meanwhile, said his team had to be better five-on-five. The line of Soderberg, Eriksson and Matt Fraser finished with two goals and three assist and was plus-six. The Bruins third line has now scored three of Bostons last five goals with Fraser accounting for the overtime winner last Thursday in Montreal. Soderberg was awarded the Bruins jacket, a hand-me-down from Boston legend Johnny Bucyk, as the teams player of the game. The capacity crowd of 17,565 at TD Garden had plenty to cheer about. Boston looked focused and physical, outhitting Montreal 39-29. Plus the Bruins managed to plug up Montreals shooting lanes. "It was one of those games where were just on the wrong side of the puck all night," said Canadiens captain Brian Gionta. Smith hit the post before either team registered a shot. The Bruins went ahead at 13:20 of the first period after Eriksson beat the lumbering Douglas Murray to the puck behind the net and sent it straight back to Soderberg, who banged the puck in off Prices pad for his first career playoff goal. It came on Bostons sixth shot of the night. It was a good omen for the Bruins, given the team scoring first won the first four games of the series and the Bruins were 5-0 in the playoffs -- and 41-6-2 during the regular season -- with the first goal. Then came the power play breakthrough as the Bruins dominated the second period. After some good puck movement had the Canadiens running around, a Dougie Hamilton shot from the point deflected in off Smiths foot. Then, after a Bruins faceoff win, a nifty Torey Krug pass from the wall found Iginla all alone and he snapped a shot past Price. Boston was bossing the game and the Habs began to lose some of their composure. But Plekanec made up for some of that time in the penalty box when he snapped a shot from the faceoff dot that went through a Boston defencemans legs before rattling in off Gallagher at 14:39 on the power play to cut the lead to 3-1. The five-foot-nine Gallagher got thumped in the corner seconds before on the play, but picked himself up and got in front of the goal to be in position to tip the puck in. The goal ended Tuukka Rasks shutout streak of 122 minutes six seconds. The Bruins kept up the pressure in the third, coming at the Canadiens. Boston calmly blunted Montreal attacks and then moved the puck up ice with speed and purpose. Erikssons goal, with 5:48 remaining, came on a three-on-two complete with some slick passing. Price denied Fraser but was powerless to stop Eriksson, who skated around him until he had a clear shot at an empty net. With Matt Bartkowski off for holding and Price on the bench, Subban scored from the point to make it 4-2 with 2:29 remaining. Therrien brought back Brandon Prust, who had sat out the last two games. Making way was veteran Daniel Briere who had played under 10 minutes each of the last three contests. ' ' '

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