THUNDER BAY, Ont. (CIS) – While defending national champion
Alberta has been seeded No. 1 and the OUA East champion McGill
Redmen have been seeded No. 5 for the upcoming 47th University Cup
tournament, all six head coaches agree this could be one of the
most closely-contested CIS men’s hockey championships in recent
years.
Championship website:
www.universitysport.ca/e/championships/m_hockey/2009
The 2009 Cavendish University Cup, presented by TBaytel, gets
under way Thursday at the Fort William Gardens in Thunder Bay with
the round-robin portion and culminates Sunday at 2 p.m. with the
presentation of the national final.
Rogers Sportsnet will broadcast Saturday’s two round-robin duels
and Sunday’s gold-medal final, while SSN Canada will webcast all
seven games from the tournament.
Joining the top-seeded Golden Bears this week in the quest for
the CIS banner are the No.2-Saint Mary’s Huskies (AUS champions),
No.3-Western Ontario Mustangs (OUA champions), No.4-UNB Varsity
Reds (AUS Finalists), No.5-McGill Redmen (OUA finalists) and the
host Lakehead Thunderwolves, seeded sixth.
Alberta, UNB and Lakehead will battle in the Pool A preliminary
round, while Saint Mary’s, Western and McGill make up Pool B. The
first-place finishers will meet for CIS gold on Sunday.
Saint Mary’s and McGill kick off the championship Thursday at 2
p.m., with Western set to face the losers of that match-up Friday
afternoon and the winners on Saturday.
In Pool A, Alberta opens its title defence Thursday at 7 p.m.
against UNB, in a rematch of last year’s final won 3-2 by the
Bears. Lakehead will take on the losers Friday night and the
winners Saturday evening.
“It’s anybody’s tournament and with this type of format, you
need great goaltending right from the beginning,” said fourth-year
Alberta head coach Eric Thurston. “It’s the sort of situation
where you can’t sit back and feel your way into the game because
it’s a ‘Game 7’ do-or-die scenario, right from the opening puck
drop.”
Thurston, the third coach in history to lead his team to a
national title in his first two trips to the University Cup
tournament (2006, 2008), knows a thing or two about tight CIS
tourneys and great goaltending on the national stage.
Last year in Moncton, the Bears overcame an opening-day 2-1 loss
in overtime to the host Aigles Bleus and received a 40-save
performance from all-Canadian netminder Aaron Sorochan in the
gold-medal final against UNB to become the first team in history to
capture the University Cup after dropping a round-robin game.
“When you see the parity and the level of competition at this
tournament… both of the pools are groups of death,” added
Thurston.
The Bears are the only team in the field that hasn’t faced one
of the other Cup contenders this season.
The Huskies and Varsity Reds met eight times overall in 2008-09
with Saint Mary’s prevailing on five occasions, including a 2-1
series win in the AUS final.
The Huskies also split two games with Lakehead in pre-season
action.
The T-Wolves won their head-to-head regular-season series with
Western, three matches to one.
The ‘Stangs edged McGill by one goal, 2-1, in the single-game
OUA Queen’s Cup final.
“The six teams all look as if they have the potential to walk
away with the Cup,” said second-year Lakehead head coach Don McKee.
“The OUA proved its depth this year as top-ranked Laurier and
Trois-Rivières did not make it through to the national
championship. Similarly, Saint Mary’s showed the AUS strength by
upsetting UNB. And since the West presently owns the Cup, they are
not going to be very generous in relinquishing it to any teams in
the East.”
“Look for low-scoring games with lots of overtime, and lots of
physical play,” added McKee, who was named CIS coach of the year
back in 1989-90 when he was at Waterloo and led the Warriors to the
national final in 1996.
“I think that UNB, Alberta and Saint Mary’s would be favourites
given the type of year each team has had and their respective
national ranking heading into the playoffs,” offered 10th-year
Western head coach Clarke Singer, who led the Mustangs to the lone
CIS title in team history in 2002. “Lakehead is outstanding in
their rink anytime of the year and McGill and ourselves, we both
have very young teams that have probably surprised many
prognosticators with our finishes.”
Championship host Lakehead was 17-7 overall at the Fort William
Gardens in 2008-09, including a sweep of arch-rival Western – 5-1
and 4-3 in OT – on the last weekend of the regular season, on Feb.
13-14.
Top-ranked Alberta will compete at the University Cup for an
astounding 12th time in 13 years and for the 33rd time since the
inaugural championship in 1962-63, one of the many tournament
records held by the Bears.
Alberta, the last team to capture the CIS title as the No. 1
seed back in 2006, holds the all-time marks for most titles (13),
appearances (33rd in 2009), finals (17), games played (86), wins
(58), losses (26), goals for (399) and goals against (257).
The Bears enjoyed yet another stellar season in 2008-09, topping
13 of 14 national media polls, finishing first in the Canada West
standings with a 22-4-2 record and dominating arch-rival
Saskatchewan, 5-2 and 7-0, in the league final to claim the
conference banner.
Saint Mary’s went 20-7-1 in conference play to finish four
points back of UNB in the AUS standings, despite a 3-1 edge in the
head-to-head regular-season series. The Huskies resumed their
success against the V-Reds in the conference final, bouncing back
from a 5-1 loss in the opener, with 3-2 and 5-1 victories,
respectively, to capture their first AUS title since 2001-02.
“I believe with a few bounces and the fact that our guys have an
ability to bring their best game when it counts, we can play with
the best and beat anyone,” said 12th-year Saint Mary’s head coach
Trevor Stienburg, who won back-to-back Father George Kehoe memorial
awards as CIS coach of the year in 1999 and 2000.
One of those players who seems to bring his best game every
night is senior left-winger Marc Rancourt, who was named AUS MVP
after he claimed the CIS scoring crown with 57 points. He added an
AUS-leading 10 points in seven playoff outings.
UNB has been almost as dominating as Alberta in recent years,
competing at five of the past seven University Cups and reaching
the national final the last two seasons, including a 3-2 overtime
win over Moncton in 2007 for the second title in team history.
The V-Reds, who dethroned Alberta in the last national Top 10
media poll of the campaign on February 17, started slowly this
season after setting AUS records with 26 wins and 53 points a year
ago. They lost four of their first eight conference outings but
went 17-3 the rest of the way to finish atop the Atlantic
league.
UNB took care of Acadia in two games in the AUS semifinals
before being stopped by Saint Mary’s.
“We are honoured to be able to represent the Atlantic conference
for the third consecutive season,” said Gardiner MacDougall, in his
ninth campaign as UNB’s bench boss. “Our team has a lot to
prove and we look forward to the challenge of being the best that
we can be when it counts the most.”
The three OUA squads that will compete in Thunder Bay this week
couldn’t have been any closer in the standings. Western (19-7-2)
tallied 40 points over the 28-game schedule while McGill and
Lakehead collected 38 points apiece after finishing with identical
18-8-2 records.
The OUA champion Mustangs really got things going in the second
half of the season, winning 13 of their last 16 outings before
going 7-1 in the playoffs, including a 2-1 win over McGill for
their first Queen’s Cup title since 2004-05.
The Redmen also caught fire in the second half of the campaign,
winning 18 of their last 23 conference duels after an 0-5 start
before reaching the OUA final for the third time in four years.
“It’s our third appearance in four years at the Nationals and
we’re as hungry as can be,” said Martin Raymond, a former
all-Canadian forward at McGill and now in his 14th season as head
coach of the Redmen. “We’re very young but have a group
of strong skaters who move the puck well. We are a bit
under-sized so we have to take advantage of our speed to counteract
the larger, more experienced teams.”
“It looks like the competition in this tournament will be as
fierce as ever, so we will need to commit to solid defence and get
strong goaltending in order to give ourselves a chance.”
TEAM PROFILES
No. 1 Alberta Golden Bears
Head Coach: Eric Thurston (4th season)
Regular season record: 22-4-2
Regular season standing: 1st Canada West
Playoff record: 4-1
Playoff finish: Canada West champions
Final Top 10 ranking (Feb. 17): No. 2
Best Top 10 ranking (14 weeks): No. 1 (13 weeks – first 13
polls)
Number of weeks in Top 10 (14 weeks): 14
Conference award winners: Kyle Fecho (top defenceman), Derek
Ryan (most sportsmanlike), Eric Thurston (coach)
Conference 1st team all-stars: Aaron Sorochan (G), Kyle Fecho
(D), Chad Klassen (F)
Conference 2nd team all-stars: Jason Fransoo (D), Ben Kilgour
(F), Derek Ryan (F)
University Cup appearances (including 2009): 33rd
University Cup first appearance (inaugural championship 1963):
1964
University Cup last appearance: 2008 (champions)
University Cup all-time record: 58 wins, 26 losses, 2 ties
(.686)
University Cup titles: 13 (2008, ‘06, ‘05, ‘00, ‘99, ’92, ‘86,
‘80, ‘79, ‘78, ‘75, ‘68, ‘64)
University Cup finals: 17 (13 titles plus 1991, 1985, 1977,
1966)
University Cup best result: 13-time champions (2008, ‘06, ‘05,
‘00, ‘99, ’92, ‘86, ‘80, ‘79, ‘78, ‘75, ‘68, ‘64)
University Cup goals for / against: 399-257
University Cup sequence: 12th appearance in 13 years (missed
2007)
2008-09 record vs. 2009 University Cup teams: 0-0
No. 2 Saint Mary’s Huskies
Head Coach: Trevor Stienburg (12th season)
Regular season record: 20-7-1
Regular season standing: 2nd AUS
Playoff record: 5-2
Playoff finish: AUS champions
Final Top 10 ranking (Feb. 17): No. 4
Best Top 10 ranking (14 weeks): No. 4 (2 weeks – last 2
polls)
Number of weeks in Top 10 (14 weeks): 12
Conference award winners: Marc Rancourt (MVP, student-athlete),
Cam Fergus (most sportsmanlike)
Conference 1st team all-stars: Andrew Hotham (D), Scott Hotham
(D), Marc Rancourt (F)
Conference 2nd team all-stars: Cam Fergus (F)
University Cup appearances (including 2009): 10th
University Cup first appearance (inaugural championship 1963):
1969
University Cup last appearance: 2002 (2nd in Pool A)
University Cup all-time record: 12-14 (.462)
University Cup titles: none
University Cup finals: 4 (1973, 1972, 1971, 1970)
University Cup best result: 4-time finalists (1973, 1972, 1971,
1970)
University Cup goals for / against: 102-99
University Cup sequence: 1st appearance since 2002, 2nd since
1977
2008-09 record vs. 2009 University Cup teams: 6-4 (5-3 vs. UNB,
1-1 vs. Lakehead)
No. 3 Western Ontario Mustangs
Head Coach: Clarke Singer (10th season)
Regular season record: 19-7-2
Regular season standing: 2nd OUA Far West (3rd overall OUA)
Playoff record: 7-1
Playoff finish: OUA champions
Final Top 10 ranking (Feb. 17): No. 6
Best Top 10 ranking (14 weeks): No. 6 (2 weeks – last 2
polls)
Number of weeks in Top 10 (14 weeks): 6
Conference award winners (OUA West): Salvatore Peralta (most
sportsmanlike)
Conference 1st team all-stars (OUA West): Chris Petrow (D)
Conference 2nd team all-stars (OUA West): Ryan Martinelli (D),
Salvatore Peralta (F)
University Cup appearances (including 2009): 9th
University Cup first appearance (inaugural championship 1963):
1987
University Cup last appearance: 2005 (3rd in Pool B)
University Cup all-time record: 5-10 (.333)
University Cup titles: 1 (2002)
University Cup finals: 2 (2002, 1988)
University Cup best result: 1-time champions (2002)
University Cup goals for / against: 45-56
University Cup sequence: 1st appearance since 2005, 4th in 10
years
2008-09 record vs. 2009 University Cup teams: 2-3 (1-0 vs.
McGill, 1-3 vs. Lakehead)
No. 4 UNB Varsity Reds
Head Coach: Gardiner MacDougall (9th season)
Regular season record: 21-4-3
Regular season standing: 1st AUS
Playoff record: 4-2
Playoff finish: AUS finalists
Final Top 10 ranking (Feb. 17): No. 1
Best Top 10 ranking (14 weeks): No. 1 (1 week – final poll)
Number of weeks in Top 10 (14 weeks): 14
Conference award winners: none
Conference 1st team all-stars: Kevin Henderson (F), Hunter
Tremblay (F)
Conference 2nd team all-stars: Dustin Friesen (D)
University Cup appearances (including 2009): 10th
University Cup first appearance (inaugural championship 1963):
1964
University Cup last appearance: 2008 (finalists)
University Cup all-time record: 15-9 (.625)
University Cup titles: 2 (2007, 1998)
University Cup finals: 6 (2008, 2007, 2004, 2000, 1998,
1997)
University Cup best result: 2-time champions (2007, 1998)
University Cup goals for / against: 93-76
University Cup sequence: 3rd straight appearance, 5th in 7
years
2008-09 record vs. 2009 University Cup teams: 3-5 (3-5 vs. Saint
Mary’s)
No. 5 McGill Redmen
Head Coach: Martin Raymond (14th season)
Regular season record: 18-8-2
Regular season standing: 2nd OUA Far East (tied 5th overall
OUA)
Playoff record: 6-2
Playoff finish: OUA finalists
Final Top 10 ranking (Feb. 17): unranked
Best Top 10 ranking (14 weeks): No. 10 (1 week – 13th poll)
Number of weeks in Top 10 (14 weeks): 1
Conference award winners (OUA East): Alexandre Picard-Hooper
(rookie), Éric L’Italien (student-athlete), Martin Raymond
(coach)
Conference 1st team all-stars (OUA East): none
Conference 2nd team all-stars (OUA East): Ken Morin (D), Sam
Bloom (F), Alexandre Picard-Hooper (F)
University Cup appearances (including 2009): 3rd
University Cup first appearance (inaugural championship 1963):
2006
University Cup last appearance: 2008 (2nd in Pool B)
University Cup all-time record: 2-2 (.500)
University Cup titles: none
University Cup finals: none
University Cup best result: 2nd in pool play (2008, 2006)
University Cup goals for / against: 11-15
University Cup sequence: 2nd straight appearance, 3rd in 4 years
(3rd in history)
2008-09 record vs. 2009 University Cup teams: 0-1 (0-1 vs.
Western)
No. 6 Lakehead Thunderwolves
Head Coach: Don McKee (2nd season)
Regular season record: 18-8-2
Regular season standing: 4th OUA Far West (tied 5th overall
OUA)
Playoff record: 3-2
Playoff finish: OUA quarterfinalists
Final Top 10 ranking (Feb. 17): No. 10
Best Top 10 ranking (14 weeks): No. 5 (4 weeks)
Number of weeks in Top 10 (14 weeks): 10
Conference award winners (OUA West): Andrew Brown
(student-athlete)
Conference 1st team all-stars (OUA West): none
Conference 2nd team all-stars (OUA West): Jordan Smith (D),
Brock McPherson (F)
University Cup appearances (including 2009): 4th
University Cup first appearance (inaugural championship 1963):
1973
University Cup last appearance: 2006 (finalists)
University Cup all-time record: 2-5 (.286)
University Cup titles: none
University Cup finals: 1 (2006)
University Cup best result: 1-time finalists (2006)
University Cup goals for / against: 18-26
University Cup sequence: 1st appearance since 2006, 3rd in 7
years
2008-09 record vs. 2009 University Cup teams: 4-2 (3-1 vs.
Western, 1-1 vs. Saint Mary’s)
POOLS & SCHEDULE (All times
Eastern)
Pool A
1. Alberta
4. UNB
6. Lakehead
Pool B
2. Saint Mary’s
3. Western Ontario
5. McGill
Wednesday, March 25
13:00 Media Conference (Fort William Curling Club – Fort William
Gardens)
18:00 All-Canadian Awards Banquet (Fort William Historical
Park)
Thursday, March 26
14:00 Pool B #1: No. 2 Saint Mary’s vs. No. 5 McGill
(SSN Canada webcast)
19:30 Pool A #1: No. 1 Alberta vs. No. 4 UNB (SSN
Canada webcast)
Friday, March 27
14:00 Pool B #2: No. 3 Western vs. Loser Pool B #1
(SSN Canada webcast)
19:30 Pool A #2: No. 6 Lakehead vs. Loser Pool A #1
(SSN Canada webcast)
Saturday, March 28
14:00 Pool B #3: No. 3 Western vs. Winner Pool B #1
(Rogers Sportsnet / SSN Canada
webcast)
19:00 Pool A #3: No. 6 Lakehead vs. Winner Pool A #1
(Rogers Sportsnet / SSN Canada
webcast)
Sunday, March 29
14:00 Final (Rogers Sportsnet / SSN Canada
webcast)
- CIS -
For more information please contact:
Michel Bélanger
Communications manager
Canadian Interuniversity Sport
Ph: (613) 562-5670 ext. 25
Cell: (613) 447-6334
belanger@universitysport.ca
www.universitysport.ca