(VERSION FRANÇAISE SUIT)
This week marks the anniversary of the first national championship won by the McGill University men's hockey team on March 25, 2012. See game story below.
Captain to the rescue, Overtime winner gives McGill its first national championship in men's hockey
FREDERICTON, N.B. -- Team captain Evan Vossen scored exactly six minutes into overtime to lead McGill to a 4-3 win against the Western Mustangs and the first CIS men's hockey title in program history, Sunday night, at the University of New Brunswick's Aitken Centre.
BOXSCORE
It was only fitting that McGill, the oldest hockey team in the world in its 136th season, triumphed in the 50th anniversary edition of the University Cup championship.
Vossen, a senior forward from Swift Current, Sask., who was wearing the McGill jersey for his 216th and last time, took a pass from
Alexandre Picard-Hooper inside the blue line, skated through the left face-off circle and beat goaltender
Josh Unice through the five-hole with a quick shot along the ice, on a play that was reminiscent of the Stanley Cup-winning OT goal scored by Chicago's
Patrick Kane in 2010.
It was the ninth University Cup final decided in overtime, including eight in the last 13 years.
"It's like a storybook ending," said
Vossen, who had also scored in Saturday's Pool B finale against Saskatchewan. "It couldn't have been any better for us and for myself. Especially after last year's heartbreak."
McGill had reached the national final for the first time in team history a year ago only to fall 4-0 to host tournament UNB.
"He whiffed,"
Unice said of
Vossen's shot. "They made a good play over the blue line, but I'm pretty sure he tried to go high with it, but it went in (anyway). It sucks."
"I thought my best chance was probably to go high,"
Vossen admitted. "He played me well, he played me tight, and I really didn't have much. I just got it on net and it found a hole. I'll take it."
Head coach
Kelly Nobes, in his second season behind the McGill bench, couldn't have been happier for his captain.
"It's so fitting that
Evan Vossen scored that goal,"
Nobes said. "What an unbelievable captain this guy's been for the program. He did it at both ends of the ice, for 200 feet. He was a key guy on that penalty kill and then to get the winning goal is just so fitting for our program."
"This is such a huge victory for the McGill hockey program. It's a win for the ages," added
Nobes. "This program is bigger than just this team. (McGill) Hockey has a large family and this championship is for all of those people. I'm so proud of the guys. Not only are they among the top-student athletes in the country but they are now the top hockey program in the country."
Benoit Lévesque of
Vaudreuil, Que., with two, and
Nicolas Biniek of Montreal, with his third of the tourney, also scored for McGill.
Lévesque earned Game MVP honours.
With an assist on
Vossen's game-winner, Picard-Hooper, a fourth-year
centre from
Boucherville, Que., registered his 265th career point overall, two shy of the all-time school record held by
Tim Iannone since 1990. The helper also gave last year's CIS player of the year the tournament scoring title with six points (1-5-6).
Picard-Hooper was voted to the all-tournament team along with teammates
Francis Verreault-Paul, a forward from
Mashteuiatsh, Que., and
Marc-André Dorion, a
defenceman from St. Hubert, Que., as well as Unice, forward
Keaton Turkiewicz of Western, and UNB rearguard
Jonathan Harty.
Verreault-Paul, who had been named McGill player of the game in each of the team's two pool play match-ups, finished the tournament with a 3-2-5 mark and received the Major W.J. 'Danny' McLeod Award as the most valuable player of the championship.
The fourth-year sniper had to watch the end of the final on a TV monitor however, after he was ejected from the game with 7:14 left in regulation. With his team holding on to a 3-2 lead,
Verreault-Paul was assessed a five-minute major and an automatic game misconduct for charging the goalie on a breakaway.
Western needed only 32 seconds to take advantage of the golden opportunity and tied the contest when
Turkiewicz deflected a
Kevin Baker shot for his second goal of the night. The All-Canadian senior from Brantford, Ont., who led the nation in the regular season with 47 points in 28 matches, finished the weekend with five points, including a tournament-leading four goals.
Baker, a fourth-year
centre from Georgetown, Ont., had the other marker for the Mustangs.
"I didn't see the replay but I didn't want to hit the goalie, obviously. I was on a breakaway and the guy tripped me (from behind). Maybe I deserved two minutes but not five," said
Verreault-Paul, who led the OUA in conference play with 21 goals in only 23 games. "I was so proud of Evan and so happy for him. He's a clutch player and a tremendous captain. He deserved it."
Clarke Singer, the 13-year Western head coach who led the Mustangs to their lone University Cup title in 2002, praised his opponents and his own troops.
"First of all I want to give credit to McGill. They had a great season and a great tournament. We certainly would have loved to see it go a different way but that's sports I guess. I'm very proud of our guys, they left it all on the ice," said Singer, whose team had dropped a 4-1 decision to McGill in the OUA final two weeks ago. "We would have needed a second goal on that five-minute power play but McGill did a great job on the PK."
"Josh was our best player in the playoffs and he was our best player this weekend," said Singer about his all-tournament goaltender. "He gave us a chance to win every game this weekend and that's all you can ask of your goaltender."
Unice turned aside 36 of 40 pucks fired his way by McGill and averaged 38 saves in his three starts at the championship. The native of Holland, Ohio, had been named the Mustangs' Game MVP in their two pool-play duels following 41 and 35-save performances.
McGill
outshot Western 29-10 in the first two periods and finished with a 40-27 advantage.
McGill dominated the play for most of the first frame.
Verreault-Paul almost opened the scoring three minutes in but he hit the post to the right of
Unice on a wrap-around.
It was the Mustangs who got on the board first however. McGill was caught with too many men on the ice at 7:21 and Western made them pay only 77 seconds later.
Turkiewicz skated around the net and beat outstretched
netminder Hubert Morin, who was caught out of position.
McGill responded at 15:38.
Dorion, the CIS
defenceman of the year, took a pass at the blue line, skated around a sprawling opponent, threw the puck in front of the net and
Lévesque tipped it in.
Lévesque gave McGill its first lead of the evening only 48 seconds into the second stanza. The sophomore left-winger pushed a rebound past
Unice after the goalie stopped
Marc-André Daneau twice from up close.
Western tied it up at 2-2 with 6:11 left before the second intermission.
Rearguard
Scott Aarssen found Baker to the right of the net with a perfect cross-ice pass and the sniper easily beat an outstretched Morin, who had no chance on the play.
McGill jumped back in the lead less than two minutes later. On a 2-on-1 rush,
Christophe Longpré-Poirier patiently waited until the last second and passed the puck to
Biniek, who deflected it into an empty cage.
Turkiewicz score the lone goal in the third, setting the table for
Vossen's overtime heroics.
GAME NOTES: Second-seeded McGill took first place in Pool B in the preliminary round after a 6-3 win over Moncton on Thursday and a 4-3 loss to Saskatchewan on Saturday. All three teams in the group finished with identical 1-1 records but McGill advanced to the final thanks to a better goal differential... Fourth-seeded Western finished first in Pool A after edging
UQTR 3-2 in overtime on Friday and upsetting top-ranked UNB 3-2 on Saturday... The Cavendish Farms University Cup championship was once again a success in Fredericton as all seven contests were played in front of sold-out crowds of 3,750... The CIS men's hockey championship will be held in Saskatoon in 2013 and 2014.
VIDEO REPORT FROM CBC MONTREAL
ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAM:
Goaltender: Josh
Unice, Western
Defenceman: Marc-André Dorion, McGill
Defenceman: Jonathan Harty, UNB
Forward: Francis Verreault-Paul, McGill
Forward: Alexandre Picard-Hooper, McGill
Forward: Keaton
Turkiewicz, Western
TOURNAMENT MVP (Major W.J. 'Danny' McLeod Award): Francis Verreault-Paul, McGill
SCORING SUMMARY
McGill 4, Western 3 (OT)
FIRST PERIOD
1. WES Keaton Turkiewicz (3) (Zach Harnden, Kevin Baker), 8:38 PP
2. McG Benoit Lévesque (1) (Marc-André Dorion, Maxime Langelier-Parent), 15:38
PENALTIES:
Bench (McG) too many men (served by Nicolas Biniek), 7:21;
Matt Ashman (WES) cross checking, 9:01;
Andrew Eastman (WES) hooking, 18:27.
SECOND PERIOD
3. McG Benoit Lévesque (2) (Marc-André Daneau, Marc-Olivier Vachon), 0:48
4. WES Kevin Baker (1) (Scott Aarssen, Geoff Killing), 13:49
PENALTIES:
Hubert Genest (McG) high sticking, 1:14;
Matt Ashman (WES) interference, 17:35.
THIRD PERIOD
6. WES Keaton Turkiewicz (4) (Kevin Baker, Scott Aarssen), 14:18 PP
PENALTIES:
Francis Verreault-Paul (McG) charging major, game misconduct, 12:46.
OVERTIME
7. McG Evan Vossen (2) (Alexandre Picard-Hooper, Andrew Wright), 6:00
PENALTIES:
(none)
GOALS (by period)
McG: 1-2-0-1: 4
WES: 1-1-1-0: 3
SHOTS ON GOAL (by period)
McG: 14-15-7-4: 40
WES: 7-3-14-3: 27
POWER PLAY:
McG: 0-3
WES: 2-4
GOALTENDERS
McG - Hubert Morin (W, 2-1, 27 shots, 24 saves, 3 GA, 66:00)
WES - Josh Unice (L, 2-1, 40 shots, 37 saves, 4 GA, 66:00)
PLAYERS OF THE GAME:
McG: Benoit Lévesque
WES: Keaton Turkiewicz
REFEREES: Sean Reid, Jonathan Langille
LINESMEN: Jay Doiron, Mike MacDonnell
ATTENDANCE: 3,750 (sellout)
START: 8:08
END: 10:59
LENGTH: 2:51
POOL STANDINGS & RESULTS
Pool A standings (FINAL)
TEAM GP W L GF GA PTS
1. Western 2 2 0 6 4 4
2. UNB 2 1 1 8 4 2
3. UQTR 2 0 2 3 9 0
Pool B standings (FINAL)
1. McGill 2 1 1 9 7 2
2. Moncton 2 1 1 8 7 2
3. Sask 2 1 1 5 8 2
Thursday, March 22
14:00 Pool B #1: McGill 6, Moncton 3
19:00 Pool A #1: UNB 6, UQTR 1
Friday, March 23
14:00 Pool B #2: Moncton 5, Saskatchewan 1
19:00 Pool A #2: Western 3, UQTR 2 (OT)
Saturday, March 24
11:30 Pool B #3: Saskatchewan 4, McGill 3
16:30 Pool A #3: Western 3, UNB 2
Sunday, March 25
20:00 University Cup Final: McGill 4, Western 3 (overtime)
For more information:
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EN CE JOUR DANS L'HISTOIRE (25 mars 2012) : McGill remporte son premier titre national masculin de hockey
Cette semaine marque l'anniversaire du tout premier championnat national remporté par l'équipe masculine de hockey de l'Université McGill, le 25 mars 2012. Récit du match ci-dessous.
Le capitaine à la rescousse : un but en prolongation offre à McGill son premier titre national
FREDERICTON (N.-B.) — Le capitaine Evan Vossen a marqué exactement six minutes après le début de la prolongation pour donner à McGill une victoire de 4-3 face aux Mustangs de Western et le premier titre national masculin de hockey de son histoire, dimanche soir, au Aitken Centre de l'Université du Nouveau-Brunswick.
Il était tout à fait approprié que McGill, la plus ancienne équipe de hockey au monde, en soit à sa 136e saison, triomphe lors de la 50e édition de la Coupe universitaire.
Vossen, un attaquant de dernière année originaire de Swift Current (Saskatchewan), qui disputait un 216e et ultime match dans l'uniforme des Redbirds, a reçu une passe d'Alexandre Picard-Hooper à la ligne bleue. Il a contourné le cercle gauche de mise en jeu avant de battre le gardien Josh Unice entre les jambières d'un tir vif au ras de la glace, rappelant le but gagnant en prolongation de Patrick Kane avec Chicago en 2010.
Il s'agissait de la neuvième finale de la Coupe universitaire décidée en prolongation, dont huit au cours des 13 dernières années.
« C'est une fin digne d'un conte de fées, a déclaré Vossen. On ne pouvait pas rêver mieux, autant pour l'équipe que pour moi. Surtout après la déception de l'an dernier. »
McGill avait atteint la finale nationale pour la première fois de son histoire en 2011, mais s'était incliné 4-0 face à l'UNB, hôte du tournoi.
L'entraîneur-chef Kelly Nobes, à sa deuxième saison à la barre des Redbirds, était ravi pour son capitaine.
« C'est tellement mérité qu'Evan marque ce but-là. Quel capitaine extraordinaire pour notre programme. Il a été dominant sur toute la glace. C'est un joueur clé en désavantage numérique, et d'inscrire le but gagnant, c'est tout simplement parfait pour nous. »
« C'est une victoire immense pour le programme de hockey de McGill. Une victoire historique. Ce programme est plus grand que cette équipe. La famille du hockey de McGill est vaste et ce championnat est pour tous ces gens. Je suis extrêmement fier de nos joueurs, qui sont non seulement parmi les meilleurs étudiants-athlètes au pays, mais aussi maintenant la meilleure équipe de hockey universitaire au Canada. »
Les autres faits saillants
Benoit Lévesque, de Vaudreuil, a inscrit deux buts, tandis que le Montréalais Nicolas Biniek a aussi marqué pour McGill. Lévesque a été nommé joueur du match.
Avec une aide sur le but gagnant, Alexandre Picard-Hooper (Boucherville) a porté son total en carrière à 265 points, à seulement deux du record de l'université. Il a également terminé meilleur pointeur du tournoi avec six points (1 but, 5 passes).
Francis Verreault-Paul, Marc-André Dorion et Picard-Hooper ont été nommés sur l'équipe d'étoiles du tournoi. Verreault-Paul a aussi reçu le trophée du joueur par excellence (Trophée Major W.J. « Danny » McLeod).
Toutefois, Verreault-Paul a été expulsé en fin de troisième période pour une mise en échec sur le gardien lors d'une échappée. Western a profité de l'avantage numérique pour créer l'égalité 3-3, grâce au deuxième but du match de Keaton Turkiewicz.
Résumé du match
McGill a dominé au chapitre des tirs (40-27) et a contrôlé le jeu pendant une bonne partie de la rencontre.
- Western a ouvert la marque en avantage numérique en première période.
- McGill a ensuite pris les devants 2-1 au début du deuxième engagement grâce à Lévesque.
- Les Mustangs ont nivelé la marque, mais Biniek a redonné l'avance aux Redbirds.
- Turkiewicz a forcé la prolongation en troisième période.
- Vossen a ensuite joué les héros en prolongation.
Notes
- McGill a accédé à la finale grâce à un meilleur différentiel de buts en ronde préliminaire.
- Western avait terminé premier du groupe A, notamment avec une victoire contre l'UNB.
- Le tournoi s'est déroulé devant des salles combles (3 750 spectateurs) à Fredericton.
- Les éditions 2013 et 2014 de la Coupe universitaire étaient prévues à Saskatoon.
Équipe d'étoiles du tournoi
- Gardien : Josh Unice (Western)
- Défenseurs : Marc-André Dorion (McGill), Jonathan Harty (UNB)
- Attaquants : Francis Verreault-Paul (McGill), Alexandre Picard-Hooper (McGill), Keaton Turkiewicz (Western)
Joueur par excellence du tournoi : Francis Verreault-Paul (McGill)