Journal Pioneer

Provincial championsh­ips held in Tignish

Several gymnasts qualify for Atlantic, Eastern and National competitio­ns

- BY STEPHEN WHYNO

The 2018 Credit Union Gymnastics P.E.I. provincial championsh­ips attracted 149 gymnasts – 122 females and 27 males – to the Tignish Credit Union Arena recently.

The two days of competitio­n were hosted by the St. Louis Gymnos Gymnastics Club. It was the first time for the provincial competitio­n to be held in Tignish, and it involved trucking in mats and equipment from Ontario.

The 400-plus spectators were treated to some very high performanc­es by the athletes, reports Paul Goguen, coach of the host club and organizer for the championsh­ips. “Coaches from our four competitiv­e clubs did a fantastic job getting their athletes in shape and ready for all their events this year,” commented Goguen.

“The provincial (event) was again a great success, and it all falls back to the support of local businesses and volunteers from our club. It was very rewarding to see it all come together.”

There was a lot at stake as the Tignish competitio­n was the last opportunit­y for gymnasts to earn their spot on the Gymnastics P.E.I. provincial team that will be representi­ng P.E.I. at the 2018 Atlantic championsh­ips at Credit Union Place in Summerside on April 20 and 21. Twelve males and 52 females earned their spots.

A total of 19 girls and 10 males also qualified for the Eastern Canadian championsh­ips, which will be held in Oshawa, Ont., on May 11 and 12. Alex Mann and Ian McKenna from the Island Gymnastics Academy in Charlottet­own and Chloe Cudmore from the Victory Gymnastics Centre in Charlottet­own, all qualified to attend the Canadian championsh­ip in Waterloo, Ont., from May 22 to 27.

Players take note: Referees aren’t swallowing their whistles so far in the 2018 NHL playoffs. Penalties are up more than 17 per cent over the same time a year ago and are playing a substantia­l role in several series. Through 19 games in the first round, there have been nearly 10 penalties per game. Last year, there was an average of eight penalties called through 20 games.

“The penalties that have been called in the series so far is an indication of how the referees are calling the game,” Pittsburgh coach Mike Sullivan said Monday. “They’re calling it as they see it. I think discipline is of the utmost importance.” While the two-time defending Stanley Cup champions haven’t been perfect in that regard against Philadelph­ia, they haven’t been derailed by a lack of discipline. Around the rest of the NHL, penalties and the ensuing power-play goals are making a big difference: There have been 38 power-play goals through Sunday’s games compared with just 21 in 2017. The NHL wants officials to call playoffs at the same standard as the regular season, which is happening with penalties actually going up from the first period through the third. Each of the 10 pairings of referees working the playoffs has at least one who has worked the Cup Final, so the hope is having that experience helps maintain consistenc­y.

The Washington Capitals blew two-goal leads in back-toback overtime losses on home ice to Columbus because of illadvised penalties and go into Game 3 on the road (7:30 p.m. EDT Tuesday, NBCSN) knowing it’s a problem that needs immediate fixing. “We need to be a little smarter,” centre Nicklas Backstrom said. “We need to play with better discipline - especially when we have the lead twice . ... It’s obviously going to hurt you in the playoffs. That’s the way it is. It’s just fact.” Nine of the 14 regulation goals in the Washington-Columbus series have come on the power play. The Blue Jackets, who surged into the playoffs by not taking a lot of penalties to tax one of the worst special teams units in the league, lead the playoffs in penalty minutes per game.

Coach John Tortorella said the Blue Jackets “have to cure that” because it’s too dangerous to keep taking so many penalties. His players know it even if they’re unsure of the standard. “We need to stay out of the box, but you never know what’s a call and what’s not anymore,” forward Cam Atkinson said. “But that’s the game right now.” In the West, where Winnipeg leads Minnesota 2-1, the teams realize how tight things are being called.

The Wild took five penalties in the first 31 minutes Sunday night and stymied the Jets’ power play in a 6-2 comeback win. The teams combined for 19 penalties - including some fights and misconduct­s - in the second game of their series.

“We’ve just got to watch taking penalties,” Minnesota coach Bruce Boudreau said. “Both teams were really emotional at the beginning and you’ve got to worry about taking penalties and getting behind the eight ball.”

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Los Angeles Kings defenseman Drew Doughty reacts after getting hit with a stick by Vegas Golden Knights centre Jonathan Marchessau­lt during the second period of Game 3 of an NHL first-round playoff series in Los Angeles, Sunday.
AP PHOTO Los Angeles Kings defenseman Drew Doughty reacts after getting hit with a stick by Vegas Golden Knights centre Jonathan Marchessau­lt during the second period of Game 3 of an NHL first-round playoff series in Los Angeles, Sunday.

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