Regina Leader-Post

Otters stars aim to go out with cup

OHL champions’ window of opportunit­y to win titles closing after this season

- TERRY KOSHAN tkoshan@postmedia.com

Kris Knoblauch put out the call.

It’s up to the marquee players of the Erie Otters to respond to their coach Friday in the semifinal of the 2017 Memorial Cup.

“You win when your best players are your best players,” Knoblauch said Thursday, a day before his club meets the Saint John Sea Dogs at the WFCU Centre with a berth in the final on the line.

“So that goes from (goaltender) Troy Timpano to (defenceman) Darren Raddysh to (forwards) Dylan Strome and Alex DeBrincat. It’s good contributi­ons when we can get our fourth line playing well, but rarely do you win hockey games when your fourth line is your best line or your best players.

“It’s our top guys who are going to have to come and perform. For the most part, we win and lose with those guys.”

The Otters, the Ontario Hockey League champions, find themselves in the semifinal partly because their best players, starting with Strome and DeBrincat, were not productive in a 4-2 loss to the host Windsor Spitfires on Wednesday. Now it’s another match against a Saint John team the Otters clobbered 12-5 on Monday, setting a Memorial Cup record for most goals in one game.

Not only did Strome, the Erie captain who mostly has excelled since being returned by the Arizona Coyotes, and DeBrincat, who had 65 goals in the regular season, not record a point against Windsor, one incident served as a painful reminder of the bad things that can happen when discipline is forgotten.

Frustratio­n on the part of Strome led to an easy call for a slashing minor toward the end of the first period and when teammate T.J. Fergus took a holding penalty seconds later, it put Erie two men down to start the second.

With Strome and Fergus watching from the box, the Spits scored what would be the winning goal.

A better handle on emotions has to be part of the Otters’ approach.

“There possibly could have been a call right before that and maybe there is retaliatio­n,” Knoblauch said. “Absolutely, there can’t be that. But I think whether that’s retaliatin­g or just our execution or work ethic in the first period, everything was not very good.”

Timpano has to be more of a wall in net. His save percentage of .823 in the tournament won’t scare anybody, least of all an offensivel­y lethal Sea Dogs.

“I don’t think the save percentage is very good, but you look at the goals we have allowed, there have been empty-net, back-door,” Knoblauch said. “I know Troy can play a lot better. We have seen it. For us to win the last two games, I am confident that he will.”

This group has brushed aside adversity previously. In the OHL Western Conference final, the Otters lost two in a row against Owen Sound, but recovered to win the next three games; in the previous series, the Otters ousted the London Knights in seven games after losing Game 6 in overtime.

The difference now is magnified. Lose on Friday and the Otters organizati­on, coming off four consecutiv­e 50-win seasons, will be hitting the rebuild button. Knoblauch is expected to move on. Strome, DeBrincat, Anthony Cirelli and defenceman Erik Cernak are headed for graduation to the pro ranks. Overagers Raddysh, Warren Foegele and Pettit are closing their junior careers.

“You think about the times you have won and you have always been building up for this championsh­ip and you want to finish on top,” Knoblauch said. “Every team has that (desire). But for me and those guys I have been around, I would definitely like to finish it that way.”

It’s our top guys who are going to have to come and perform. For the most part, we win and lose with those guys.

 ?? DAN JANISSE ?? The Erie Otters will need improved play from goaltender Troy Timpano if they are to advance past the Saint John Sea Dogs on Friday night to reach the Memorial Cup final, where the Windsor Spitfires await.
DAN JANISSE The Erie Otters will need improved play from goaltender Troy Timpano if they are to advance past the Saint John Sea Dogs on Friday night to reach the Memorial Cup final, where the Windsor Spitfires await.

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