The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Special recognitio­n

Third-year Wild forward Evan Gallant named MVP of provincial major midget series

- BY JASON SIMMONDS

The Kensington Monaghan Farms Wild expected big things from forward Evan Gallant in the playoffs, and the Abram-Village native did not disappoint.

Gallant scored five goals in the first two games, assisted on the game-winning goals in Games 4 and 5 and was named the most valuable player of the P.E.I. major midget hockey championsh­ip series as the Wild defeated the Charlottet­own Bulk Carriers Pride 4-1 in the best-of-seven matchup.

“It was exciting (to be named MVP), but I was more worried about getting the big trophy,” said the 17-year-old son of Jamie and the late Yvette Gallant.

Wild head coach Kyle Dunn praised Gallant’s work ethic and contributi­ons.

“Evan is a guy who comes to the rink and puts a lot of time in,” said Dunn. “He made some big contributi­ons in the playoffs. He played big minutes, whether it be penalty kill, power play and a regular shift, and it’s good to see him get rewarded.”

Gallant admitted things got tougher as the series went along.

“The first few games I had more room out there, but they tightened up their D and things

got a little tougher in the other three games,” said Gallant, a draft pick of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League’s Charlottet­own Islanders and St. Stephen Aces of the MHL (Maritime Junior Hockey League).

The Wild won the first two games 8-1 and 6-2, before the Pride showed they weren’t going to go quietly and pulled out a 3-2 road win in Game 3.

Kensington actually trailed Game 4 2-1 early in the third period, but the Wild rallied for four goals and a 5-2 win in Charlottet­own. Gallant and rookie defenceman William Proud set up Ryan Richards’s winning goal with just under seven minutes remaining.

Gallant and Isaac Callaghan assisted on Chandler Wood’s championsh­ip-clinching tally 3:27 into overtime in a 3-2 win on Saturday night. That goal came after the Pride erased a 2-0 third-period deficit.

“It was one of those games where one bad bounce ends up in the back of our net (to tie the game),” said Gallant in addressing the team’s mood after Charlottet­own pulled even. “No one was panicking, it was stick to the game plan, play our game and try to get the last goal.”

Gallant, forward Frank Fortin and defenceman and team captain Clark Webster are in select company of having won three provincial major midget championsh­ips in a row.

“It’s a pretty cool feeling,” acknowledg­ed Gallant. “Not many players are able to do a threepeat, and we’ve had a great bunch of guys to do it with. It’s been a really fun three years.”

The Wild was right back to work at practice on Monday night, and have workouts scheduled for Wednesday and Friday of this week as they prepare to represent P.E.I. at the Atlantic major midget hockey championsh­ip in Lantz, N.S., from March 29 to April 1.

 ?? JASON SIMMONDS/JOURNAL PIONEER ?? Hockey P.E.I. president Barry Thompson presents Kensington Monaghan Farms Wild forward Evan Gallant with the most valuable player award for the 2018 P.E.I. major midget hockey championsh­ip series.
JASON SIMMONDS/JOURNAL PIONEER Hockey P.E.I. president Barry Thompson presents Kensington Monaghan Farms Wild forward Evan Gallant with the most valuable player award for the 2018 P.E.I. major midget hockey championsh­ip series.

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