The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Opening weekend

Fiddler likes look of Island Storm’s athletic newcomers

- Fred MacDonald Fred MacDonald’s column appears every Saturday in The Guardian. He can be reached at fiddlersfa­cts@hotmail.com.

It’s another one of those weekends when both the hockey Charlottet­own Islanders and the UPEI Hockey Panthers are on the road and basketball gets all the attention.

Let’s take a closer look.

The Island Storm concludes a two-game National Basketball League of Canada opening weekend here Sunday at 2 p.m. when they meet the Saint John Riptide at Eastlink Centre. The team plays Cape Breton tonight after Friday’s game was postponed due to inclement weather.

The Storm has a number of high-profile newcomers, including Sampson Carter, who played briefly with Memphis of the NBA; Robbie Robinson, a standout in the highly regarded Drew League in Los Angeles; Russell Byrd, the former captain of the Michigan State Spartans; and Jarrell Tate, a flashy Drew League guard; to go along with returnees like sharpshoot­ing guard Tyler Scott and rugged forwards Brad States and Tirrell Baines, who is back after playing last year with Moncton.

The Storm is quick with a talented group of athletes but they do not have a big man and that could hurt when they face a team like Joe Salerno’s Moncton Magic, who have a seven-foot power forward and another physical player at six-foot-11 in ex-Storm regular Nick Evans. The Storm is confident Carl Hall can handle that department, but he will not be available for the next few weeks.

There is no love lost between Moncton and the Storm and when they first meet in a home and away on Dec. 28 and 31, I doubt either will be in a peaceful mood. I believe this is the most talented group the Storm has ever had, but you can make your own judgement tonight and tomorrow. See you at the game.

University

The UPEI men basketball squad is off to a great start, 3-1 after four games, having swept Memorial here and split at Acadia in Wolfville, N.S. They conclude their two-game homestand against Saint Mary’s (SMU) tonight at 8 p.m. while the women’s Panthers play Saint Mary’s again tonight at 6 p.m.

If you look at common opponents Saint Mary’s dumped Acadia by four and 13 in Halifax while SMU edged Memorial by eight in Newfoundla­nd, suggesting the games here will be close and the outcomes might tell us if the Panthers are a playoff-bound club or not.

Hockey

The touring Russian juniors split two-game series with the WHL and the OHL before winning both from the Quebec squad.

Islanders head coach Jim Hulton went with Charlottet­own goaltender Matthew Welsh in Tuesday’s game and he couldn’t be faulted on any of the five goals as the Russians capitalize­d on their great in-close chances.

On the NHL front, the Las Vegas Golden Knights rebounded with an impressive 5-0 Wednesday win over L.A. Kings, so I wouldn’t worry about Las Vegas as they are

within six points of the division lead heading into weekend play. When they get healthy, and when top defenceman Nate Schmidt returns to form after serving his suspension, the Knights will be just as good as last year and stand a great chance of winning the Pacific Division.

As for attributin­g the Las Vegas slow start to the idea teams are more prepared to play the Knights, that’s pure nonsense. The Golden Knights are a fastskatin­g, hard fore-checking club, blessed with top goaltendin­g and great coaching in Gerard (Turk) Gallant and company. Take it from the Prophet, they’ll represent the Pacific Division come playoff time.

Harness racing

Live harness racing continues today and Sunday at 12:30 at Red Shores at the Charlottet­own Driving Park. The 13-dash card today has the open mares at $2,350 and it’s a tough field with the likes of Prettyndan­gerous, Dustylanem­issmolly, Collective Wisdom and five others.

On Sunday, Sock It Away leaves from Post 2 in the $2,650 top class in the five-horse field and the Reg MacPherson owned pacer looks like tons the best.

The driving title at Mohawk and London is still up for grabs with six weeks to go.

At Mohawk, Louis Philippe Roy has 139 wins, followed by Bob Mcclure and Trev Henry at 135, Sylvan Filion at 132, Doug McNair at 123, James MacDonald 121 and Jody Jamieson at 119. At Western Fair, Scott Coulter at 111 wins holds a nine-race edge over Robert Shepherd, who has bagged 102.

Local trotters Freddie and Osprey Impact were off the board in Thursday starts in separate $8,500 trot events at Plainridge. At Western Fair earlier this week, Adkins Hanover was a close second in 1:56:3 in the $8,500 overnight pace while at Flamboro, Sodwana Bay took the $10,500 preferred in 1:55:3 for co-owners Wayne MacRae and Blaine MacPherson. At Yonkers, Mark MacDonald is on holidays, so not racing this week while McWicked goes tonight in the $20,000 preferred handicap at the Meadowland­s.

 ?? JASON MALLOY/THE GUARDIAN ?? Daniel Gordon goes for a reverse layup as Dominic Shuler defends during Island Storm practice Tuesday at Colonel Gray High School.
JASON MALLOY/THE GUARDIAN Daniel Gordon goes for a reverse layup as Dominic Shuler defends during Island Storm practice Tuesday at Colonel Gray High School.
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