The Standard (St. Catharines)

Fort Erie Meteors hand Falls Canucks second loss in a row

- BERND FRANKE

An Olympic-size ice surface in the main rink at Fort Erie Leisureple­x is the largest in the Greater Ontario Junior Hockey League’s Golden Horseshoe Conference.

On the weekend, it was large enough to swallow a 19-point disparity between the host Meteors, the seventh-place team in the nine-conference, and the Niagara Falls Canucks, the first.

Fort Erie’s 5-4 victory in double overtime may have stunned fans, but it was not surprising to Meteors head coach Ethan Moreau. He saw a confident crew hit the ice for Round 3 in junior B hockey’s Battle of the Niagara Parkway.

“I could tell our players knew they would win the game,” he said. “That was evident as well outplayed them in the first period.”

Shots on goal in the opening frame were 15-9 in favour of Fort Erie.

While the Canucks outshot their hosts 34-15 the rest of the way, the Meteors were 3:02 away from winning the game in regulation.

“Our speed and pace was equal or better than them throughout the game,” Moreau said. “Our goalie (Ethan Cook), who has been out with injury for a month, was very good.”

It was the Canuck’s second loss in as many nights and first of the season against the Meteors. They suffered a 3-1 setback at home at the night before to the Pelham Panthers.

Niagara Falls owner-head coach Frank Pietrangel­o said playing on the large ice at the Leisureple­x poses a challenge for visiting teams.

“It’s the biggest surface in our league, and you definitely have to adjust the way you play there,” he said.

Compoundin­g the problem for the Canucks is a lack of turnaround time as Niagara Falls’ home games are Fridays and Fort Erie’s the following night.

“Playing Friday night home games and then going to play on the big ice in Fort Erie on Saturday nites is never easy,” Pietrangel­o said. “We have dropped points there over the years.”

Evan Miller scored 4:24 into the

second — and final — overtime to give the Meteors their second win in a row.

Brady Lee, Alex McTeer, even strength; Logan Warner and Luca Mazzo, power play; found the back of the net in regulation for Fort Erie, which improved to 4-10-0-1.

Dillon Hill scored two goals, Ben Evans and Matthew Riva one each for the Canucks who outshot their hosts 43-30.

Niagara Falls opened the season series against Fort Erie winning 9-2 at home and 7-1 at home.

Fort Erie went 2-for-8 on the power play; Niagara Falls, 0-for-3.

Lone game on the Golden Horseshoe schedule last night had the Meteors visiting the Welland Jr. Canadians, 4-10-0-0.

Results were unavailabl­e at press time, but a summary is posted online at stcatharin­esstandard.ca, niagarafal­lsreview.ca and wellandtri­bune.ca.

Next action for the Canucks is a 7 p.m. home game Friday against the Thorold Blackhawks.

Falcons 6, Blackhawks 3

At Jack Gatecliff Arena in St. Catharines, Christian Girhiny netted a hat trick and the host Falcons doubled Thorold to return to the win column and extend their point streak to 11 games.

Rounding out the scoring for St. Catharines were Jacob Roach, with two goals, and Carson Edwardson.

Bailey Stumpo, Brendan Chartlon and Sam Vander Zalm scored for the Blackhawks, who were outshot 35-17.

The Falcons were 2-for-4 on the power play; the Blackhawks, 1-for-4.

St. Catharines improved to 11-3-0-1 moving within one point of idle Hamilton, 12-4, for second place in the Greater Ontario Junior Hockey League’s Golden Horseshoe Conference.

Fifth-place Thorold fell to 5-91-0 and lost for the second time this season to the Falcons.

Girhiny, who started the season in the Ontario Hockey League as an over-ager with the Erie Otters, has eight goals and two assists in his first four games with St. Catharines.

The 20-year-old Thorold native had 28 goals and 40 assists for 68 points in 185 games in three seasons in Erie before coming home to play out his final year in junior.

Girhiny, the Otters’ 11th-round pick in the 2014 OHL draft with the 219th selection, played high school hockey with the Ridley College Tigers after graduating from the Southern Tier Admirals minor midget triple A program.

St. Catharines hosts the Lockport Regals 7 p.m. Friday at Jack Gatecliff Arena. Thorold returns to the ice Thursday for a 7:07 p.m. puck drop against the visiting Welland Jr. Canadians.

Panthers 3, Canucks 1

At Niagara Falls, visiting Pelham scored three unanswered goals between whistles and tripled the Canucks for their second in a row.

Thomas Young, with two goals; and Chris Webber scored for the Panthers, 11-6-0-1.

Patrick McCabe opened the scoring for Niagara Falls which outshot Pelham by a 32-23 margin.

The two teams combined for 114 minutes in penalties on 30 infraction­s. Pelham went 2-for-9 on the power play; Niagara Falls, 0-for-9.

 ?? BOB TYMCZYSZYN THE ST. CATHARINES STANDARD ?? Thorold’s Brennan Ireland reached over St. Catharines’ Christian Girhiny for a loose puck in Greater Ontario Junior Hockey League action Friday night at Jack Gatecliff Arena in St. Catharines.
BOB TYMCZYSZYN THE ST. CATHARINES STANDARD Thorold’s Brennan Ireland reached over St. Catharines’ Christian Girhiny for a loose puck in Greater Ontario Junior Hockey League action Friday night at Jack Gatecliff Arena in St. Catharines.
 ?? BOB TYMCZYSZYN
THE ST. CATHARINES STANDARD ?? St. Catharines’ Jacob Roach, though off balance, scores a goal against Thorold in Greater Ontario Junior Hockey League action Friday night at Jack Gatecliff Arena in St. Catharines.
BOB TYMCZYSZYN THE ST. CATHARINES STANDARD St. Catharines’ Jacob Roach, though off balance, scores a goal against Thorold in Greater Ontario Junior Hockey League action Friday night at Jack Gatecliff Arena in St. Catharines.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada