Times Colonist

Victoria Royals ready for four-game trip

GAME DAY: VICTORIA AT KAMLOOPS 7 p.m. at the Sandman Centre TV: None / Radio: The Zone 91.3 FM

- CLEVE DHEENSAW

The hyper-competitiv­e and parity-driven Western Conference of the Western Hockey League features what could be a telling game tonight in the B.C. Division with the Victoria Royals in Kamloops to play the Blazers.

Both teams are 7-6 with Kamloops having won its last three games. Victoria put up 24 goals in its recent three-game winning streak, including 18 in two games, before losing 3-1 Saturday to U.S. Division-leading Everett despite widely out-playing the Silvertips.

“It’s a tight conference, for sure,” said Don Hay, head coach of Kamloops.

“We have to be competitiv­e against the top teams — Kelowna, which is starting to play now, Victoria and this year Prince George, which is off to a fast start. And Everett plays well all the time.”

Then there are the Seattle Thunderbir­ds, who will suddenly become a major factor if Mathew Barzal is sent back from the New York Islanders of the NHL.

“There are such good coaches in the league and organizati­ons that have done such good drafting [of bantams],” said Hay.

“You have organizati­ons that are really committed to getting, and staying, strong. Teams realize they have to be competitiv­e in all different areas.”

Victoria, the defending WHL regular-season champions, dominated Everett on Saturday and outshot the Silvertips 38-13 despite the loss. The difference was Silvertips goaltender Carter Hart, a second-round draft pick of the Philadelph­ia Flyers and likely the goaltender for Canada at the 2017 world junior championsh­ip. There-in could be the key to what will be a tight season. The goaltendin­g this season will be crucial and teams like Everett and Prince George, the latter well set with 19- and 20-year-old veterans tending the crease, are well poised in that department.

So are they in Kamloops, where formerly unheralded and lightly-regarded Connor Ingram has come on to become one of the best goaltender­s in the WHL and was selected in the third round of the 2016 NHL draft by the Tampa Bay Lightning after being overlooked in his first year of draft eligibilit­y in 2015. Ingram is fifth in the league in goals-against average at 2.32 and is third in save percentage at .927.

“Connor has such composure and he doesn’t get rattled,” said Hay.

“His confidence level gives all the other players more confidence.”

The reviews are still pending on the Victoria goaltendin­g, however. It is among the youngest in the league. How goes 18-year-old starter Griffen Outhouse and 17-year-old backup Dylan Myskiw, may go the Royals season. With so many opposing teams in the conference featuring solid to outstandin­g goaltendin­g, this is not a position in which the Royals can afford to have any uncertaint­y.

The Ingram-backed Blazers, as a whole, gained a great deal last spring in taking Kelowna to Game 7 of overtime in the first round of the playoffs. They were one shot from meeting Victoria in the second round and the Blazers, in a sense, announced they had arrived.

“That series was important for our group’s growth,” said Hay.

“But we need to continue to see growth with this group this season, and to make another step so we can compete against the top teams in our division like Victoria, Kelowna and Prince George.”

Hay, meanwhile, said the transforma­tion in Victoria hasn’t gone unnoticed by him and others in the league.

“They have done a great job in Victoria from going from a bigger and more physical team to a smaller and more skilled team,” said the Kamloops bench boss.

“We better be prepared to skate against these guys.”

The Royals continue their road swing Wednesday in Kelowna with a reprise of that epic secondroun­d playoff series last spring against the Rockets, Friday in Tri-City against the Americans and Saturday in Everett against the Silvertips.

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