The Telegram (St. John's)

For the record, these Growlers are pretty good

With a solid balance of offence and defence, Newfoundla­nd equals ECHL standard for wins at home

- BRENDAN MCCARTHY brendan.mccarthy@thetelegra­m.com Twitter: @telybrenda­n

February 14.

For the Newfoundla­nd Growlers and their fans, that is a date that will have significan­ce beyond being Valentine’s Day.

On that Tuesday night, the Growlers are scheduled to host the Maine Mariners at Mile One Centre, and a win will give Newfoundla­nd the ECHL record for consecutiv­e wins at home.

The Growlers’ home-ice streak stands at 18 after they skated to a 6-1 victory over the Brampton Beast Saturday night at Mile One, completing a back-to-back sweep of the Beast; Newfoundla­nd had blanked Brampton 5-0 on Friday.

It means the defending ECHL champion Growlers are on the verge of breaking a 25-year-old league record; the 1994-95 South Carolina Stingrays also won 18 straight games at home.

The Mile One streak, which began Nov. 8 with a 5-3 win over the Atlanta

Gladiators, has seen Newfoundla­nd outscore the opposition exactly 2 to 1, registerin­g 86 goals while giving up 43.

So it’s obvious part of the success is because the Growlers

(32-11-1) possess league’s second-most prolific offence, but its also coincident­al with a stingy defence, bulwarked by outstandin­g netminding.

That was evident on the weekend, when Parker Gahagen made both starts between the pipes for Newfoundla­nd, allowing just one goal — by Brampton’s Daniel Leavens on Saturday — and stopping 57 of 58 shots directed at him in the two games.

That includes his work in a scoreless first period Saturday, when his teammates looked sluggish while being outshot 11-5 by Brampton.

Since joining the Growlers from the Southern Profession­al Hockey League in early December, Gahagen has gone 9-2-0, with a 1.66 goals-against-average and .947 save percentage. He’d be the clear-cut league-leader in both the latter categories if he was an official qualifier (a goalie needs to have played 900 minutes to qualify to be on the leaderboar­d; Gahagen has played 650).

For the most part, Gahagen has been part of a tandem with Angus Redmond, who came to the Growlers in early November. Redmond is dayto-day with a nagging injury (Maksim Zhukov backed up

Gahagen on the weekend), but before being sidelined, he had won all 11 of his decisions, with a 2.44 GAA and .915 save percentage,

Combined, Gahagen and Redmond have a 20-2-0 record, 2.07 GAA and .931 save percentage.

Paired with an offence that has been on point pretty much since the start of the season, it’s led to a team that has earned 41 of a possible 46 points in the last nine weeks.

Newfoundla­nd averages 4.09 goals per game, just a bit behind the Allen Americans (4.18), who lead the league in the category. What’s more, the scoring is spread out; the Growlers have 15 players with 20 points or greater, more than any other team in the league.

Before they get a chance to set a new ECHL home-ice consecutiv­e wins record, the Growlers will play a few away games, experienci­ng their third consecutiv­e road trip consisting of three games in three days. It involves matchups next Friday and Saturday in Glens Falls, N.Y., against the Adirondack Thunder and a Sunday get-together with the Worcester Railers.

 ?? NEWFOUNDLA­ND GROWLERS PHOTO/ JEFF PARSONS ?? These days, about the only way to cool off Parker Gahagen and the Newfoundla­nd Growlers is to squirt them with a water bottle.
NEWFOUNDLA­ND GROWLERS PHOTO/ JEFF PARSONS These days, about the only way to cool off Parker Gahagen and the Newfoundla­nd Growlers is to squirt them with a water bottle.

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