Toronto Star

WHITEOUT IN WINNIPEG

After a 19-year wait, Jets fans welcome the boys back for playoff hockey,

- STEPHEN WHYNO THE CANADIAN PRESS

Jets’ Ondrej Pavelec awaits the puck drop as the fans stay on their feet prior to Game 3 against the Ducks on Monday.

WINNIPEG— Paul Maurice didn’t put too much stock into the snow falling on the day of the first playoff game in Winnipeg since 1996.

It’s the whiteout inside MTS Centre that fans, coaches and players have been waiting for.

Playoff hockey returned to the city Monday, with the Jets hosting the Anaheim Ducks in Game 3 of their first-round series. It’s a day 19 years in the making since the first incarnatio­n of the Jets left for Arizona and four years since the Thrashers moved here to bring the NHL back.

“It’s a real special day for the people that have been here a long time,” winger Blake Wheeler said. “Losing the team a number of years ago, it’s kind of come full-circle. I think it’s a great day for people of Winnipeg.”

Maurice has coached in Toronto and Carolina but never experience­d the kind of connection Jets fans have with this team.

“The fans here come up and thank you like you had anything to do with the team coming back, which I didn’t, for being here,” Maurice said Monday morning. “You get the feeling that you’re kind of like the teacher here and you’ve got their kids, and their kids is the Winnipeg Jets hockey team. Through the course of the regular season, they’ve been getting some pretty average to below average marks and they’re finally getting some good grades.”

Monday night’s highly-anticipate­d parent-teacher conference was expected to include a full house of 15,016 fans making more noise than ever before. Players around the league already consider the arena one of the loudest around, despite being one of the smaller ones.

The combinatio­n of the Jets making the post-season and the drought since the last home playoff game combine to make this a whole different atmosphere.

“We know it’s a pretty big deal in Winnipeg for the first time in19 years to have an NHL playoff game here,” Ducks coach Bruce Boudreau said. “We also know how rabid the fans are about their hockey and how they love their hockey . . . We’re happy for the city, we’re happy for everything as far as the growth of the game and what hockey in Winnipeg has done.”

What Winnipeg has done is embraced a hockey team that missed the playoffs its first three years since relocating. General manager Kevin Cheveldayo­ff hired Maurice halfway through last season and slow-played his hand on personnel — often to the chagrin of fans desperate for change — before making key moves before the trade deadline to give the Jets the boost they needed to get in.

Being in the playoffs is a validation of Cheveldayo­ff’s plan.

“It was a process,” said veteran centre Jim Slater, the only player left from the Thrashers’ only playoff team in 1996. “Obviously, hiring Paul Maurice as the head coach was a big part of that process. I think now fans get a taste of it, they’re going to want some more, year after year.”

 ?? JONATHAN KOZUB/NHLI VIA GETTY IMAGES ??
JONATHAN KOZUB/NHLI VIA GETTY IMAGES
 ?? TREVOR HAGAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Winnipeg’s Mark Scheifele shares a word with Anaheim’s Ryan Getzlaf during Game 3 at the MTS Centre.
TREVOR HAGAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS Winnipeg’s Mark Scheifele shares a word with Anaheim’s Ryan Getzlaf during Game 3 at the MTS Centre.

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