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Tipped Off
03-14-2008, 12:21 PM
http://www.heraldnet.com/article/20080314/SPORTS/250917556/1003/SPORTS08#This.years.Everett.Silvertips.team.is.bet ter.prepared.for.the.playoffs

This year's Everett Silvertips team is better prepared for the playoffs

EVERETT -- Expectations blew through the roof in March 2007.

The Everett Silvertips had won the Scotty Munro Trophy for the best regular-season record in the Western Hockey League. They finished with 54 victories and 111 points. To many, the Silvertips would be a lock to win the league title and the Memorial Cup merely by showing up. After all, they had the best talent in the league with names such as Mueller, Hamill, Irving, Beach and others.

Yet, this year's edition of the Tips, currently in sixth place in the conference, might well come into the playoffs in a better mental frame of mind and better physical shape than last season's juggernaut.

"This is a very positive, confident group," general manager Doug Soetaert said. "Last year, we had all the talent and ability in the world, but we weren't positive, we weren't confident and there were some internal issues. About mid-February, things began to go downhill."

After ripping through the first five months of the 2006-07 season, the Silvertips lost eight of their final 18 games of the regular season, dating back to Feb. 10. The swoon continued in the playoffs. After getting by Spokane in six games, Everett beat Prince George twice in the second round before a shocking collapse in the last four games.

Up 3-0 at home in Game 5, Everett gave up four goals in the third period, three in a five-minute span, and lost 4-3. That sent them back to Prince George behind 3-2 in the series. Prince George dominated Game 6, closed out the series 8-2 and suddenly, Everett fans were selling their Memorial Cup tickets on the cheap.

In roughly the same span this year, the Silvertips have won 10 of their past 13 games. They won't come close to winning the Scotty Munro Trophy, but the feeling is one of positive anticipation going into next week's playoffs.

So what happened? And why are they so comparatively more ready for the postseason this time around?

"Last year, we were pretty much just winning every game," forward Shane Harper said. "I'd say we were a little overconfident going into the playoffs. This year, we started off rocky. This is the time to start bringing your 'A' game. You want to go into the playoffs rising instead of teetering off."

Last year's team dealt with very few hard times and didn't have a clue how to work out of them.

The 2007-08 Tips began the season by losing five of their first six games. They've had three losing streaks of three games or more. Adversity is hardly a strange animal.

"Last year, everything seemed to come easy for us," coach John Becanic said.

The Munro Trophy became The Goal, and five months of playing scorching hockey left little energy for the playoffs, a time when familiarity sets in.

"Some of the guys were getting pretty tired and pretty beat up from playing a lot," defenseman Graham Potuer said. "But teams, after a 72-game season, figure you out after a while. They start playing your strengths and playing against your weaknesses."

This season, the emphasis all along was for the Tips to play their best hockey down the stretch of the regular season and in the playoffs. They understood that a change in head coach meant a change in philosophy. The players had to learn a new style. That would take time and would mean they would have their struggles, especially in the early part of the season.

Becanic has made sure to give the players the occasional day away from the game to stay mentally fresh.

"There are a lot of demands on the players, both on and off the ice," Becanic said. "I don't think people realize how mentally demanding this is for the players. The mental part is just as important as the physical part. I'm not so sure if we were mentally exhausted in the playoffs or a combination, but nobody hands out trophies at the end of the regular season."

Well, there is the Scotty Munro Trophy.

But that's not the one the Silvertips really want.

Tipped Off
03-14-2008, 12:23 PM
http://www.heraldnet.com/article/20080314/SPORTS/755627792/1003/SPORTS08#The.Everett.Silvertips.can.control.their. own.destiny.with.three.wins

The Everett Silvertips can control their own destiny with three wins

Tips are fighting for home ice advantage

EVERETT -- Scenario No. 1 among the Everett Silvertips' playoff possibilities is straightforward: Win all three games this weekend -- beginning tonight against Seattle -- and earn home-ice advantage for the first round of the playoffs.

Anything other than that and it's a big mess.

The final weekend of the WHL regular season has arrived, and Everett heads into it with a multitude of possible conclusions as far as the playoffs are concerned.

Everett can finish anywhere between fourth and sixth in the Western Conference standings. The fourth-place position is particularly important. The team that finishes fourth is the last one to have home-ice advantage in the first round of the playoffs.

The Tips also still have four possible first-round opponents. Should Everett finish fourth or fifth, the Tips probably face Seattle, with an outside chance of playing Kelowna. If Everett finishes sixth, the Tips face either Spokane or Tri-City, whichever does not win the U.S. Division and WHL regular season titles.

All of which has curiosities piqued this weekend in locations throughout the Western Conference.

"As an older player being in the league four years, you always look at the standings and where you're going to end up," Everett leading scorer Dan Gendur said. "I don't know if it's as important to the younger players -- I know when I was younger it didn't really matter. But we want to finish fourth and have home-ice advantage."

The drama going into the final weekend of the season stands in stark contrast to Everett's previous two seasons. A year ago, the Tips had clinched the league's best record with a week remaining in the regular season, and the U.S. Division title was for all intents and purposes wrapped up by Christmas. Two years ago, the Tips clinched the division title with five games remaining in the season. As a result the season's final games were essentially meaningless.

Not so this year.

"The last couple years we as assistant coaches already were getting prepared for our first-round opponent, getting video edited and stuff," Everett coach John Becanic recalled. "We could play one of three or four teams now, so there's no work to be done, and there probably won't be any more clarity until Sunday."

Everett hopes that when the dust settles they'll be playing at home when the playoffs open. Not only do the Tips play better at home -- 21-12-0-2 at Comcast Arena versus 18-15-0-1 on the road -- it means having home games on the weekends, when Everett is particularly good for bringing in boisterous crowds.

"Home ice is a huge advantage," defenseman Dane Crowley said. "To play here (at Comcast Arena) on a Friday and Saturday night is a lot better than on a Wednesday or Thursday, so we want to get that."

But accomplishing that won't be easy. This weekend includes two crucial head-to-head matchups with Seattle, sandwiched around a road game against Chilliwack. Everett is just 2-5-0-1 against Seattle this season.

Nevertheless, the Tips are confident about their chances of pulling it off.

"Our chances are as good as anyone else's," Becanic said. "You've just got to win your games. It's not like we haven't won three in a row. People have called us a streaky team, I guess we can hope for the positive side of the streakiness."

But as nice as it would be to earn home-ice advantage, Everett isn't dwelling on it.

"To me, home ice is a byproduct of everything we want to accomplish, which is playing hard, playing at a playoff-type pace and winning," Becanic said. "So home ice to me is off the flow chart, there's a lot of things that come before it. If we win, then home ice happens."

Everett does hold one small edge. Should there end up a tie, the first tiebreaker is total wins. In any possible tie situation, Everett will finish with more wins than either Seattle or Kelowna, thus winning the tiebreaker.

And however things end up playing out, the Tips are looking forward to playing meaningful games this weekend.

"It's only going to help us down the playoff stretch," Gendur said. "Last year, I think we were a little bit complacent going into the playoffs. This year, I think if we play hard we're going to be a lot more prepared."

Slap shots: Everett should have two more of its injured players available tonight. Winger Kyle Beach, who sat out Wednesday's 3-1 home loss against Tri-City because of a fractured orbital in his face, practiced Thursday with a full face shield. Defenseman Chris de la Lande also has recovered from the leg injury that sidelined him for six games. ... Left wing Cameron Abney has been officially added to Everett's roster. The 16-year-old prospect from Algergrove, B.C., became eligible to join the team full time after his team, the North Delta Devils of the junior B Pacific International Junior Hockey League, was eliminated from the playoffs.