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Tipped Off
04-08-2005, 02:03 PM
From the Everett Herald on 4/8

Game 1: Everett Silvertips at Kootenay Ice
Tips find rough Ice

By Nick Patterson
Herald Writer


EVERETT - Tuesday night the Everett Silvertips were in Portland, celebrating their 3-2 victory over the Winter Hawks in Game 7 of their first-round playoff series.

Eighteen hours later they were boarding a bus in Everett en route to Cranbrook, British Columbia, for Game 1 of their second-round series against the Kootenay Ice.

There's no rest for the weary in the Western Hockey League postseason.

"It's a challenge," Everett coach Kevin Constantine said. "We don't really get a lot of time to re-energize. But the bottom line for our guys was it was either golf or play hockey, and I don't know a guy in that room that doesn't want to play hockey."

With Everett's second-round series against the Ice beginning tonight at Kootenay, the Tips have had little time to dwell upon their first-round victory over Portland, in which Everett overcame the Winter Hawks' punishing style to prevail 4-3 in the best-of-seven series.

"Something we've talked about all playoffs is, 'Don't get too high, don't get too low, try to forget about what happened and stay focused with the present,' " Everett right wing Alex Leavitt said. "That's because everything that happened in the past in playoffs doesn't really mean anything. The fact that we had a big win in Game 7, I don't think the Kootenay Ice could care less about that. So that's the way we have to think about it."

While Everett was surviving against Portland, Kootenay advanced by dispatching Kamloops in six games. The Ice were 47 seconds away from falling behind 3-1 in the series. But a late game-tying goal by Ryan Russell and an overtime winner by Dale Mahovsky in Game 4 allowed Kootenay to tie the series, and the Ice won the final two games, outscoring Kamloops 12-3.

"I thought we played a lot better as the series went on," Kootenay coach Cory Clouston said. "We were tentative early, whether it was because of jitters or nerves. But the last two games were our best by far. We were just competing a lot harder and playing more physical."

Kootenay presents a stern test for the Tips. The Ice had the best record in the WHL during the regular season, gave up the fewest goals in the league (137) and scored the most goals in the Western Conference (218).

Everett did not fare well against Kootenay during the regular season. Everett lost two of their three meetings, with those being two of the Tips' uglier losses of the season. Even Everett's win deserves an asterisk as the Tips won 1-0 at home in a game where Kootenay was missing three of its best players.

"They're No. 1 in the league overall for a reason," Constantine said. "They're the best team in the league. They've got good goaltending, they're really solid on defense, they've got a dynamic offensive player who's not the only good offensive player on the team. So I think what's most challenging about them is they don't have a chink in their armor. They don't have anything you can exploit."

Tantamount for Everett is dealing with Kootenay's two stars, left wing Nigel Dawes and goaltender Jeff Glass.

Dawes, a two-time member of Canada's World Junior Championships team and perhaps the best natural goal scorer in the WHL, scored a franchise-record 50 goals this season. Two of those came in victories against Everett - one on an unbelievable shot from the slot, the other on a great solo effort where he skated around three Everett players.

"It's really hard because he moves all over on their lines," Constantine said. "It's not like playing (Brandon) Dubinsky and (Dan) DaSilva from the last series where you knew they were going to be on the ice together 95 percent of the time. With Dawes he plays on all their lines randomly, so you don't really have the ability to match guys against him. It's a lot harder strategy-wise to stop someone like that."

However, Dawes' status is uncertain. Dawes did not play in Kootenay's final two first-round games, and a tight-lipped Clouston was mum both on why Dawes missed the games and whether he'll play in Game 1.

Glass also was a member of the Canada team that won the gold medal at this year's World Junior Championships. During the regular season he finished second in the league in both goals against average (1.76) and save percentage (.932).

Both Dawes and Glass were named first-team Western Conference All-Stars.

While there are question marks surrounding Dawes, Everett has injury concerns of its own. Defenseman Mitch Love sat out three of the Tips' the final four games against Portland with a bruised knee. He skated during warmups in Game 7, but was held out by the coaches. He's listed as day-to-day.

Left wing Tyler Dietrich, recovering from a fractured ankle, was a surprise inclusion in Game 4, but hasn't played since. His availability is unknown.

Tipped Off
04-08-2005, 02:04 PM
Everett Herald: 4/8

Don't count out Silvertips, who thrive in role of underdog

The feeling is the same as that of a year ago. They don't have a chance. But then again, they do.

The Everett Silvertips-Kootenay Ice WHL Western Conference semifinal series feels so similar to last year's conference final between Everett and the Kelowna Rockets. And if this one is anything similar, you don't have to be a hockey fan to get all giddy.

The contrasts are absolute. The teams couldn't be more opposite if they'd come from different planets.

That's the fun. That's what makes this series riveting.

As riveting as Everett-Kelowna, 2004.

Remember? The Silvertips were an expansion club that somehow won the U.S. Division in the final days of the regular season, caught fire and took the first two rounds of the playoffs. Somehow, coach Kevin Constantine molded rejects from other teams into a smart, gutty team that hung in with defense, intelligence and white-hot intensity.

The Rockets, who won a WHL-leading 47 games in the regular season, were a scary bunch, with superb goalie Kelly Guard along with a huge, rugged lineup that included Randall Gelach, Troy Bodie, Shea Weber and Justin Keller.

Many will remember the series as one that Everett stole with three fluke overtime goals in Games 5, 6 and 7 to overcome a 3-1 Rockets lead in the series. Certainly, the Silvertips got more than their share of breaks.

However, they kept close with the more talented Rockets with a decidedly unflashy, blue-collar, workmanlike, grinding style of play. The philosophy: Be relentless and smart, kill penalties, wear the other team down physically, keep the game close and find a way to win at the end.

Underdogs win that way. A less-skilled team has a fighting chance that way. Critics call it "boring." The Silvertips call it "successful."

That philosophy has carried through this season, and it's needed to.

Otherwise, the Silvertips wouldn't have beaten Portland in Game 7 to get here.

"You look at the top scorers in the WHL and you won't see many Everett Silvertips up there," said forward Alex Leavitt, who tallied nine points in the seven-game series against Portland. "We're definitely not the most skilled team, but the team's got a lot of heart. We do a lot of little things you need to do to win, things other teams don't do. We block a lot of shots. We play very disciplined. We have very few penalty minutes and we were pretty consistent all year on our power plays."

Two things here. In the very beginning, general manager Doug Soetaert knew the style an expansion team had to play in order to have a prayer of being successful. After months of scouting every team in the league the season before, Soetaert plucked players in the expansion draft he knew could grind it out and would sooner take a puck in the eye than quit. The most important talent Soetaert looked for: work ethic. And it is a talent.

That's how Chad Bassen got here from Medicine Hat. How Torrie Wheat, Jeff Harvey and Mitch Love got here from Swift Current.

"The whole Silvertips organization takes pride in it," goalie Mike Wall said. "We just go out and work hard, stay disciplined and be focused for every game. I think that's a big key to our success."

The second: Constantine and his staff get everything possible out of every player on the roster.

"We have a standard work ethic ourselves," Constantine said. "We're kind of competing against ourselves, rather than competing against somebody else. We know what's right and wrong. We try to make sure we live up to those standards every night."

It's the key to beating Kootenay, which is this season's Kelowna.

The Ice is a fearsome, high-flying bunch, led by Nigel Dawes, a wizard of a puck-handler who put through 50 goals and 76 points in 63 regular-season games. Dale Mahovsky is another highly skilled player who added 71 points in 71 games. Goalie Jeff Glass was second in goals-against in the regular season at 1.76 a game.

The Ice, tied with Kelowna with a league-high 104 points, look almost unbeatable. But then, so did Kelowna, which went on to win the Memorial Cup last season.

The Silvertips sputter into the conference semifinals with the weapons they have. Leavitt is a legitimate scorer. Wall, after struggling post-Christmas, finished fifth in the league with a 1.920 goals-against average and was lights-out against Portland. Wheat adds scoring and leadership. Mitch Love gives leadership and toughness, as does Curtis Billsten. So many others fill perfect roles within the team's philosophy. Cody Thoring. Shaun Heshka. Kyle Annesley. Brady Calla. Zach Hamill. Karel Hromas. Mark Kress. Ivan Baranka. Jonathan Harty. Ryan Blatchford.

You'll find few of them on All-Star teams and few with gaudy offensive numbers, but that's not the Silvertips' way.

The team is much the same as last year's Western Conference champion. It's much younger, with more 16-year-olds that present Constantine and the coaching staff with challenges. The top end is more skilled than that of last year. Overall, it plays roughly on the same plane as last year's team.

The constant is the team's lunch-bucket approach. That, the Silvertips hope, evens the playing field.

"We've phrased it that our work ethic, our details and our discipline have to be the foundation that's in place every night," Constantine said. "Until we're a more dynamic offensive team, we can't win without those foundation things."

This will be a great, great series.

Tipped Off
04-08-2005, 02:05 PM
On paper, advantage belongs to Kootenay


By Nick Patterson
Herald Writer


Here's a look at how the Everett Silvertips and Kootenay Ice match up heading into their second-round playoff series.

Offense

Kootenay is deep and experienced up front, led by superstar Nigel Dawes. Dawes, a diminutive but explosive left wing, scored 50 goals this season despite missing several games because of international duty. His status is unclear for the start of the series - he missed the final two games of Kootenay's first-round series against Kamloops for unspecified reasons - but the Ice won both games without him, scoring 12 goals in the process. Center Dale Mahovsky has emerged as a dependable No. 2 scorer, leading the Ice in points during the first round with nine, and Martin Sagat, Ryan Russell, Adam Taylor and Adam Cracknell are also capable offensive players.

For Everett, right wing Alex Leavitt has become the focal point. With nine points in the first round against Portland, Leavitt had more than twice as many as any other Silvertip, and his numbers would have been even greater had teammates buried chances he created. Center Zach Hamill flashed signs in the first round of becoming a true offensive force, but center Torrie Wheat, the team's leading scorer during the regular season, only had three points as his defensive duties were expanded.

Edge: Kootenay

Defense

This series pits two of the most-sound defenses in the league.

Kootenay has a group of no-frills, no-nonsense defensemen - Michael Busto's 29 points were the most by an Ice blueliner during the regular season. But Busto, James Cherewyk, Roman Polak and Derek Price all do the job in their own end. Polak missed three of Kootenay's final four first-round games with a shoulder injury and is considered day-to-day. Kootenay's forwards are also some of the more defensively responsible in the league and are terrors on the forecheck.

Because of injuries, Everett was forced to mix and match defensive pairings throughout the first round. Ivan Baranka was dominant at times, while Shaun Heshka and Cody Thoring continued their solid play. Mitch Love, dealing with a bruised knee that forced him out of three games against Portland, is hoping to be ready for the start of the series.

Edge: Even

Goaltending

Everett's Michael Wall is playing the best hockey of his life. He was excellent in the final six weeks of the regular season, and he was even better in the Silvertips' first-round victory over Portland. At times Wall carried Everett on his back and he was unquestionably the Tips' most valuable player against Portland.

However, Kootenay's Jeff Glass was the starter on Canada's gold-medal winning team at the World Junior Championships for a reason. As good as Wall's numbers were during the regular season, Glass' were even better, earning him first-team Western Conference All-Star honors. Glass won both head-to-head matchups with Wall during the regular season and looked impressive in the process.

Edge: Kootenay

Specialty teams

Kootenay was solid on both the power play and the penalty kill during the regular season, ranking fifth and seventh, respectively, in the league. However, the Ice saw a dropoff in their specialty teams against Kamloops, particularly on the penalty kill as they killed off just 78.6 percent of the Blazers' advantages.

Everett's penalty kill also dropped off a tad in the playoffs, though not to the extent that Kootenay's did, and the Tips had a lot more wiggle room, having led the league in penalty killing during the regular season. Everett's power play, solid during the regular season, performed at essentially the same efficiency against Portland.

Edge: Everett

Coaching

Kootenay was picked by some WHL prognosticators to finish last in the B.C. Division this season. Cory Clouston, in his third season at the helm, turned those predictions on their head, guiding the Ice to the best record in the WHL. Clouston did it primarily by turning Kootenay's defense into the stingiest in the league, and he was the Western Conference's nomination for Coach of the Year.

However, Everett was picked to finish 18th out of 20 teams in one preseason poll, and the Tips have advanced as far as Kootenay, despite less talent and a considerably younger team. Kevin Constantine is the main reason for that.

Edge: Everett

Overall

Everett disposed of Portland, which was the hottest team in the Western Conference going into the playoffs, in the first round. However, the Tips expended a lot of energy in winning what was a physically grueling seven-game series. Now the Tips face the regular season champs. Much hinges on the status of Dawes, which is not known. But Kootenay comfortably beat Everett twice during the regular season with Dawes, and without him lost in Everett in a game the Ice played well enough to win. Ultimately, Kootenay's experience will be difficult for the Tips to overcome.

Prediction: Kootenay in seven.