Vancouver Giants hope underdog mindset that helped them beat Everett works against Kamloops


With their win over Everett, Vancouver became the first No. 8 seed to beat a No. 1 in the opening round of the WHL playoffs since they went to 16 teams in the post-season in 2002.

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The game plan will be slightly altered. Their mindset remains the same.

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That was the messaging coming out of the Vancouver Giants’ players Wednesday as they prepared to face the Kamloops Blazers in the second round of the WHL Western Conference playoffs beginning Friday in Kamloops.

The Giants’ 6-3 win over the Everett Silvertips on Monday at the Langley Events Center clinched their best-of-seven West quarterfinal series in six games and made the Giants the first No. 8 seed to beat a No. 1 seed in the opening round since the WHL went to a 16-team playoff split over two conferences in 2002.

Vancouver (24-39-5-0) finished 47 points behind the front-running Silvertips (45-13-5-5). Kamloops (48-17-3-0) is the No. 2 seed, thanks to finishing one point back of Everett.

Kamloops plays quicker and pushes the play offensively more than Everett, the Giants said. They will tweak things for that. They won’t change from the last series and they’re not thinking about their regular-season struggles or about predictions from pundits about how this series might go.


NEXT GAME

Friday: Game 1

Vancouver Giants vs. Kamloops Blazers

7 pm, Sandman Centre. Radio: Sportsnet 650.


Vancouver is a heavy underdog once more. Onlookers might get caught up in how Vancouver was 2-9-1-0 against Kamloops in the regular season. Giants players insist they will not.

“A lot of people will write us off but that’s outside noise for us,” Giants defenseman Connor Horning said. “We have to focus on what we can control. Focusing on the little details helped us out against Everett and we’ll have to do that against Kamloops.”

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The Giants were the No. 10 team in the national rankings on the morning of Dec. 8, coming off a six-game win streak. They lost 7-1 in Kamloops that night, and they floundered much of the rest of the regular season. From that Kamloops game, they didn’t win more than two games in a row until they took the final three games of the Everett series.

Horning said that the playoffs gave the Giants a chance to get a “clean slate and treat it as a new season.”

Or as winger Fabian Lysell explained: “We had the regular season and once it was finished and done and the playoffs came, we let loose a bit.”

Or defenseman Mazden Leslie added: “Everyone is 0-0 to start the playoffs. Everyone is even.”

One of the keys for Vancouver will be keeping their power play going. Despite having high-end skill types like Lysell and defenseman Alex Cotton, Vancouver was No. 18 in the 22-team WHL on the power play in the regular season, connecting at 17.7 per cent (43-of-243). Against Everett, they were at 37.5 per cent (12-of-32).

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The Giants had to tweak their first-unit power play quintet in Game 2 when winger Payton Mount left the game after taking a hit-from-behind from Everett center Alex Swetlikoff. Mount didn’t return for the rest of the series and Giants coach Michael Dyck talked afterwards about concussion concerns for Mount.

Swetlikoff received a checking-from-behind double-minor on the play and then a two-game suspension from the league office afterwards.

Horning took Mount’s spot with the top unit and had a key power-play marker in Game 6.

“I think we simplified it,” Horning said of the power play. “I think we’re getting some bounces too, which is nice.”

Vancouver’s power play clicked at just 12.5 per cent (5-of-40) in their 12-game regular season series with Kamloops. Also in the Blazers’ favor in that regard is that they were short-handed the fewest times in the league (215). The Winnipeg Ice (222) and the Saskatoon Blades (223) were next best.

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Kamloops had the league’s No. 6 penalty kill (80.9 per cent, 41 goals against on 215 opportunities), while Everett, No. 12 (78.9 per cent, 56 goals against on 265 chances).

TALE OF THE TAPE
Vancouver Giants vs. Kamloops Blazers

overall record

Kamloops: (48-17-3-0, 99 points, second in West, fourth in WHL)

Vancouver: (24-39-5-0, 53 points, eighth in West, 19th in WHL)

head-to-head record

Kamloops: 2-9-1-0

Overall goals for

Kamloops: 287

Vancouver: 185

Overall goals against

Kamloops: 176

Vancouver: 254

Overall power play

Kamloops: 23.5 per cent (67-of-285)

Vancouver: 17.7 per cent (43-of-243)

Overall penalty killing

Kamloops: 80.9 per cent (41 goals against, 215 chances)

Vancouver: 76 per cent (63 goals against, 262 chances)

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Head-to-head PP

Kamloops: 27.6 per cent (16-of-58)

Vancouver: 12.5 per cent (5-of-40)

Head-to-head PK

Kamloops: 87.5 per cent (five goals, 40 chances)

Vancouver: 72.4 per cent (16 goals, 58 chances)

Head-to-head top scorers

Kamloops: Logan Stankoven (9-11-20); Matthew Seminoff (6-8-14); Quinn Schliemann (4-10-14)

Vancouver: Fabian Lysell (5-5-10); Zack Ostapchuk (6-1-7); Cole Shepard (1-5-6).

[email protected]

twitter.com/steveewen


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