RAIDERS 0-2 AT M.C., DUB ON A DROUGHT

CHL.ca

HALIFAX – Tyler Hinam of Cole Harbour, N.S., picked the right time and place to score the biggest goal of his junior hockey career.

The 19-year-old Hinam had a pair of goals, including the winner, as the Rouyn-Noranda Huskies beat the Prince Albert Raiders 6-3 on Monday at the Memorial Cup.

Hinam broke a 3-3 tie with 4:32 to go in the third period before Joel Teasdale secured the win with his second of the game just 1:25 later.

“We were just praying on the bench we would get the next one and fortunately it came out to me in the slot there and I was able to bury it,” said Hinam. “I was pretty happy there.”

Monday’s game was a matchup of the top two ranked teams in the Canadian Hockey League.

The Huskies finished the regular season No. 1 with a 59-8-1 record thanks to a 25-game win streak. The Raiders were No. 2, riding a 19-game win streak early in the season en route to a 54-10-4 record.

But both teams dropped their tournament openers and were looking for a bounce-back performance.

Raiders head coach Marc Habscheid believed his team played well enough to win.

“I thought we deserved better, should have won that game,” said Habscheid. “A lot of chances a lot of posts, think five or six posts, missed three or four open nets. Just didn’t go our way.”

As the only winless team at the tournament with two straight losses, the Raiders will need a victory in their final round-robin outing against the OHL champion Guelph Storm on Tuesday or their season will be over.

“If we play the same way I think we’ll be OK,” said Habscheid.

Felix Bibeau and Noah Dobson, into an empty net, also scored for the Quebec league champion Huskies. Samuel Harvey made 30 saves.

Cole Fonstad, Brayden Pachal and Noah Gregor scored for the Western league champion Raiders while Gregor tacked on two assists for a three-point effort. Ian Scott stopped 27 shots in defeat.

The WHL champion has now lost 12 in a row at the four-team competition dating back five tournaments.

The last time the WHL champion won a contest was the 2015 semifinal, when the Kelowna Rockets beat the Quebec Remparts before falling to the Oshawa Generals in the final to start the streak of defeats.

The Regina Pats were able to win twice at last year’s event and reached the final, but that was as the host team.

(Canadian Press/Kyle Cirella)