First place Axemen slip down in standings with loss
29/01/2012 11:01 am
UNB move back to first place with 7-1 win over Acadia
FREDERICTON, NB - The Friday night battle for first place in the AUS was a bit anti-climactic as the CIS No. 3-ranked UNB Varsity Reds skated to a 7-1 win over the No. 5-ranked Acadia Axemen in front of 2,750 fans at the Aitken Centre in Fredericton, NB.
Still riding a short bench due to five injuried Axemen, the UNB outshot Acadia by a 43-14 margin and were led offensively by Kyle Bailey with two goals, Thomas Nesbitt with a goal and two assists, and Chris Culligan with four assists.
Both teams have been playing with a number of key players out with injuries the last few weeks, and the Varsity Reds welcomed back forwards Shayne Wiebe, Tyler Carroll and goaltender Travis Fullerton, who was making his first start of 2012. The Axemen had Dustin Ekelman and John Girman return but are still missing Joel Ridgeway, Alex Beaton, Nicolas Choinard and Leo Jenner.
Early UNB pressure led to the first goal when Daine Todd from behind the Acadia goal line banked a shot off the skates of Axeman defenceman Michael Ward and past goaltender Evan Mosher at 2:16.
Each team had two power plays in the period, with few scoring chances. UNB was buzzing the Acadia net in the last minute of the period, and with time running out Antoine Houde-Caron fired his own rebound into the top corner at 19:59. It was a good period for the home side, who outshot Acadia 13-6.
While not tested a lot in the game, Fullerton was forced to make a big save against sniper Andrew Clark at 5:30. Less than two minutes later at the other end of the ice, Mosher had to make several saves of his own with V-Reds on the doorstep and in the resultant goalmouth scrum Acadia defenceman Travis Gibbons received the extra minor penalty. On the power play, Carroll took a pass from Thomas Nesbitt and scored from the bottom of the circle at 8:34.
At 10:28 Acadia defenceman Paul Kurceba hit Houde-Caron in the neutral zone and drew the ire of several V-Reds who took exception to the play and came to the aide of their teammate in a spirited pushing and shoving match along the boards by the penalty box. This time it was Acadia who came out a man ahead after it was all settled. Seconds after Mosher made a brilliant glove save on penalty killer Carroll, the Axemen went up the ice and Clark scored from the slot at 11:45. Chris Culligan smashed his stick on the UNB net in disgust on the play and was handed a ten-minute misconduct penalty.
UNB got that goal back at 12:12 when Kyle Bailey whacked at a saucer pass and his off-speed shot dribbled through Mosher. UNB outshot Acadia 16-5 in the middle period.
Just over two minutes into the third period, Nick MacNeil was working the puck behind the Acadia net when he passed the puck out to Nesbitt who quickly snapped it into the top right corner. Immediately after the goal, Acadia head coach Darren Burns elected to replace Mosher with Peter DiSalvo.
Midway through the period Joe Gaynor was called for interference and UNB struggled on the power-play until they broke into the Acadia zone on an odd man rush and Bailey scored at 11:07. UNB didn't let up on the offensive zone pressure, and at 15:11 the V-Reds defence fed Geordie Wudrick a pass at the far blue line and he went in alone on the breakaway and made a couple of moves before beating DiSalvo five-hole. Shots in the third period were 14-3 for UNB and 43-14 in the game.
With the 7-1 win, UNB moved back into first place in the AUS standings, tied with Moncton who defeated StFX 2-1. The V-Reds were 2-for-6 on the power play while Acadia went 1-for-6. UNB will host Dalhousie Saturday night while Acadia will continue on to Charlottetown to play UPEI.
Acadia has struggled to find wins at the AUC, and the loss is their 17th in row on UNB's home ice.
Acadia coach Burns wasn't happy with the loss "against a pretty good hockey team", but he ready to move on after the game. "We've been clipping along pretty good and our guys have been unbelievable the last four or five games and doing a great job. Obviously that was ugly. We've gotta kind of erase it. We haven't really had many bad games per se this year and that was certainly probably our worst collectively."
The Axemen head to UPEI for the second and last game on the road this weekend, while the Varsity Reds host the Dalhousie Tigers.
