GAME DAY RECAP: February 1, 2026

Ontario Hockey Academy Mavericks (8) vs Mount Academy (2) East U18 Prep 

Ontario Hockey Academy Mavericks detonated offensively in an 8–2 rout of Mount Academy, riding a hat‑trick masterclass from Oliver Gregor Janac (3G, 2A) and a multi‑goal night from Dmitrii Titovskii (2G) to overwhelm the Saints from start to finish. OHA struck twice late in the first, Titovskii burying a slick feed from Lukas Janek, then Lucas Janek (1G, 2A) added his fith of the season. The second period turned into a full‑tilt avalanche: Janac scored twice in under six minutes, Titovskii added his second, and Mount’s lone answer came from Noah Richard (1G). Any hope of a comeback evaporated early in the third when Janac completed his hat trick just 88 seconds in, followed by goals from Noah Brewer (1G, 1A) and Colin Moses (1G, 1A) as OHA’s depth kept rolling. Mount scraped one back late through Mitchell Goodine (1G), but Jin Inoue (32/34) stood tall with 32 saves to secure the win. 

 

Okanagan Hockey Ontario (6) vs King’s Edgehill School (6) East U18 Prep 

Okanagan Hockey Ontario punched back in a big way, rolling to a 6–3 win on the strength of a four‑goal first period that left King’s Edgehill chasing shadows from the opening puck drop. Easton Choffe (2G,) erupted early with a pair of goals, while Adam Clark (1G, 1A) and Pierce Rusenstrom (1G) piled on to make it 4–0 before the game was even 15 minutes old. Philippe Naef (1G, 1A) added insurance in the second, and Kenton Wong (1G, 2A) sealed it late with a short‑handed dagger. Despite pushback from Liam Nash (1G), Liam Befus (1G), and Jack Warren (1G), KES never fully recovered from the early onslaught. Lohan Goolab (38/41) held firm through a penalty‑filled third, backstopping OHO to a much‑needed rebound win and snapping their three‑game skid with authority. 

 

Lower Canada College (3/OT) vs Selwyn House School (2) East U17 Prep 

Lower Canada College clawed out a gritty 3–2 OT win, powered by a late surge from Alex Gervasi (2G), who buried the equalizer in the second and then the dagger in overtime off a perfect feed from Mario Lapenna (3A), who quietly orchestrated the entire comeback. Frank Bertucci (1G, 1A) jump‑started LCC’s offense on a power play blast, while Selwyn House leaned on early strikes from Michael Paliotti (1G, 1A) and a third‑period push by Liam Ray (1G) to keep the game on edge. Goaltender Jona Erickson (27/29) held firm through a tense third period and OT, giving LCC the platform to finish the job. In a matchup defined by Lapenna’s steady playmaking, LCC’s resilience carried them through to a sixth straight victory. 

 

Okanagan Hockey Ontario (7) vs Mount Academy (4) East U17 Prep 

Okanagan Hockey Ontario U17 Prep punched back with a full‑throttle, wire‑to‑wire 7–4 win. After an early shorthanded goal from Nathaniel St. Pierre Maltais (1G) put OHO on their heels, the response was instant, Mikelis Kreicbergs (1G) tied it shorthanded, Thomas Garland (1G) buried his 15th, and Ryan Sucher (2G) beat the buzzer at 19:59 to cap a three‑goal surge. Mount hung around behind Mitchell Goodine (2G) and Noah Richard (1G, 1A), but every spark they found was met with another OHO punch: Sucher again in the second, Emilio Martínez Alemán (1G) on the power play, Jack Carter (1G, 1A) answering a third‑period push, and finally Kristers Sokolovs (1G) sealing it into the empty net. With Sawyer Tengum (35/39) turning aside 35 shots and OHO firing 55 the other way, the game never drifted far from their control, another assertive chapter in a season series they’ve completely owned. 

 

Okanagan Hockey Academy Black (0) vs Delta Hockey Academy Black (3) Female U18 Prep 

Delta Hockey Academy Black controlled the game from the opening shift, riding early pressure and a heavy shot advantage to a 3–0 win over Okanagan Hockey Academy Black. Kiernan Ledoux (1G) opened the scoring just 2:16 in off a feed from Celine Cabalquinto (1G, 1A) and Jojo Mailhot (1A), before Cabalquinto added a power‑play marker late in the first. Despite a strong third‑period push from OHA Black, Delta’s penalty kill held firm, and Lucy Williams (1G) delivered the dagger with a shorthanded strike at 6:24. Saysha Brace (19/19) stopped all 19 shots she faced, while Ryann Faulkner (39/42) battled through a 39‑save effort at the other end. Delta’s structure carried them to a seventh straight win over OHA Black this season. 

 

Edge School (5) vs Prairie Hockey Academy (6/OT) U15 

Prairie Hockey Academy outlasted Edge School in a wild 6–5 overtime finish, a game that swung back and forth from the opening shift to David Osiowy’s (1G) winner in OT. Both teams traded early punches, with Ryder Grimes (1G) and Carter White (1G, 1A) getting things started before Edge grabbed momentum in the second through Kyden Brockman (2G) and a power‑play strike from Nash Klimpke (1G, 1A). PHA countered with a pair of quick goals, including a shorthanded marker from Maguire Lepp (1G, 1A), to send the game into the third tied 3–3. The pace only ramped up from there: Brockman’s second of the night briefly put Edge ahead, but Titan Sauter (2G, 1A) answered, then Drake Baker (1G, 1A) buried a power‑play goal to give PHA its first lead since the opening minutes. Satoshi Takeda (1G, 1A) forced overtime with under two minutes left, but Osiowy ended it in the extra frame, sealing a gritty comeback win. 

 

Prairie Hockey Academy (6) vs RINK Hockey Academy Winnipeg (1) U17 

Prairie Hockey Academy rolled to a decisive 6–1 win over RINK Hockey Academy Winnipeg, powered by a relentless 58‑shot attack and a wave of multi‑point performances. Eric Helland (2G) set the tone early with a pair of first‑period goals, while Kase Gellner (1G, 1A), Rhett Benaschak (1G, 1A), and Tony King (1G, 1A) each delivered balanced production to stretch the lead. Noah Delaurier (1G) added another before the first intermission, and PHA never looked back, controlling possession and tempo throughout. Jake Myhre (2A) and Reid Kawaguchi (2A) kept the offense humming with steady playmaking, while Kayden Gregoire turned aside 29 of 30 shots in a composed, wire‑to‑wire performance. Winnipeg broke the shutout late on the power play, but the outcome was long decided as PHA extended its win streak to eight with another complete, top‑to‑bottom effort. 

 

RINK Hockey Academy Winnipeg (5) vs Notre Dame Hounds (0) U15 Prep 

RINK Hockey Academy Winnipeg rolled to a commanding 5–0 win over Notre Dame, powered by a dominant 64–17 shot margin and a four‑point explosion from Easton Pitz (2G, 2A). Pitz opened the scoring midway through the first before Beck Van Kemenade (1G) doubled the lead just 18 seconds later, giving RHA Winnipeg full control early. After a scoreless second, Winnipeg buried the Hounds in the third: Pitz struck again, Nash Dolyny (1G) added a shorthanded marker, and Wyatt Sydenham (1G) capped the night off with a late tap‑in. Haize Brightnose turned aside all 17 shots he faced for the shutout and the fifth straight win. 

 

Bourget College (5/OT) vs Bishop’s College School (4) East U18 Prep 

Bourget College survived a momentum‑swinging 5–4 shootout thriller against Bishop’s College School, a game that felt like it was being played on fast‑forward from the opening faceoff. Maddx Thinel (1G) ignited the scoring early before BCS punched back through Jan Vladar (1G, 1A) and Gavin Rusenstrom (1G, 1A), only for Bourget to counter with a late first‑period surge from Elie Robert (1G, 1A) and Christophe Potvin (1G). Keifer Pion‑Robin (1G) added what looked like insurance in the second, but Bishop’s refused to fade, clawing back with third‑period tallies from Dominic Schnarr (1G) and Taitt Dobbin (1G, 1A) to force overtime. After a tense, chance‑trading extra frame, the game shifted to the shootout, where Robert and Pion‑Robin buried their attempts while Zachary Botelho (33/37) shut the door, sealing a gritty, opportunistic win in a matchup where Bourget needed every ounce of efficiency to overcome BCS. 

 

North Shore Warriors (2) vs Shawnigan Lake School (3) Female U18 Prep 

Shawnigan Lake edged out North Shore 3–2 in a tight, heavy‑special‑teams battle, powered by a standout two‑goal performance from Eden Hamel (2G) and a late shorthanded dagger from Leah Hill (1G). After a scoreless first, Hamel finally broke through on the power play, only for the third period to erupt with four goals in seven minutes. Taylor Siemens (1G) jump‑started North Shore’s push, and Calle Shanahan (1G) tied it shortly after Hamel’s second of the afternoon restored Shawnigan’s lead. Finally, Hill’s shorthanded strike gave Shawnigan their third lead of the game, one they would never let go.   

 

Delta Hockey Academy (2) vs RINK Hockey Academy Kelowna (1) U17 Prep 

Delta kept its perfect season alive with a tight, disciplined 2–1 win over RINK Kelowna, grinding out offence in a game where every inch of ice felt contested. Ewan Torrance (1G, 0A) opened the scoring late in the first, finishing off a clean feed from Brady Cyr (0G, 1A) and Brady Oatman (0G, 1A). The middle frame turned into a goaltending showcase—Quinn Coupland (30/31) matching Dylan Mingo save for save—before Isaac Hannah (1G, 0A) doubled the lead midway through the third off touches from Otto Puhakka (0G, 1A) and Casey Pearson (0G, 1A). Kelowna finally broke through with a late shorthanded strike from Kaustav Pradeep (1G, 0A), but Delta’s structure held firm the rest of the way, closing out a composed, low‑event finish to secure win number eighteen. 

 

Prairie Hockey Academy (1) vs OHA Edmonton (3) U17 Prep 

OHA Edmonton ground out a composed 3–1 win over Prairie Hockey Academy, leaning on timely scoring and a sharp night from Owen Amyotte (36/37) to close out a tight matchup. After a scoreless first, Clark Schneider (1G, 1A) opened the scoring on the power play, only for PHA to answer with a man‑advantage strike of their own from Ramsey Thompson (1G). The third period tilted Edmonton’s way: Kaysun Brunham (1G, 1A) buried the eventual game‑winner just 87 seconds in, and Tayln Kopansky (1G) sealed it with an empty‑netter at the horn, supported by steady setup work from Jaxon Moss (2A). Despite a strong push and 37 shots, PHA couldn’t solve Amyotte again, and Edmonton’s special‑teams edge proved the difference in a disciplined, playoff‑style finish. 

 

Coeur d’Alene Hockey Academy (3/OT) vs St. George’s School (2) U17 Prep 

Coeur d’Alene clawed out a gritty 3–2 overtime win against St. George’s, a game that felt like it never stopped simmering until Jay Nooney (1G, 1A) finally boiled it over with the OT dagger. After a scoreless first, SGS struck first through Alex Rode (1G), but CDA answered late in the second when Camden Masterson (1G) buried one. The third period opened with another SGS punch, Tarik Lammam (1G) converting on the power play from Bradey Ching (2A) and Adam Benn (2A), but CDA refused to fade. AJ Fu (1G) tied it midway through the frame. Overtime tilted on a single mistake: a tripping call against SGS gave CDA a late power play, and Nooney made them pay, ripping home the winner. Liam Rogers (44/46) was immense, outdueling Mathias Dishneau (48/51) in a goaltending showcase that kept both benches on edge. It was a night defined by special teams and CDA’s refusal to let the rematch slip away twice in 24 hours. 

 

Fairmont Hockey (0) vs Stanstead College (2) East U18 Prep 

Stanstead College methodically squeezed out a 2–0 win over Fairmont, a game defined by territorial control, relentless shot volume, and a pair of timely third‑period strikes. After forty minutes of scoreless hockey, thanks largely to Jordan Martinez’s (39/41)  heavy workload and 39‑save effort, the pressure finally cracked when Maxime Bonin (1G) snapped the deadlock at 6:39 of the third. Fairmont, stuck at just 13 shots all afternoon, couldn’t generate the pushback they needed, and Stanstead doubled the lead minutes later on a power‑play finish from Emanuel Ganz (1G), set up by Logan Foote (1A). Andrew Shimon (13/13) quietly authored a perfect outing at the other end, turning aside every Fairmont attempt to secure the shutout and seal a composed, defensively disciplined victory for Stanstead. 

 

STAR Hockey Academy (1) vs Delta Hockey Academy (12) Black U15 

Delta Hockey Academy Black overwhelmed STAR Hockey Academy in a 12–1 avalanche, dictating every inch of the ice from the opening faceoff and riding a relentless wave of pressure that never let up. Bentley Gillis (1G, 4A) set the tone early with a power‑play strike, and although Jeffrey Yu (1G) briefly answered shorthanded for STAR, the rest of the night belonged entirely to Delta’s firepower. Zach Giles (4A) quarterbacked the attack with surgical puck movement, while Nate Anderson (2G, 1A), Stefano Trentalance (2G, 2A), Jack Delaney (2G, 2A), and Easton Isfeld (1G, 2A) piled on in waves as the shot clock ballooned to a staggering 85–11. Almost the whole lineup joined the surge, Bryce Bose (1G, 1A), Sangjun Lee (1G), Weston Patrick (1G, 1A), and Lukas Kravcak (1G, 1A) all found the back of the net. STAR’s goaltenders absorbed an onslaught, with Zachary Kolar battling for 61 saves on 71 shots, but the sustained zone time and rapid‑fire puck movement proved too much as Delta closed out another dominant performance this season. 

 

OHA Edmonton (4) vs Edge School (7) U15 Prep 

Edge School U15 Prep powered their way to a 7–4 win over OHA Edmonton in a game that felt like it was running downhill from the moment Brody Antignani (2G, 2A) found his rhythm. OHA struck first through Steven Leavitt (2G), but Edge answered with a three‑goal surge, highlighted by Antignani’s slick finish and Luke Van Waes (1G, 1A) cashing in off a sharp passing sequence. The second period tilted even further, although Leavitt briefly pulled OHA back within one on the power play, Edge’s depth took over, Cruz Schwabe (1G, 2A) quarterbacked the PP, Matteo Dufour (1G, 2A) buried one, and James Butterwick (2G) added insurance before the intermission. OHA pushed in the third with goals from Kobe Pellack (1G) and Micah Montgomery (1G), but Stanley’s (42/46) 42‑save performance held the line until Butterwick iced it late on the man‑advantage. With Edge’s power play clicking at key moments, they controlled the pace wire‑to‑wire despite OHA’s 46‑shot push. 

 

Okanagan Hockey Academy (8) vs BWC Academy (5) U18 Prep 

Okanagan Hockey Academy overwhelmed BWC Academy in an 8–5 track‑meet of a game, powered by a four‑point explosion from Maxx Parfitt (3G, 1A) and a relentless special‑teams surge that went 3‑for‑6 on the power play. Parfitt opened the scoring and never really let go of the spotlight, while Luke Assi (1G, 2A) and Eli Tverdovsky (2A) kept feeding the engine as OHA built a 3–0 lead in the first and stretched it to 8–2 midway through the second. Chase Vossenaar (2G, 1A) added his own burst of offence, and Landon Nagle (2A) quietly stacked up helpers as OHA hit 53 shots on the night. BWC pushed back with a three‑goal third, highlighted by Dominic Seminoff (1G), Jayan Muchalla (1G, 1A), and Justin Moon (1G, 1A), but the early damage was too much to undo. Linden Sobocan (40/45) held firm through the late surge, sealing an OHA win built on pace and pressure that overwhelmed BWC from the opening puck drop. 

 

Prairie Hockey Academy (8) vs OHA Edmonton (5) U18 Prep  

The U18 Prep squads for Prairie Hockey Academy and OHA Edmonton play twice head-to-head this season, with Sunday’s game predated by November’s OHAE victory over PHA in Moose Jaw. Sunday was Prairie’s opportunity to return the favour with a win on the road, and throughout the contest, it was anyone’s game. Heading into the last seven minutes of the game, the 4-4 deadlock presented both teams with the chance to take the game to their opposition. First, Ben Shaw snatched a goal to give OHAE the lead. Less than three minutes later, Prairie had once more levelled the score, with Trey Bohlken grabbing back an equalizer. With the game heading towards overtime, Prairie took a late boarding penalty to give OHAE a power play chance with barely 90 seconds left. That looked like Edmonton’s chance, but right off the draw, Brady Keith (4A) and Grayden Solodan (3G, 1A) broke back the other way. Keith was denied, but Solodan followed in to pot the rebound, a shorthanded goal that stood as the game-winner. Prairie added two empty-net goals, including one that completed Solodan’s hat-trick. 

 

North Shore Warriors (1) vs Yale Hockey Academy (3) U15 Prep  

Yale Hockey Academy’s U15 Prep squad have been the team to beat in their division this season, rolling into Sunday on a twelve-game winning streak. They’d lead 1-0 in the second, but had their lead snatched back by a North Shore equalizer from Nicholas Sheldon. Donovan Kuhn (39/42) stood tall in between the pipes for the Warriors, keeping them in the game until the third, but that was as far as they’d keep the game tied. Just over four minutes into the third, Teagan Dernisky (1G, 1A) scored on a short-side opportunity, notching his 33rd goal of the year on the power play. Kuhn and North Shore mounted a very solid third-period performance from there, but at the end, Hayden Zygarliski (1G, 1A) scored for Yale to provide insurance in the win. 

 

Stanstead College (4) vs Bishop’s College School (5/SO) East U17 Prep  

Stanstead College and Bishop’s College Schools’ clash on Sunday was about as back-and-forth as it could have possibly been. Stanstead scored a go-ahead goal four different times during this game, but after each time, Bishop’s were able to snatch back a tying goal, preventing Stanstead from ever taking a two-goal lead. Cole Toms’ (2G) second goal of the game late in the third tied the game at four, forcing overtime, and eventually a shootout. The eight-round shootout was extended by both goaltenders’ strong stops, with BCS forward Henry Bassuk eventually scoring the game-winner. Bishop’s never led in the game, but tied the game four times and prevailed in the shootout. 

 

Yale Hockey Academy (7) vs Shawnigan Lake School (4) U17 Prep  

Shawnigan Lake School’s U17 Prep contingent outplayed their Yale opponents in the first period, scoring three different go-ahead goals, and leading 3-2 through one. That, however, was where the serious Shawnigan threat would fizzle out. Yale controlled proceedings in the last two periods, only allowing a goal against on one of Shawnigan’s seven total power plays. Daniel Harvard (2G, 1A) and Matthew Zaitchikov (1G, 3A) led the way for Yale, and while Shawnigan wasn’t as threatening in the final forty as they looked early in the game, Lucca Tassone still had to stop 27 of 31 for Yale in the 7-4 win.  

 

Kuper Academy (4/SO) vs Ontario Hockey Academy (3) East U17 Prep  

Kuper Academy bested the Ontario Hockey Academy 4-0 in both teams’ first game of 2026, less than one month before Sunday’s clash between the two teams. Kuper is coming off an offensive explosion on Saturday that saw them best CIH Academy 19-2, but on Sunday, the production was more of a challenge. Alessio Servello (1G, 1A) scored in the first, but Dylan Bairstow scored for OHA in the second to send the game into the third period knotted at one apiece. The third period swung in both directions, with Kuper and OHA exchanging the lead until the game was tied at three. The scoreless overtime predated a shootout, where Kuper scored all three of their opportunities. Adamo Ersoni (1A) scored the winner, as OHO’s threat to knock off Kuper came up just short.  

 

BWC Academy (6) vs Yale Hockey Academy (7/SO) U15  

BWC Academy and Yale Hockey Academy’s U15 squads will likely have to go through one another too win the U15 division this season, having been two of the most dominant squads this season. Their previous two regular-season games went BWC’s way, making this Yale’s last chance to knock off their rivals. Things looked good for Yale early, with two from Emmett Rumbold (3G) giving YHA a 2-0 lead that would prove only temporary. In response to the Yale start, BWC rattled off four straight goals to snatch a 4-2 lead in the second, but that was, again, temporary. Yale grabbed two more, including the goal that completed Rumbold’s hat-trick. The 4-4 tie persisted into the last six minutes of the game, where there’d be two more massive twists. BWC reestablished a two-goal advantage with two quick-fire strikes, with their 6-4 lead looking like it would be enough to win, especially as they held the lead into the last 40 seconds of the game. In the span of just 26 seconds, Yale had saved themselves, with Sebastien Sibley (2G, 1A) and Daniel Valchev saving the day, Vlachev doing so with 11 seconds to go to tie the game. Come the shootout, it was the hat-trick hero for Yale, scoring first, with Emmett Rumbold giving Yale the lead. Brady Barrett scored the dagger to help Yale snatch the victory in dramatic fashion. 

 

Pilot Mound Hockey Academy (1) vs Calgary International Hockey Academy (3) U18 Prep  

Pilot Mound Hockey Academy and Calgary International Hockey Academy’s U18 Prep squads had played just once previously to Sunday. Back on October 20th, CIHA bested PMHA 2-1 in overtime, a similarly low-scoring game to Sunday’s sequel. Cruz Nicolay scored the go-ahead goal at the start of the third period, and PMHA’s pushback couldn’t respond, with CIHA goaltender Ben Hakes stopping 26 of 27 in the win. With the victory, Hakes has now won four straight starts.  

 

Edge School (4/OT) vs OHA Edmonton (3) Female U18 Prep  

Heading into Sunday, OHA Edmonton’s Female U18 Prep squad won 22 of their 23 games this season, including all three previous games against Edge School. OHAE bested Edge 5-4 yesterday, with Sunday unfolding in a similarly tightly-fought fashion. Sara Hettle (1G, 1A), Abigail Lee (2G, 2A), and Lila Deis (1G, 1A) scored in regulation for Edge School, responded to by Riley Cooper (1G, 1A), Avery Sam, and Peyton Carter goals for OHAE. Merely 66 seconds into overtime, Abigail Lee popped in to score her second of the game, handing OHAE merely their second loss of the season. Jenna Ring stopped 32 of 35 for Edge.  

 

Pacific Coast Hockey Academy (2) vs Shawnigan Lake School (1) U15 Prep  

Shawnigan Lake School’s U15 Prep team came into Sunday having faced Pacific Coast Hockey Academy thrice this season prior, with PCHA winning the first two, Shawnigan winning on Saturday. Nate Brocklehurst’s second-period goal stood as the game-winner in the 3-2 victory for SLS, just their second win of the season. Sunday’s game saw PCHA and SLS trade first-period goals through Malone Mann and Landon Russell, sending the game all the way into the third period still tied 1-1. Six minutes into the third, PCHA finally broke the deadlock, with Jamie Davidsson’s first goal in nearly two months making it 2-1. James McRae stopped 16 of 17 in the PCHA net to help the Sea Devils over the finish line for the win.