GAME DAY RECAP: March 1, 2026

Ontario Hockey Academy Mavericks (1) vs Mount Academy (8) East U18 Prep 

Mount Academy delivered their most decisive performance of the season in a matchup that had previously tilted heavily toward Ontario Hockey Academy, flipping the script with an 8–1 statement win powered by a second‑period avalanche. After dropping all three prior meetings to OHA Mavericks this year, MA hit the front early through Noah Richard (4G), whose first of the morning opened the floodgates for a Mount Academy powerplay that went 4‑for‑6. Richard completed his hat trick before the game even reached the midway point of the second, while Jacob Jardine (3G, 1A) matched him stride for stride with a hat trick of his own, and Mitchell Goodine (1G, 1A) chipped in insurance as they scored six unanswered in a dominant middle frame. The engine behind nearly everything was Cohen Paul (6A), who authored one of the most productive playmaking performances of the season. OHA finally broke through late in the second on a Jordan Laycock (1G) powerplay marker, but Cedrick Provencher (39/40) shut the door the rest of the way, backstopping Mount Academy to a cathartic win that snapped their skid against the Mavericks who had beat them yesterday coming back from 2 goals down. 

 

Stanstead College (5/OT) vs Ontario Hockey Academy (4) East U18 Prep  

Stanstead College continued their long‑running dominance over Ontario Hockey Academy with a fourth straight win this season, but this one demanded far more resilience than the previous three, needing a late third‑period push and an overtime finish to secure a 5–4 victory. Stanstead looked poised for another routine outing when Matej Doboš (1G, 2A) opened the scoring just 89 seconds in, but a three‑goal OHA second period flipped the script, with Luka Blais (1G), Mathieu Boudreault (1G) and Kaemon Tran (1G, 1A) powering OHA to a 3–2 lead despite being heavily outshot. Stanstead’s pressure eventually cracked their opposition late, with Logan Foote (1G) tying the game inside the final two minutes before Max Sheppard (2G) struck twice, once with 52 seconds left in regulation and again at 3:28 of overtime, to complete the comeback. Juuso Mustonen (3A) quietly authored a three‑assist night, while Andrew Shimon (21/25) held firm when needed despite a light workload compared to Kye Johnson (52/57), who faced a barrage but couldn’t deny Stanstead’s late surge. 

 

Shawnigan Lake School (2) vs Delta Hockey Academy Green (7) Female U18 Prep 

Delta Green continued their season‑long control of the matchup with Shawnigan Lake, rolling to a 7–2 win powered by a special‑teams clinic that saw them score five times on the powerplay and once shorthanded. After a tight, penalty‑filled first period, Adie Schneider (2G) opened the scoring late on the man‑advantage, setting the tone for a second‑period surge where Payton Finnie (2G, 2A) and Gabriella Lee (2G, 1A) pushed the lead out of reach, capitalizing repeatedly as SLSFP’s parade to the box caught up with them. Leah Hill (1G) briefly gave Shawnigan life with a powerplay strike, but another Finnie goal restored the three‑goal cushion before the intermission. Delta kept their foot down in the third, with Schneider adding her second and Abigail Jung (1G) and Lee each tacking on insurance as the game tilted further their way. Eden Hamel (1G) added a late reply for Shawnigan, but Mya Young (21/23) stayed steady while Jordyn Kemp (34/41) faced a barrage at the other end, unable to stem a Delta attack that controlled the game from start to finish. 

 

Indigenous Sports Academy (1) vs RINK Hockey Academy Winnipeg (10) U17 Prep  

RINK Hockey Academy Winnipeg overwhelmed Indigenous Sports Academy in their most lopsided head‑to‑head of the season, riding a relentless 66‑shot performance to a 10–1 win that featured scoring bursts in every period. RHA Winnipeg hit the front less than two minutes in through Drayden Champagne (1G, 2A) and never looked back, with Brady Filmon (1G, 2A) and Murphy Johnston (1G, 1A) stretching the lead to 3–0 by the first intermission. The second period turned into a runaway, highlighted by back‑to‑back goals 25 seconds apart from Conner Lamb (1G, 1A) and Atley Feniuk, before Markus Knaub (2G, 3A) added his first of a five‑point afternoon. Feniuk (3G) completed his hat trick in the third, including a shorthanded marker, while Colton Ross (1G) added his 30th of the season to cap the outburst. ISA broke the shutout late on an Owen Sinclair (1G) finish, but Miller Fettes (33/34) stayed sharp despite the scoreline, backstopping his team to a dominant win. 

 

Prairie Hockey Academy (6) vs Northern Alberta Xtreme (4) U17 

Prairie Hockey Academy and Northern Alberta Xtreme have played some wild ones this season, but Sunday’s clash might have been the most theatrical yet, a game that swung like a metronome before PHA’s stars seized control in a 6–4 win that completed a dominant season series. Jake Myhre (3G) wasted no time setting the tone with a goal inside two minutes, only for NAX to punch back with two of their own to briefly flip momentum. But every time NAX tried to tilt the ice, PHA answered with precision: Tony King (1G, 1A) tied the game late in the first, Myhre added a powerplay dagger in the second, and then the third period turned into a showcase of PHA’s firepower. Kase Gellner (1G, 3A) scored 23 seconds into the frame, Soren Hayden (1G, 2A) followed soon after, and Myhre’s empty-netter sealed his hat trick and the victory. NAX found late goals from Rhett Dahl (1G) and Milo Nolin (1G), but Kayden Gregoire (47/51) stood tall under a 52‑shot barrage, anchoring a Prairie team that once again proved too clinical when the game’s biggest swings arrived. 

 

RINK Hockey Academy Kelowna (4/SO) vs Coeur d’Alene Hockey Academy (3) U17 

RINK Kelowna and Coeur d’Alene played out their tightest, most dramatic meeting of the season, a game that swung through three distinct momentum chapters before RHA Kelowna finally escaped with a 4–3 shootout win to take the season series. RHA Kelowna looked fully in command early with first‑period strikes from Otis Jacques (1G) and Jake Kochhar (1G), but CDA flipped the script in the second with goals from Trevor Johnson (1G) and Blake Celski (1G) as their forecheck and shot volume began to tilt the ice. When Logan Madrid (1G, 1A) buried early in the third to give CDA their first lead, it felt like the comeback was complete, but Myeongcheol Sung (1G) answered inside the final two minutes to force overtime. Both goaltenders were outstanding under pressure, with Griffin Prairie Chicken (35/38) and Liam Reed (36/39) trading big saves through OT, but the shootout belonged to RINK Kelowna, who found the extra edge they couldn’t generate at even strength. 

 

Pilot Mound Hockey Academy (3) vs Notre Dame Hounds (2) U15 Prep 

Pilot Mound came out looking like a team determined to end the season series on their terms, and their first period proved to be all the separation they’d need in a 3–2 win over Notre Dame that tightened late but never fully slipped from their grasp. Zac Klassen (2G) set the tone with a pair of goals six minutes apart, one at even strength, one on the powerplay, before Brock Vodden (1G) added his 20th of the season to cap a three‑goal opening frame that had PMHA in full control. Notre Dame pushed back with goals in each of the final two periods, first through Jax Baumuller (1G) and then a late third‑period strike from Marceli Stepien (1G), but Kobe Parker (29/31) held firm as the Hounds pressed with 15 third‑period shots. Despite being held off the board after the first, Pilot Mound’s early surge and special‑teams execution carried them across the line, extending their strong run against Notre Dame in another tight, momentum‑tilting chapter between the two programs. 

 

OHA Edmonton (4) vs Calgary International Hockey Academy (7) U17 Prep  

The four matchups this season between OHA Edmonton and the Calgary International Hockey Academy’s U17 Prep squads were split in half by the new year, with OHA Edmonton winning both matchups in 2025 but CIHA coming back to win their previous game on February 17. Their clash on Sunday presented CIHA the opportunity to tie the season series at two, with the 10-4 win from Calgary in the two teams’ last outing indicating the momentum may have been with CIHA. While OHAE took an early lead through Kaysun Brunham (2G), Calgary would go on a run of five consecutive goals that put the game to bed by the middle of the second period. Rylan Wood (3G, 1A) led the way for CIHA with a hat-trick, with a pair of goals from Duke Lesnar helping CIHA hold on despite a late OHAE push.  

 

St. George’s School (3) vs Delta Hockey Academy (10) U15 Prep  

The first ten minutes of St. George’s School and Delta Hockey Academy’s U15 Prep clash on Sunday saw the game ostensibly be won and lost by the 10:17 mark. Braelyn Nunley (2G, 1G), Eli Vickers (2G, 3A), Carson Brown (1G, 2A), and Ronan Gow made it 4-0 from the get-go, and while a couple of SGS shots would hit the back of the net as well, there was no way back for St. George’s. Neither Nunley nor Vickers were done after their early goals, with both scoring again later on, with Vickers adding three assists to his pair of goals to see the defenceman finish the game with a five-point night in his team’s 10-3 win. 

 

Delta Hockey Academy White (4) vs St. George’s School (3) U15  

Unlike the simultaneously-occurring U15 Prep clash between Delta and St. George’s School, Delta White and SGS’s U15 clash was a razor-thin matchup throughout. After going down a goal early, Sajan Chatha scored a pair for Delta White to give them their first lead of the game, with Donivan Cominetti quickly following Chatha’s second with a goal to make it 3-1. St. George’s School did nothing but push back after Delta White went up a pair, with goals from Asher Jin and Minsoo Lee scraping them back into the game. Those goals would have been enough to pull the game back to even ground, but unfortunately for SGS, Grayson Sears scored a crucial goal early in the third that would prove to be the difference in the game, helping DHAW over the finish line with a one-goal win. 

 

Bishop’s College School (5) vs Stanstead College (2) East U17 Prep  

The majority of Sunday’s game in the Eastern U17 Prep division between Bishop’s College School and Stanstead College was an extremely tightly-fought affair in which grade ‘A’ scoring chances, and subsequently goals, were hard to come by. Bishop’s took a 2-1 lead into the last eight minutes of the third period, but starting with a powerplay, Bishop’s went on a run that put the game to bed in barely two and a half minutes. Thomas Roy, Greyson Hnatiuk, and Samuel Boutet scored in a very short amount of time, adding to Alex Han’s two goals earlier in the game to take a 5-1 lead and put Stanstead out of contention. 

 

Notre Dame Hounds (4) vs OHA Edmonton (2) U17   

The Notre Dame Hounds’ U17 squad marched towards the last three minutes of the first period having controlled the bulk of play, but weren’t able to get through the goaltender. Their repeated early attempts managed to break through with 3:17 left in the first; a goal from Carter Rands proved to open the floodgates, at least for the rest of the first period. Notre Dame doubled down through Peter Fobes (2G), who doubled the Hounds’ lead just 20 seconds after Rands had scored. Dominik Chartrand made it 3-0 with a second to go in the first, with the three quick goals for Notre Dame proving too much for OHAE to come back from. OHA Edmonton grabbed a pair of goals in the third period to make the Hounds sweat, but Peter Forbes’ second of the game on a powerplay sealed the deal, providing the insurance marker for the Notre Dame victory. 

 

Shawnigan Lake School (3) vs North Shore Warriors (5) U17 Prep   

Shawnigan Lake School and the North Shore Warriors’ U17 Prep squads had played just once so far this season, with Shawnigan Lake taking a commanding 6-1 win away from the Warriors. Throughout their clash on Sunday, neither team could take control of the game as Shawnigan had last time around. The first two periods of the game saw both teams generate a decent number of five-on-five chances, but it was the power plays to do the damage on the scoreboard. Carson Peet (2G) had his first-period goal responded to by James Koch (2G), with North Shore taking the lead in the second, only for Matthew Morris to respond to Zeno Seipert’s go-ahead goal. All four of the goals in the first forty minutes came on the man advantage, but early in the third, both teams would finally break through at even strength. Haydn Goetzinger gave North Shore the lead again, but Carson Peet’s second of the game sent proceedings into the back half of the third period still tied. James Koch found the go-ahead goal with barely over seven minutes to play, his second of the game, to reestablish the Warriors lead for the third time. This time, though, Shawnigan couldn’t find the tying strike, and Enan Clad sealed the deal into the empty-net to lift North Shore to a 5-3 win. 

 

Pilot Mound Hockey Academy (10) vs Notre Dame Hounds (3) U18 Prep  

 The beginning of Pilot Mound Hockey Academy and the Notre Dame Hounds’ U18 Prep clash started in a very even fashion, with two teams exchanging early chances at a generally even rate. That was the way the majority of their first three games of the season played out, with PMHA winning 5-2 and 2-1, and Notre Dame winning the middle fixture 4-2. In all four games this season, the second period of Sunday’s was head and shoulders the most slanted. PMHA dominated the middle period, making their positive end to the first even more impactful. 1-1 heading into the last three minutes of the first period, a pair of PMHA power plays gave Collin Friedrich (4G, 2A) the chance to score twice, adding to his first of the game to complete a hat-trick within nineteen minutes. The 3-1 first period predated the first 13 minutes of the second period, which saw PMHA run away with the game. Pilot Mound only needed one powerplay goal, scored by Knox Burton (2G, 2A), and added five goals at even strength, putting PMHA 9-1 up with still seven minutes to play in the second period. Notre Dame grabbed two more after, but PMHA’s potent offence, led by Collin Friedrich’s four goals and Burton’s four points, were also joined by big performances from Hector Kapitonov (2G, 3A), Cole Landreville (5A), Nolan Harding (1G, 2A), and Casey Silverman (3A) and 38 saves on 41 shots from Zackary David led Pilot Mount to victory.  

 

North Shore Warriors (2) vs Pacific Coast Hockey Academy (4) U17  

The North Shore Warriors and Pacific Coast Hockey Academy’s U17 teams have seen plenty of one another this season, and unfortunately for North Shore, their games have all resulted in Sea Devils victory. Pacific Coast won 7-2 over North Shore yesterday, and again unfortunately for the Warriors, the result wouldn’t get much better on Sunday. PCHA controlled the bulk of the game, grabbing goals from their big dogs, with Nixon Szadkowski, Jackson Squire, and Blake Bidney giving PCHA a foundation that North Shore wouldn’t reach the peak of. Keegan Hole made good on a pair of shorthanded chances to get North Shore back in the game, including one late in the third to give North Shore a chance to push back late. Hudson Elke’s (1G, 1A) empty-net goal sealed the deal for PCHA. 

 

RINK Hockey Academy Kelowna (3) vs St. George’s School (1) U17 Prep  

RINK Hockey Academy Kelowna have been dominant in the U17 Prep division this season, with their 23 wins coming into Sunday, including one against St. George’s School, 5-2 back on January 9, and would continue that dominance into Sunday. Griffin Hoy (1G, 1A), Kaius Millan, and a powerplay marker from Alexander Sharman put RHA Kelowna up by three goals heading into the third period, where a St. George’s School pushback could only run into RHAK goaltender Dylan Mingo (38/39). The Moose Jaw Warriors prospect prevented serious damage coming from St. George’s efforts, with SGS’s third-period really testing the strength of Mingo. Ultimately, Felix Hang managed to get one back for the Saints in the third, but couldn’t do much more than get back within two. 17 saves on 18 shots in the third period from Mingo led RHAK to the win. 

 

Coeur d’Alene Hockey Academy (0) vs Okanagan Hockey Academy (3) U18 Prep  

Coeur d’Alene Hockey Academy and Okanagan Hockey Academy’s U18 Prep squads play three head-to-head games this season, splitting the first two, with a 1-0 win for CDA followed up by a 5-3 win for Okanagan Hockey Academy in the second of their back-to-back in October. Maxx Parfitt (2A) provided a pair of primary assists in the first period for OHA, assisting on a powerplay goal from Ethan Dimand and a last-second strike from Marcus Domhof. CDA shut the door in the second, but hanging on defensively was about the best they could do. A shorthanded breakaway chance converted by Trey Tourigny made it 3-0 to provide some insurance. OHA’s Charlie Peppinck was solid, making 21 saves in his first shutout of the season, but was the significantly less busy goaltender in the 3-0 OHA win that saw the victors outshoot CDA 48-21.