Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Bruins dump Chiefs

Spokane loses sixth straight at home

Odds were the same ol’ story was going to play out at the Arena on Friday night.

Chilliwack scored a power-play goal midway through the second period to take a 1-0 lead into the final 20 minutes against Spokane, and the Bruins were 15-1 when leading after two periods while the Chiefs were 0-11 when trailing.

It didn’t help that the Chiefs had dropped five straight home games, all by one goal, but at the same time the Bruins were 0-7 at the Arena in their brief history.

So, what happened?

Simple, take the odds.

Chilliwack goalie Lucas Gore made 28 saves, 13 in the third period when a Spokane turnover and a giveaway led to goals by Kevin Sundher and Ryan Howse, to saddle the Chiefs with a 3-0 loss, their second shutout of the season.

The Bruins (20-18-1-5, 46 points) did their damage despite getting just 17 shots – the fewest by four the Chiefs (23-15-3, 49), who had 28 shots, gave up this season.

“I can’t peg it on any particular guy or any group of guys,” Chiefs coach Hardy Sauter said. “As a group we were flat. That is too many home games in the season, too many home games in a row, where we’ve come out and we don’t have enough jump. That has to be corrected.”

It’s not exactly where the Chiefs – who were back at full strength for the first time since mid-December – want to be with Western Division-leading rival Tri-City coming to town tonight.

“I wish I could put my finger on it,” Sauter said. “Obviously, between tonight and tomorrow night I have to figure it out.”

The Chiefs welcomed back captain Jared Cowen and Tyler Johnson from the World Junior Championship and rookies Mitch Holmberg and Brady Brassert from U-17 World Hockey Challenge. But the team that had beat Chilliwack 5-1 and 7-1 in two previous meetings had nothing.

“My guess, I don’t know, is sometimes when you insert guys back into your lineup, the group gets a sense almost of entitlement to win and they don’t put in the work necessary to get the end result,” Sauter said. “I thought as good as some guys have played leading up to this game we had some guys tonight that just struggled.”

The Arena, despite 5,112 fans, was flat at the start because there was no pregame music or public-address announcer because of technical difficulties.

“We had to create our own kind of volume in the room and on the ice,” Gore said after his third shutout. “We did a good job with that and got a win tonight.”

The first two periods were particularly dull, the only marker an easy power-play goal by Dylen McKinlay at 13:33 of the second period.

Spokane was more aggressive on offense in the third period but hit the post on its two best chances.

The Bruins beat Michael Tadjdeh twice in the third period, both after miscues.

“We’ve been making similar mistakes for a long time now,” Sauter said. “It’s not like the guys don’t recognize the errors. We have to take it upon ourselves to really put forth the effort to correct them.”