Davidson, Chartrand score in Canada's win over UK
By Chris Hodges & Michel BĂ©langer
HARBIN, China (CIS) – Ă山ǿĽé's Vanessa Davidson of Kirkland, Que.,
and Cathy Chartrand of Lac Nominingue, Que., each scored
first-period goals as the Canadian women’s hockey team opened the
competition at the 24th Winter Universiade in grand style, posting
a convincing 11-0 win over Great Britain Wednesday in its first
game of the round-robin tournament.
The sport of women’s hockey is making its world university games
debut in China, with Canada competing against Great Britain,
Finland, Japan, Slovakia and the host Chinese in the inaugural
tourney.
University of Alberta forward Leah Copeland of Fort McMurray,
Alta., paced the Canadian offence in the Universiade opener with
three goals and an assist, while Alberta teammate Jennifer Newton
of Norglenwold, Alta., Ottawa’s Kayla Hottot of Sombra, Ont., St.
Francis Xavier’s Brayden Ferguson of Toronto, Toronto’s Annie Del
Guidice of Hamilton and Saint Mary’s Kori Cheverie of New Glasgow,
N.S., all chipped in with a goal and a helper.
Wilfrid Laurier defenceman Andrea Bevan of Collingwood, Ont., had a
pair of assists.
Rearguard Andrea Boras (Alberta) of Calgary also scored for Team
Canada.
UBC goaltender Melinda Choy earned the victory. The Victoria native
was virtually untested throughout the match as the Canadians
outshot their opponents 62-2, holding Great Britain to one shot in
the second period and another in the third.
“Those are tough games to play,” said head coach Dan Church. “It’s
easy to start making soft passes and positional mistakes against a
team that’s not going to try and come out of their defensive
system. It was a good way to start the tournament as we continue to
adjust to the environment. I was happy with the effort, and the
pace we carried throughout the game.”
The Canadians came out strong in the game’s opening minutes, and
only the goaltending effort of Great Britain’s Laura Saunders
prevented the first goal from coming sooner that it did. It took
nearly half a period for the Canadians to find the back of the net,
with Ferguson, the CIS player of the year in 2007-08, scoring after
nine minutes and 46 seconds of play.
Davidson and Chartrand added first-period goals to make it 3-0
after 20 minutes.
The second frame yielded five more Canadian goals – four of which
came off the sticks of Alberta Pandas. Copeland notched the first
two-thirds of her hat-trick performance with Panda teammates Boras
and Newton adding singles. Late in the middle period, Del Guidice
made it 8-0.
Any notion of Great Britain staging the greatest upset-comeback in
the history of women’s international hockey was snuffed out midway
through the third stanza when Canada scored three times in a span
of 2:20.
Cheverie made it 9-0, ending the night of Saunders in the process.
Copeland completed her three-goal effort by scoring on relief
netminder Michaela Walker with Hottot rounding out the scoring 52
seconds later.
“I thought we did a good job staying true to our game and working
on the habits,” said Davidson. “We’re going to be facing Finland
tomorrow and we knew that if we got away from the habits, it could
be the kind of thing that costs us later in the tournament. We
broke the periods down into five-minute blocks, and just tried to
do our best to stay within the system that we play.”
Despite the final score, the team from Great Britain was pleased –
not only with the quality of their own play, but for the
opportunity to make British hockey history in the process.
“Great Britain has never faced Canada at any level of play in the
women’s game,” said head coach Simon Manning. “It’s actually the
first competitive game this particular team has ever played and it
happens to be against what we believe to be the best team in the
world. We had absolutely no doubt about the final outcome of the
game and to be honest, I couldn’t have asked for things to have
gone any better.”
Team Canada’s next game is scheduled for Thursday, February 19
against Finland. The Finns opened the round-robin portion of the
Universiade competition with a 4-0 shutout of Japan.
Canada’s full sporting delegation enjoys a much busier day on Day 2
of the Games, with all but the biathlon team involved in
competition.
Team Canada website:
2009 Winter Universiade website:
SCORING SUMMARY
Canada 11, Great Britain 0
FIRST PERIOD
SCORING:
1. CAN Brayden Ferguson (1) (Annie Del Guidice, Kori Cheverie),
9:46
2. CAN Vanessa Davidson (1) (Andrea Bevan), 13:30
3. CAN Cathy Chartrand (1) (Mariève Provost, Kelsey Webster),
18:02
PENALTIES:
Katherine Wiggins (GBR) hooking, 1:32.
SECOND PERIOD
SCORING:
4. CAN Leah Copeland (1) (unassisted), 4:08
5. CAN Andrea Boras (1) (Andrea Bevan), 7:18
6. CAN Jennifer Newton (1) (Leah Copeland), 9:34 PP
7. CAN Leah Copeland (2) (Jennifer Newton, Kayla Hottot),
13:15
8. CAN Annie Del Guidice (1) (Brayden Ferguson), 14:52
PENALTIES:
Rachel Butcher (GBR) hooking, 7:56.
THIRD PERIOD
SCORING:
9. CAN Kori Cheverie (1) (Vanessa Davidson), 8:39
10. CAN Leah Copeland (3) (unassisted), 10:07
11. CAN Kayla Hottot (1) (unassisted), 10:59
PENALTIES:
Amanda Carr (GBR) tripping, 11:43.
GOALS (by period)
CAN: 3-5-3:11
GBR: 0-0-0:0
SHOTS ON GOAL (by period)
CAN: 23-20-19:62
GBR: 0-1-1:2
POWER PLAY:
CAN: 1-3
GBR: 0-0
GOALTENDERS
CAN – Melinda Choy (W, 1-0, 2 shots, 2 saves, 0 GA, SO,
60:00)
GBR – Laura Saunders (L, 0-1, 50 shots, 41 saves, 9 GA,
48:39)
GBR – Michaela Walker (12 shots, 10 saves, 2 GA, 11:21)
PLAYERS OF THE GAME:
CAN: -
GBR: -
REFEREE: Maija Kontturi (Finland)
LINESMEN: Kate Connolly (USA), Gong Ming (China)
ATTENDANCE: 848
-CIS-
For more information please contact:
Chris Hodges
Communications manager
Team Canada
2009 Winter Universiade
In China: 011 86 15104601380
chodges [at] ctv.ca
Michel BĂ©langer
Communications manager
Canadian Interuniversity Sport
Ph: (613) 562-5670 ext. 25
Cell: (613) 447-6334
belanger [at] universitysport.ca