We're getting ever so close to the end of the season. The teams will take a break for the All-Star Weekend, which leaves just one weekend left of regular season play.
Les Canadiennes swept Toronto and Calgary swept Boston, leaving both the Inferno and Montreal locked in a tight battle for first place. This is fantastic, because the teams will close out the regular season with a series against each other. It could be another preview for the Clarkson Cup Final.
Calgary sits in first place with 38 points, while Les Canadiennes have 34. Brampton has now caught up to Toronto and the teams have 22 points each. The Furies have played their last game of the regular season, which gives Brampton a chance to leapfrog them into sole possession of third place
News and Notes
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Toronto's Shannon Moulson broke the record for the number of career games played in the CWHL.
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Les Canadiennes' Ann-Sophie Bettez was named the Gongshow Player of the Month for January. She scored 15 of her 35 points in the month. Bettez is on a 12-game point streak, with goals in nine of those contests and 27 points over that stretch. She's second in the scoring race, just one point behind Marie-Philip Poulin.
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Speaking of Bettez, she sang the Canadian national anthem on Saturday...and then scored the opening goal.
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Toronto's regular season has ended and they'll have an extended break before the playoffs start. Head coach Sommer West said said the team will prepare by mixing practice, maintenance days, and video days.
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Carlee Campbell, Meaghan Mikkelson, and Natalie Spooner were voted as captains for the All-Star Game, which will take place this weekend.
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CWHL Q&As with Meghan Grieves and Haley Irwin.
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Because of injuries and travel issues, the Blades only took 14 players last weekend to play Calgary.
Calgary Inferno vs. Boston Blades
Calgary swept the Blades by a total of 13-2 over the weekend. The Inferno opened the series with a 9-2 win on Saturday. Calgary scored four goals in the opening frame of the series and added five goals in the second period, while Boston scored twice in the third.
"For the rest of the weekend, I thought we battled harder and did a good job of trying to contain them," Blades coach Brian McCloskey said. "Offensively, they're so explosive and we generated some great chances."
While no player netted a hat trick, Meaghan Mikkelson had five points (2G, 3A), Jill Saulnier recorded two assists, and Jessica Campbell added a goal and two assists.
"We had a balanced attack, whether it was from our forward, our D, and then we had solid goaltending," Calgary coach Scott Reid said. "The combination of the three of them definitely helped us out."
Lauren Dahm allowed four goals on seven shots. Jetta Rackleff appeared in relief and stopped 34 of 39 shots, while Delayne Brian made 12 saves for Calgary.
Boston's defense and goaltending fared a little better the next night. Bailey Bram opened the scoring in the first, followed by tallies from Brianne Jenner and Saulnier in the second. Bridgett Lacquette added a goal in the third.
Rackleff got the start for Boston and made 43 saves, while Genevieve Lacasse stopped 14 shots for the shutout.
"Lauren has played great for us all season long, but she just didn't look as sharp on Saturday and so I went with Jetta," said Reid.
Toronto Furies vs. Les Canadiennes
The matchup between both teams turned into a defensive battle, with Les Canadiennes squeaking by with a 2-0 win on Saturday and a 2-1 win on Sunday.
Marie-Philip Poulin scored the game's first goal on Saturday, potting an attempt midway through the first. Karell Emard scored an empty netter late in the third. Christina Kessler made 27 saves in the loss, while Charline Labonte stopped 18 for the shutout.
"[Our strength was] our consistency of playing a full 60-minute game not giving up, battling, doing the little things," said Toronto head coach Sommer West. "I think we played exceptionally well this weekend -- we just didn't bury the puck when we had the chance."
Ann-Sophie Bettez scored 2:21 into the game to give Les Canadiennes the lead. Kelly Terry tied it midway through the third to send it to overtime. But Poulin (who else) scored the game-winning goal. Labonte made 23 saves and Kessler made 22.
"Defensive zone, we're struggling a little bit, as well as [scoring] more goals," Les Canadiennes assistant coach Lisa-Marie Breton-Lebreux said.
"We wanted to have an overtime win and not a shootout win in order to be able to still fight for first place, so the girls were able to get that done."
Notable Quotes
"We had some chances as well, we just couldn't get the puck past Genevieve Lacasse, who's an outstanding goalie. Of course, we know that, because we had her last year." -- Boston head coach Brian McCloskey
"You can never get complacent, whether its D zone or your forecheck, breakouts, neutral zone, any kind of system work. There's always tweaking or adjusting that you need to do." -- Calgary head coach Scott Reid
"The [players] had a little bit of their own little meeting along with some information from the coaches. ... We've seen a bit of a switchover from the [players] who went into Boston played really well, and I truly believe that this weekend was probably our best weekend of hockey to date. So [we're climbing that mountain and it's a good time to be doing that." -- Toronto head coach Sommer West
Three Up, Three Down
↑ Ann-Sophie Bettez: See above.
"[Her] attitude, she's all smiling, has energy and that's very good for [the] team atmosphere," Breton-Lebreux said. "Her speed, her vision, and combine that with dedication to training, that's what you get."
↑ Jetta Rackleff: She was forced into a tough situation when she had to relieve Dahm just 12:33 into the game. But Rackleff played well and made 34 saves. The next night she played well again, making 43 saves. It isn't easy being a Blades goaltender when you face around 40 shots per game, but Rackleff stepped up this weekend.
"Jetta was terrific...She got beat a bit in the second period; she gave up five goals which sounds terrible on paper, but they were really storming us," McCloskey said.
"Saturday, [in] the second period, she had some ups and downs, but I really liked the way she composed herself and competed and then in the third period she really did a great job. We didn't give a goal in the third. On Sunday I thought she had a strong, strong game...Jetta was just very calm in there, very composed, and she's very athletic as a goaltender so she made a couple of spectacular saves. In general, she was strong in net and gave us a lot of confidence."
↑Calgary's offense: The Inferno scored...a lot.
"I think we got in on the forecheck quickly, made them cough pucks out, and then once we were able to do that we took the puck to the net with the net-front presence," Reid said. "It's hard to stop a puck you can't see. We didn't really outshoot them that much and we were able to score some goals, but I think it's because that net front was there when we were able to shoot the puck."
↓ Toronto's execution: The Furies' offense struggled and mustered just one goal against Les Canadiennes. "Putting away our chances," West said. "It's just going an extra little bit to bury that chance."
↓ Les Canadiennes offense: Piggybacking off my last point, Les Candiennes also had an uncharacteristically low-scoring effort this weekend with just four goals total. They also only scored one power play goal out of six attempts on Saturday.
"That finishing touch, we need to work on," Breton-Lebreux said.
Coming up Next
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Calgary Inferno vs Les Canadiennes: February 18 at 6:15 PM (Mountain Time); February 19 at 12:30 PM (Mountain Time) at WinSportArena A
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Boston Blades vs. Brampton Thunder: February 18 at 5:30 PM (Eastern Time) at Walter Brown Arena; February 19 at 2:00 PM (Eastern Time) at Veterans Memorial Rink
(Photo credit: Calgary Inferno/Twitter)