Canton Shuts Out Medford to Reach Sweet Sixteen

Canton Boys Hockey
Canton players celebrate after Brian Middleton (10) scored a shorthanded goal in the third period to seal a 3-0 win over Medford. (Josh Perry/HockomockSports.com)

Josh PerryFollowJoshPerry


CANTON, Mass. – Sometimes, especially during the early rounds of the tournament, a team needs to find its footing, overcome some postseason jitters, and grind out a result. It may not be the prettiest win, but at this stage of the season all that matters is finding a way to advance to the next round.

Click here for a photo gallery from this game.

On Thursday night at the Metropolis Rink, Canton wasn’t at its free-flowing best, but the Bulldogs had enough to hold off an upset bid from No. 30 seed Medford. Canton got a pair of goals in the second period and tacked on a shorthanded tally in the third to pull out the 3-0 win and reach the Div. 2 Sweet Sixteen.

“A lot of teams, if you look at the past few nights, sort of struggle in these early-round games, especially teams that put pressure on themselves and these guys certainly did,” explained Canton coach Brian Shuman. “I give Medford credit. They’re a good team and they really played us hard and played us well.”

The Bulldogs wasted no time taking the initiative, outshooting the Mustangs 13-5 in the first, but Canton was struggling to create clear-cut chances and get bodies in front of Medford goalie John Nocella (34 saves).

Matt Anderson had a good early shot from the point that was kicked aside and Kevin LaBellee charged down the rebound only to have that gloved. James Young created a scoring chance with a nice outlet pass up the boards to Jeffrey Chaput, but the shot was kicked away and AJ Thomas was unable to connect on the rebound.

Medford nearly sprung a surprise when it got behind the Canton defense, but Griffin Hughes raced back and made a key intervention to prevent a breakaway. Jack Digirolamo came close with a shot from the slot that was blockered over the bar, but the Mustangs had the best chance of the period when Tyler Taddia forced a save out of Colin Davis and Louis Pucillo appeared to hit the post as he sent the rebound back through the crease.

Brendan Tourgee made a nice play with the puck in the defensive zone to get into open ice and then weaved his way through traffic before putting a backhand shot on target from close range with just 25 seconds left in the first.

Canton was in need of a spark and Digirolamo provided a lift with a big hit along the blue line, which seemed to give the bench much-needed energy.

“Digi this year for us, when we needed a goal, needed a big play, or in this game needed a physical presence, he provided it,” Shuman said. “Whatever we needed, he gave us, and this game we needed someone to match their physicality and he sure did.”

While the shot total was just about the same as the first, Canton looked much more fluid offensively in the second and puck movement was a key reason why.

Shuman said, “A lot of times in a playoff game, especially the first one, people are trying to be the hero early and score two goals with one shot. I thought the second period we moved the puck a lot better. Sometimes when the nerves kick in, your first instinct is to throw it at the net, so hopefully we got that nervousness out of the way and be better in the next game.”

Digirolamo teed up Colin Blake right on the edge of the crease, but his tip was saved. Less than a minute later, Canton got its breakthrough. Teddy Shuman’s shot from the point was blocked in front, but Travis Thomas managed to scoop the loose puck up and over the stretching goalie to make it 1-0.

With 6:40 left in the period, AJ Thomas showed great patience against the near side boards, holding the puck and waiting for space to make a pass. Finally, a crease opened up and he was able to pick out Chaput in front for a tip that made it 2-0.

Canton’s passing was creating a lot of good looks. Tourgee set up Thomas for a chance that was saved and the duo combined again with Tourgee having his tip turned aside. Thomas also had a shot that caromed off the end boards right to Young, who was pinching in and forced another save.

It looked like the Bulldogs were going to cruise to victory, but the Mustangs came out for the third intent on getting back into the game. After compiling nine shots through the first two periods, Medford put 12 shots on Davis in the third.

Carsten Mangan took advantage of a turnover and fired a shot from the right wing that Davis fought off, DJ McDonough had a shot that deflected in front and clipped the post, and Devon Page had a bid from the slot that Davis got his pad onto. He finished with 21 saves to record the shutout.

The game was effectively put away with 7:46 to go. On the penalty kill, Brian Middleton made a play at the blue line, broke free, and buried his breakaway opportunity to give the Bulldogs a three-goal cushion.

“Colin played well, made some big saves,” Shuman said. “Sadly that’s been a theme this year, the dreaded two-goal lead. It’s a cliche but sometimes cliches turn into reality. We need to find ways to bear down and get that third, such a crucial goal in a game, especially when you’re on a team and pressuring them.”

Canton (18-4-0) will take on No. 19 Wilmington, which beat No. 14 Masconomet, on Saturday night at the Canton Ice House.

Click here for a photo gallery from this game.

Marder Leads Foxboro Past Easthampton In Playoff Opener

Foxboro boys hockey
Foxboro junior goalie Trevor Marder made 33 saves and recorded his first assist, as the Warriors rolled to a big win in the D3 preliminary round. (Josh Perry/HockomockSports.com)

Josh PerryFollowJoshPerry


FOXBORO, Mass. – It was a long 10 days for Foxboro. After closing the regular season with a loss against Taunton, the Warriors sat right on the edge of the top 32 and faced a nearly two-week wait to see if they would hold onto that spot and onto a playoff berth. The wait turned out to be worth it.

Click here for a photo gallery from this game.

Foxboro earned the No. 31 seed in Div. 3 and a home playoff game in the preliminary round. Showing no rust from the two weeks off, the Warriors jumped all over No. 34 Easthampton in the opening period to grab the lead and then tacked on from there, riding the strong play of junior goalie Trevor Marder (33 saves) to run away with a 7-1 win on Monday night at the Foxboro Sports Center.

“We didn’t know when or who, so it was tough,” said first-year Foxboro coach Eric Galanti about the long wait to find out if the Warriors were in. “You can’t replicate that game intensity in a practice, you just can’t. We were sitting around and wondering and we were pretty close to the line. We had no control over it, but it doesn’t make it any easier.

Marder added, “It was pretty tough. The lack of ice time slows everyone down a little bit. We got at it quick though, scored early, and kept it going from there.”

After a long layoff, it was important for Foxboro to get off to a quick start and the Warriors immediately put pressure on the Eagles and their junior netminder Paige Galpin.

The pressure paid off four minutes into the game when freshman Owen McAuliffe battled to keep the puck along the boards, before popping the puck out to Tom Watts at the point. The sophomore defenseman’s shot was tipped in front but Galpin kicked out a leg to stop it, only to have the rebound fall right to Dan Jacobs at the post and he squeezed his shot in.

Foxboro had the lead and finished the first period with a 14-5 edge in shots, but Marder was still called upon to make several key saves to keep hold of the one-goal advantage. Zach Roy got space to skate right into the slot and forced a good blocker stop and Rob Herman cut in from the left wing but Marder flashed a glove to save it.

Marder wasn’t just helping in his defensive zone, but also giving the Warriors a little extra boost on the other end of the ice too. With a minute left in the period, the officials waved off icing, so Marder stepped up and flicked a pass up the near boards. The puck caromed right to Finlay Campbell and the sophomore took it in stride behind the Easthampton defense and he snuck his shot through Galpin to make it 2-0.

“It was intended for the first guy, overshot it a little bit, but still got the assist, so that’s all that matters,” Marder said about his first helper of the season.

It isn’t often that a goalie proves to be the positive difference in a game with a six-goal margin, but Easthampton shook off the cobwebs from its long trip to Foxboro and came out of the first intermission intent on getting right back into the game, and the Eagles would have but for Marder standing on his head.

Just 40 seconds into the period, Gabe Growhowski got behind the Foxboro defense and skated in all alone, but for Marder to make the glove save. Pete Sullivan would have a good look on the edge of the crease but Marder kicked it aside. Ethan Marowitz tried a wraparound attempt and, despite being unsighted, Marder still got a toe on the shot to keep it out. He then went post-to-post to deny Growhowski again on the doorstep.

Galanti said, “It’s been all season. He’s been our backstop and that’s where it starts, from the back, but we’re very pleased with the way he played. He really stood on his head. I was hoping he was going to get the zero, but he made some incredible stops as he has all season long.”

While Marder was saving the day on one end, the Foxboro offense was finishing off the few scoring chances it was getting on the other end.

Henry Diamond drove to the net from the left wing boards and managed to slip his shot under the goalie’s pads to make it 3-0 on Foxboro’s first shot of the period. Less than a minute after his hit the post with a similar move, Connor Hayes got Foxboro’s fourth when he cut across from the right wing, deked, and buried a shot high to the glove side.

The Warriors would effectively put the game away with 11.1 left in the second. Defenseman Alex Coviello pushed forward down the right wing and forced a save out of Galpin, but Diamond reacted quickest to the rebound and knocked it in for his second of the night.

“It was really important,” Marder said about not settling once the Warriors were in front. “We’re a team that’s been behind a lot this season and to finally get ahead and to steamroll a team feels a little bit better.”

Early in the third, Campbell made a nice pass to spring Ryan Wood, only for Galpin to make the stop. Wood collected the loose puck below the goal line and fired a pass back into the front. It went off an Easthampton skate and found the back of the net.

Marder continued to come through with big saves. He stopped Roy on a two-on-one with a kick save, but with eight minutes to play the Eagles finally found a breakthrough. Herman found room in the slot and wristed a shot over Marder’s shoulder, ruining the shutout bid.

Foxboro got the goal back. After Luigi Muttart nearly scored with a crazy, weaving solo effort, only to see his backhand shot ricochet off the crossbar, Jake Demaino followed up Jacobs’ breakaway chance and smashed in the rebound.

The Warriors had almost two weeks off before their playoff opener, but Foxboro (8-12-1) will only have to wait two days for the second tournament game, on Wednesday night in Peabody against No. 2 seed Lynnfield.

“I’m really happy with the way the kids have developed and really happy with their performance today,” Galanti said. “There’s obviously lots to work on always will be, but we played pretty well today.

“It’s a young team. We have 10 sophomores. It’s asking a lot of them, but they’re delivering.”

Click here for a photo gallery from this game.

Hockomock Hockey Playoff Seeds & Matchups

Below are the seeds and matchups for Hockomock teams in the MIAA playoffs. Seeds, times, and dates are subject to change and we will update this post with any changes.

Boys

Division 1
#12 Franklin (16-5-0) will host #21 Andover (11-5-4) on Wednesday, 3/1 at 8:00 at Pirelli Rink.
#30 King Philip (12-5-3) will travel to #3 Hingham (14-3-5) on Thursday, 3/2 at 7:00 at the Canton Ice House.

Division 2
#3 Canton (17-4-0) will host the winner of #30 Medford (11-8-1)/#35 Agawam (11-6-1) on Thursday, 3/2 at 5:00 at Metropolis Rink.
#21 Oliver Ames (10-9-1) will travel to #12 Gloucester (12-7-1) on Wednesday, 3/1 at 6:00 at Talbot Rink.
#25 North Attleboro (9-7-1) will travel to #8 Hopkinton (16-4-0) on Wednesday, 3/1 at 7:10 at the New England Sports Center.
#28 Mansfield (4-14-2) will travel to #5 Silver Lake (14-7-1) on Wednesday, 3/1 at 3:30 at Hobomock Arena in Pembroke.

Division 3
#17 Taunton (13-9-0) will travel to #16 Seekonk (15-4-1) on Wednesday, 3/1 at 7:00 at New England Sports Village.
#31 Foxboro (7-12-1) will host #34 Easthampton (12-7-1) on Monday, 2/27 at 5:00 at Foxboro Sports Center.

Girls

Division 2
#4 Canton (15-2-4) will host #29 Westwood (8-11-1) on Wednesday, 3/1 at 5:00 at Metropolis Rink.
#19 Franklin (9-8-3) will travel to #14 Pembroke (13-6-1) on Thursday, 3/2 at 5:30 at Hobomock Arena in Pembroke.
#22 King Philip (10-11-1) will travel to #11 Lincoln-Sudbury (16-4-0) on Wednesday, 3/1 at 8:00 at Valley Sports Arena.