OUA

Top seeds look to avoid upsets in OUA West second round

TORONTO, ON – The first round of the OUA Queen’s Cup Playoffs has come and gone, and teams are all set to drop the puck on the second round, with matchups that could determine the conference’s 2024 University Cup participants. 

Across the OUA it was sweeps abound in the first round. In the OUA West, the No. 6 Laurier Golden Hawks surprised the No. 3 Toronto Varsity Blues, while the Windsor Lancers knocked off the Lakehead Thunderwolves. 

In the OUA East, the Concordia Stingers eliminated the Queen’s Gaels, and the Ottawa Gee-Gees defeated the Ontario Tech Ridgebacks. 

With the second round looming, 49 Sports previews the OUA West semifinals. 

TMU Bold vs Laurier Golden Hawks

As the hosts of the 2024 U SPORTS Men’s Hockey Championships, the TMU Bold can do a massive favour for the rest of the OUA while also putting themselves in the best position to take a run at the national championship. 

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(TMU Bold Athletics)

Should TMU advance to the final four of the OUA, which they would do upon eliminating Laurier, every other series winner in U SPORTS and the conference would clinch a spot at the University Cup, with three of four semifinalists + TMU taking the OUA berths, and the other conferences earning their spots through making their respective finals. 

Yet, even with that wrinkle and extended importance, head coach Johnny Duco and the Bold enter the Laurier series with nothing but a Queen’s Cup and U CUP title on their minds — that’s been their goal since they started planning for the 2022-24 season, and one they’ve never swayed from. 

The Bold enter the best-of-three series rested after earning a bye in the first round of the playoffs, having finished second in the OUA West with a 19-9-0 record while scoring 103 goals and only conceding 70. 

Even with strong regular seasons in the past and an OUA bronze medal and U CUP appearance in 2021-22, this year’s group has had loftier goals and expectations with the seniority of many of its core players and valuable additions. 

Offensively, the team is led by their top line of Kyle-Bollers- Kevin Gursoy-Danil Grigorev, who combined for 93 points this season, with Grigorev hitting his stride since the turn to the new year, having adjusted to the OUA game as a teenager. 

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(TMU Bold Athletics)

Bollers continued his top form since hitting the OUA, scoring 18 goals and 42 points while not missing a game this season — a welcome change from 2022-23, where injuries plagued his second half, leaving a top offensive player out of TMU’s playoff lineup, ending in a first-round defeat to the Toronto Varsity Blues. 

Meanwhile, there’s depth throughout their top three lines. They’re also settled on the backend as well, with veteran two-way defenceman Aaron Hyman in his fourth year and Arizona Coyotes NHL prospect Artem Duda, who, despite not racking up points as many expected, has been critical to TMU’s two-way game in his increased minutes. 

Stacking up against the Laurier Golden Hawks won’t be as easy a task as it may seem on paper, however, with the two teams splitting results this season, with a 4-1 win for Laurier and a 7-1 win for TMU. Led by head coach Kevin Forrest, the Golden Hawks ride a string of confidence entering the matchup after sweeping the third-seed Varsity Blues in the opening round of the Queen’s Cup Playoffs. 

(Laurier Golden Hawks Athletics)

After scoring 17 points in 28 games in the regular season, third-year forward Conor Ali continued his strong play into the two games against Toronto, scoring six points on a top line alongside Patrick Brown, who claimed five. Nick Giunta, meanwhile, already has four postseason goals. 

Although Laurier’s regular season point totals don’t jump off the page, the team is one of, if not the hardest, in puck battles and has a committed and focused mentality in every element of their game, rarely letting the situation get the best of them. 

(Laurier Golden Hawks Athletics)

Similarly, they’ve been the hottest team in Canada aside from the AUS UNB Reds since Jan. 1, with a 2024 record of 11-0-2.

It may just be a month since they last fell to TMU, but the Golden Hawks are not a team to sleep on and a potential contender to force an upset on TMU, frustrating the U CUP hosts and the other quarterfinal winners in the OUA. 

Game 1 goes on Wednesday night at TMU’s Mattamy Athletic Centre at 6:15 pm ET, with Game 2 set for Pillers Ice Pad at RIM Park, a secondary rink for Laurier, on Feb. 23 at 7:00 pm ET. Game 3 would be back in Toronto on Feb. 25 at 6:15 pm ET if needed.

Brock Badgers v Windsor Lancers

The Brock Badgers enter the series with the Windsor Lancers hoping to put themselves back in the U CUP conversation after missing out on last year’s tournament, one where the Windsor Lancers were the only team from Ontario to earn a spot, alongside the OUA’s Quebec-based teams in Concordia and UQTR. 

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(Brock Badgers Athletics)

Brock comes into the second round of the Queen’s Cup Playoffs after a slight rest given their division-topping record of 21-7-0, giving them a bye through the first round, while Windsor enters coming off a first-round sweep over the Lakehead Thunderwolves. 

Led by head coach TJ Manastersky, the Badgers have one of the more consistent teams in the OUA and, through the second half of the season, have established more balance than before the break. While much of their first-half success relied on outstanding goaltending from Connor Ungar, the second half has seen them improve in all areas of play while Ungar continues his stellar campaign in net. 

(Brock Badgers Athletics)

As a rookie netminder, Ungar enters his first OUA Playoffs with a .932 save percentage, which aided the Badgers’ stout defensive efforts this season, only allowing 67 goals, the fewest in the division. 

Offensively, the Badgers have a strong mix of young and veteran talent, led by Jacob Roach’s 40 points in 26 games, alongside Jared Marino and Tyler Burnie, while first-year blueliner Jonah Boria has been a massive boost with his 17-point season. 

Brock is the better team on paper and holds the undoubted upper hand in the matchup. Yet, the Lancers and head coach Kevin Hamlin have the experience of last year’s U CUP and Queen’s Cup run under their belt and a strong series against Lakehead. 

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(Windsor Lancers Athletics)

Hot and cold throughout the season, the Lancers played to a 15-13-0 record in the OUA and scored 88 goals, 19 less than Brock’s scoring output. Still, they were defensively sound all year, and in the series against Lakehead, got stellar goaltending from Nathan Torchia, whose two-game windsor saw him at a .958 save percentage, compared to his season mark of .916, which was the lowest of his three OUA regular seasons. 

On the offensive side, Jake Durham leads the Lancers into the second round after a 30-point season, while Holden Wale’s 25 points from the blueline make him a dynamic two-way option. Durham also scored a goal and three assists in the first-round sweep against the Thunderwolves. 

While neither side is likely to win a University Cup this year, their special teams have been good at present an intriguing battle, with Brock boasting the division’s second-best penalty kill at 86.2 percent, set to go up against Windsor’s OUA West-best 23.5 percent powerplay.

Game 1 is set for Wednesday at 7:30 pm ET in Windsor, with Game 2 on Feb. 24 in St. Catharines at 4:00 pm ET. If needed, Game 3 would be on Feb. 25 at Brock’s home rink at 4:00 pm ET.

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